Arizona
Oregon State transfer Silas Bolden to visit Arizona, 3 others
One of the top remaining players in the NCAA transfer portal will visit Arizona later this month.
Former Oregon State wide receiver Silas Bolden has planned a visit to Tucson on Jan. 19, one of four visits he has set up for January. He is set to visit Texas this weekend, Washington on Jan. 20 and USC on Jan. 27.
The 5-foot-8, 157-pound Bolden had 54 catches for 746 yards and five touchdowns this past season, serving as Oregon State’s top target out of the slot. He had five receptions for 66 yards at Arizona in October, and in four seasons he has nine TD catches.
Bolden told 247Sports’ Greg Biggins he’s done Zoom calls with coaches from all four schools, along with others, and his hoping to find a school where he can make a bigger impact.
“My goal is to get drafted in the first three rounds, so I’m trying to find the school that fits me and an offense that obviously likes to throw the ball,” said Bolden, who has one season of eligibility remaining. “Those are all great schools and I know everywhere I go, there’s competition. I’m not looking to be promised anything, I just need to go and put in the work, and that’s what I plan to do.”
Bolden would help fill the slot hole left by Jacob Cowing, who in two seasons at the UA caught 175 passes for 1,882 yards and 20 TDs including a school-record 13 in 2023. Arizona has in-house options for that opening, including junior-to-be Kevin Green Jr. and incoming freshman Audric Harris, but coach Jedd Fisch has shown the willingness to bring in outside help at the receiver position in the form of Cowing and Montana Lemonious-Craig.
Arizona
Arizona State Extends Baseball Coach Willie Bloomquist
Image credit:
Arizona State coach Willie Bloomquist (Photo by Eddie Kelly / ProLook Photos)
Arizona State plans to extend head baseball coach Willie Bloomquist for two additional seasons through the 2028 campaign, sources told Baseball America. The extension is pending formal approval from the Arizona Board of Regents.
Bloomquist was set to earn $390,000 from July 1 through June 30, 2026, the final year of his existing deal. As part of the extension, Arizona State adjusted some of Bloomquist’s contract incentives and is planning to increase its overall investment in the baseball program, sources said. The Sun Devils currently fund 34 full scholarships, the maximum allotment permitted.
The timing of the extension reflects a measured show of confidence following a pivotal season for both Bloomquist and the ASU program.
Hired in the summer of 2021, Bloomquist returned to his alma mater with no head coaching experience and inherited a program navigating significant change. His first three seasons were subpar, marked by flashes of competitiveness but ultimately falling well short of the standard long associated with ASU baseball.
The Sun Devils went 26-32 in 2022, 32-23 in 2023 and 32-26 in 2024, missing the NCAA Tournament in each of those seasons. The three-year postseason absence represented the longest drought in program history, an uncomfortable distinction for one of college baseball’s most historically successful programs. As the sport rapidly evolved around the transfer portal and NIL, the pressure to accelerate results mounted.
ASU finally broke through in 2025, finishing 36-24 overall and 18-12 in their first season competing in the Big 12 to end the postseason drought and reestablish a baseline of competitiveness. While the season did not fully restore the national stature the program once routinely commanded, it provided tangible evidence of progress and stability after several transitional years.
That momentum carried into the offseason, when the Sun Devils assembled one of their most complete teams under Bloomquist. ASU retained key pieces from their 2025 roster, most notably top pitcher Cole Carlon, a lefthander who emerged as a reliable anchor for the staff out of the bullpen, and emerging outfielder Landon Hairston, among others.
ASU also made a significant push in the transfer portal, securing commitments from three top 100 transfers: former Cal shortstop PJ Moutzouridis, former UNLV outfielder Dean Toigo and former TCU righthander Kole Klecker.
The planned increase in institutional investment aligns with those roster moves. In an era when resources increasingly shape competitive ceilings, ASU’s willingness to increase its baseball budget signals an understanding of the demands required to contend at a high level. While details of the expanded support were not immediately available, the move suggests a more aggressive approach to sustaining success in the Big 12 and nationally.
For Bloomquist, the two-year extension provides continuity without dramatically altering the short-term expectations attached to the job. It offers stability as he continues to shape the program while still placing an emphasis on sustained results.
The Sun Devils enter the next phase of Bloomquist’s tenure with clearer alignment. The extension does not erase the challenges of the past four seasons, but it does position ASU to evaluate progress on firmer footing as it looks to turn a single breakthrough season into something more durable.
Arizona
Former Arizona Senator Accused of Having Affair With Bodyguard in Bombshell Suit Filed by His Wife
Arizona
Peat scores 24, No. 1 Arizona remains undefeated with 89-82 win over rival Arizona State
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Koa Peat had 24 points and 10 rebounds, Tobe Awaka added 25 points and top-ranked Arizona remained undefeated with an 89-82 win over rival Arizona State on Wednesday night.
The Wildcats (17-0, 4-0 Big 12) had a hard time shaking the Sun Devils in a physical first half before Peat came alive in the second. The 6-foot-8 freshman, who shot 2 of 8 in the first half, made all seven of his shots in the second as Arizona built a 12-point lead.
The Sun Devils (10-7, 1-3) kept hanging around behind Moe Odum, whose 3-pointer with 55 seconds left pulled Arizona State within 87-82.
Arizona’s Jaden Bradley followed with a short jumper and the Wildcats made two free throws to join No. 8 Nebraska and Miami (Ohio) as the only remaining undefeated Division I teams following No. 10 Vanderbilt’s loss to Texas. The Wildcats are off to their best start since opening 21-0 in 2013-14.
Odum led Arizona State with 23 points and Massamba Diop added 16.
Arizona State led 39-38 at halftime by holding its ground, bumping and banging the physical Wildcats while limiting their transition opportunities.
They also got the ball inside to Diop.
The 7-1 Senegalese freshman averaged 21.5 points in two games last week and beat Arizona with a variety of moves, scoring 13 first-half points on 6-of-9 shooting.
Awaka used his might to bull his way through the Sun Devils for 15 points on 6-of-8 shooting.
Arizona found more of an offensive rhythm midway through the second half, hitting 11 straight shots to build a 75-63 lead before Arizona State fought back to make it close.
Up next
Arizona State: plays at No. 7 Houston on Sunday.
Arizona: plays at UFC on Saturday.
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