Sports
'Nobody prepared us': An Ivy League wrestler's unlikely path to SEC lineman and NFL Draft prospect
A groggy Joey Slackman woke from an anesthetic slumber the morning of Nov. 20. The Penn defensive lineman was in a Philadelphia hospital bed. He had just spent three hours in surgery to repair a torn biceps.
That day also happened to be when Slackman’s name appeared in the transfer portal, college football’s centralized marketplace for players looking for a new school. Slackman, who graduated from Penn with a political science degree, had decided to pursue his master’s, and coaches were now allowed to contact him.
“It was completely surreal,” said Paul Slackman, Joey’s father. “We got there maybe 4:30 in the morning. I said goodbye. They prepped him. It just so happened that was the day that he entered the portal. It totally slipped my mind. We really didn’t know a lot about this whole process.”
Joey arrived in the Ivy League four years ago as a no-star football recruit from Long Island who went to Penn to wrestle. He has never been a headlining player. But to the surprise of the Slackmans, Joey woke up after surgery as one of the hottest commodities on the transfer market.
“I remember coming to, I was pretty delirious and nauseous from the surgery, but I just remember when I was finally cognizant, looking over at (my dad),” Joey Slackman said. “He had his phone in his hand. He had just gotten off with a coach. He’d hung up the call and said, ‘You won’t believe what’s happening.’ I felt like I was still under, or I was delirious.”
Two hours after he was awoken, bandaged up and put in a wheelchair, Slackman was discharged. Still somewhat groggy from the anesthesia, he started to respond to coaches on the five-hour ride home to Long Island.
“The entire way back, his phone is blowing up, getting texts and calls,” Paul Slackman said. “I was getting so many calls from coaches. This went on for hours. We probably had seven or eight phone conversations and were texting with 20-25 different people.
“It was really insanity for those first 24 hours.”
For many transfer portal entries, the recruiting process is a second spin on the wheel; most of them were recruited by football programs out of high school.
Slackman joined Penn as a heavyweight wrestler, ranked 12th in the country in his weight class. Paul, a PE coach who had won a Division III national title as a tight end for Ithaca (N.Y.) College, had entered Joey in a wrestling tournament in the second grade. His son hated it.
“I remember him saying, ‘I don’t ever want to do this again,’” said Slackman’s mom, Dana.
Slackman liked football, though, and loved getting to play with his friends. He gave wrestling another try in middle school after his football coaches told him it would make him a better lineman.
With his blend of power, determination and focus, Slackman blossomed as a wrestler. He went to wrestling camps and earned national recognition. He emerged as the top 285-pounder in New York and twice received All-America honors at the nationals in Fargo, N.D. His dad purposely tried to stay away from coaching him in middle school and high school but made it a point to teach that it was Joey’s effort that mattered most.
“He worked out religiously, regardless of his condition, the weather, time constraints,” Paul Slackman said. “A few years ago, he just had pec surgery. He was in a sling and wanted to stay in condition. We were on vacation near Sarasota. He had the surgery a week before. He decided to go running with the sling on. He ran 8-9 miles alongside this main road down there. He had all these cars honking and waving at him. That really signifies the determination he has.”
Joey attributes that determination to how his parents raised him and his younger sister, a fencer at the Air Force Academy.
“In our household, we literally were not allowed to use the word ‘can’t,’” he said. “It was like the equivalent of cursing. Stuff like that shaped my mentality. Growing up, I was not a determined kid. I was chubby. I was lazy. School came easy to me, so I didn’t put in a lot of effort, but then wrestling helped propel me to that toughness. I think it’s the toughest sport there is. You’re out there, wearing a silly outfit, and you’re by yourself. It forces you to make a choice of whether or not to grow up and figure it out.”
Because his high school football team struggled, Slackman didn’t get much recognition until his senior season, when he was named first-team all-state. By then, he’d figured that wrestling was his ticket to a high-level education. He chose Penn over recruiting interest from all of the Ivy League’s wrestling programs.
Midway through his freshman year wrestling for the Quakers, he tore his ACL and his meniscus. Three months later, the pandemic shut down college sports, and everyone at Penn was sent home. Slackman took a gap year, leaving school while he recovered from his knee injury. He lived with his wrestling teammates in Philadelphia while working for a non-profit called Beat the Streets, an organization connected to the wrestling community that helps underprivileged kids in the area.
“When he was training for wrestling, alongside the (Penn) football program, I remember him saying, ‘I really miss football,’” recalled Dana.
Slackman decided to try to join the Penn football program and play both sports. He was cleared in February 2021 but tore his right pec not long after that. That meant another surgery and six more months on the sidelines.
“I don’t think (the Penn coaches) thought much of me at first,” he said. “I was coming off two major surgeries.”
Slackman turned heads quickly once he put the pads back on. In his first college game, he was credited with a half-sack. His middle school football coaches were right. All the wrestling training had made a huge difference in his development as a defensive lineman.
“It’s helped me a lot, especially in the run game and being able to hold my ground because I’m able to understand leverage really well and, without thinking, I am able to prevent myself from being moved, which is a lot of what you have to do as a defensive tackle,” he said. “Learning how to hand-fight is the biggest thing in wrestling, and that’s kind of the biggest thing as a D-lineman, too. Also, a lot of the pass rush moves that I like to hit are similar to moves I would hit in wrestling matches.”
Slackman finished the year with 16 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks and a forced fumble, deciding midseason to focus only on football. In 2022, he started all 10 games and made honorable mention All-Ivy League, ranking second on the team with 4.5 sacks and 49 tackles. But on the second-to-last defensive play of the season, he tore his left pectoral muscle. The injury, which would require his third major surgery, only seemed to further drive Slackman.
“He is one of the most focused and dedicated people I’ve ever been around, and he is the toughest person I’ve ever been around,” said Cornell head coach Dan Swanstrom, previously Penn’s offensive coordinator. “He’s just wired very differently. He is the toughest S.O.B. I’ve ever seen.
“He was 305 pounds at like 16-17 percent body fat. He’s a physical freak of a human. … We had to sub him out just so we could practice. He would wreck our whole offensive practice. He was that disruptive.”
In 2023, Slackman became the most dominant player in the Ivy League. He had five tackles for loss in Penn’s first two games. He finished the season with a team-best 12 TFLs and 50 tackles, becoming the first Penn player to win Ivy League defensive player of the year honors since 2015.
The Quakers were still in contention for the conference title when they faced No. 19 Harvard in the second-to-last game of the season. With five minutes left in the fourth quarter, Slackman tore his right biceps. He took off his pads and tried to root on his teammates. Penn trailed 20-13 before tying the score. Before overtime, Slackman asked the team doctor whether the injury could get worse if he returned to the game.
“The doctor said, ‘You can’t hurt it any more,’” Slackman said. “It was our last chance to keep our Ivy League (title) hopes alive. I went over to our coaches and said, ‘Let’s go!’”
The coaches put Slackman back into the game.
“It’s more than that,” Swanstrom said. “We had this goal-line stand, where it was like three plays from inside the 2. He was in there for all three plays with a torn biceps. Talk about putting it all out there.”
Slackman said he wasn’t trying to be a hero. He had something else on his mind.
“I’d really thought this was gonna be the end for me when it came to football,” he said.
Yes, it was extremely painful to play in the trenches with a torn biceps. Harvard won 25-23 in triple overtime.
“I guess the adrenaline was still running,” he said.
Last fall, the feedback from NFL circles was that Slackman could be a late-round pick, but that came before he went on to win Ivy League defensive player of the year. Some NFL teams visited him; one came four times during the year. “That’s when we started to realize, ‘Wow, he could get drafted,’” said Paul Slackman.
But that was before the torn biceps against Harvard made full participation in the draft process unrealistic. So Slackman, who graduated from Penn with a political science degree, filed his paperwork to enter the transfer portal.
“Nobody prepared us for the transfer portal process,” Dana Slackman said. “It’s blown our minds.”
It was not easy to sort out all the offers and opportunities. Michigan, Texas A&M, Miami, USC and others came calling. He estimates about 50 schools offered him. Ultimately, he scheduled trips to Wisconsin, Virginia Tech, North Carolina, Florida and Auburn.
“It was the craziest month of my life, by far,” Slackman said.
Florida felt like an ideal fit. The Gators felt the same way.
“He’s an alpha personality, very articulate and very intelligent,” said Florida head coach Billy Napier. “It’s important to him. He’s very motivated and driven. The biggest compliment I can give him is when he took his official visit here, I literally got 12 to 15 players coming up to me saying, ‘Coach, we gotta get that guy.’ He checked all the boxes.”
(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; photos: Andy Lewis, Getty Images; Courtesy of the Slackman family)
Sports
USA World Cup star calls lack of appeal process for teammate’s red card ‘bogus’
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Folarin Balogun’s teammates came to his defense after the USA World Cup star was given a red card during the team’s 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday night.
Balogun received the red card after he stepped on defender Tarik Muharemovic’s right ankle. Brazilian referee Raphael Claus only gave Balogun the card after a VAR review. The red card meant Balogun will not be able to play in the team’s Round of 16 match against Belgium.
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United States’ Folarin Balogun, right, stands by after being issued a red card by Referee Raphael Claus, of Brazil, as United States’ Weston McKennie (8) looks on during the World Cup round of 32 soccer match between the United States and Bosnia in Santa Clara, Calif., near San Francisco, Wednesday, July 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner)
A FIFA official told The Athletic a team cannot appeal against the red card or the suspension. The official pointed the outlet to a portion of the organization’s rules and regulations, which states, “A sending-off automatically incurs suspension from the subsequent match. The FIFA judicial bodies may impose additional match suspensions and other disciplinary measures.”
Balogun’s teammate, Weston McKennie, called the lack of an appeal process “bogus” and disagreed with the referee’s decision to issue the red card.
Bosnia’s Sead Kolasinac (5) talks to United States’ Folarin Balogun after Balogun was sent off, as Christian Pulisic (10) watches during the World Cup round of 32 match between the United States and Bosnia in Santa Clara, Calif., Wednesday, July 1, 2026. (Julio Cortez / AP)
“Obviously the ref made a decision that he made, but I think it’s questionable,” McKennie said. “I think there’s been many other plays like that throughout the tournament on other players that a card wasn’t given at all. It’s disappointing.”
U.S. coach Mauricio Pochettino said Balogun’s act “was never intentional.”
“It’s never a red card. Never. … If the intention is to damage the opponent, OK, I understand. But that never was. It was a normal action in football that you are fighting for the ball and your feet land,” he said.
Balogun is the third player to score in a World Cup knockout match and be sent off. He follows Brazil’s Ronaldinho in 2002’s quarterfinal match against England and France’s Zinedine Zidane in the 2006 World Cup final against Italy.
Referee Raphael Claus of Brazil shows a red card to United States’ Folarin Balogun, right, during the World Cup round of 32 soccer match between the United States and Bosnia in Santa Clara, Calif., near San Francisco, Wednesday, July 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)
It’s the fifth red card handed to an American in the squad’s World Cup history.
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Eric Wynalda received one against Czechoslovakia in 1990, Fernando Clavijo got one against Brazil in 1994 and Pablo Mastroeni and Eddie Pope each received one against Italy in 2006.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Lakers announce summer league schedule, roster
While veterans jockey for new contracts during free agency, young players are getting their tryout opportunities with NBA summer league games beginning this week.
First-round draft pick Cameron Carr and second-year forward Adou Thiero highlight the Lakers summer league roster that was announced Wednesday. The 16-man team will be coached by Lakers assistant coach Ty Abbott and begin summer league play Friday against the Golden State Warriors at Chase Center.
The Lakers also face the Miami Heat (July 5, 1:30 p.m.) and San Antonio Spurs (July 6, 4:30 p.m.) in the California Classic before playing in the Las Vegas summer league from July 9-19. The Lakers play Oklahoma City (July 10), Dallas (July 11), the Clippers (July 14) and Chicago (July 16) in Las Vegas’ Thomas & Mack Center.
The Lakers traded up in the draft to get Carr, a 6-foot-5 guard out of Baylor, with the 24th overall pick. He will make his unofficial NBA debut, along with former Indiana State and Saint Louis star Robbie Avila. The 6-10 center became a bespectacled college basketball cult hero known affectionately as “Cream Abdul Jabbar” while leading Indiana State to the NIT championship game in 2024. He transferred to Saint Louis, where he was named Atlantic-10 player of the year as a senior when the Billikens won a school-record 29 wins.
Although he is entering his second season with the Lakers, Thiero will be playing his first summer league games. Persistent knee injuries hampered his rookie season. The athletic 6-7 forward averaged 1.9 points and 1.1 rebounds in 25 appearances last season. He said after the Lakers were eliminated from the playoffs that he wanted to improve on his three-point shooting during his second year. He attempted only five three-pointers during his rookie season, regular season and playoffs, making one.
Lakers summer league roster
Robbie Avila, C, 6-10, 240
Cameron Carr, G, 6-5, 190
Jon Elmore, G, 6-3, 190
Luke Goode, F, 6-7, 210
William Hickey, G, 6-4, 203
Arthur Kaluma, F, 6-7, 225
William Kyle III, C, 6-9, 230
Chris Mañon, G, 6-4, 212
Robert McCray V, G, 6-4, 188
AK Okereke, F, 6-7, 245
Chase Ross, G, 6-5, 210
Zhaire Smith, G, 6-4, 205
Peter Suder, G, 6-5, 215
Adou Thiero, F, 6-7, 234
Anton Watson, F, 6-8, 225
Jacari White, G, 6-3, 180
Sports
USA World Cup star Folarin Balogun receives controversial red card during Round of 32 match
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U.S. men’s national team star Folarin Balogun received a red card in the second half of their Round of 32 World Cup matchup against Bosnia and Herzegovina on Wednesday night.
Balogun was making a challenge on a ball when he stepped on an opposing player’s leg.
The U.S. men’s national team is down to 10 players for the rest of the match. If the U.S. holds their 1-0 lead, Balogun will have to miss the Round of 16 game.
Balogun scored for the U.S. in the first half.
This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.
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