Las Vegas Raiders corner back Jakorian Bennett (0) tackles Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Ja'Marr Chase (1) at the 1-yard-line in the first quarter of the NFL game at Paycor Stadium in Cincinnati on Sunday, Nov. 3, 2024.

Reports: Eagles acquire CB Jakorian Bennett from Raiders

The Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles added depth to a solid secondary, acquiring cornerback Jakorian Bennett in a trade with the Las Vegas Raiders, multiple media outlets reported Monday night.

The Raiders reportedly received reserve defensive tackle Thomas Booker IV in the swap.

Bennett, 24, appeared in 10 games for Las Vegas last season, making seven stops. He finished with 26 tackles and eight passes defensed.

A fourth-round draft pick in 2023 out of Maryland, Bennett played in 14 games and started four times as a rookie. In his two seasons overall, he has 58 tackles and 11 passes defensed.

Booker, 25, appeared in every regular-season game for Philadelphia last year, starting once. However, he was in on only 17 percent of the Eagles’ defensive plays and seven percent of the special teams snaps. He had 18 tackles, one sack and one pass defense.

The Texans made him a fifth-round pick out of Stanford in 2022. He appeared in 10 games (one start) for Houston that year — his lone NFL experience before 2024. For the Texans, he recorded 15 tackles, 0.5 sacks and one pass defensed.

The Eagles open the preseason on Thursday against the visiting Cincinnati Bengals, then officially start defense of their title against the visiting Dallas Cowboys on Sept. 4.

The Raiders start preseason play Thursday on the road against the Seattle Seahawks, then open the regular season on the road vs. the New England Patriots on Sept. 7.

–Field Level Media

Sep 29, 2024; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Aidan O'Connell (12) warms up before a game against the Cleveland Browns at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Raiders activate Aidan O’Connell, place Gardner Minshew on IR

The Las Vegas Raiders activated Aidan O’Connell from injured reserve Thursday and placed fellow quarterback Gardner Minshew and cornerback Jakorian Bennett on IR.

The Raiders also signed wide receiver Terrace Marshall Jr. and activated running back Sincere McCormick and cornerback Kyu Blu Kelly.

O’Connell had been sidelined since injuring his thumb in Las Vegas’ 20-15 setback to the Los Angeles Rams on Oct. 20. He will start for the Raiders (2-9) on Friday when they face Patrick Mahomes and the host Kansas City Chiefs (10-1).

The Raiders lost starter Minshew for the season to a broken collarbone in the team’s 29-19 loss to the Denver Broncos on Sunday.

O’Connell, 26, returned to practice on Monday and received first-team reps. He has completed 52 of 82 passes for 455 yards with two touchdowns and two interceptions in four games (two starts) this season.

He threw for 2,218 yards with 12 touchdowns and seven interceptions in 11 games (10 starts) as a rookie last season. He was selected by Las Vegas in the fourth round of the 2023 NFL Draft.

Bennett, 24, has 26 tackles in 10 games (seven starts) this season.

Marshall, 24, has played in one game with Las Vegas this season. He has 64 catches for 767 yards and one touchdown in 37 games (16 starts) with the Carolina Panthers.

McCormick, 24, has rushed five times for 33 yards in two games this season.

Kelly, 23, has five tackles in nine career games with four teams.

–Field Level Media

Aug 26, 2023; Denver, Colorado, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) warms up before the game against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports

Sean McVay: Rams QB Stetson Bennett facing issue ‘bigger than’ football

Brett Rypien was signed to the 53-man roster of the Los Angeles Rams for their Week 2 game against the San Francisco 49ers and appears to be set for an extended stay as the No. 2 quarterback.

Rypien now is the primary backup to Matthew Stafford and will be active on Sunday for the Rams (1-0), who placed rookie Stetson Bennett on the non-football illness list on Wednesday.

Head coach Sean McVay said the roster move involving Bennett is unrelated to a minor shoulder injury he experienced. McVay said he couldn’t share specifics, but said the issue was “bigger than” football.

“Out of respect for him and the situation, I’m going to leave all the specifics and particulars in-house,” McVay said. “And I want to be able to do that out of respect for that situation, so I’m not going to really have any follow-up information or anything that I’ll give in that regards.

“I really hope that you can please respect my wishes in regards to keeping that in-house. I understand you have a job to do, but there are certain things that I think are a little bigger and a little more important. And out of respect for the particulars and the specifics, we want to keep it in-house, and that’s where I want to leave it please.”

Bennett played well in the preseason. A fourth-round pick, he won back-to-back national championships at Georgia with a record of 29-1 combined in the 2021 and 2022 seasons.

But Bennett, despite being 25, faced questions about his maturity and readiness for the NFL during the pre-draft process following an arrest for public intoxication.

–Field Level Media

Jan 14, 2023; Athens, GA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs offensive lineman Sedrick Van Pran (63) and defensive back Christopher Smith (29) and quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) speak at the national championship celebration at Sanford Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-USA TODAY Sports

Georgia QB Stetson Bennett on arrest: ‘I know better’

Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett apologized to his family and said he’s being honest in meetings with NFL teams this week about his public intoxication arrest on Jan. 29.

The former walk-on is viewed as an NFL longshot with limited athleticism, size and arm strength by pro standards and despite winning two national championships as the Bulldogs’ starting quarterback, his path to the NFL is off to a rocky start.

Bennett was arrested on public intoxication charges and turned down an invitation to the top pre-draft prospect showcase, the Senior Bowl, leaving NFL general managers to scratch their heads about the 25-year-old’s priorities.

“It was a mistake that everybody’s aware of,” Bennett said Friday at the 2023 NFL Scouting Combine. “I understand why that can’t happen. I’ve talked to coaches about it, talked to GMs. Apologized to my family. That’s who I feel worst about. I felt like I let them down, because no matter where I go now — and even without all of this — I’ve got an obligation. I’m the fourth (Bennett named Stetson). Can’t do that if your last name is Bennett, and I know better.”

Bennett was a Heisman Trophy finalist in 2022 and rose to prominence because of his humble beginnings as a walk-on in Athens who fled for junior college only to return and claim the starting role. Bennett is one of at least nine Georgia players arrested in the past 14 months, but said individual decisions and not a culture issue are the problem.

“Those were individual mistakes that those individuals are responsible for. Not a culture issue,” Bennett said Friday.

Maturity wasn’t one of the issues scouts anticipated with Bennett — he’ll be 26 in October, the same age as Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson — and decision-making, at a position where each split-second call can be make-or-break, is one of the qualities Colts head coach Shane Steichen said was a must for quarterbacks.

Bennett isn’t flying solo in Indianapolis with 13 Georgia players in attendance. He’s also one of five Southeastern Conference quarterbacks invited to the combine, which offered spots to only 15 total quarterbacks.

Based on Field Level Media rankings, Bennett is projected to be picked in the final two rounds of the draft or become a priority free agent. Bryce Young (Alabama), Will Levis (Kentucky), Anthony Richardson (Florida) and Hendon Hooker (Tennessee) are projected as first- or second-round picks.

–Field Level Media

Dec 31, 2022; Glendale, Arizona, USA; TCU Horned Frogs quarterback Max Duggan (15) against the Michigan Wolverines during the 2022 Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-USA TODAY Sports

Another team-first underdog QB center stage in national title game

Forgive the coach of a private Christian college for saying so, but the Hollywood backdrop only adds kerosene to TCU coach Sonny Dykes’ belief his quarterback might be a piece of divine intervention.

Dykes and TCU (13-1) paused more than a time or three this season to ponder the reasons they might be in position to claim a national championship on Monday night, when they draw No. 1 Georgia.

“It’s almost like an act of God that this has happened,” Dykes said in November. “And then you go, ‘Okay, why? Well, here’s this guy that’s played incredibly well at an incredibly important position?’”

Duggan capped his fourth season with the Horned Frogs by traveling to New York as a Heisman Trophy finalist, where he shared company with Ohio State’s CJ Stroud and Georgia’s Stetson Bennett. He finished runner-up to USC quarterback Caleb Williams but the trophy he’s after at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., on Monday night is not an individual honor. He wants what Bennett has.

“Max is an awesome dude. We hung out a little bit in New York,” Bennett said of Duggan. “He’s an A-plus dude. He works hard. … But I think he’s the heart and soul of that team. I hadn’t really watched him play, but I’ve watched his interviews, and I’ve watched just how he carried himself up in New York. And he’s a leader. And there’s something to be said for both his story and my story and the fact that we’re here in the end.”

Duggan’s story. It’s underdog triumphant if ever there was one.

An Iowa kid with multiple scholarship offers, Duggan picked TCU primarily for the city feel with the campus in the heart of Fort Worth. He started 10 games as a true freshman and then a pandemic-influenced physical led to the discovery of a rapid heart rate condition, prompting a nine-hour surgery during which catheters were inserted in his neck and groin. A blood clot formed after surgery requiring another operation.

Duggan said it “puts a stop to your life.”

He kept going, fighting for playing time and working through multiple injuries he insisted not be disclosed. He played most of the 2021 season with a broken bone and torn tendon in his foot that required pain-killing injections to tolerate gameday. Duggan said he rarely practiced.

Then the coach that championed his toughness and courage, the reason he was offered a scholarship to TCU — head coach Gary Patterson — was replaced by Dykes.

Dykes informed Duggan, a senior and three-year starter, that his job as QB1 was going to Chandler Morris. The response wasn’t what Dykes expected.

“Yes sir,” Dykes recalled. “I’m going to be the best backup in the country. I’ll help him any way I can.”

But Morris hurt his knee in the season opener at Colorado. Enter Duggan. Cue the organ.

Twelve consecutive wins, with a takedown of heavily favored Michigan on New Year’s Eve, almost all have Duggan’s stamp in a storybook TCU run that’s not over yet.

“What that comes down to, that comes down to confidence,” Dykes said. “And confidence is the result of hard work and doing things that other people aren’t willing to do. And our guys have done that.”

Dykes said he cannot recall one “bad practice” and knows for certain Duggan “never pouted” after being told he wasn’t a starter.

“He never thought of himself one time. How many people can you truly say that about? I’m kind of emotional about it, honestly. He’s the way you’d want your son to handle that situation,” Dykes said.

It’s a similar story for Georgia’s quarterback. The 25-year-old Bennett and head coach Kirby Smart are trying to become the first team to repeat as champions in the College Football Playoff era.

One of their main concerns this week is finding ways to slow Duggan.

“He understands defenses. I think he’s very smart,” Smart said. “There’s no defense he’s going to see that he hasn’t seen before. You’re not tricking an experienced quarterback, very similar with Stetson.”

Bennett, 25, was a walk-on at Georgia. He is four years older than Duggan, and entered college football with little fanfare ranked behind more than 2,500 players in the Class of 2017. He ran the scout team, then left in 2018 for Jones County Junior College in Ellisville, Miss.

But at Jones, Bennett said he found out what he wanted was at Georgia, where “nothing was given.”

He landed back at Georgia, largely laboring in backup duty to the likes of Jake Fromm and JT Daniels. As Smart said last month, “He overcame us,” and eventually settled as the Bulldogs’ starter last September.

For his final act, Bennett gets another chance to prove he’s a trophy QB.

“I try to see things for what they are, and I don’t let people tell me what they are. I try to figure that out on my own. And I think I’ve done a pretty good job of that,” Bennett said.

–Field Level Media

Georgia Bulldogs quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) kisses the trophy after winning the College Football Playoff National Championship on Monday, Jan. 10, 2022, at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

Alabama Crimson Tide Versus Georgia Bulldogs On Monday Jan 10 2022 College Football Playoff National Championship At Lucas Oil Stadium In Indianapolis

Syndication The Indianapolis Star

QB Stetson Bennett returns for champion Georgia; JT Daniels hits portal

Stetson Bennett is returning to national champion Georgia for another season, prompting his primary competition, TJ Daniels, to hit the transfer portal again.

Bennett’s walk-on to national title story in Athens was completed when he rallied from a second-half fumble and sparked Georgia to victory in the national championship game against Alabama earlier this month.

Bennett announced his plans via social media on Wednesday.

“One more year. Let’s roll,” he said via Instagram.

Bennett passed for 224 yards and two touchdowns in the 33-18 victory in the national title game. In 2021, he passed for 2,862 yards and 29 touchdowns with seven interceptions.

Bennett and Brock Vandagriff, a top-40 addition in the recruiting Class of 2021, are expected to be the primary quarterbacks in Georgia. The Bulldogs also have 2022 recruit Gunner Stockton at the position.

Daniels started the first three games of the 2021 season for Georgia after transferring from Southern California, where he played in 2018 and 2019. A knee injury ended his 2019 season and he transferred to Georgia in 2020.

But oblique and arm injuries slowed Daniels and opened the door for Bennett.

Daniels and Bulldogs receiver Jermaine Burton entered the transfer portal Wednesday.

–Field Level Media

Georgia quarterback JT Daniels (18) and Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) warm up before the start the Southeastern Conference championship NCAA college football game between Georgia and Alabama in Atlanta, on Saturday, Dec. 4, 2021.

Syndication Online Athens

Georgia QB Stetson Bennett to start CFP semifinal

Georgia head coach Kirby Smart confirmed Wednesday that Stetson Bennett will be the starting quarterback in Friday’s College Football Playoff semifinal against Michigan.

Quarterback JT Daniels’ health remains in question as the No. 3 Bulldogs (12-1) take on the No. 2 Wolverines (12-1) in the Orange Bowl in Miami Gardens, Fla.

“Stetson is our starting quarterback,” Smart said Wednesday when asked if Daniels is likely to play. “The JT situation will be what’s the situation (in the game), right? And also if he’s healthy enough.

Bennett completed 64.1 percent of his passes for 2,325 yards, 24 touchdowns and seven interceptions in 12 games (10 starts) this season.

Daniels sustained multiple injuries this season (oblique, lat strain) and reportedly tested positive for COVID-19 just before Christmas. He passed for 722 yards with seven TDs and three picks in six games (three starts).

Smart acknowledged that starting Bennett over Daniels, who began the season as the Bulldogs’ starting quarterback, might not be a popular decision with everyone.

“There’s fans that may not agree with it, that may agree with it, media may not agree with it, may agree with it,” Smart said. “Our team understands that we’re going to give our team the best opportunity to win and Stetson does that. And that’s not to knock on JT. That’s the part that’s so sad about this is that you guys want to ask us as coaches questions, I want to answer them as honest as possible, but the hardest thing is every time you ask a question, you drive the comparison home.

“Really, at the end of the day, they’re both different quarterbacks, and they’re both good in their own right, and I think we’ve got four quarterbacks capable of winning big here at the University of Georgia, and Stetson is our quarterback right now.”

–Field Level Media

Georgia quarterback Stetson Bennett (13) warms up while Georgia quarterback JT Daniels (18) looks on during warm ups before an NCAA college football game between Kentucky and Georgia in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, Oct. 16, 2021.

Syndication Online Athens

Georgia’s QB plans uncertain ahead of Florida game

For Georgia coach Kirby Smart and the top-ranked Bulldogs, it comes down to one question: JT Daniels or Stetson Bennett?

“No decision has been made, whatsoever,” Smart said Monday when asked who would start at quarterback when Georgia faces rival Florida on Saturday in Jacksonville.

“I’m OK with whoever the best guy to give us the best chance to win is. That’s based on practice and health. It’ll continue to be that way the rest of the year. The question of, ‘Are you OK rotating them?’ is not relevant if they’re both not completely healthy. I just go off if they’re healthy and who gives us the best chance to win based on what we think we need to do offensively against their defense.”

Smart has been having to answer that question since the second game of the season. With Daniels nursing a strained oblique, Bennett started against UAB and led the Bulldogs to a 56-7 victory. Daniels returned to action for the following two games but hasn’t played since.

If Georgia (7-0, 5-0 SEC) can beat Florida (4-3, 2-3), the Bulldogs would be all-but guaranteed to sit atop the initial College Football Playoff rankings, which will be released next week.

But here’s something neither Daniels nor Bennett has done: beat Florida.

The Gators overcame a 14-0 deficit against the Bulldogs en route to a 44-28 win in last year’s meeting. That result ultimately led Florida to a spot in the SEC title game, ending Georgia’s run of three straight division titles.

In that contest, Bennett split time with now-departed D’Wan Mathis at quarterback.

As for who will man the position this week, Smart said, “It’s going to be based on practice. I think it all depends on where JT is and where Stetson is, and who gives us the best chance to win. Stetson has done a good job since he’s been playing, and JT has done a good job when he’s played.”

Daniels, who was sidelined against Florida last year while recovering from a knee injury, is 7-0 as a Bulldogs starter dating to last season. This year, he has completed 76.1 percent of his passes (54 of 71) for 567 yards with five touchdowns and two interceptions.

Bennett has started the past three games and has played in the past six. He is 57 of 82 for 996 yards with 11 touchdowns and two interceptions. He also has 19 carries for 148 yards.

Against Florida last year, Bennett threw for just 78 yards with a touchdown and an interception on 5-for-16 passing. After initially injuring his shoulder in the first quarter, he was pulled in the third quarter in favor of Mathis.

“They have two quarterbacks that you know manage the game very, very well,” said Florida coach Dan Mullen, who hasn’t made it public whether Emory Jones or Anthony Richardson would start at quarterback for the Gators on Saturday. “They get them into the right read, to run checks, make plays and then are able to distribute the ball down the field to playmakers really well.”

Zamir White (83 carries, 400 yards, 7 TDs) and James Cook (47 carries, 296 yards 2 TDs) will power the Georgia ground game, regardless of who is under center. True freshman tight end Brock Bowers, who leads the team in receptions (25), yards (416) and receiving touchdowns (6), and redshirt freshman receiver Ladd McConkey, who has 17 catches for 295 yards and two scores, have emerged as the team’s top receivers.

“This game is not about rankings,” said Smart, whose side is favored by two touchdowns. “It’s never been about rankings. It’s a rivalry game.”

–Field Level Media