Home US SportsNCAAF Nick DeGennaro embodies commitment, consistency at Shrine Bowl

Nick DeGennaro embodies commitment, consistency at Shrine Bowl

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Nick DeGennaro is the embodiment of committed and consistent.

Those are the first words that should come to mind when describing the former James Madison wide receiver after he caught a 5:55 AM flight from the American Bowl to the Shrine Bowl on the heels of receiving a last-minute invite from the Dallas-based pre-draft showcase.

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DeGennaro arrived to the American Bowl on a Saturday and then practiced the whole week before getting the call.

“I was there Tuesday night when I got the call saying I was going to come here (to Dallas) and I obviously accepted it,” DeGennaro told me. “We had had a wild week of practice (at the American Bowl) and then we played the game itself at 8 p.m. on Thursday and it ended at around midnight.”

From there, the wideout says he went to bed at 1:30 a.m., catching less than two hours of sleep before waking up to catch a 5:55 a.m. flight.

“Definitely am going to have to catch up on some sleep when it’s all said and done,” he laughed.

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Shrine Bowl Director of Football Operations and Player Personnel Eric Galko was excited to land DeGennaro, who he has had his eyes on for a while.

“Nick (DeGennaro) jumped at the opportunity to be at the Shrine Bowl. I’ve seen Nick play for a while now and have been a fan of him for a long time. We found him early in the process while the American Bowl was already going after him too.”

Galko says he waited for the right time to add DeGennaro to the showcase for ethical reasons, and it’s easy to see how it all worked out the way it should have.

“We had talked to his agent beforehand… one of the requirements that we have, which I think is ethical and right, is that these guys have to finish the American Bowl before coming to the Shrine Bowl,” Galko explained. “We’re not going to pull a guy from another showcase.”

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DeGennaro, who finished out the 2025 season with 28 catches for 500 yards with five touchdowns, is confident in what he brings to the NFL after playing six years of college football. What he can do has shone through on the tape and in the over 2,500 career receiving yards he racked up.

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