Larry Fitzgerald had praise for one quarterback he knows from afar and a much murkier read on another when he spoke Thursday at the Caesars Celebrity Pro Am at Edgewood Tahoe Resort.
The former Pitt star was asked about Mason Heintschel, the quarterback who took over for Eli Holstein during his freshman season in 2025 and eventually became the Panthers’ full-time starter by the end of the year. Fitzgerald liked what he saw from the former 3-star Clay, Oregon, recruit and said the key for Heintschel is keeping the same edge that helped him break through last season.
“Yeah, just watching the games, he's not one to shy away. He’s a tough dude, and he took some licks last year.
It was really inspiring to have a young man who's got some leadership qualities to him like that. And you could tell by the way guys responded to him that they really admire his perspective.
Talking to people in the building, he’s a hardworking kind of guy. I’m hoping he can take us to the ACC championship this year.”
Fitzgerald was less definitive when the conversation turned to Kyler Murray, his former Cardinals teammate who is now with the Minnesota Vikings and battling J.J. McCarthy for the starting job this summer.
“I don't know how it’s been for him this offseason. But I hope he does well.
Obviously, I grew up a longtime Vikings fan. I always want to see the organization do well.
They've done a great job of reaching into that community. I mean, some of my earliest childhood memories of big brothers and big sisters were organized by the Vikings in the community.
So there's always a place in my heart for life, and I want them to do well with whoever they pick.”
Fitzgerald’s comments came one day before the start of the 2026 American Century Championship, set for July 10-12 on NBC, NBC Sports Network, and Peacock.
In Other News...
Pitt Lands A Rivalry Stage That Will Mean Plenty To Fans
Pitt has added a familiar rivalry date to its early schedule, and this one comes with extra weight because of where it will be played. The Panthers announced they will face Penn State on Nov. 8 at The Palestra in Philadelphia, a setting that still carries real cachet in college basketball and gives the annual non-conference meeting a little more edge than usual.
It is also the latest chapter in a series that has become a consistent neutral-site affair, with the schools set to meet for the 150th time. For Jeff Capel, the venue matters, and for Pitt there is another layer to watch as the roster takes shape after a busy offseason and one transfer guard with Philadelphia ties gets a chance to play in front of a crowd that should feel close to home. [Read more 🡒]
