
June 22, 2026
By Evan Lepler
Throughout the UFA season, there are typically dozens of noteworthy individual performances every week. But only seven special efforts can earn their way onto the weekly Honor Roll, highlighting the best of the best across the Association.
Players are listed alphabetically by last name.
Micah Davis, Minnesota Wind Chill
The rich keep getting richer. The undefeated Wind Chill already had plenty of capable throwers, but on a night when hundreds of Twin Cities youth players were celebrated at halftime, it felt appropriate that another young Minnesota star also sparkled in his home debut for the Wind Chill. In fact, after the game, Minnesota Coach Ben Feldman said that he thought Micah Davis deserved to be named as the team’s top star of the night. Davis made his UFA debut on the back half of the team’s Week 8 doubleheader, collecting two assists, one goal, and one block in the team’s blowout win over Vegas. But his Friday performance against Salt Lake—against far superior competition—was even more impressive. The St. Louis Park product—who just finished his junior year at the University of Pittsburgh—went 20-for-20 for 242 throwing yards, churned for 89 receiving yards, and finished with three assists and one goal in the Wind Chill’s 20-16 victory over the Shred. Beyond the numbers, his poise and presence as a rookie joining an elite team absolutely stood out. He played interchangeably on both lines—11 points on O-line, seven points on D-line—and impacted winning like a seasoned veteran whenever he took the field.
Oscar Graff, Boston Glory
While Oscar Graff is technically in his fifth season in the UFA, his previous four years were all as a part-time player. From 2022 through 2025, he only played in about five games per year, and he never totaled more than five goals or five assists in a season. But after his huge contributions at Championship Weekend for the Glory last August—Graff went 56-for-56 across the two victories in Madison—the emerging star has continued to excel as a regular in the Boston rotation here in 2026. He’s a captain, a cornerstone, and one of the league’s premier D-line leaders. On Saturday against Philly, Graff tallied a career-high five assists, along with two goals and two blocks, in Boston’s 30-14 demolition over the Phoenix. He also accumulated 251 throwing yards, the most in his now-30-game UFA career, while playing 3 O-points and 18 D-points. Only seven other players in the UFA all season have had 250 throwing yards in a game where they played three or fewer O-points.
Charles Guay, Montreal Royal
The UFA doesn’t directly track bookends—defined as getting a block and then soon thereafter scoring a goal—but I cannot remember seeing another player produce bookends three times in the first three quarters of a game this season. Maybe someone else has done it, but it seems like a pretty unique feat for Montreal’s Charles Guay, who finished with six goals, five blocks, and one assist in the Royal’s 25-18 victory over Philadelphia on Friday night. Guay delivered bookends three times in the game, getting the block and the break to put his team up 7-4 in the first, 17-12 in the third, and then 19-12 later in the third. After earning 2nd Team All-Defense honors with 19 blocks in 2025, Guay only registered three blocks in his first nine games this season. But the 25-year-old delivered five against Philly—for perspective, that’s four more blocks than the entire Phoenix roster produced for the entire game—as the Royal earned their second win of the season.
Elliot Hawkins, Indianapolis AlleyCats
It’s fair to say that Elliot Hawkins seems to have Chicago’s number. After erupting for an astonishing 15 assists against the Union in his 2026 debut, Hawkins dished another seven dimes in Saturday’s 18-13 AlleyCats victory. The 20-year-old sharpshooter also tallied one goal, one block, and finished the night with zero turnovers, a marked improvement after enduring seven costly throwaways in the previous week’s one-goal loss in Madison. In his two games against the Union, he’s had just one throwaway, while he endured 11 turns in his other two games. As the 2-4 AlleyCats head into the second half of their season—Indy will play its final six games of the season in the next four weekends—it’s likely that Hawkins’ potential All-UFA candidacy will depend upon how efficient he can be against opponents that are not Chicago. With that said, he’ll have one more chance to pick apart the Union again as well; Indy visits Chicago on July 5.
Felix Moren, Oregon Steel
With nine assists—tied for the second-most in a game across the UFA this season—along with one goal and two blocks, Felix Moren helped to carry the Oregon Steel to their first win of the season on Friday night against Toronto. With time winding down in overtime, the 23-year-old Oregon State product also snagged a 52-yard reception from David Barram to set up the game-winning score. Few outside of the greater Portland area expected Oregon to topple Toronto on Friday, but the Steel have shown they can be competitive when their best players are on the field. Moren’s one of the several standouts who’ve been part-time contributors throughout their college careers, but Friday’s 10-score, 661-total yard performance was arguably the biggest game of his Steel experience. Moren also went 3-for-3 on his hucks against the Rush, the first time he’s ever finished 100 percent on multiple hucks in a game.
Max Pettenuzzo, Toronto Rush (Pictured)
Toronto will likely fall short of the 2026 playoffs, but the fact that they remain above .500—the Rush haven’t finished a season above .500 since 2019—is a tribute to how the team has made significant strides in 2026. And Max Pettenuzzo’s emergence as a dynamic UFA star has been a huge part of Toronto’s resurgence. While he and his teammates missed a massive opportunity to complete a 2-0 weekend in the Pacific Northwest by falling short in overtime on Friday, Pettenuzzo still lit up the scoresheet for five goals, 11 assists, five blocks, and almost 1,500 total yards on the two-game road trip. And his numbers on the second day of the back-to-back in Seattle, when he went 34-for-35 and 3-for-3 on hucks, helped to carry the Rush to a critical get-right win over the playoff-bound Cascades. The University of Victoria standout certainly looks like a First-Team All-Rookie lock, and with a strong finish he could contend for a spot on an All-UFA team too.
Mark Turner, Houston Havoc
It’s tough to make an All-League team when your own team only has one win, but Houston’s Mark Turner has quietly blossomed as a true star for the Havoc in 2026. He’s one of just two players in the entire league—along with Indy’s Elliot Hawkins—who has multiple 300/300 games this season. On Saturday against San Diego, the 35-year-old Turner registered 316 throwing yards, 350 receiving yards, eight assists, and three goals, all while completing 20-of-21 passes. And remarkably, seven of his 20 completions were hucks! Turner went 7-for-8 on hucks against the Growlers, which represented the second-most huck completions in a game this season; once again, Indy’s Hawkins is the other player to mention here, as Elliot went 8-for-9 in that 15-assist game vs. Chicago. Turner has also already surpassed his stats from a season ago in virtually every category; perhaps most notably, whereas last year he finished with seven completed hucks, he already has 26 in 2026. That’s currently the most in the entire league.
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