Virginia
Brandyn Hillman Commitment Preview: Virginia Standout Ready To Announce His Decision
One of the vital versatile athletes within the nation – Portsmouth (Va.) Churchland star Brandyn Hillman – is ready to make his school dedication recognized. The 6-1, 195-pound athlete will announce his choice in the present day at 1:00 PM ET. Hillman is without doubt one of the quickest risers within the nation after colleges started to pay extra consideration to him, and he has quite a lot of massive title applications to select from.
Regardless of being a dominant participant on the sphere as a junior, together with being named the 4A State Participant of the 12 months in 2021, groups and recruiting companies did not pay sufficient consideration to Hillman. There are stories that Hillman initially was set on enjoying quarterback, however as he turned extra open to enjoying different positions you noticed his provide checklist explode.
He started his senior season with no FBS presents, however he ended his senior marketing campaign with presents from Notre Dame, USC, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Miami (Fla.), North Carolina, Virginia Tech, Kentucky, Boston School, Virginia and West Virginia. Hillman is now ranked as a four-star recruit and the No. 291 total participant within the nation in line with On3, and that’s nonetheless underrated once you have a look at his movie, athleticism and flexibility.
Hillman has a bunch of 5 finalists that embrace Notre Dame, USC, North Carolina, Virginia Tech and Kentucky.
This is a glance Hillman’s 5 finalists.
Notre Dame Preventing Irish
Notre Dame labored behind the scenes on Hillman for a while earlier than lastly providing, and the Irish instantly shot up his checklist of favourite colleges. Hillman made a visit to Notre Dame for an official go to the weekend of October 15, and the Irish continued constructing a powerful bond with the Virginia standout.
Notre Dame director of recruiting Chad Bowden has put a variety of work into this recruitment, and Hillman has been constructing a reference to a number of completely different Irish coaches. Notre Dame has been throughout with what positions he would possibly play, however on the finish of the day they view him as an athlete that may play wherever.
North Carolina Tar Heels
Hillman made a number of sport day visits to North Carolina and the Tar Heels have pushed laborious to land him. He’s being recruited by fellow 757 legend Dre Bly, who was a star for Chesapeake (Va.) Western Department earlier than turning into an All-American at North Carolina.
The Tar Heels are recruiting Hillman as a security.
Virginia Tech Hokies
Blacksburg is one other place that obtained a number of visits from Hillman, who noticed the Hokies in particular person through the season and in addition made a number of offseason journeys to the western a part of his state to see Virginia Tech.
Virginia Tech has talked to Hillman prior to now about getting an opportunity to play quarterback.
Kentucky Wildcats
Like Notre Dame, Kentucky received into the combination late however has pushed laborious to get into the combination with him. The Wildcats obtained Hillman for an official go to the weekend they play Vanderbilt. Kentucky can be pushing for Hillman on the defensive aspect of the ball. Kentucky has labored laborious to get into the combination with Hillman, however they seem like trailing the groups above heading into his announcement.
Scroll to Proceed
USC Trojans
USC was one of many final colleges to supply and start making a push for Hillman. Right now I don’t imagine Hillman has visited the USC campus, which can probably make it laborious for the Trojans to drag this one out on the finish.
Irish Breakdown Followers make sure to get your Notre Dame tickets from SI Tickets HERE
You should definitely try the Irish Breakdown message board, the Champions Lounge
Irish Breakdown Content material
Notre Dame 2022 Roster
Notre Dame 2022 Schedule
Notre Dame 2023 Class Huge Board
Notre Dame 2023 Commits Board – Offense
Notre Dame 2023 Commits Board – Protection
Notre Dame 2023 Scholarship Presents
Notre Dame 2024 Scholarship Presents
Rating The 2022 Signees – Offense
Rating The 2022 Signees – Protection
———————
Turn into a premium Irish Breakdown member, which grants you entry to all of our premium content material and our premium message board! Click on on the hyperlink under for extra.
BECOME A MEMBER
You should definitely keep locked into Irish Breakdown on a regular basis!
Be a part of the Irish Breakdown group!
Subscribe to the Irish Breakdown YouTube channel
Subscribe to the Irish Breakdown podcast on iTunes
Comply with me on Twitter: @CoachD178
Comply with me on Gettr: @IrishBreakdown
Like and comply with Irish Breakdown on Fb
Join the FREE Irish Breakdown each day e-newsletter
Virginia
Syracuse football: what to watch for vs Virginia Tech
The Syracuse Orange (5-2, 2-2) welcome the Virginia Tech Hokies (5-3, 3-1)to the Dome on Saturday for a critical ACC match-up. Kickoff is Noon on The CW and here’s what we’re watching for:
Kevin: Protect Kyle
Virginia Tech defensive end Antwaun Powell-Ryland has nine sacks and seventeen hurries on the season and leads a strong Hokies pass rush. Syracuse needs to keep APR from disrupting their passing game so that Kyle McCord can attack a secondary rated the second-worst in coverage by PFF. Will the Orange use screens and draws to force APR to read and react instead of letting him just tee off and attack McCord? If Syracuse can negate APR’s impact they could score enough to win this one.
Mike: Make the Most of Allen
With Yasin Willis doubtful for Saturday’s game, this could be the first time since last season where LeQuint Allen is leaned on as a bell-cow back. How much that affects the offensive gameplan remains to be seen, but it might incite more designed plays as opposed to the RPO package SU has run very frequently. The o-line is struggling to block effectively on option plays lately so to make sure they can get Allen wide lanes to run through, a more traditional approach could work better this week.
Dom: Keeping momentum up for Syracuse’s 12th man
The Orange are once again back in the Dome for the first time in quite a while (September 28 to be exact). Since then, Syracuse’s road trip resulted in two nice wins over UNLV and NC State, then most recently with a bitter blowout loss. Fans will be looking for the Orange to bounce back against an inconsistent but still tough ACC opponent. Considering it’s also alumni weekend, the Dome should have plenty of seats filled and should look to take care of business.
Max: Keep Kyron Drones in the pocket
VT’s quarterback is extremely dangerous in the running game, racking up over 300 rushing yards through eight games, good for 19th in the ACC. The only conference QBs with more rushing yards are Georgia Tech’s Haynes King and Stanford’s Ashton Daniels, who gave the Orange fits on the ground this year. Syracuse’s rush defense still ranks in the top 50 in rush yards allowed per game, and it will need to keep Drones in the pocket to find some success this Saturday.
************************************************************************************
What will you be watching for on Saturday?
Virginia
A GOP-dominated Supreme Court resuscitates Youngkin’s late-game Virginia voter purge • Virginia Mercury
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a partisan vote, did exactly what many feared it would do Wednesday in this pivotal election season and green-lighted a Republican-ordered, late-in-the-game scouring of Virginia voter rolls in search of “noncitizens.”
U.S. Supreme Court grants stay in challenge to Youngkin’s voter purge order
The court’s two-thirds majority of Republican-appointed justices (three by former President and current GOP nominee Donald Trump) granted a stay that Virginia’s Republican-led executive branch sought, after federal district and appellate courts temporarily voided Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s order 90 days before the election to purge Virginia voter rolls.
That means that the 1,600 people who failed to check the correct box on a Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles form and, in many cases, mistakenly identified themselves as noncitizens were excised from rolls of registered voters. Now, they bear the burden, if they’re lucky enough to find out about it in time, of re-registering at this late hour and casting provisional ballots subject to challenge after the polls close.
Youngkin has sought to position himself as a hero standing resolutely against hordes of swarthy outsiders corruptly seeking to influence American elections.
To be clear, Youngkin is legally and morally right in asserting noncitizens have no business voting in U.S. elections. Yet he’s never shown proof that it happens.
According to the Washington Post, no noncitizen has tried to vote in Virginia since he became governor. What’s more, only three people were prosecuted since January 2022 for illegal voting of any kind in Virginia, the Post reported.
Former top state election officials say that maintaining clean, up-to-date voter rolls is work that goes on almost year-round as required under a 2006 state law — except in the three months before elections. Federal law specifically bars states from systematically purging its rolls during a “Quiet Period” 90 days ahead of a federal election.
All of which imparts an unmistakable partisan odor — rooted in Trump-inspired election denialism and nationwide Republican “election integrity” initiatives — to Youngkin’s Aug. 7 order to take extraordinary, expedited steps to find and excise noncitizens during that exact 90-day pre-election period.
Youngkin’s order is much more likely to disenfranchise actual citizens for paperwork snafus than to snare a foreigner hell-bent on voting. But then, this was always about political posturing, irrespective of bad operational outcomes or adverse consequences for legitimate citizen voters like lifelong Republican Christine Rabassa of Henrico County or Rina Shaw of Chesterfield County, both U.S.-born citizens and longtime registered voters.
Clean voter rolls are essential, but Youngkin’s late, politically driven ‘purge’ deserves challenge
Rabassa said in a sworn affidavit in support of litigation filed in U.S. District Court against Youngkin’s Executive Order 35 that she discovered her registration was “canceled” after she showed up for early in-person voting. She said a Henrico election supervisor “took her into a separate room” and told her she was removed for failing to check a box indicating her citizenship when she renewed her driver’s license in August and that she would have to re-register. She was turned away from the polls that day without being offered a provisional ballot and required to return another day to vote, the affidavit states.
Shaw also had no idea that a DMV clerical error compromised her right to vote.
“I actually wasn’t notified by Virginia. I was notified by NPR,” the unemployed computer programmer told the Mercury on Wednesday.
Had the public broadcaster not sought an interview with her for its Oct. 30 story on Youngkin’s order, Shaw said, she would have found out as Rabassa had — by being turned away at the polls. She said she called the Chesterfield registrar’s office and was told her removal was “a mistake,” though there was no explanation for it. She said she was assured that she was being reinstated and found when she checked her registration status online Wednesday that she had.
From this columnist, however, Shaw learned to her dismay that the Supreme Court’s Republican majority prevailed 6-3 in granting Virginia’s request for a stay, halting enforcement of lower court orders to reinstate voters in situations like hers and Rabassa’s.
“That’s ridiculous,” she said, adding, “… and it was the same six votes that struck down Roe v. Wade, wasn’t it?” That decision in June 2022 ended 49 years of federal protection for abortion rights.
Yes, Rina. It was.
So, five days and a wakeup until the nation decides whether Trump or Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris will lead the free world for the next four years, Youngkin and Republican Attorney General Jason Miyares are joining other Republican-led states in imposing restrictions that make voting harder, especially for those with the fewest resources.
Alabama’s Republican secretary of state attempted a voter-removal program similar to Youngkin’s that was also struck down by a federal judge. It was unclear Wednesday whether the Supreme Court will rule similarly in Alabama’s case as it did in Virginia’s.
In the 2020 and 2024 battleground state of Georgia, a state judge struck down a rule approved Sept. 20 by the pro-Trump conservative majority of that state’s electoral board that would have required the hand count of millions of paper ballots. It’s a state Trump narrowly lost in 2020 despite his desperate, corrupt attempt to sandbag Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, “to find 11,780 votes,” the margin by which he trailed Democrat Joe Biden.
There’s a bromide in politics about what motivates the two parties to vote, and there’s a lot of truth to it: “Democrats have to fall in love; Republicans just fall in line.”
Youngkin recognizes that opposing Trump is lethal in today’s Trump-owned GOP where apostates are targeted for primaries and defeated. Just ask outgoing Rep. Bob Good or former Rep. Denver Riggleman, both Virginia Republicans who fell out of favor with Trump during their time in office.
In 2021, Youngkin was hailed nationally as the GOP’s post-Trump path forward when he won the governorship on his first bid for elective office with a genial, pragmatic, avuncular style that played well in Virginia and ended a 12-year GOP drought in statewide elections. Now, mindful of his party’s current landscape and his own lofty national ambitions, he has Super Glued his lips to Trump’s ample derriere.
He fell in line.
GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.
Virginia
Virginia law at center of voter rolls controversy was once a bipartisan issue – WTOP News
The Virginia law allowing election officials to remove people from voter rolls if they are listed as noncitizens has led to controversy during this election cycle, but it was once a politically neutral issue.
The Virginia law allowing election officials to remove people from voter rolls if they are listed as noncitizens has led to controversy during this election cycle, but it was once a politically neutral issue.
John Aughenbaugh, a political science professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, said the law was championed by Ken Cuccinelli, who was then a Republican state senator and later became attorney general.
It was signed into law in 2006 by Democratic Gov. Tim Kaine.
“It was basically a bipartisan measure,” Aughenbaugh said.
Even though the law has been on the books for nearly 20 years, this is the first time it has become so contentious.
“In part, the reason why it became an issue is that the Biden administration became very skeptical of states purging their voter rolls in the aftermath of what Georgia did after the 2020 presidential election,” Aughenbaugh said.
A sweeping rewrite of Georgia’s election rules was signed into law in 2021 by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp, making numerous changes to how elections are administered, including adding a new photo ID requirement for voting absentee by mail.
Republican supporters said the law was needed to restore confidence in Georgia’s elections. But Democrats said it would restrict voting access, especially for voters of color.
“President Biden gave an infamous speech where he said that his Justice Department would not allow states like Georgia to reinstitute Jim Crow laws,” Aughenbaugh said. “This has been a point of emphasis for the Biden administration.”
The Justice Department filed a suit against Virginia earlier this month, arguing that making large-scale changes to voter rolls within 90 days of an election was against federal regulations.
Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin and his administration took the case all the way to the Supreme Court, which ultimately sided with Youngkin on Wednesday.
Aughenbaugh said Youngkin’s administration “didn’t do anything unusual” in implementing the law.
What was unusual, according to Aughenbaugh, was Youngkin publicly drawing attention to the law and issuing an executive order “codifying” it exactly 90 days before this year’s election.
“If it wasn’t issued as an executive order and it didn’t get publicized, then perhaps it wouldn’t have caught the attention of the Biden administration,” Aughenbaugh said.
Aughenbaugh said state lawmakers could potentially make changes to the law, like having it paused within 90 days of an election, in order to prevent such a controversy in the future.
“I think the General Assembly should give some consideration to revising the law to avoid this kind of conflict,” Aughenbaugh said. “This is completely unnecessary.”
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
© 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago
Alien Country (2024) – Movie Review
-
Technology7 days ago
OpenAI plans to release its next big AI model by December
-
Health6 days ago
New cervical cancer treatment approach could reduce risk of death by 40%, trial results show
-
Culture7 days ago
Top 45 MLB free agents for 2024-25 with contract predictions, team fits: Will Soto get $600M+?
-
Sports5 days ago
Freddie Freeman's walk-off grand slam gives Dodgers Game 1 World Series win vs. Yankees
-
News5 days ago
Sikh separatist, targeted once for assassination, says India still trying to kill him
-
Culture5 days ago
Freddie Freeman wallops his way into World Series history with walk-off slam that’ll float forever
-
Technology4 days ago
When a Facebook friend request turns into a hacker’s trap