13. DL Dakota QuiñonezQuiñonez is another graduate transfer who comes to Duke after spending his entire career at Dartmouth. He tallied 21 tackles and a sack throughout his time with the Big Green. The defensive front seven will be one of the Blue Devils' best aspects next season, and Quiñonez is likely towards the bottom of the depth chart.
Two Ivy League transfers expected to be lower on the depth chart:
• 19. QB Blaine Hipa (Princeton)
• 16. RB Wilhelm Daal (Yale)
And the highest rated Ivy League transfer:
2. WR Jared Richardson
I'd be surprised if, come the 2026 season's end, Richardson wasn't the Blue Devils' leading receiver. Richardson comes over from Penn, where he had a breakout season in 2025, leading the Ivy League in receptions (80) and receiving touchdowns (12), and finished second in receiving yards (1,033), being named a First Team FCS Football Central All-American. At 6'2", 215 pounds, he should be Eget's top target.
Reading the story down, it was interesting to see that even a school like Duke is party to the transfer madness. Consider:
Ranked No. 8 among the incoming players in Durham is safety Patrick Smith-Young Smith-Young, who spent two seasons at North Texas, then one at Old Dominion, then another back at North Texas, before landing at Duke.
No. 7 is running back CJ Campbell, who was at Florida State for three seasons, then spent one at Florida Atlantic and last year at Rutgers before arriving at Duke.
The most peripatetic incoming transfer is corner Dylan Flowers, ranked at No. 5. He began his college career with two years at Southern Utah. Then came a season at BYU. Next it was a junior college year at College of the Canyons. Last year he was at Western Kentucky. That makes Duke his fifth collegiate stop.
Green Alert Take: When a school like Duke is playing the game that way it's yet another reason to appreciate Ivy League and Patriot League football.
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No Dartmouth game is mentioned but two annual Ivy League contests are included in this video:
The good news? We have plenty of yummy blackberries these days. The bad news? Blackberry plants are seriously invasive, and we have them growing like crazy where they shouldn't be. The worst news? Blackberry thorns are no joke. None of that is news to me, but if I needed a reminder I got one yesterday when I got to work cutting, clearing and pulling up thorny blackberry canes that have invaded the landscaping around our house. I'll be back at it today and I'm here to tell you it's a pain. Literally.