Spring game spotlights key standouts months ahead of Big 12 debut season
ASU football's spring game was held Friday night in Tempe, capping an offseason filled with effort, learning and player turnover.
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ASU football's spring game was held Friday night in Tempe, capping an offseason filled with effort, learning and player turnover.
It didn’t take long for ASU to reload its roster for upcoming years after Jaden Rashada, Elijhah Badger, and Bryce Pierre entered the transfer portal. Since Friday, the Sun Devils have added four new players to their 2025 recruiting class, which currently ranks 18th in the country and 3rd in the Big-12.
What will ultimately separate Arizona State football from its 3–9 finish last year to a better result next season is the completeness of its roster. Kenny Dillingham's squad had a number of standouts in 2023, but there wasn't talent across the board.
"I'm done. I quit. I want to go home."
Bor Artnak flew from Slovenia to Tempe just days before his opening match for ASU men’s tennis. His decision to travel from a small Balkan country of just 20,000 square kilometers to the blistering hot desert in America’s southwest will be one of the riskiest and most consequential of his career.
ASU wrestling placed sixth in the 2024 NCAA National Championships on Saturday, ending its last season in the Pac-12 conference.
Schemes, NIL progress, and team culture were all topics of interest for ASU football's head coach, Kenny Dillingham, during his press conference on Thursday.
ASU wrestling has a chance for unprecedented success at the individual and team levels in its final competition of the season, the NCAA Wrestling Championships, which will be held from Thursday, March 21 to Saturday, March 23.
At the top of collegiate men's tennis, every program has great recruits and top-tier talent. However, coaches can’t expect to sign players and call it a day; they have to build players so they can reach their full potential. They have to gain an edge.
Sun Devil wrestling won its 24th and final Pac-12 championship on Sunday, further etching its name into collegiate wrestling history by defeating all conference contemporaries by more than 20 points.
ASU Wrestling reached a low point on Jan. 19. After a loss to Little Rock - the Trojans' first-ever ranked win in program history - the Sun Devils were 2-4, and their season arguably looked lost.
In the history of the Power Five Conferences, no school had ever brought men's tennis back before, so when ASU's men's tennis program was discontinued in 2008, its future seemed nonexistent. Tennis wasn't coming back to Tempe.
The ASU men's tennis team has a chance for unprecedented success this weekend. After defeating No. 25 Florida State and Virginia Commonwealth on Jan. 28, the Sun Devils earned a spot at the ITA Division I National Men's Team Indoor Championship. This will be the team's first time since it was revitalized at ASU in 2018.
ASU men's tennis has the potential to be one of the best programs in the country this year, but that's dependent on one factor: the performance of their back line.
Kaleb Larkin epitomizes what it means to be an outlier. At six feet tall and weighing 149 lbs, the freshman wrestler has unprecedented strength, stamina and flexibility for his size while managing to encompass a high wrestling IQ and unorthodox style unheard of for his age.
The Whiteman Tennis Center has been bubbling with optimism this season and rightfully so — after a promising start from the ASU's men's tennis team. Following a 14-12 season last year, the Sun Devils added talent, continued to work and most importantly didn't lose any of their stars from last season.
ASU has one of the best wrestling programs in the country, and it's not because of their recruiting, nor is it due to their talent. Sure, the team is full of all-world athletes and top recruits like juniors Cohlton Schultz and Kyle Parco, but the team doesn’t have the same talent to compete against the heavyweights of the college wrestling world without any preparation.
With one awkward maneuver, what seemed to be a high point in redshirt senior Jacori Temmer's wrestling career came to a screeching halt in a moment's time. Teemer was attempting a throw, a move he'd done thousands of times in his career when he tore his pectoral muscle six centimeters off the bone.
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