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Jason Day Flies His Mother to Ohio State's James Cancer Center Hospital to be Treated for Lung Cancer

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Jason Day with his mother, Dening.

While Jason Day might be known for his prowess on the golf course, he's walking away from the green – at least temporarily – to be with his mother in Columbus, Ohio who has been diagnosed with lung cancer.

For treatment, Day flew his mother, Dening – an Australia resident – to Columbus, Ohio to be treated by the experts at Ohio State's James Cancer Center.

Day talked to the Golf Channel about the situation:

“It’s really hard to even comprehend being on the golf course right now because of what she’s gone through,” Day said. “She had a test done in Australia, and the doctor said she was terminal and only had 12 months to live. I’m glad I brought her over here. It’s been really hard to play golf lately.”

Day's manager also offered a comment:

“The prognosis coming here wasn’t very positive. But now that she’s been here, they are more optimistic,” Bud Martin, Day’s manager, told the Golf Channel. “They feel like it’s something that hopefully, God willing, that it’s manageable."

Day is from Australia as well, but he lives in Westerville, Ohio, where he met his wife while touring as an amateur golfer.


Video: Episode 2 of Marshon Lattimore's Draft Diary

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Marshon Lattimore draft diary.

Marshon Lattimore came to Ohio State as a four-star recruit in 2014. After two injury-plagued seasons, Lattimore exploded onto the national scene in 2016. 

Despite the breakout year, Lattimore set out to prove himself healthy by running a sub-4.4 40-yard dash at the NFL Combine in Indianapolis.

He ran a 4.36.

In the latest episode of Lattimore's draft diary, shot by LeBron James' athlete media company Uninterrupted, Lattimore talks about the process of preparing for the combine, his time in Indianpolis, and more.

Across the Twitterverse: Review of the Week's Best Tweets

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Honestly, a chicken philly from anywhere is always a good move.

Campus Collection

After the first week back from spring break at the Ohio State University, there were some great tweets out there — but here are the ones that made the cut.

We start with Johnnie Dixon's day out on a little boat.

Taylor Decker apparently lives near a buzzkill.

Also, Dwayne Haskins checked out the latest cinematic masterpiece.

 The now-retired Stephen Collier continues to try out some new activities.

 While food became another topic of discussion, including Pat Elflein's search for a sponsor.

In other news, Baron Browning and J.K. Dobbins made an....interesting video featuring Buckeye Guy's tricked out vehicle.

 Joey Lane posted the profile picture everyone wants.

While NFL Draft scout Matt Miller creeped out Marshon Lattimore a bit.

Tweet(s) of the Week

This week, the award-winning tweets come from Buffalo Bills teammates Cardale Jones and Adolphus Washington.

Go Bucks!

Ohio State to Receive $1.3 Million Payout From NCAA

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Brutus Buckeye rubs Gene Smith's shoulders.

According to Steve Berkowitz of USA Today, the NCAA will disburse $200 million in April to Division 1 schools. The case-by-case payments will range from $1.3 million to $165,000.

Under a plan approved a year ago by the NCAA Board of Governors and the Division I Board of Directors, the amounts are based on the number of athletic scholarships the schools provided during the 2013-14 school year. Schools received credit for one scholarship for every set of partial awards that added up to the equivalent of a full scholarship.

Given the biggest money will go to the biggest schools, it's unsurprising to see Ohio State (404 scholarships) lead the pack at $1.3 million.

Big Ten schools Michigan, Penn State, Michigan State, Minnesota and Wisconsin will also receive more than $1 million, along with Stanford, Virginia, and North Carolina.

The NCAA will monitor the funds, which come from a "liquidation type of endowment that had grown to more than $360 million." The NCAA expects the money to be spent to "the direct benefit of the student-athlete and their academic success."

Hockey Bucks Open NCAA Tournament against Bulldogs

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Senior goalie Matt Tomkins tends the Buckeye net.

In a few hours Ohio State will take the ice in its opening round match of the 2017 NCAA tournament. The Buckeyes earned their first trip to the tourney since 2009 thanks to their body of work in the regular season, sliding into the sixteen team field with the final at large bid. In doing so, said head coach Steve Rohlik, they realized their “No. 1 and only goal” for the 2016-17 season.

game info osu vs umd
Opening Faceoff Friday at 6:30 p.m.
Location Fargo, ND
Television ESPNU
Radio 1460 AM
Online Stream WatchESPN ($)

Rohlik also noted that, while the Bucks intend to enjoy the tourney experience, they are “not satisfied with just going up there and being part of it.” Nick Schilkey echoed his coach’s comment, saying, “It’s not just about getting here, it’s about making some noise too.”

The Buckeyes will need to be loud indeed to advance in the West, the tournament’s most deadly quarter. In addition to OSU, the regional features defending NCAA champ North Dakota, Hockey East co-champ Boston University, and regular season NCHC runner up and conference champion, Minnesota-Duluth. Seven of the eight first-round NHL draft picks in this tournament will skate in this stacked West regional.

team stats ohio state minn-duluth
Overall Record 21-11-6 25-6-7
Regional Seeding No. 4 No. 1
National Polls No. 14 No. 2
Average Goals For 3.97 (T-No. 2) 3.42 (No. 8)
Average Goals Against 2.89 (T-No. 30) 2.29 (No. 11)
Power Play Percentage 32.5% (No. 1) 20.0% (No. 20)
Penalty Kill Percentage 74.2% (No. 57) 80.3% (T-No. 41)
Points Leader Mason Jobst - 55 points Alex Iafallo - 45 points
Top Goal Scorer Nick Schilkey - 27 goals Alex Iafallo - 18 goals
Starting Goaltender Matt Tomkins - 2.48/.909 Hunter Miska - 2.23/.917

UMD is the first giant on the docket for the Bucks. The Bulldogs are the No. 2 overall team in the country. They are a big, strong, experienced squad. The team’s players are very skilled individually and when they operate together within the system, Duluth is even greater than the sum of its talented parts. There is no better evidence of this than the fact that the Bulldogs played the most difficult schedule of any team in college hockey this season and yet only dropped six games.

Minnesota-Duluth enters the tournament on a spectacular roll. The team has only one regulation loss in its last 17 outings. Freshman goalie Hunter Miska is undefeated in his last 16 starts (13-0-3) dating back to mid-January. And, in case all this wasn’t challenge enough for the Bucks, the whole regional takes place just a hop, skip, and a jump from the Bulldogs’ backyard. 

But Duluth’s formidableness is not news to the Buckeye coach. Said Rohlik, “We’re playing, obviously, a very good hockey team. They’ve been rated No. 1 for three months of the year for a reason. We’ll be focused. We know we’ve got to play good, sound, team defense and that’s what we’re going to do.”

Rohlik also made a point of noting that the burden of defensive responsibility does not rest on the blue liners alone. “I think it’s not just on our defense to play team defense. It’s on everybody on the ice and our forwards have got to be responsible.”

Ohio State’s rearguard has struggled at times this season, though the Buckeyes’ average goals against is down to just 2.00 over their last eight contests. Defense became an even bigger challenge after the Big Ten tournament in which Drew Brevig was lost for the remainder of the season and Josh Healey suspended two games.

However, Rohlik maintains the absence of these two senior leaders does not affect his team’s strategy. “We’ve got to go up [to Fargo] and stick to our game plan, do the best job we can. We understand who [the Bulldogs] are and what they are, but we can’t change who we are.”

And who Ohio State is, is just about the biggest powder keg of scoring potential in all of college hockey. The Buckeyes average an NCAA second best 3.97 goals per game. Only Harvard (4.21) rates better.

The Bucks are also running a historically astounding power play. They have converted 32.5% of their chances this season. The program record for a single season is 32.7%. OSU is 10 for its last 20 power plays (50%).

Can Ohio State bring down Minnesota-Duluth with high voltage offense and a patched together defense? Anything’s possible. As Rohlik noted, “You wouldn’t say [the Bulldogs have] got a lot of weaknesses, looking at them, but they’re as beatable as anybody else.”

Connections

We mentioned the association between the Ohio State and Duluth coaching staffs already. There are also a couple of sibling links among the teams. The Bulldogs’ leading scorer, Alex Iafallo, is the brother of the women’s hockey Bucks’ second leading scorer, Julianna Iafallo. Josh Healey’s sister, Jessica, skates for UMD’s women’s team.

Big Ten News
  • Tom Anastos has stepped down as the head coach of Michigan State.
  • Wisconsin star Luke Kunin is the first major early departure for the B1G this season. The sophomore signed with the NHL’s Minnesota Wild.
  • Seniors who have inked pro deals include Michigan’s Alex Kyle (Rochester, AHL) and MSU’s Rhett Holland (Idaho, ECHL).

Ohio State Falls to Top-Seeded Notre Dame 99-76 Ending its Season in the Sweet 16

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Ohio State's season ends with a Sweet 16 loss to top-seeded Notre Dame.

For the second-straight year, Ohio State's season ends in the Sweet 16 as the Buckeyes fell 99-76 to top-seeded Notre Dame.

TEams 1 2 3 4 Final
Ohio State2517231176
Notre Dame 24 26 30 19 99

The lopsided loss came despite what was actually a well-played game from Ohio State. The Buckeyes shot over 50 percent from the field and 40 percent from behind the arc most of the game while turning the ball over just one more time than the Irish. They just couldn't overcome Notre Dame's hot night, as it put up 99 points, a school record in NCAA Tournament play.

The Irish were without their top scorer and rebounder on Friday night after Brianna Turner tore her ACL against Purdue last weekend. It appeared to be a huge loss for the Irish, but they really didn't seem to miss her. Six different players scored double figures, led by Arike Ogunbowale, who had a career-high 32 points.

OHIOSTATE STAT Notre Dame
76POINTS 99
30-71 (42%)FGM-FGA (PCT.) 34-65 (52%)
9-24 (38%)3PM-3PA (PCT.) 12-24 (50%)
7-10 (70%)FTM-FTA (PCT.) 19-20 (95%)
12TURNOVERS 11
30TOTAL REBOUNDS 42
10OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS 10
32DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS 20
34BENCH POINTS 13
2BLOCKS 1
4STEALS 4
23ASSISTS 23

Without Turner, Notre Dame put an emphasis on three-point shooting, and to say "it worked" would be an understatement. The Irish average just six three-pointers on the season, but they hit a season-high 12 on Friday night, including seven-straight in the first half.

Kelsey Mitchell opened the game 5-for-5 with 12 points in the first quarter, but was limited in the second half. She was just 1-for-8 after the intermission.

Ohio State just couldn't keep up, couldn't get to the free-throw line to make up for it and the game gradually got out of reach.

One of the few bright spots was the play of lone-senior Shayla Cooper. Playing in what ended up being her last game as a Buckeye, Cooper did everything she could, pulling down a game-high 13 rebounds (nine of which came in the first five minutes), while scoring nine points and dishing out four assists. She is likely headed to the WNBA.

The first quarter was nothing but offense as the teams seemed to trade three-pointers every possession. Both teams shot over 50 percent from beyond the arc in the first quarter and Ohio State led 25-24 entering the second.

It was Notre Dame, however, that stayed hot. The Irish hit 13-straight field goals across the first two quarters including seven-straight threes — one more than the team even averages in a game. The Buckeyes didn't roll over, though. Ohio State held Notre Dame scoreless during final two minutes of the half and found shots of their own to cut the lead to single digits before halftime. The Irish led 50-42 after two quarters.

The Buckeyes cut the Notre Dame lead to just four at the start of the third quarter, but the Irish responded in a big way, gradually stretching the lead to 15 points to take an 80-65 lead into the fourth quarter.

Notre Dame coasted in the fourth quarter, gradually extending its lead to earn a 99-76 win and punch its ticket to the Elite Eight, where it awaits the winner of tonight's game between Stanford and Texas.

The loss ends Ohio State's season in the Sweet 16 for the second straight season. The Buckeyes finish with a 28-7 record and won the regular season Big Ten title.

Hockey Bucks Rally to Force OT But Fall to No. 1 Seed Minnesota-Duluth

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Matt Tomkins makes a save in the Buckeyes' NCAA opener against Minnesota-Duluth.

All week long Ohio State coaches and players expressed a desire to “make some noise” in the program’s return to the NCAA tournament. I think that mission has been accomplished. Although they didn’t get the result they were looking for, the Bucks battled national No. 2 and top regional seed Minnesota-Duluth to a very loud overtime loss. 

scoring by period 1 2 3 ot final
No. 4 Ohio State 0 0 2 0 2
No. 1 Minnesota-Duluth02013

The Buckeyes worked hard, hustled on every shift, and made very few mistakes. In the opening period their scoring chances were superior in both quality and quantity to the Bulldogs'. Matt Tomkins was a model of calm, boring, reboundless goaltending. Aside from not notching the game's first goal, the first period could not have been better for Ohio State. 

Truthfully, I'm not so sure that they didn't score the opening goal late in that period. On the power play with about three minutes to play in the frame Dave Gust appeared to roll a puck up over the shoulder of UMD goalie Hunter Miska. The netminder caught the puck behind his back and spun away from the goal line but not before the official signaled, emphatically, for a goal. The play was reviewed at length. Apparently the officials found conclusive evidence to overturn the original call. 

buckeye goal scorers pd time
Matt Joyaux (Kevin Miller, Dakota Joshua) 3 7:09
Gordi Myer (Tanner Laczynski) 3 12:40

Instead of a 1-0 Buckeye advantage, the second period began in a scoreless tie though it did not remain scoreless for long. Dominic Toninato netted the ice breaker in the opening minute of the middle frame. He used his space and the Buckeye defenseman most effectively, firing from behind the screen and picking the top blocker corner on Tomkins. 

The Bulldogs continued with a more aggressive attack throughout the second period. Toninato appeared to strike again, finishing a fortunate bounce off the end wall. However upon further review (the slogan of this regional apparently), he only nicked the crossbar. 

UMD did go ahead 2-0 at the 13:41 mark. Nick Wolff wired a seeing-eye shot through traffic that managed to miss about six players before denting the twine. Though Tomkins struggled to stop what he couldn't see, he was stellar in fending off the shots he did get a good look at. He make a number of key stops in the second period including this spectacular stick save. 

While Tomkins held the Bucks in the game, his teammates kept trucking, searching for their first score. They finally broke through with about 13 minutes to go. A play that started with an offensive zone faceoff win ended with Matt Joyaux ripping this beauty. 

Ohio State was within a goal of Duluth and the Buckeyes weren't done yet. With seven minutes to go Tanner Laczynski set up Gordi Myer. The freshman defender blasted home his first collegiate goal and tied the game up, 2-2. 

The momentum was solidly on Ohio State's side through the remainder of regulation. They swarmed the UMD net again and again. Gust nearly netted a go ahead goal but he was once again stymied by a highlight reel save from Miska. 

Miska would continue to be a thorn in the Bucks’ side in overtime. The Duluth netminder made stop after quality stop in the extra session. He stoned Gust twice more, made a toe save on Mason Jobst’s stuff attempt and a stick save on a Nick Schilkey shot labeled for the top corner. Joyaux hit the post. The Buckeyes could not buy a goal.

Steve Rohlik credited the UMD goalie with the Bulldogs' ultimate victory, saying, "You can’t ask for better chances than what we had. [Miska] just flat out made some unbelievable saves."

Minnesota-Duluth didn’t generate much in the way of offense for the first 10 or 12 minutes of the period. However, once the Bulldogs finally manufactured an extended shift in the Ohio State zone, Willie Raskob hammered the game winner past the outstretched blocker of Tomkins for the victory.

Although this isn't the result they wanted the Buckeyes can certainly walk away from this game with their heads held high. The team worked its collective rear off tonight. The Bucks battled all game long for every loose puck, every faceoff, every square inch of ice. They more than answered Rohlik's call for "a little extra” and they deserved better than they got.

At the end of the night, despite the result, the Buckeye coach was pleased with his team's effort. "I couldn’t be more proud of my club. They emptied their tanks and gave us a chance down 0-2 and our guys never quit. They never stopped talking positive on the bench and they believed we could win the whole time. Unfortunately we came up a little short tonight."

  • Ohio State outshot Minnesota-Duluth 42-32 in the game.
  • The Buckeyes - led by John Wiitala's 15-4 record - were decisive victors in the faceoff battle, winning 50 total draws to the Bulldogs' 33.
  • The Scarlet and Gray outblocked UMD as well, 29-13. Janik Moser (5) and Tommy Parran (4) led the way for the Bucks.
  • Check out the official boxscore as welll as a transcript of postgame comments from Steve Rohlik and Nick Schilkey.

Skull Session: Marshon Lattimore and Gareon Conley Solidify Stock, Bill Belichick Intimidates Raekwon McMillan, and Corey Smith Won't Give Up

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Noah Brown hits the brakes for the March 25th 2017 Skull Session

It's Saturday, folks. If you're working, quit to do something fun with somebody special in your life and thank me later.

ICYMI: The women's basketball team lost to Notre Dame in the Sweet 16.

Word of the Day: Mewl.

 MONEY IN THE BANK. The good football men made their annual hajj to Columbus on Thursday to observe the latest wave of Buckeye draftees. Marshon Lattimore and Gareon Conley refused to run the 40-yard-dash, which turned out to be a wise decision.

They blew scouts away without it.

From Matt Miller of bleacherreport.com:

Linebacker McMillan went through drills during the workout, and a scout at the event texted me that he looked "smooth, easy-moving, caught the ball well. We like him in Round 2."

Conley and Lattimore stood on their combine numbers, but both went through drills. A coach at the workout texted that Lattimore "is one of the best athletes I've ever seen at corner. He should be a top-five pick."

Said another scout, "these two [corners] could be the first two off the board. They're damn near perfect."

Lattimore is such an athlete his drills popped on grainy iPhone footage taken 100 yards away from the action. Injuries are the only thing that could stop him from being an All-Pro.

It speaks to his talent though that Conley, who came into this year tabbed as a potential first-round pick, is now unjustly overshadowed.

Also good to see McMillan look adroit. He faced questions about his athleticism early in the draft process. Between the combine and pro day, he seems to have put them to rest.

 BOOMER INTIMIDATES MILLENNIAL DURING JOB INTERVIEW. McMillan came to Ohio State as a five-star prospect and left as a second-round prospect. He didn't get there by shying away from competition or playing scared.

That doesn't mean a 64-year-old man can't intimidate him. It just depends on how many championships he won.

From masslive.com:

McMillan apparently spent some time with the legendary coach prior to Ohio State's pro day.

"When you first meet him, you're scared," McMillan said, via WBZ. "He's quizzing you. It's like a little test. But after you get done with the test, the quiz or whatever, drawing up the defense, it's pretty cool. They're real down to earth people. Really cool."

Couple this with the private workout, and it seems the Patriots fancy McMillan. It's almost sad how much like destiny this match seems. I'm sure he'd rather land there than Cleveland or Cincinnati, though.

And if it happens, good thing he met the challenge of playing football in the cold years ago and already adapted to it. Not a bad bonus for a championship player who left the SEC footprint for the Big Ten.

 SMITH REFUSES TO QUIT. Dontre Wilson and Corey Smith's 40-yard dash times disappointed NFL personnel at Thursday's pro day.

The results refused to dampen Smith's spirit. The former JUCO transfer still feels positive about his chances.

From dispatch.com:

"Honestly, I just feel like my talent and my skill set is anywhere from a first- or second-round type of talent," Smith said. "The team that drafts me or picks me up is basically going to have a steal."

[...]

Cardale Jones, now with Buffalo, was one of several former Buckeyes who watched pro day. He believes both Wilson and Smith can make it.

"You have to be a different kind of athlete and guy to make it through four to five years here," Jones said. "The way they competed when they were injury-free is the type of thing you can see out of guys in the NFL.

I thought Wilson had a better chance at getting picked up than Smith, but after showcasing pedestrian speed, I still feel their best chances are in Canada.

 ZEKE CATCHES ANOTHER STRAY. Ezekiel Elliott's partying hasn't earned a headline since Monday, which might be a record for the offseason.

Unfortunately, he still caught a stray bullet from a former Buckeye great. This time it's Cris Carter sounding off.

From totalprosports.com:

“What I’m concerned about with Zeke is the overall lack of respect. Lack of respect for the Cowboys. Lack of respect for the shield. And as we saw on St. Patty’s Day, lack of respect for the young lady that was there. Because that was someone’s daughter, that’s someone’s sister.

“And, to me, publicly showing a lack of respect and lack of conscience of what’s really going on in your like. Now how’s he going to handle being in the National Football League? It gets bigger and bigger, the monster gets bigger and bigger until eventually, if you don’t control the monster and put it on a leash, the monster eats you up.”

[...]

“Will Zeke be able to handle that? That’s the question. It used to be a question of, ‘How good can he be in the NFL?’ ”

Interesting comments considering Carter's transgressions.

 MORE BOWL SKIPPING? Notre Dame linebacker Jaylon Smith suffered an injury against Ohio State in the original 2016 Fiesta Bowl. It didn't stop the Dallas Cowboys from drafting him, although Smith didn't play last year.

As it turns out, Smith fortunately had an insurance policy. And according to one lawyer, such policies could lead 

From cbssports.com:

Former Notre Dame linebacker Jaylon Smith has become at least the fourth highly-rated player in the last 18 months to collect on his loss of draft value insurance policy, two sources told CBS Sports.

But that is less of a story than the implications of Smith’s payout -- believed to be $700,000. Will the increasing availability of such insurance and seeming frequency of payouts make it more likely that more players will be skipping bowl games?

“What you saw is the tip of the iceberg,” said Bryan Fisher, a Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based attorney who works with college players vetting insurance. “You’re going to see a lot of kids skipping.”

You know what this means, folks: We've only seen the tip of the hot take iceberg. Harrowing.

 THOSE WMDs. Artsy-crafty booze is giving Kentucky Rabbis a headache... The Wall Street informant who double-crossed the FBI... The inner-lives of animals... Humans made the banana perfect, but soon it will be gone... Drug testing pilots is "like playing Jenga."


Predicting the Rest of Ohio State's 2017 Football Captains

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Projecting the other members of Ohio State's team that will be named captain in 2017.
2017 Spring Preview

Though Ohio State is set to have seven fifth-year seniors on its roster this fall, Urban Meyer's sixth team in Columbus is still on the relatively young side of the coin. Thirty players hold sophomore eligibility and only 12 are in their final season of college football as allowed by the NCAA.

Meyer led the youngest team in the country to the College Football Playoff in 2016. He then lost six players early to the NFL Draft, which puts the pressure on those older guys that returned to lead even more. Setting the groundwork for that began in winter workouts, expanded at the start of spring practice a few weeks ago and will continue all summer.

Barrett, Price

Meyer said on the first day of spring practice that he and his staff had already put together a leadership committee for the "first time in a while," likely an exercise due to both having strong heads up top and nine members of the 2017 recruiting class already enrolled. He wants to accelerate everything.

“I'm not going to give you names yet but have a group of players,” Meyer said. “Made a comment that we had a very, this is as strong a group of leaders that we've had.”

J.T. Barrett, Billy Price and Tyquan Lewis — three fifth-year senior starters and faces of the program — were all listed as captains on the spring roster a team spokesman handed to media members on March 7. Seeing the capital "C" next to their names was hardly a surprise — all three served as the head of the team's leadership panel a year ago. Barrett is also a three-time captain, the first in school history.

Meyer typically opens the floor to his players to vote on captains at some point during training camp in August. After tapping five captains in each of his first three seasons in Columbus, the number has increased by one each of the last two years. For reference:

Ohio State Captains Under Urban Meyer
Season Team Captains
2012 John Simon, Zach Boren, Etienne Sabino, Garrett Goebel, Jordan Hall
2013 Jack Mewhort, C.J. Barnett, Kenny Guiton, Corey Linsley, Philly Brown
2014 Michael Bennett, Curtis Grant, Doran Grant, Jeff Heuerman, Braxton Miller
2015 Jacoby Boren, J.T. Barrett, Taylor Decker, Joshua Perry, Braxton Miller and Tyvis Powell
2016 J.T. Barrett, Pat Elflein, Raekwon McMillan, Joe Burger, Tyquan Lewis, Billy Price and Gareon Conley

Experience is obviously key to be named a captain. Every player that has been named a captain was a starter except for Joe Burger, the walk-on linebacker who ran multiple special teams units for the Buckeyes before he graduated. Burger, Conley, Lewis and Price were voted as captains by their peers alongside Barrett, Raekwon McMillan and Pat Elflein last August.

There has also been an exceptional balance among the team leaders. Every position on offense and defense has been represented with at least one captainship in Meyer's tenure. The specialists continue to hold out hope for some love.

The Buckeyes actually voted eight as captains ahead of the 2013 season before Meyer whittled the number to five after the team went 12-2. Barrett is an exception to the assumption that only seniors are named captain. Since he is already one this fall along with Lewis and Price, it would make sense for Ohio State to add two or three more before kickoff at Indiana on Aug. 31.

ALREADY IN

J.T. Barrett: As previously mentioned, Barrett is the first three-time captain in school history. He is also the starting quarterback. Yeah, let's move on.

Billy Price: Voted in by his peers a year ago and shifting to center like his best friend and former fellow offensive lineman Pat Elflein, Price teams with Barrett as the pillars in an offense that must improve from a year ago. Price is entering his fourth year as a starter too, just for good measure.

Tyquan Lewis: He of quiet strength, Lewis was named the 2016 Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year after he led the Buckeyes with eight sacks and 10.5 tackles for loss. Lewis could have left for the NFL Draft. He returned to lead Ohio State's on its quest to return to the College Football Playoff.

PROBABLES
Worley

Chris Worley: Another fifth-year senior, Worley bided his time and waited his turn to start at linebacker for Luke Fickell. He did that in 2016 and thrived, finishing with 69 tackles — fourth-most on the team. A move to the middle in place of McMillan means he is the quarterback of the defense and, along with Lewis, a commander of the entire unit. Already being more vocal as he leads the linebackers through its transition from Fickell to new coach Billy Davis, Worley's presence will be instrumental for the Buckeyes this fall.

Tracy Sprinkle: When Sprinkle left Ohio State's 77-10 decimation of Bowling Green on a cart last September, his teammates on the defensive line did not mince words about how much they would miss him during the season. Larry Johnson said he saw Sprinkle's emotions spill out of him after undergoing surgery for a patella injury. Back for a fifth year and already the subject of a story that includes him getting kicked off the team three years ago to becoming a starter before last season, Sprinkle teams with Lewis as the main leaders on the defensive line.

50/50

Jalyn Holmes: Holmes teams up with Sprinkle, Lewis, Sam Hubbard and many others to form a terrifyingly talented defensive front for Johnson to work with. A true senior, Holmes really came into his own in 2016, namely in the Rushmen package where Johnson dispatched him, Hubbard, Lewis and Nick Bosa on passing situations to get after the quarterback. A vibrant personality, terrific interview and emotional player, really the only reason we don't have Holmes as a probable is because two other assumed captains are defensive linemen.

Damon Webb: However you feel Webb performed in 2016 alongside three potential first-round draft picks, he is the only starter in the secondary back for Greg Schiano and Kerry Coombs. Another true senior, the younger Buckeyes (and Schiano) will look to Webb to lead. Even if he isn't as vocal as some others on the team.

OTHER POSSIBILITIES

Terry McLaurin: Ohio State does not have a senior wide receiver on its roster for the 2017 season after James Clark elected to graduate and transfer. McLaurin, Johnnie Dixon and Parris Campbell are all redshirt juniors. McLaurin's name has been brought up often in recent years by Barrett, Meyer and others when asked about the leaders in the wide receivers room. Does that mean he will earn captain status?

Jerome Baker: Baker exploded in 2016 in place of an injured Dante Booker, turning in an All-Big Ten-caliber season with 83 tackles and a pair of interceptions. Only a true junior, Baker is a phenomenal player who, provided he stays healthy, is likely bound for the NFL in 2018. One of the best players on the defense, Baker could earn the nod from his peers.

Denzel Ward: Like Webb, Ward is another presumed starter in the secondary that must replace three stars. He played a ton of snaps last season and is a junior. To put it simply, Ward must become a dependable player on the outside of Ohio State's defense. His experience could warrant a captaincy.


It will be interesting to see how many captains Urban Meyer's staff allows from a team vote standpoint. He said in 2013 the reason there were eight in fall camp was because the votes were so close.

The three already named as team leaders will also have a say. They will represent the key pieces in Ohio State's hunt to return to the Big Ten Championship.

Hockey Bucks Take Great Team and Individual Strides in 2016-17

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One final salute

The Ohio State men’s hockey season officially came to an end last night with the team’s overtime heartbreaker of a loss to national No. 2 Minnesota-Duluth. Although the Buckeyes’ tournament exit is hardly cause for celebration, their tournament presence certainly is. 2017 marked the Bucks’ first trip to the national tourney in eight years and yet another step forward for an Ohio State program continuing to build steam under the leadership of head coach Steve Rohlik.

Great Expectations

The Big Ten preseason poll predicted a second place finish for the Buckeyes this season. I forecasted a winning record in non-conference play, a top two finish in the B1G, and a national ranking at the end of the season. While the Bucks didn’t precisely live up to these expectations, they came darn close.

Ohio State was the B1G’s third place team, just one point shy of second place Wisconsin. This was the best ever Big Ten result for the Bucks. They cruised to a 9-3-5 record in non-conference games and will end the year with a national ranking (final number to be determined).

That there were actual preseason expectations for OSU in the first place is a sign of the program’s progress. It has been some time since anyone expected the Buckeyes to be relevant at the end of the year. The fact that the team nearly bulls-eyed those expectations further proves it is on an upward path.

Onward and Upward

This season Ohio State surpassed 20 wins for the first time since 2008-09. While the team did not face a particularly brutal schedule, the Bucks did earn some impressive victories over the NCAA’s top squads. They topped No. 1 Denver, No. 5 Minnesota (twice), and No. 11 Penn State (twice).

The Buckeyes began the year with that upset of the Pioneers and ended it with an impressive loss to UMD. There were plenty of high points between these red-letter bookends but the Bucks also struggled to put forth a consistent effort, particularly after the holiday break. They settled for ties on six occasions and dropped several other winnable contests, often against “bad” teams.

By failing to lock down those decisions Ohio State missed some opportunities to improve its standing in both the Big Ten and the PairWise ranks. As successful as the season was, it is still difficult not to wonder what might have been had the Bucks come out on top in even just a few of those close contests. Both game-to-game consistency and the development of a killer instinct are areas in which OSU can improve next year.

On the whole, though it had its ups and downs, this season was a rousing success and a large step forward for the program. Now the Buckeyes must find a way to maintain their hard won stature through a critical roster turnover and prove that 2016-17 wasn’t just a senior-driven flash in the pan.

The Best Defense

One aspect of Ohio State's game will be difficult to top next season and that is the team’s electrifying offense. The Scarlet and Gray powered through 2016-17 with one of the nation’s top scoring squads. The offense hovered near 4.00 goals per game all year.

The ridiculously productive crew was paced by career years from Mason Jobst (55 points), Nick Schilkey (27 goals), Dave Gust (41 points), and Dakota Joshua (35 points). All four Buckeyes averaged better than a point per game this season and another two, Matt Weis (0.97) and Tanner Laczynski (0.94), were only a tick off that mark. Josh Healey (25 points) led all Buckeye defensemen in scoring. 

Jobst finished the season among the nation’s leaders in points (No.7) and assists (tied for No. 2). Schilkey was No. 3 in the country in overall goals (27). He also drove the practically unstoppable Buckeye power play and led the NCAA in man-advantage tallies (16).

Speaking of OSU’s power play, it ends the season at an impressive 31.6% conversion rate. The Buckeyes were even more fearsome on the advantage in conference games. They scored on a mindblowing 39.5% of power plays which occurred during B1G tilts.

While most of the team's career marks were made in the offensive zone, goaltender Matt Tomkins quietly set personal bests in both wins (12) and single season GAA (2.48). 

Freshman Review

Tanner Laczynski was the clear standout of this year’s freshman class. (Though Ronnie Hein’s 11 points in 16 games - before suffering a season-ending injury - were notable.) The Philadelphia Flyers draftee posted 32 points this season (10g, 22a). Most came in the first half of the year, prior to the rookie phenom’s World Junior stint when he brought home a gold medal and a tenacious virus which lingered for weeks and hampered his second half performance.

Laczynski was just beginning to look like his old self when the season ended. He is definitely a player to watch next season. Depending on the kind of offseason he has, the Shorewood, Illinois native could be poised for a Jobst-like sophomore breakout.

Looking Ahead

Ohio State will have some big shoes to fill next year. The Buckeyes face the loss of key contributors on both offense (Schilkey and Gust) and defense (Healey and Drew Brevig) as well as the departure of almost every last goaltender with NCAA experience (Tomkins, Logan Davis, and Christian Frey).  

The team will return seven of its top ten scorers in 2017-18 along with its young but battle tested defense corps. They will be joined by a freshman class which features no obvious stars, though that view may change as the season rolls along. Guys like Gust and Jobst arrived in Columbus with little fanfare and under the guidance of Rohlik and company they developed into team-leading point machines.

One of the most interesting stats for me this season was fact that Jobst, a very under-the-radar type of recruit, shared the Big Ten regular season scoring title with Minnesota’s Tyler Sheehy, a skilled guy with the resume to prove it and a one time Ohio State commit who jumped ship after Rohlik replaced Mark Osiecki behind the Buckeye bench.

So I’m not sweating next year’s blue-collar crew of freshmen. This coaching staff has demonstrated an ability to both identify diamonds in the rough and bring out the latent brilliance in its roster. But if you get really itchy about recruiting hype allow me to direct your attention to the U.S. National Team Development Program’s Under-17 evaluation camp. The USNTDP keeps a watchful eye on the top American talent and two of the Buckeyes’ long range verbal commits, defenseman Marcus Gretz and forward Cole Caufield, garnered invites to this week’s eval camp. 

Congratulations, Smartypants!

16 Buckeyes were named to the Academic All-Big Ten team, letterwinners in at least their second year who carry a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or higher. They are Drew Brevig (communication), Logan Davis (marketing), Freddy Gerard (communication), Dave Gust (family resource management), Josh Healey (finance), Mason Jobst (real estate), Dakota Joshua (sport industry), Brendon Kearney (finance), Christian Lampasso (industrial systems engineering), Sasha Larocque (earth sciences), Kevin Miller (finance), Tommy Parran (English), Nick Schilkey (finance), Matt Tomkins (finance), Matt Weis (sport industry), and John Wiitala (finance).

Flip Watch: The Recruitment of Five-Star Penn State Commit Micah Parsons Continues to be One to Watch Closely

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Ohio State continues its pursuit of five-star Penn State commit Micah Parsons.

The 2017 class featured Chase Young as the lone defensive end to sign with the Buckeyes, but a much greater emphasis will be on the edge for the new recruiting cycle. Larry Johnson has his sights set on a handful of defensive ends, but the recruitment of five-star Micah Parsons will continue to be the most interesting one to follow.

The story really begins back in the fall of 2014 when Parsons was merely a freshman at Harrisburg's Central Dauphin High School. At the time, he was just starting to burst onto the scene with 17 sacks in his first season. The rising star made the 90-minute trip to Happy Valley in late October and watched as Joey Bosa put an end to the Nittany Lions' hopes in double overtime. 

Less than a month later, the freshman landed his very first offer as James Franklin and the Nits looked to jump on one of the state's top young talents before the rest of the country took notice.

Following the offer, he would make about a half dozen trips to Penn State before pulling the trigger in February of 2016. The Nittany Lions had a few things working for them with the first clearly being proximity to home. Additionally, Parsons' recruitment didn't even take off until after the commitment. Franklin had been fending off schools like Rutgers and West Virginia, but a lot has changed in the past year.

Following an MVP showing at The Opening Regional in New Jersey, his recruitment blew up when Alabama, Florida State, and USC all came calling. Larry Johnson visited the five-star in the spring of 2016, and the Buckeyes would extend an offer in September. Since that time, the once solid Penn State pledge has seemed anything but firm on his commitment. 

The country's No. 3 prospect has been to Columbus at least three times since receiving the offer; most recently for a junior day in January. While he's also been to Georgia and visits to Clemson and Florida State are in the works, the Buckeyes certainly look like the most likely candidate to pull off the five-star flip. 

Parsons has been one of Columbus' most frequent visitors.
Parsons has become a regular in Columbus.

The world of social media is often overanalyzed and can be a very misleading thing. That being said, Penn State fans really have to wonder if their highest-rated commit could be slipping away.

The Harrisburg star has been know to show the Buckeyes some love on Twitter and caused some eyebrows to be raised in State College when he conveniently named his new puppy "Brutus." It's also not often that a player committed to a school releases a list of his top six schools. 

Again, it's not uncommon for kids to mess around with the masses, but it definitely looks like there's a bit more to this one. 

The 6-foot-3, 235-pounder is planning on getting back to Columbus this spring and is also expected to check out some other schools this summer. Georgia, Clemson, USC, Alabama, and Florida State have all been mentioned as other schools that are standing out. Parsons will also be in Oregon this summer for The Opening festivities.

He was back in Happy Valley earlier in March and will surely return throughout the spring and summer as the Nittany Lions hope to hold onto their prized commit. The Penn State staff is certainly aware that this one is far from over and all eyes will be on the five-star over the next several months.

Back in 2012, Urban Meyer set the tone early on when he landed the nation's top weak-side defensive end. Noah Spence measured in at 6-foot-3 and 235 pounds and he too hailed from Harrisburg. 

The similarities are striking, and Urban Meyer is hoping for a repeat in 2018.

Saturday Spotlight: Meet Tyler Pfister, Redshirt Senior Captain and Columbus Native for Ohio State Men's Lacrosse

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Meet Tyler Pfister.

As a native of Columbus, Ohio and graduate of Upper Arlington High School, Tyler Pfister has been around Ohio State and the Buckeye tradition since a very young age.

His father, Mark, played linebacker for the Scarlet and Gray and earned letters in 1983 and 1984. Now over 30 years later, Tyler is creating his own legacy in the Shoe as a two-time captain of the Ohio State men's lacrosse team.

As a redshirt senior midfielder, Tyler has racked up 22 points (14 goals, eight assists) in 44 career games played. This season, Pfister has been key to the program's best start (9-0) since 1966 — as he and the No. 4 Buckeyes look to remain undefeated this weekend heading into a top-5 clash with No. 2 Notre Dame.

We sat down with Tyler this week to discuss growing up in the Columbus area, his love of the outdoors and much more.

When did you realize you might have a chance to play lacrosse at the collegiate level?

Tyler Pfister: I guess the first time was probably my sophomore year of high school. There wasn’t a ton of club teams like you see now, so I wasn’t heavily involved with that. I had kind of been successful with lacrosse and loved it, so it was something that I knew could help me get into college and something I wanted to do. So that summer, there was a skills camp with some Division One coaches and you got put into teams and player some games — and I was fortunate to be with coach (Mark) Bergey and (former OSU) coach (Andrew) Baxter. We kind of connected, and I knew I loved Ohio State, so that was really the first time I entertained the thought of playing in college.

What drew you to come to Ohio State?

TP: My dad actually played football at Ohio State, so growing up, it was all Ohio State everything. It’s one of those things where you think you know about it until it becomes super personal — and for me, I was fortunate to come on a visit and the things I thought I knew about Ohio State were just completely blown out of the water as far as the people, the tradition and the facilities. That just kind of solidified me coming here.

What is the best part about being a student-athlete?

TP: I think it’s the people, and Buckeye Nation. For me, lacrosse is phenomenal, but I think it’s also been the coolest vessel for me to meet some of the most extraordinary people and people that have helped me out on the field — but more importantly, to become the man I am today. It’s something I try not to take for granted, but it’s something you’re constantly surrounded by. They care about you as a Buckeye, but also you as a person in general. So looking back, that’s something I can’t be thankful enough for.

What’s been the best lacrosse moment of your career?

TP: I’ve been fortunate enough to be a part of overtime wins and stuff like that, so it’s tough to put a stamp on one thing. Last year when we beat Michigan in the “Showdown at the Shoe” before the spring game, we had an opportunity to sing Carmen Ohio in front all those fans and that was so surreal and something I will definitely never forget.

What are you studying? What are your plans after you receive your degree?

TP: I graduated last year with a degree in communications, and right now I doing a masters program in sports management. I’d love to be involved in coaching to some extent — probably not in a primary means, but more as being involved with players’ growth on and off the field.

What’s been your favorite class you've taken at Ohio State?

TP: I’ve taken a ton of classes and was actually a construction major before I became a communications major, but the best and hardest class I’ve taken is probably a welding engineering class. It was with a guy who doesn’t have the technology, a Carmen page or anything like that, but he cared a ton about his students and it was a class I loved going to.

What’s your favorite part about/spot on campus?

TP: There’s a pond behind the Jesse Owens Stadium where I love to go fish and kind of get away from things. Obviously I loved the academic buildings and the Shoe and such, but it’s something that not a lot of people know about and gives me time to get away from everything and kind of slow down a little bit.

What’s been your favorite aspect of Columbus?

TP: Columbus is a really cool city. It’s cool to see how Columbus has progressed since I’ve been here, but I’ve always been drawn to the German Villages and the places that have kind of stayed the same over the years. It’s those places that have kind of stood the test of time and stayed where they have been over their lifetime that I tend gravitate towards.

What’s something that not a lot of people know about you?

TP: I’m pretty transparent, but I love the outdoors and being able to escape a little bit. I’m kind of a reflective person, and for me, the outdoors have always provided a way to get away from distractions and allows me to look back on life and just really enjoys things.

What is something you would tell incoming students about Ohio State that you'd like them to know?

TP: I would say to take every opportunity you can to experience as many things as possible. I think one of the biggest regrets people having coming to a place as big as Ohio State is getting comfortable with a few people or one specific aspect. However, Ohio State and Columbus has so much to offer, and I would just say to explore those things and be open to get out of your comfort zone.

VIDEO: Top NFL Draft Prospect Malik Hooker Shows Off One-Handed Catching Abilities

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Malik Hooker shows off his hands in his latest Twitter video.

In case you didn't know, former Ohio State safety Malik Hooker is very good at catching a football — and may be even better at it with just one hand.

As he continues to recover from sports hernia and hip labrum surgeries, Hooker did not take part in Pro Day with his former teammates at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center on Thursday afternoon.

However, Hooker took to Twitter on Friday to show NFL scouts and coaches that his recovery is going well and not affecting his ability to intercept an opposing quarterback. He checked in at the NFL Scouting Combine last month with 10 and 1/4-inch hands, easily the largest among the Ohio State players invited. So really, catching passes like this isn't all that surprising.

Hooker posted this video last week. On Thursday, he reiterated to reporters that he is way ahead in his rehab.

Friday's clip is just another example of his freak abilities and why he enters the upcoming NFL Draft as a projected top-10 pick.

Ohio State Five-Star Quarterback Commit Emory Jones Visiting Alabama This Weekend

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2018 Ohio State commit Emory Jones is visiting the Alabama Crimson Tide Saturday.

Ohio State five-star dual-threat quarterback commit Emory Jones will take an unofficial visit to Alabama on Saturday, according to BamaOnLine's Hank South.

The trip to Tuscaloosa comes nearly three weeks after Alabama offered the Franklin, Georgia, native.

Jones, a verbal commit of the Scarlet and Gray recruiting class of 2018, will be in Columbus for yet another Ohio State visit next weekend.

No. 4 Ohio State Men's Lacrosse Suffers First Loss of the Season, Falls to No. 2 Notre Dame 12-7

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Buckeyes men's lacrosse fall for the first time this year.

After taking down then-No. 1 Denver last Sunday in the Shoe, the No. 4 Ohio State men's lacrosse team lost for the first time this season Saturday on the road at No. 2 Notre Dame.

Freshman attackman Tre Leclaire continued his success on the field from last weekend, cashing in four times on six shots on goal. Junior attackman Colin Chell, senior attackman Eric Fannell and redshirt senior midfielder Tyler Pfister also netted a goal each in the loss to the Irish.

The Scarlet and Gray (9-1) will play all of their five remaining regular season games against ranked opponents, including matchups with No. 17 Johns Hopkins, No. 20 Michigan, No. 10 Maryland, and No. 1 Rutgers.

Ohio State's stretch of top-5 meetings continues next Sunday on the road at No. 3 Penn State.


Ohio State Baseball Honors Former Pitcher Zach Farmer During Home Series With Minnesota

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The Buckeyes wore similar arm bands during today's series with the Minnesota Golden Gophers. This photo is from the first Zach Farmer Memorial Game in 2016.

The Ohio State baseball team honored the memory of former pitcher Zach Farmer Saturday afternoon during a home series with the Minnesota Golden Gophers.

A freshman pitcher on the 2014 Buckeyes baseball team, Farmer was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia April 28, 2014. After successful treatment, Farmer went into remission on June 6, 2014.

However, Farmer announced on July 15, 2015 that the disease returned and later passed away at The James Cancer Hospital at The Ohio State University on Aug. 2, 2015.

Farmer was honored in a multitude of ways Saturday afternoon at Bill Davis Stadium, including game one being deemed the "Zach Farmer Memorial Game", booths raising awareness and even by the visiting Golden Gophers.

Farmer's father and wife also were invited to take part in the pregame events.

Minnesota swept both games of the series, recording a 15-5 win in game one and a 6-5 victory in game two.

Alberta Native Josh Healey Signs with Calgary Flames

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Ohio State, and now Calgary Flames, defenseman Josh Healey

Senior defenseman Josh Healey is headed home to Alberta. The Calgary Flames today announced an agreement between the club and the Edmonton native. He is the first of Ohio State’s 2016-17 senior class to ink a professional deal.

josh healey gp g a pts blk
2013-14 33 1 4 5 51
2014-15 32 2 7 9 59
2015-16 33 5 16 21 59
2016-17 35 4 21 25 72
Career133124860241

Healey has been on NHL scouts’ radar all season. Fully aware of the scrutiny, the blue liner posted a career year. He led all Buckeye defenders with 25 points (next on the list was Matt Joyaux with 11) and topped Ohio State’s shot blocking chart (72). Healey continued, as he has from the moment he first donned the block O in his freshman season, to set the physical tone for the Bucks each night.

The Hurt-ah from Alberta regularly brought the pain for OSU opponents, leaving a trail of destruction across college hockey. Big or small, Healey hit them all. He was a valuable weapon for the Bucks, if a two-edged sword. He pushed the boundaries of allowable violence night in and night out. Though his late season suspensions loom large in the immediate memory, more often than not throughout his career Healey’s aggression has been an asset for Ohio State.

Now Healey takes his particular brand of hostility to the pro leagues. Calgary signed him to a two year entry level contract which begins in 2017-18. For now he is headed to the AHL’s Stockton Heat on an ATO. We wish him luck, though it may be the other guys who really need it. 

Ohio State Synchronized Swimming Captures 30th National Title, The Most of Any Buckeye Sports Program

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Ohio State Synchronized Swimming Captures 30th National Title

The Ohio State synchronized swimming team capped off a fantastic 2017 season Saturday with another national championship, the 30th in program history.

The 30 national championships are especially impressive given that the program has only existed since 1977. To put that dominance into perspective, the synchronized swimming team wins national titles more frequently than the football team wins games, winning a championship 75 percent of the time while the football team's all-time winning percentage is 72.4 percent.

The Buckeyes hosted the US Collegiate Championships for the second time in the last three seasons, and finished with 100 points — 22 ahead of runner-up Stanford. This marks the team’s first title since also winning it in their home pool in 2015. 

The Scarlet and Gray duet, led by seniors Emma Baranski and Elizabeth Davidson, performed well in the water by taking the event crown. Baranski also shined on her own in the solo finals, winning her second event of the afternoon and second-straight solo title.

The results of each event are listed below.

Overall Team Standings

Team Points
Ohio STate 100
Stanford 88
Lindenwood 71
Incarnate Word  68
Florida 50

Solo Finals

Swimmer Points
Baranski (OSU) 85.2667
McGovern (STAN) 83.1333
Haylor (LU) 81.9333

Duet Finals

Team Points
Baranski, Davidson (OSU) 84.4333
Hoying, Velazquez-Stiak (OSU) 84.0000
Ortellado, Slavin (STAN) 83.6000

Trio Finals

Team Points
Ortellado, Slavin, McGovern (STAN) 84.1667
Hack, Hoying, Velazquez-Stiak (OSU) 83.6667
Hyon, Park, Tashima (STAN) 82.5000

Team Finals

Team Points
Ohio State Scarlet 85.1333
Stanford A 84.4333
Ohio State Gray 83.0000

Recapping the Ohio State Women's Basketball Team's Season, Which Included A Big Ten Title and a Sweet 16 Appearance

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Shayla Cooper is the lone senior leaving the program after this season.

Despite the addition of three former McDonald's All-American transfers and three five-star freshmen, the Ohio State women's hoops team's season ended exactly where it did last year — with a disappointing loss in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16.

It was not the ending the Buckeyes wanted. With the new additions and returning firepower, Ohio State appeared to have one of the most talented rosters in the country on paper and real depth at every position for the first time since the arrival of head coach Kevin McGuff.

It didn't turn out that way. The Buckeyes struggled against top opponents, winning just three of eight games against ranked opponents. In the losses, Ohio State was outscored by an average of 15 points.

Still, 2016 wasn't all bad. We take a look back at some of the highlights from this women's hoops season.

Kelsey Mitchell

Kelsey Mitchell added to her already legendary Ohio State career in 2016, again leading the team in scoring with 22.6 points per game, which was also the best in the Big Ten and seventh in the nation.

During the season, Mitchell reached 2,000 career points faster than any player in NCAA history. She hit the mark in just 79 games — three games sooner than Missouri State's Jackie Stiles.

Following the season, Mitchell was named the Big Ten Player of the Year, marking the second time in her three seasons at Ohio State she's earned the honor.

After her junior year, Mitchell already ranks third on the school's all-time scoring charts and is on pace to shatter the program record and contend for the NCAA career scoring record next season.

Shutting Down Cincinnati

Both halves of Ohio State's early-season matchup with Cincinnati were memorable for different reasons.

In the first half, the Buckeyes were completely absent offensively, shooting just 23.5 percent from the field. They trailed the Bearcats 28-27 at halftime.

Then, it switched.

Ohio State went on a 63-10 run to close the game, holding the Bearcats to just 8 percent from the field in the second half and no field goals in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, the Buckeyes shot 65 percent from the field and cruised to an 80-38 win.

Beating Maryland

Ohio State's biggest win of the season came in late February when the Buckeyes downed No. 2 Maryland 98-87.

The win was the program's first against a top-2 team since 1993 when it defeated No. 2 Iowa and was Ohio State's third-straight win over Maryland. The Terrapins have only lost three games since joining the Big Ten — all three have been to the Buckeyes.

Most importantly, the win put the team in the driver's seat for the regular season Big Ten championship.

Big Ten Champions

After beating Maryland, the Buckeyes topped Rutgers to clinch a share of its first Big Ten championship since the 2009-10 season.

Ohio State ran rampant through the Big Ten in 2016, with its only snag coming against Michigan State, who beat the Buckeyes for a third-straight time. Ohio State finished 15-1 in the conference, but owned the tie breaker over Maryland, earning it the No. 1 seed in the Big Ten Tournament where the Buckeyes fell to Purdue in the semifinals.

Sweet 16

With expectations sky high, it's easy to talk negatively about this team only making the Sweet 16, but this was the first time since the 1988 and 1989 season the Buckeyes made the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 in back-to-back seasons.

Of course, that's where Ohio State's season ended. The Buckeyes met a hot-shooting Notre Dame team and was ousted from the tournament with a 99-76 loss. The Buckeyes finished 28-7 on the year, which is Ohio State's best record since the 2009-10 season.


Ohio State will look to rebound in 2017 and make a run at the Final Four, which will be played in Columbus, Ohio. The Buckeyes will be equipped, returning nearly their entire roster, minus only Shayla Cooper. She, however, was an extremely vital part of the team.

Cooper was without doubt Ohio State's most versatile player and played the second-most minutes behind only Kelsey Mitchell. She was the team's second-leading scorer and rebounder on the season, finishing just two boards behind Stephanie Mavunga. She also hit the fourth most three pointers and dished out the third-most assists.

When Mavunga injured her foot, causing her to miss eight games during the team's stretch run, it was Cooper who stepped up to fill the void, even though she's a completely different type of player. In those eight games, Cooper averaged 14.0 points, 9.6 boards and 3.6 assists.

The Buckeyes are losing more than production; they're losing their leader. It cannot be understated how important Cooper's leadership was to Ohio State. She did everything from coaching freshmen in practice, to getting a team back together after a loss, to physically moving players into position when they had mental lapses on the court.

Ohio State has the players to replace Cooper's production on the court, but it will be a tall, tall task to replace her presence in the locker room.

As Ohio State Continues to Struggle on the Court, Attendance Keeps Dipping

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The Schottenstein Center.

This isn’t really breaking news, of course. And Ohio State’s less-than-impressive 13-6 home record — which featured a 4-5 mark in conference play — only solidifies that.

The Buckeyes play in a modern NBA-style arena that seats 18,909 — the ninth largest in Division I, according to kenpom.com. Ohio State did not sell out one home game during the 2016–17 season, however, and only topped the 15,000-mark twice. It’s not exactly a raucous environment even when it’s filled and anybody who has ever attended a game there can probably attest to that.

Attendance declines are the product of on-court struggles the last few seasons for the Buckeyes. For the first time in the Thad Matta era, Ohio State failed to reach the 20-win mark as it finished this most recent campaign just 17-15, missing both the NCAA tournament and the NIT.

Ohio State Averaged Announce Attendance Last Five Years
SeasonAvg. attendance
2016–17 12,324
2015–16 12,284* (includes two NIT games)
2014–15 14,648
2013–15 16,524
2012–13 16,522

In 19 home games this season, Ohio State’s average announced attendance was 12,324 per game. That figure is up slightly from the 12,284 from the 2015–16 season, but if you discount the two NIT games the Buckeyes hosted that season — which averaged just 6,442 per game because, well, they were NIT games — this was the fourth-straight season in which attendance for Ohio State home games decreased. Without those two NIT games, Ohio State’s average announced attendance was 12,899 for that 2015–16 campaign.

There was a slight decline in Big Ten games, too. Last season, Ohio State’s average announced attendance in league contests was 13,842 with a Feb. 16 game against Michigan featuring the largest home crowd of the league season with 17,088. This season, the Buckeyes’ average announced attendance was just 13,258 per game. The Jan. 15 win over Michigan State had the largest home crowd of the season: 17,449.

In an interview with the Columbus Dispatch at the end of last season, Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said, essentially, the best way to fix the attendance declines was to win more games.

“Everybody is trying to analyze it,” Smith said then. “The bottom line is we need to win. That’s it.”

After this most recent season, interest around the Ohio State basketball program seems to be at an all-time low under Matta. Not only do the Buckeyes struggle to win games, but there isn’t much appeal either. Ohio State doesn’t play a particularly exciting style of basketball and there are no star players. Three seasons ago, the Buckeyes somewhat struggled and wound up as a 10-seed in the NCAA tournament. But they had a superstar in D’Angelo Russell and he alone was worth the price of admission.

With just one senior on last year’s team, Marc Loving, Ohio State is expected to return the majority of its core next season. A star doesn’t appear to be arriving immediately nor do the Buckeyes figure to completely change their system to play a different brand of basketball.

This team is going to look, personnel-wise, fairly similar to how it looked the previous two seasons. The only question is will the results change?

If performance is similar, expect attendance to be similar. And if both of those become reality, there could be significant changes made within the program.

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