Here’s an up-to-date list of all NFL Players from Fort Collins High School in Fort Collins, Colorado.
The list includes only those players who have played in an NFL game.
See where it ranks among other schools in the state here.
Here’s an up-to-date list of all NFL Players from Fort Collins High School in Fort Collins, Colorado.
The list includes only those players who have played in an NFL game.
See where it ranks among other schools in the state here.
Exeter Chiefs: Woodburn; Brown-Bampoe, Slade, Rigg, Feyi-Waboso; Skinner, Varney; Sio, Yeandle, Roots; Jenkins, Zambonin; Hooper, Vintcent, Fisilau
Replacements: Dweba, Burger, Tchumbadze, Tuima, Worley-Brady, Cairns, Haydon-Wood, Ridl
Munster: O’Connor; Abrahams, Farrell, Nankivell, Kilgallen; Crowley, Casey; Loughman, Barron, Ryan; Edogbo, Beirne; O’Donoghue, Kendellen, Coombes
Replacements: Scannell, Milne, Ala’alatoa, Ahern, Quinn, O’Donovan, O’Brien, Hodnett
Referee: Jeremy Rozier (France)
NEW DELHI: A young fast bowler stole the spotlight in the IPL 2026 clash between Gujarat Titans and Rajasthan Royals, not just for his performance but for sheer pace. Ashok Sharma, playing for Gujarat Titans, bowled the fastest delivery of the season, a fiery 154.2 kmph yorker to Dhruv Jurel, leaving everyone impressed. The 23-year-old pacer consistently bowled at high speeds, crossing 145 kmph regularly and even hitting 150 twice in the same over. His 154.2 kmph delivery became the fastest ball of IPL 2026, beating Anrich Nortje’s earlier mark of 150.9 kmph.Sharma earned his IPL spot after a strong performance in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, where he was Rajasthan’s top wicket-taker. Gujarat Titans showed faith in him by picking him in the playing XI early, and he has delivered steady performances so far.Despite Sharma’s pace, Rajasthan Royals posted a big total of 210/6 after choosing to bat first. Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooryavanshi gave a solid start, adding 69 runs in the powerplay. Jaiswal went on to score a half-century, while Dhruv Jurel played a crucial knock of 75 off 42 balls, accelerating the innings in the later stages.There were a few setbacks with quick wickets in the middle overs, but Jurel’s innings ensured Rajasthan crossed the 200 mark. Gujarat bowlers managed to pull things back slightly towards the end, but still faced a challenging target.With Gujarat already missing captain Shubman Gill, the big question remained whether they could chase down the total against a confident Rajasthan side.
The 2026 NFL Draft is 19 days away, and after the Minnesota Vikings have wrapped up free agency — for the most part — the clues are there to peek at a possible strategy. Consider the following list the most realistic outcomes on Thursday, April 23rd.
Minnesota has four credible Round 1 routes, each tied to roster needs and long-term draft value.
The Vikings have nine picks this cycle, up from five when they embarked on the 2025 NFL Draft.
Ranked in ascending order, these are the Vikings’ most likely draft outcomes (No. 1 = most realistic).
4. Draft Peter Woods (DT) at No. 18
The Vikings may want a defensive tackle early in the draft after electively releasing Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave last month. Allen joined the Cincinnati Bengals, and Hargrave picked the Green Bay Packers. What a world.
Woods is probably the only defensive tackle who merits the 18th overall pick — for those who believe in the purest form of his upside. It might be strange for Minnesota to reach at No. 18 for Kayden McDonald or Caleb Banks, for example.
Woods is the no-nonsense stick-and-pick DT option at No. 18.
Zone Coverage‘s Preet Shah on Woods: “Clemson’s scheme wasn’t a good fit for his style of play. However, at some point, talent should lead to production. The lack of it is definitely a red flag that has taken Wood’s position as the undisputed DT1 in the draft down a notch.”
“Peter Woods has all the tools and could be a monster in this defensive unit. However, that will only happen if he buys in and shows a willingness to curb some of his reckless tendencies while developing his skills. Still, given just how high the upside is, it’s a risk the Vikings should consider taking if they are determined to add to an already fun and young defensive line.”
3. Trading Down + Drafting a Defensive Back
No matter what, the Vikings need cornerback and safety help for the long haul. Heading into the 2027 offseason, the Vikings will have these defensive backs under contract:
Isaiah Rodgers, Jay Ward, and Harrison Smith are not scheduled to be on the 2027 roster, and this draft should be just as much about planning for 2027 as 2026.
In this scenario, the Vikings traded down 5-10 spots, grab a 3rd-Rounder or so, and pick one of these defensive backs:
They’d add a young cornerback or safety while ensuring five Top 10 draft picks are on the menu.
2. Trading Down + Drafting a DT
Take that logic from the Woods pick and tweak it just a little bit.
Minnesota could prefer a defensive tackle with its first pick, but after Woods, the other iDL options can likely be drafted later in Round 1 or early in Round 2. We’re talking these four players:
The Vikings could love McDonald, Banks, Hunter, or Miller, trade down about 10 spots, and perhaps add a 2nd- or 3rd-Rounder while still getting their man.
1. Draft Dillon Thieneman (S) at No. 18
This take is everywhere, and this take is everywhere for a reason.
The aforementioned Smith will either retire in a couple of months or a year in a couple of months. No matter what Smith decides, the Vikings need a safety. Thieneman, after an outstanding showing at the NFL Combine, blends the Vikings’ team need with the best player available at pick No. 18. That’s why you see Thieneman selected by Minnesota in 90% of all mock drafts.
While Minnesota could prefer the contrarian approach, it really might be as simple as choosing Thieneman and calling it good.
SI.com‘s Will Ragatz on Thieneman: “If he isn’t taken before the 18th pick, it would not be surprising at all to see Thieneman end up in Minnesota. But the consensus formed by mock drafters suggests it would be a surprise if he doesn’t become a Viking, and that’s worth pushing back on. There are a few reasons why this shouldn’t be viewed as a slam dunk or a foregone conclusion.”
“For one, Thieneman isn’t the only safety who could make sense at 18. The lone safety who earned a higher PFF grade than him last year was Toledo’s Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, who has a legitimate case to be the second player drafted at that position after Ohio State’s Caleb Downs. It’s entirely possible the Vikings wind up preferring EMW, who is three inches taller and arguably a better open-field tackler than Thieneman.”
He currently ranks 18th on the Consensus Big Board, and — checks notes — the Vikings have the 18th overall pick.
Ten years since their last win on the Championship Course there were hoots and cheers of relief and delight as Oxford brought an end to a bruising Boat Race drought. Cambridge had won the last eight editions; president Gemma King, by far the most experienced rower of either side, had won five of her six races on this course.
The Dark Blues faced a forbidding task but even throughout the years of those chastening defeats they were beginning to rebuild. And there was even more on the line this year: for Annie Anezakis, this was her last chance before graduating from her medicine postgrad, after being on the losing side on three occasions. For Olympic bronze medallist and president Heidi Long, this was a last shot at another lifelong dream before completing her master’s in September, powered by the grief of losing her father Keith – an endless champion of her rowing career – to pancreatic cancer in 2023.
Inevitably cycles come to an end; tides turn. Cambridge were bidding for a ninth straight win but their pursuit of yet more glory came to an end on a classic April day, grey with the hovering threat of downpour.
The Boat Race is simultaneously unlike any other sporting event and exactly the same.
Maybe there’s an element of masochism from the spectators, watching people suffer on the water for 20 minutes; maybe it’s the glimpse into a completely alien world, but there is a buzz around this that endures year after year. And it has all the ingredients of a classic sporting contest: tribal loyalty, skullduggery and gamesmanship, and plenty of people just there to get hammered.
As the clocked ticked down to the 2.21pm start time (designed to take advantage of the incoming tide) the banks of the Thames were lined with gilet-clad, Chelsea boot-wearing punters, drawn to the sizzle of barbecues outside the line of rowing clubs along this stretch of the river. Many seemed to have taken a side – there was significantly more light blue, or more accurately perhaps mint green, than dark blue – and a ferry was repurposed as a University of Cambridge party boat.
But although the Light Blues were overwhelming favourites in the men’s race, that party boat looked premature when Oxford got off to a lightning-quick start in the women’s. From the vantage point of the media boat, following behind, it’s hard to actually see when they set off – but the roar of the crowd, covering every square inch of space along Putney and along both banks, made it obvious.

Oxford pulled rhythmically away; long before Hammersmith Bridge there was clear water between the two boats, and by the Harrods Furniture Depository there was a boat length between them. Oxford’s history of defeats could have worked against them, but for this crew it held no weight.
Shortly before Chiswick Eyot Cambridge cox Matt Moran made the call to swerve sharply left, aiming for the calmer water along the Surrey bank. Louis Corrigan followed suit to nullify any tactical advantage, and reacted again when Moran swung well to the right after Barnes Bridge. But there was simply too much water to make up, and the Dark Blue celebrations started before they even pulled to a halt, two lengths ahead.
Australian Anezakis, last year’s president, and Sarah Marshall finally broke their duck at the fourth attempt; Long led the celebrations, after a brief pause to be sick into the Tideway from those agonising efforts; Lilli Freischem got one over little sister Mia in the first-ever battle of siblings in different boats.
Coach Allan French, who was brought onboard in 2024 and is credited for turning his squad into contenders again, was mobbed by the girls as he spoke to Channel 4. “This takes time, it’s years in the making,” he beamed. “These girls are incredible, they put their life and soul into this. It’s a brutal race, and today they made everybody so proud. Immense, absolutely immense.”

Anezakis was just as thrilled: “On top of the world. This is the best feeling in the whole world.” An emotional Long said: “It was the nine of us in the boat today, and Allan, and I wouldn’t have done it with anyone else. It was just incredible, every single stroke this year, for the whole of this year.”
There was more to cheer about for the Dark Blues as their men’s squad – widely expected to be utterly trounced – made it a genuine fight against a Cambridge side unbeaten this year.
Coxed by Tobias Bernard, who grew up racing on the Tideway and knew the river inside out, Oxford went for an aggressive strategy, clinging close to the Cambridge boat, and were repeatedly warned by umpire Ciaran Hayes to move further to the Surrey side.

The Light Blues eventually made their superiority felt in brutally rough conditions. But a boat featuring many who only learned to row at their college finished four lengths down against arguably Cambridge’s strongest team in history – a better result than last year’s boat, who came home five and a half lengths down despite being led by an Olympic champion and stacked with elite internationals.
A visibly disappointed Bernard said: “It’s a testament to how strong a crew they are, but I’m really proud of my guys. Cambridge are an incredible outfit.”
His teammate Harry Geffen, a four-time under-23 world champion for Great Britain and widely regarded as a generational talent, said there were “mixed emotions”. “Gutted to come away with a loss but proud of the way we hung on in there. That’s racing, sometimes you get the better side of it.”
Cambridge were magnanimous in victory, with French president Noam Mouelle saying bluntly: “Everyone was blown.” Cox Sammy Houdaigui said: “That was a fantastic race. All credit to Oxford, all credit to the eight rowers.”
As the Boat Race nears two historic anniversaries – a century of women’s racing in 2027, two centuries of men’s in 2029 – this felt another high water mark for the race. Anezakis was momentarily put off by getting English sparkling wine under her contact lens during the trophy celebrations – but there was no dampening the spirits as a decade of Cambridge dominance came to an end.
)
Argentina’s Lionel Messi celebrates scoring his side’s second goal against Zambia during a friendly soccer match in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tuesday, March 31, 2026.(Photo:PTI)
In what was likely his final home appearance for Argentina’s national squad, Lionel Messi scored a goal and provided an assist in a 5-0 rout of Zambia on Tuesday night in a farewell friendly ahead of the World Cup.
The 38-year-old Messi set up Julian Alvarez in the fourth minute and then scored in the 43rd at La Bombonera stadium in Buenos Aires.
The crowd gave him a standing ovation and pleaded with him to help Argentina win another World Cup. The global tournament kicks off June 11 in the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
Nicolas Otamendi and Valentin Barco also scored for Argentina.
The defending world champions raised some concern after their lackluster performance last Friday in a 2-1 victory over Mauritania.
In the lead-up to the Zambia friendly, coach Lionel Scaloni had warned that if the team didn’t improve its performance he would take drastic measures regarding the 26-man World Cup squad, which must be submitted by May 30.
For the last home game before the World Cup, Scaloni started with a lineup similar to that one that defeated France in the 2022 final, with the notable exclusion of midfielder Rodrigo De Paul, who is recovering from a muscle injury and performed poorly against Mauritania.
Argentina, which also won the World Cup in 1978 and 1986, will open against Algeria on June 16 in Group J, followed by games against Austria on June 22 and Jordan on June 27.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: Apr 01 2026 | 12:46 PM IST
Manchester United star Patrick Dorgu has taken an important step in his recovery process.
The club have confirmed the 21-year-old has returned to individual training at Carrington.
It is a big boost for United, who aim to seal Champions League football by securing maximum points from their remaining seven Premier League games.
Advertisement
Dorgu had been in excellent form for the Red Devils before suffering a hamstring issue against Arsenal in January.
The injury kept him sidelined for the previous eight league games.
The Dane is not expected to recover in time for the Leeds United clash on April 13, but he could return to action before the end of the month.
Dorgu joined the Manchester titans in January 2025 from Lecce for a fee worth £25 million.
He has established himself as an important player, making 44 appearances across all competitions and scoring three goals.
Dorgu was originally signed as a wing-back but he has been more effective in a left-sided attacker role.
Advertisement
When he returns to the team, it is likely he will play as a left winger in Michael Carrick’s 4-2-3-1 system.
United have seen a resurgence under Carrick, as they are enjoying an excellent run of form.
They have picked up 23 points from a possible 30, putting them on course to secure a Champions League spot.
United played out a 2-2 draw at Bournemouth in their last game before the international break.
They will be keen to bounce back against Leeds next week.
Stats from Transfermarkt
Shop Fairway Jockey’s curated selection of Masters-ready gear.
Fairway Jockey
It is less than 14 months since Liverpool came to the Etihad Stadium, Arne Slot outwitted one of his coaching heroes with his use of twin false nines, won 2-0 and took a giant stride towards the Premier League title. Pep Guardiola is not seen off quite that easily, however. Slot’s subsequent visits to Manchester City have been crushing.
Such slim chances as Liverpool had of retaining their Premier League crown ended with a 3-0 defeat in November. Their FA Cup run came to an abrupt halt with a 4-0 demolition here. “An unbelievable disappointment,” said Slot.
Not for City. They walked past the Carabao Cup on their way on to the pitch and took a stride towards winning the FA Cup. For Liverpool, unless a bedraggled, beaten group can somehow recover to claim the Champions League, starting with the first leg of their quarter-final against holders Paris Saint-Germain on Wednesday, it will be a season without silverware.
.jpeg)
For Slot, already aware some of the Liverpool support want him gone, the soundtrack was of City fans chorusing “sacked in the morning”. And if their timescale is inaccurate, it was scarcely a result to enhance Slot’s prospects of remaining in charge for next season.
His heaviest defeat in charge of Liverpool, and joint heaviest of his managerial career, was a chastening affair. Not merely for him: Mohamed Salah, in the first game of his extended goodbye, skewed a shot wide for a throw-in, via a touch from Abdukodir Khusanov, when through on goal and, when 4-0 down, had a penalty saved by James Trafford. These were emblematic moments for a man whose powers are waning.
There were triumphant ones for City counterparts. Erling Haaland converted his penalty. A forward who has specialised in scoring multiples of goals had not in 2026. A first double of the year became a first City hat-trick of the season. A man who has had a barren spell still has 33 club goals for the campaign and 12 hat-tricks in his time at City. “He is a machine,” said the City assistant manager, Pep Lijnders.
Meanwhile, Guardiola has his own extraordinary statistics. City had a banner prepared: “Wembley again, ole, ole.” They had reason to bring it out. They are in an eighth consecutive FA Cup semi-final, extending their own record. Guardiola has enjoyed enviable resources but an import’s commitment to the most English of competitions cannot be questioned.
As in the Carabao Cup final, he could enjoy the exploits of a revamped team. Liverpool could rue them, given that two of their destroyers could have made their way to Merseyside. Slot spoke to Rayan Cherki last summer but signed the costlier Florian Wirtz. Liverpool were interested in Antoine Semenyo in January but City stumped up the transfer fee. The winger ended with a goal and an assist, the No 10 with pivotal parts in two goals; not for the first time, Liverpool had little to show for their own £450m outlay. Meanwhile, the other catalyst, crucial in the first and fourth goals, was the Mancunian marvel Nico O’Reilly.

Liverpool’s capitulation came either side of half-time, four goals conceded in 18 minutes of football. “The fighting spirit wasn’t there enough,” lamented Dominik Szoboszlai. “Those 20 minutes the way we defended when we conceded the four goals is absolutely not good enough,” said Slot.
It began with City’s third penalty in as many meetings with City this season when O’Reilly, after deft footwork, was tripped by Virgil van Dijk. Giorgi Mamardashvili had saved a spot kick from Haaland here in the Premier League, but not the FA Cup. As in November, Liverpool then could not hold out until the interval. “The second time we conceded just before half-time playing Man City,” said Slot. Cherki and Semenyo combined, the latter crossed and Haaland evaded Ibrahima Konate’s half-hearted leap to glance in a header. “I love these old-school striker goals,” added Lijnders.
Slot often talks about the significance of set-pieces and is aware only Joe Gomez has a long throw at Liverpool. A goal stemmed from it: City’s third. Cherki pierced their defence with a pass and Semenyo dinked a shot over Mamardashvili. The latter then had so much confidence he tried to score from 65 yards. Instead, Haaland did from about eight, after O’Reilly sprang the offside trap to square.

It completed a brutal assault; indeed, after Guardiola booted the advertising hoardings at Wembley, Haaland kicked the corner flag in celebration of his opener. Liverpool struggled to find an answer to City’s attack, getting respite only when Guardiola removed Haaland, Rodri, Cherki and Semenyo.
“Both teams accepted it was 4-0,” said Slot. “No one will remember it but the first 35 minutes there was a lot to like from my team.” He had opted for a 4-2-2-2 system and Liverpool had congested the centre of the pitch. Yet Guardiola found the flaw in the formation. Liverpool got outflanked on their left for City’s second goal and on their right for the fourth.
Suspended for past bookings, he was sat alongside his daughter in the stands. The Dutchman celebrating in the dugouts was Lijnders, Jurgen Klopp’s sidekick, and now Guardiola’s assistant. The coach from the Netherlands in a personal purgatory was Slot. His dominance of Guardiola was restricted to last season.
The Catalan continues to excel. City are unbeaten in 18 FA Cup ties at home, with an aggregate score of 81-6. Yet another scoreline this season may have more pertinence: over three games, it has been City 9 Liverpool 1. The numbers can worry Slot. So, too, can the way a disastrous 18 minutes unravelled.
Oxford claimed their first win in the Women’s Boat Race since 2016 with a dominant victory over Cambridge on the Thames.
The Dark Blues made a blistering start to the 80th edition of the race and Cambridge were unable to respond.
In tricky, blustery conditions on the 4.2-mile Putney to Chiswick course, the Oxford crew had to dig deep as Cambridge tried everything to bridge the gap.
But Oxford stayed strong, maintaining their advantage to win by 9.4 seconds and celebrate their 31st overall success.
More to follow
Apr 2, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Minnesota Timberwolves forward Julius Randle (30) is defended by Detroit Pistons forward Paul Reed (7) in the second half t Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images The Detroit Pistons are one win away from accomplishing a feat they haven’t achieved in nearly 20 years.
The Pistons will aim to secure the top spot in the Eastern Conference playoffs for the first time since 2007 when they visit the Philadelphia 76ers on Saturday night.
Detroit (56-21) needs one win — or one loss by the second-place Boston Celtics (52-25) — to clinch home-court advantage throughout the East postseason. Both the Pistons and Celtics have five regular-season games remaining.
The Pistons have played well without star guard Cade Cunningham, who will continue to recover from a collapsed lung this weekend. He has missed the last nine games, during which the team has gone 7-2, with both losses coming in overtime.
Most recently, Detroit topped the Minnesota Timberwolves 113-108 on Thursday as Daniss Jenkins scored 26 points and Jalen Duren notched 22 points and 14 rebounds for the Pistons.
In addition to playing without Cunningham, the team got only six minutes out of Tobias Harris (knee injury), who is questionable to face his former team on Saturday.
“I give our guys credit. They just seem to figure out a way, and typically it starts with our defense,” Detroit coach J.B. Bickerstaff said.
The Pistons held the Timberwolves to 31% 3-point shooting and forced 14 turnovers, led by Ausar Thompson, the Eastern Conference Defensive Player of the Month in both January and March.
Thompson finished with seven points, nine rebounds, nine assists, three blocks and two steals against Minnesota.
“Throughout his career, that’s what he wants to do,” Bickerstaff said of Thompson racking up the monthly honors, “and that’s where he wants to put his impact on the game.”
Duncan Robinson chipped in with 15 points for the Pistons. He enters Saturday’s game with seven straight double-digit scoring performances, having made multiple 3-pointers in each of those contests.
“We find different ways to win,” noted reserve guard Kevin Huerter. “There are different guys (who step up). We piece it together. That’s the sign of a good team.” Philadelphia (43-34) has won eight of its last 11 games, including a 115-103 victory over Minnesota on Friday. The Sixers are tied with the Toronto Raptors for the No. 6 seed in the East.
Paul George scored 23 points against the Timberwolves while adding six rebounds, six assists and four steals. He is averaging 27.0 points in five games since coming back from a 25-game suspension for taking a banned substance.
“His shot making has been so good that teams are … almost forcing him inside the (3-point) line, and he’s been able to take it (to the rim), which is good,” Philadelphia coach Nick Nurse said.
Kelly Oubre Jr. chipped in with 21 points, including two clutch 3-pointers down the stretch. Joel Embiid contributed 19 points, 13 rebounds, seven assists and three blocks. The Sixers scored 42 points in the third quarter after managing just 41 in the first half.
“I think we just started playing a little smarter offensively,” Nurse said of the second-half surge. “I think we did an excellent job of doing almost everything we wanted to in the second half, offensively, and the defense stayed just about the same.”
The Pistons have won all three matchups against the Sixers this season.
–Field Level Media
Steven Gerrard disagrees with Gary Neville over ‘shock’ Chelsea and Arsenal claim | Football
No Jackpot Winner and $194 Million Prize Rolls Over
Weekend Open Thread: Spanx – Corporette.com
Fans slam 'heartbreaking' Barbie Dream Fest convention debacle with 'cardboard cutout' experience
Gold Price Prediction: Worst Month in 17 Years fo Save Haven Rock
The Pixel 10a doesn’t have a camera bump, and it’s great
Dems press CFTC, ethics board on prediction-market insider trades
Lana Del Rey Celebrates Her Husband’s 51st Birthday In New Post
Avatar Legends: The Fighting Game comes out in July and it looks pretty slick
Tallest college basketball player ever, standing at 7-foot-9, entering transfer portal
EE TV is using AI to help you find something to watch
Login and Checkout Issues Spark Merchant Frustration
Amazon Sundays: Soft Spring Layers
Elon Musk’s last co-founder reportedly leaves xAI
The Best Spring Trends of 2026
How to back up your iPhone & iPad to your Mac before something goes wrong
Apple will hide your email address from apps and websites, but not cops
Should Trump Be Scared Strait?
U.S. rule change may open trillions in 401(k) funds to crypto
Flipsnack and the shift toward motion-first business content with living visuals
You must be logged in to post a comment Login