• New here? Register here now for access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Plus, stay connected and follow BP on Instagram @buckeyeplanet and Facebook.

LGHL Power Two Podcast: Is Ohio State on the verge of a dynasty?

Power Two Podcast: Is Ohio State on the verge of a dynasty?
JordanW330
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Rose Bowl Game Presented by Prudential - Ohio State V Oregon

Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

College Football Playoffs semifinals are set! DJ and Jordan dissect the matchups and predict who will rise to the top.

Welcome to a new episode of Land-Grant Podcast Network’s Power Two Podcast. On this show, we talk about Big Ten and SEC football…and everyone else. This show is for the die-hard fans and the casual college football fans. After every week of action, we will catch you up on all the major matchups of the previous weekend and look ahead at the games, storylines, and players you should be paying attention to for the next week. My name is Jordan Williams, and I am joined by my co-host DaNaysia Jones. Lock in as we run a power sweep through the college football landscape.


Subscribe: RSS | Apple | Spotify | iHeart Radio



On this week’s episode, DJ and Jordan discuss the NFL draft. The first three teams are set and the imminent first three picks are Cam Ward, Travis Hunter, and Sheduer Sanders. DJ and Jordan break down which teams are the best fit and who has the highest potential for success. They also tackle the topic that many are wondering: Will Travis enter as a wide receiver or a corner?

In the two-minute drill, Jordan shares his excitement about the Big Ten having more wins over the SEC in bowl games. Jordan and DJ discuss their ideal matchup for the College Football Championship. They also share the stakes for the coaches of each team.

In the pre-game power sweep, Jordan and DJ take a deep dive into each team and their potential to win. Penn State and Notre Dame both have injured players so Jordan and DJ wondered who would even be in the lineup. Penn State and Notre Dame are also more well known for their defense so the ability to score came into question as well.

Ohio State versus Texas seems more like an open-and-shut matchup to DJ and Jordan. Ohio State has such an elite defense and it could potentially disarm Texas. Texas is talented but are they talented enough to beat Ohio State?

In the two-minute drill, Jordan shares the unfortunate reality that Joy Taylor is facing amidst the Skip Bayless lawsuit. DJ shares her excitement for the Detroit Lions. Since the Cowboys are not anywhere close to the postseason, DJ explains that this is her time to pick and choose who she will root for moving forward.



If you like the show, please share it with friends and family and leave a five-star review. If you want to keep up with the show, subscribe to the Land-Grant Podcast Network Feed where new episodes drop every Monday. You can also find Jordan’s article including B1G Thoughts on the Land-Grant Holy Land website.

Follow the show on YouTube: @GetDefensiveSportsNetwork

Follow the podcast on Instagram: @PowerTwoPodcast

Connect with us on Twitter: Jordan: @JordanW330 and DJ:@dj_danaysia

Continue reading...

LGHL Three things to watch when No. 9 Ohio State women travel to No. 25 Michigan

Three things to watch when No. 9 Ohio State women travel to No. 25 Michigan
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Ohio State v Michigan

Photo by Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images

Freshmen, veterans, and does the rivalry extend beyond football?

On Wednesday, No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball makes the three-hour drive north to take on the No. 25 Michigan Wolverines. It’s a ranked matchup for the first time since the 2023 Big Ten Tournament and the Buckeyes enter this year’s edition of the rivalry coming off two different performances against the Wolverines last season.

The last time these two played at the Crisler Center, the Wolverines frustrated the Buckeyes in a 69-60 Michigan victory that propelled a 15-game winning streak. That run of consecutive victories culminated in a 67-51 blowout win for the Buckeyes over the very same Michigan side to secure the outright Big Ten title.

This time around, both the Buckeyes and Wolverines feature overhauled rosters, loaded with fresh names to not only the rivalry but college basketball as a whole. Which side’s trio of talented freshmen will stand out? How will the veteran leaders take fair in the matchup and does the infamous Ohio State vs. Michigan rivalry known as The Rivalry, extend to all sports, or has football taken it over?

Here are three things to watch on Wednesday night in Ann Arbor.


Trios of Freshmen


At this point of the season, the group of Michigan freshmen are well known throughout the college basketball ranks. The Wolverines are proving that a starting lineup with three freshmen can surprise people, in a good way.

They’re led by No. 4 overall prospect Syla Swords. The youngest player to play for Team Canada’s senior team, debuting at the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics, Swords made her mark right away, scoring 27 points and adding 12 rebounds in the first game of the season when Michigan nearly defeated the reigning championship-winning South Carolina Gamecocks.

The 6-foot guard leads Michigan with 16.4 points and 6.5 rebounds per game. She plays alongside fellow freshman Olivia Olson (No. 20 2024 recruit) who averages 15.4 points per game. Then there’s Mila Holloway, the first-year point guard averaging the ninth-highest assists per game (4.2).

Northwestern v Michigan
Photo by Jaime Crawford/Getty Images

Together, the trio of freshmen have led the Wolverines to a strong start to the season, despite losing four games (all coming against top-10 opponents). On Wednesday, returning home from a long trip to the West Coast, they have a trio that may not get as many minutes as the starting three, but each has come into their own this season for the Buckeyes.

Point Guard Jaloni Cambridge is likeliest to go up against Holloway, which is a favorable Ohio State matchup with giving up the second most turnovers in the conference (52) against the No. 2 overall recruit Cambridge’s 2.5 steals per game.

Offensively, Cambridge is the equivalent of a Formula One car getting off the starting line. Since returning from a shoulder injury, Cambridge led the Buckeyes with 20 points against Northwestern on Sunday, including six rebounds and three assists.

For the Buckeyes, it isn’t only Cambridge showing up in her first year. Fellow guard Ava Watson’s begun to see her responsibilities grow. After coming off the bench behind Madison Greene and Kennedy Cambridge, head coach Kevin McGuff has rewarded the freshman with more minutes after her three-point shooting has improved and she’s contributed defensively.

“I just think for shooters like herself, going from high school to college, the speed of the game is different,” said McGuff. “And they’re running at you, and they’re more athletic. And so now I think she’s moving really well without the ball, and she’s able to get those shots up, even with the speed of the game being more so than what she saw in high school.”

Watson’s averaged 20 minutes in the last six games, averaging 9.7 points and 2.3 three-pointers made at a 40 percent clip. Defensively, the guard who played in a similar press in high school averaged 1.7 steals off the bench too.

Then there’s 6-foot-6 center Elsa Lemmilä. The Finnish big excelled in the non-conference schedule against mid-major sides but is still working on getting her footing in conference play. Against Rutgers, Lemmilä only played two minutes, with McGuff opting for the experience of Eboni Walker going up against Rutgers’ forward Destiny Adams.

It almost looked like it’d be a similar day against Northwestern when Lemmilä picked up four fouls in four minutes, but showed upperclassmen patience to return to the game and play 13 second-half minutes, scoring 11 points with four rebounds and two blocks. Lemmilä is third in the conference in blocks (30) and blocks per game (2.1).

Wednesday has the makings for any of the six to make their name known, with each playing important roles in their programs.


Don’t Forget the Upperclassmen


It’s not only the freshmen who will make their mark. There are upperclassmen for both Big Ten sides who can put the game on their shoulders, especially in the interior.

Ohio State bolstered their presence around the paint with former Kentucky forward Ajae Petty. Against Northwestern, Petty was overwhelmed by multiple Wildcat bigs clogging the paint but should have more room to work against Michigan. Petty’s averaging 7.9 rebounds per game, the first Buckeye to grab that many since the 20-21 season.

Before Sunday’s 30-point Ohio State win, Petty shot 70.3 percent from the floor in the previous eight games. That stretch included two double-doubles and 14.5 points per game. Petty is likely going to face pressure from senior guard Jordan Hobbs. Although she’s labeled as a senior, Hobbs is a 6-foot-3 ball of energy for head coach Kim Barnes Arico, who plays physically and will aim to stop Petty’s movement and high-efficiency shooting.

Hobbs will also have forwards Cotie McMahon and Taylor Thierry to work around. Offensively, any of the five starting Buckeyes is a danger to score, with all five averaging at least double figures per game scoring. What will dictate the game is how the veterans orchestrate the defense.

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

“Our offense is not a problem but there’s just things that we really do need to lock in on defense that can potentially cost us,” said McMahon. “So just kind of taking each game and make sure that we kind of focus on what we’re capable of doing as far as defense and making sure that we’re doing the right things, making the right reads, and just playing within what we do.”


How Deep Does “The Rivalry” Go?


Ask most Michigan or Ohio State fans which college team they dislike the most and they’re likely to say the other one. It’s a rivalry that causes street signs to be vandalized one week of the year and gives a superiority complex to one side of the other depending on the results of a sporting event.

That sporting event is a football game. It’s what football fans countdown to each season, it’s what players receive clothing-related pieces of jewelry if they win and if there ends up being multiple losses in a row, it can mean fans calling for the firing of a coach despite their overall record with the team.

Ask athletes and they’re going to follow suit and make their thoughts known about wanting to beat the other side. Ohio State forward Cotie McMahon wants to beat the other side, but it doesn’t go beyond the fact that she’s a born competitor.

When asked if she feels the rivalry like other teams at the university, it was an emphatic “I don’t.”

“The fans kind of make it more serious than it needs to be,” said McMahon. “But I mean, hey, go bucks!”

In past seasons, players went the company lines, saying they wanted to beat “that team up north” from multiple Buckeye press conference locations. McMahon is someone who wears her thoughts and emotions out for folks to see, and there’s no reason to doubt her comments or think of them as a way to say Michigan isn’t that important or anything. McMahon sees it as another game that she wants her team to win.

How does that apply to the court on Wednesday? There will be an arena full of fans in Maize and Blue who disagree that the rivalry doesn’t mean much, and swarms of fans at home, or those who make the drive, too.

Will it be more intense of a game for the Scarlet and Gray? It’s arguably the strongest test of the season to date with sides like the Illinois Fighting Illini starting to move towards the middle of the Big Ten pack and the Stanford Cardinal looking like a ghost of their former program.

That itself should drive more emotion into the game but it’s interesting to see how plays respond to the idea of the rivalry with so many new faces added to it. Not only the three consistent freshmen on both sides but players like Petty or guard Chance Gray who came in from Oregon in the offseason.

Either way, the good thing is that anyone can make the game into whatever they want it to be, regardless if a player in the game agrees.

Continue reading...

2025 tOSU Offense Discussion

Ohio State football team has major depth issues at RB after latest transfer loss

The Ohio State football team lost a running back to the transfer portal and that seriously screws up their depth at the position.

This season, the Ohio State football team has benefitted from having two great running backs. Both TreVeyon Henderson and Quinshon Judkins have had great seasons for the Buckeyes. They have shared the load equally and have helped the Buckeyes make the CFP semifinals.

Behind them, the Ohio State Buckeyes don't have much depth. The only two other scholarship running backs who are healthy are James Peoples and Sam-Williams Dixon. Henderson will leave next season to go to the NFL and it looks like Judkins will do the same.

Ohio State did get C.J. Donaldson Jr. to transfer in to help with depth issues at that spot. Still, that leaves them dangerously thin at running back. They just got thinner because the Buckeyes are now losing Williams-Dixon to the transfer portal.

Ohio State football player Sam Williams-Dixon has entered the transfer portal

Williams-Dixon, who was just a freshman, has decided to leave the Buckeyes. That means that they are likely down to just Peoples and Donaldson Jr. as backs who have significant carries at the collegiate level. They will have TC Caffey back after his second knee injury, but that's not a lot of depth.

The Buckeyes will be adding Bo Jackson and Anthony "Turbo" Rogers as freshmen in the incoming recruiting class, but they obviously don't have experience. Ohio State is going to have to rely on some unproven guys to get significant carries next year. Donaldson Jr. could start if Judkins heads to the NFL.

As for Williams-Dixon, he leaves after carrying the ball just seven times for 53 yards as a freshman this season. He must think that the freshman backs coming in behind him are more talented. That would be the only reason why he would decide to leave at this point.

Just sayin':
1. It would probably be nice to get another (proven) RB out of the transfer portal for 2025.
2. On December 9, 2024, Chip Trayanum announced that he would enter the transfer portal for the third time and ultimately committed to Toledo. I just wonder if Ohio State tried to get him back.

LGHL You’re Nuts: Which Texas player would you love to see at Ohio State?

You’re Nuts: Which Texas player would you love to see at Ohio State?
Brett Ludwiczak
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Texas v Michigan

Photo by Caten Hyde/The University of Texas Athletics/University Images via Getty Images

Your (almost) daily dose of good-natured, Ohio State banter.

On Friday night Ohio State will battle Texas in the Cotton Bowl with a spot in the College Football Playoff Championship Game on the line. The Buckeyes and Longhorns are two of college football’s heavy hitters, annually bringing in some of the top recruits in the country, as well as having deep pockets from donors to splash cash into NIL collectives to not only entice recruits out of high school, as well as lure top players in the transfer portal.

With both rosters loaded with blue chip talent, there are plenty of Ohio State players that Texas fans wished were suiting up in burnt orange, and many Longhorns that Buckeye fans would gladly welcome to Columbus. There’s even a key player on one of the rosters who has spent time at both schools. Quarterback Quinn Ewers spent the first year of his college career at Ohio State in 2021 only seeing the field to take two snaps at the end of a blowout against Michigan State. Ewers would transfer back to his home state of Texas following the season and has led the Longhorns to College Football Playoff appearances in each of the last two seasons.

Today we are going to focus on current Texas players who would be welcomed to Ohio State. What we want to know is which Longhorn you would love to see playing for the Buckeyes. It could be either a player you think would step in immediately and make an impact, or a Texas player that might not see a ton of playing time currently but would be an asset over the next couple of seasons.

Today’s question: Which Texas player would you love to see at Ohio State?

We’d love to hear your choices. Either respond to us on Twitter at @Landgrant33 or leave your choice in the comments.


Brett’s answer: Kelvin Banks Jr.


Since Ohio State is loaded with skill position talent I figured the obvious choice would be to focus on the trenches. The most obvious choice for me is offensive tackle Kelvin Banks Jr., winner of the 2024 Outland Trophy and Lombardi Award. Along with winning those awards, Banks was named a unanimous All-American and First Team All-SEC. The conference honor comes a year after he was named First Team All-Big 12.

The choice of Banks makes even more sense after the Buckeyes have suffered two major injuries on the offensive line this season. Tackle Josh Simmons was injured in the Oregon game, forcing guard Donovan Jackson to shift over to tackle. Later in the season, center Seth McLaughlin suffered an Achilles injury, which led to another shake-up on the offensive line. Even though the line has found its groove in the playoff, Ohio State might have had a little more success moving the football in the dreadful offensive performance against Michigan in late November had the Buckeyes had Banks on the left side of the offensive line.

Since he is a junior, Banks likely will be playing in the NFL in the fall since it’s hard to imagine his draft stock being any higher than it will be when the 2025 NFL Draft rolls around in April. Although it’s highly unlikely Banks would be playing when the Buckeyes and Longhorns square off to open the season in late August, he still would make offensive line coach Justin Frye’s job easier since Banks is the type of talent you can put at the tackle spot and not have to worry about. On Friday night both J.T. Tuimoloau and Jack Sawyer will have their work cut out for them as they try and get by Banks and into the Texas backfield


Matt’s answer: Jake Majors


If I’m being completely honest with you, I don’t know that there is anyone on Texas that I would want to replace a Buckeye with right now. Yes, there are individual talent, experience, and productivity upgrades at individual spots, but given how cohesive all of OSU’s units have been through the first two games of the playoffs, I wouldn’t want to disrupt anything that the Buckeyes have going on in favor of a short-term fix.

However, like Brett, in this hypothetical, I would stick on the offensive. Again, personally, I think that Justin Frye and the o-line have been tremendous given the circumstances and deserve any and all praise that they get. But, if you are looking to upgrade a position, I would go there. BLeez went tackle, and I understand why, but I’m thinking more about the middle of the line.

While I think Carson Hinzman has done an admirable job coming back to the position he played last season, I have a few reservations. First is that the center is in the... well... center of the line. So, if you have an elite player at that position, they can help the guard on either side of them. Given the volatility of Ohio State’s guard situation (again, I’ve been very pleased with their performance thus far in the postseason), it might help to have a veteran at the spot. This would also allow Hinzman to kick back to guard if the coaching staff so desired.

Jake Majors is a fifth-year senior who has been an All-conference selection, an Outland Trophy National Player of the Week, a Joe Moore Award semifinalist, and more. He also rates as the top Texas offensive lineman behind Banks according to Pro Football Focus.

My other concern at Ohio State’s center position has to do with how slowly Hinzmann seems to snap the ball. All too often, it feels like the football kind of floats back to Will Howard, or he has to bend down to catch it, giving the defenders an extra second to get into the backfield. It hasn’t cost OSU yet, but I’m afraid that in a tight game, it very well might.

So, for those reasons, I am opting to go with Majors at center, but again, I would gladly stick with the team we’ve already got.

Continue reading...

LGHL Who do you think is most responsible for Ohio State’s CFP success?

Who do you think is most responsible for Ohio State’s CFP success?
Matt Tamanini
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: Rose Bowl-Ohio State at Oregon

Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

You ask, we answer. Sometimes we ask, others answer. And then other times, we ask, we answer.

Throughout the
Ohio State football season, we will be asking and answering questions about the team, college football, and anything else on our collective minds of varying degrees of importance. If you have a question that you would like to ask, you can tweet us @LandGrant33 or if you need more than 280 characters, send an email HERE.

I don’t know about you, but coming out of the holidays, I have absolutely no idea what day it is. But what I do know is that the Ohio State Buckeyes will take on the Texas Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl on Friday night for a chance to play in the College Football Playoff National Championship Game.

Following blowout wins over the Tennessee Volunteers and Oregon Ducks, the Buckeyes are coming into the CFP semifinals as the prohibitive favorites to take home the title. So, we wanted to check in with the always-correct, ever-insightful fans of Buckeye Nation to see what you are thinking about the team’s run and Friday’s game.

So, we have two questions in this week’s fan survey. I run through them in the sections below and then you can vote in the survey at the bottom of the article. If the survey options don’t cover all of your bases, please feel free to write in your vote in the comments section at the bottom of the page. We will share the results of the survey before the game.


Question 1: Who has been the most important part of Ohio State’s postseason success?


There are a ton of people that I think deserve infinite amounts of credit for how well Ohio State has played during its first two games of the College Football Playoff; some of those individuals wear jerseys and some of them wear headsets.

From defensive stars like Caleb Downs, Jack Sawyer, and Cody Simon to offensive stars like Will Howard, Jeremiah Smith, and, heck, even the rebuilt offensive line. The Buckeye players have been extraordinary against Tennessee and Oregon.

However, the credit doesn’t stop there as Ryan Day and his coordinators Chip Kelly and Jim Knowles have been near flawless during the first two rounds. So, from your perspective, if you had to single one person out as being the most important to the success, who would you go with?

Would it be a coach because of how much influence they have over everything that happens, or would you go with a difference-making player? Hit the survey below to let us know.


Question 2: What will the margin of victory be in Friday’s game against Texas?


Following Ohio State’s dominant win over Oregon and Texas’ narrow overtime victory over the Arizona Sun Devils, Ohio State was installed as a 6.5-point favorite. The gold-standard college football analytics model SP+ projects the Buckeyes to win by a score of 26-22.

Through OSU’s first two games in the College Football Playoff, both Vegas and the analytics seemed to underestimate how well they were playing on both sides of the ball, so I would not be surprised if the Buckeyes end up exceeding both the oddsmakers and computers’ expectations.

I will have my official prediction on Friday, along with all of the other LGHL staff, but needless to say, I will be taking OSU to cover. In the meantime, let us know what you are thinking in the survey below.


Share your thoughts here:


Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Ohio State fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Continue reading...

LGHL Visiting Locker Room: Maize n Brew talks Michigan freshmen trio and more

Visiting Locker Room: Maize n Brew talks Michigan freshmen trio and more
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Michigan v UCLA

Photo by Meg Oliphant/Getty Images

How the early schedule for the Wolverines sets them up for March and the veterans holding the group together.

While basketball doesn’t have the same rivalry week feel as the football season, the No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball team heads north to Ann Arbor on Wednesday to face the No. 25 Michigan Wolverines.

Before the two sides take to the court, Land-Grant reached out to Maize n Brew, SBNation’s Michigan Wolverines site, to talk about a Maize and Blue side that looks vastly different than the recent Naz Hillmon or Laila Phelia-led teams.

It’s now centered around a dynamic trio of freshmen including a frontrunner for Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Writer Kellen Voss talks about them and more from the visiting locker room.



Land-Grant Holy Land: The storyline for Michigan in the offseason was losing their star guard Laila Phelia to the transfer portal but once games actually started the story quickly shifted to a trio of freshmen who aren’t making a team of the future but a team of right now. Syla Swords was the No. 4 ranked freshman in the 2024 class and immediately made an impact nearly leading Michigan over the defending national champions South Carolina on the first night of the season. What makes Swords so effective so early in her NCAA career?

Maize n Brew: Syla impresses me more and more every time I watch her play. She doesn’t really have any weaknesses, she can score at all three levels, and she sets up her teammates incredibly well with her court vision. She’s got WNBA potential written all over her, she’s already got Olympic experience, and she is the main reason why the future is so bright in Ann Arbor.

LGHL: Around Swords are two other freshmen in Olivia Olson and Mia Holloway. Olson and Swords take turns leading the Wolverines in scoring each game and Holloway is already averaging over four assists per game as a freshman. What do Olson and Holloway bring to the team?

MB: Olson and Holloway play nearly perfectly alongside Swords, as the fit is pretty seamless. Olson hasn’t gotten off to the best shooting start, but she’s an excellent cutter, a good finisher around the rim and plays solid defense. Holloway is the biggest surprise of the team, with all the preseason hype surrounding Swords and Olson.

She drives to the rim with authority, and has great court vision. One thing that is clear is the chemistry developing amongst the group, which has gotten better since November. They all play well around each other and the trio is incredibly unselfish. Swords brings the starpower, but Olson and Holloway lift the ceiling for this team over the next few seasons as well.

LGHL: Head coach Kim Barnes Arico didn’t go the way that some coaches in her shoes would go. Usually, a coach with practically a new side would try to lighten up their non-conference schedule to help players align but Barnes Arico started the year with the Gamecocks and then games against Virginia Tech and a ranked Oklahoma Sooners side. Despite going 1-2 in those games, how do you think they’ll help this team in the long run?

MB: That schedule has been hard on the team, especially coming off the California road trip with two top-five matchups against UCLA and USC. But I think this scheduling will be good for the team in the long run. The tough non-conference schedule reminded me of Tom Izzo testing his team with difficult games in November and December; yea it can be tough to swallow in the moment, but it will help Michigan in the long run face better teams on paper in an elite Big Ten and potentially upset better teams in March Madness.

LGHL: Roster talk is justifiably focused on the freshmen trio this season, but Jordan Hobbs seems like the glue holding the team together. What does she do for the team as its senior leader and who else on the roster is standing out for the Wolverines this season?

MB: Hobbs brings the stability that you would expect from a senior leader on this young team. She’s a good rebounder and she’s always been a good defender, but her scoring ability has improved drastically over the years. She’s gotten more versatile, scoring around the rim and from deep. Both her and Greta Kampschroeder have benefitted from playing alongside the three freshman, as their ball sharing is contagious and they often get set up for wide open threes.

Continue reading...

LGHL Ohio State men get epic double-overtime road win at Minnesota 89-88

Ohio State men get epic double-overtime road win at Minnesota 89-88
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Basketball: Ohio State at Minnesota

Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

The Buckeyes are now 2-2 in Big Ten play and will host Oregon next on Thursday.


The Ohio State Buckeyes (10-5, 2-2) picked up a key conference road win against the Minnesota Golden Gophers (8-7, 0-4) 89-88 in double-overtime to get to .500 in conference play. Bruce Thornton has had the Gophers’ number, scoring 26 and 25 in the two meetings respectively last season, but he was not the star for the Buckeyes in regulation.

Sophomore Devin Royal led the way for the Buckeyes putting up 19 points before the overtime periods, including a dunk with five seconds remaining in regulation to tie the game at 64. But Thornton opened up the second overtime with a three-pointer to give the visitors a 76-73 advantage, starting Ohio State’s run to the much-needed road victory.

Coming into the contest, OSU had lost 21 of its last 22 conference road games, a trend Jake Diebler’s squad was all too happy to buck. The difference in the game is that the visiting Buckeyes were 16-for-17 from the charity stripe in the extra periods while the Gophers were just 5-for-11.



Coming in, Ohio State was 1-4 in its last five trips to the Barn and lost by an average of 12.3 points per game, but OSU won the tip, and John Mobley Jr. drove to the paint and recorded the first basket of the game.

Dawson Garcia has been a Buckeye killer, averaging 28.7 points per game and 9.3 rebounds per game in three career games, but he started off slow from the field, missing his first three shots. Picking up the slack was super senior center Parker Fox who recorded seven of Minnesota’s first 10 points and was 3-for-3 from the field.


Devin Royal recorded four quick points for Ohio State, and baskets from Aaron Bradshaw and John Mobley gave the Buckeyes eight points.

Minnesota led 10-8 after the first media timeout. While Fox was 3-for-3 from the field, the rest of Minnesota was 1-for-7 from the field.

Gopher freshman Colin White entered the game and immediately knocked down a corner three-pointer to give the Buckeyes the lead. Two quick baskets from Minnesota gave them a 14-11 lead with 12 minutes remaining in the first half.

In the first eight minutes of the game, Ohio State shot 4-for-11 from the field and 1-for-4 from three-point range, while Minnesota shot 6-for-13 from the field and 1-for-5 from three-point range.

Thornton — Ohio State’s star point guard — didn’t score his first points of the game until there was 11:15 remaining in the first half. Ohio State led 20-18 at the under-8 timeout after a three-pointer from Thornton and a basket from Royal. Femi Odukale and Micah Parrish traded three-pointers, and Ohio State led 25-23 at the under-4 media timeout.

Both teams went ice cold to end the half, and Minnesota took a 28-27 lead into the break. Ohio State shot 10-for-30 from the field and just 3-for-15 from three-point range. Minnesota was not much better, shooting 12-for-31 from the field and 3-for-12 from three-point range.

Fox led all scorers with 11 points on 5-for-6 from the field for Minnesota. Isaac Asuma added seven points. Garcia, who averages 19.8 points per game, had zero points on 0-for-6 shooting in the first half.

Royal led the way for the Buckeyes with eight points, while Thornton added five points on 2-for-4 shooting. Minnesota outrebounded Ohio State 22-18 in the first half, and Ohio State did not score in the last 2:18 of the half.

To open the second half, Royal quickly picked up four points, but Minnesota answered and took a 35-33 lead into the under-16 media timeout. Trey Edmonds picked up a technical foul for arguing a foul call, and Thornton made two free throws to tie the game. After a Garcia turnover, Ques Glover picked up his first points of the game on a reverse layup to give Ohio State the lead.

Garcia answered with his first points of the day with a three-pointer from the corner, and then Thornton recorded a layup to continue the back-and-forth. Four more lead changes after three-pointers from Mitchell, Mobley, Asuma, and Glover to give this game 22 lead changes in this game with still 12 minutes remaining. Minnesota went on a 7-0 run to take a 51-47 lead at the under-12 timeout.

Minnesota continued to keep the Buckeyes at arm's length, leading 61-58 with three minutes left in the game. Ohio State could never put together a run on offense to take the lead in the middle part of the second half.

OSU’s Parrish tied the game at 62, but a Fox steal and Garcia dunk gave Minnesota a two-point lead with 1:14 remaining.

Another Buckeye turnover gave Minnesota the ball, as Glover lost his footing on a drive to the basket. The Buckeyes got the ball back down two points, and Mobley found Royal for a dunk and foul. Garcia was called for the foul and fouled out with five points.

Royal missed the free throw, but Ohio State was able to get the offensive rebound, and Glover and Mahaffey both missed putbacks to send the game into overtime. Stewart is fouled out for Ohio State, and Garcia is fouled out for Minnesota.

In overtime, Patterson made a layup to give Minnesota a 70-66 lead with 1:27 left in the game. Thornton was then fouled on a drive and made both free throws to cut the Minnesota lead to two. Fox knocked down a jumper to put the Gopher lead back to four points.

Parrish made two free throws, and Minnesota led 72-70 with 39 seconds left. Minnesota turned the ball over, but a Parrish travel gave the ball back to the Gophers. Asuma was fouled and missed the first and made the second. John Mobley also split free throws for Ohio State and Minnesota, leading 73-71 with six seconds left. Mitchell missed two free throws, and Mobley was fouled to give Ohio State a chance at the tie.

Mobley made both, and Minnesota missed at the buzzer, and we headed to a second five-minute overtime period.

Thornton made a three-pointer, and Bradshaw converted an and-one to quickly give Ohio State a 79-73 lead. Ohio State built an eight-point lead at 83-75 before the Gophers started crawling back. Fox made a quick layup, and Kadyn Betts split a pair of free throws to cut Ohio State's lead to five. Mobley made two free throws, and then Patterson made a three to make it 85-82. Glover was fouled, and he hit two free throws, but Mitchell hit a three to cut the Ohio State lead to only two points. Glover made two free throws to ice the game and give Ohio State the 89-88 win.


Up Next


As is life in Big Ten conference play, the schedule doesn’t get any easier for the Buckeyes. On Thursday, Jan. 9, OSU will host No. 15 Oregon, who is 13-2 overall and 2-2 in the conference, at 6 p.m. ET at the Schottenstein Center. The Ducks are coming off of a home loss to Illinois and a home win over Maryland in their last two games.

Continue reading...

LGHL Ohio State men pull off double OT road win, while football preps for CFP semis

Ohio State men pull off double OT road win, while football preps for CFP semis
Matt Tamanini
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Basketball: Ohio State at Minnesota

Nick Wosika-Imagn Images

All the Buckeye news thats fit to re-print.

Look, we get it. Your days are busy and you don’t have time to read all of the stories and tweets from the three dozen websites dedicated to covering Ohio State athletics, or the 237 Buckeye beat writers churning out hot takes and #content on a daily basis. But that’s ok, that’s what your friends at Land-Grant Holy Land are here for.

Monday through Friday, we’ll be collecting all of the articles, tweets, features, interviews, videos, podcasts, memes, photos, and whatever else we stumble across on the interwebz and putting them in our daily “Why is this News?” article. That way, you’ll have a one-stop shop for all of the most important Buckeye news, jokes, and analysis.

You’re welcome!


For your Earholes...


Subscribe to the Land-Grant Podcast Network for all of your Ohio State needs
Matt Tamanini, Land-Grant Holy Land


Subscribe: RSS | Apple | Spotify | iHeart Radio


On the Gridiron


Practice report: Ohio State continues prep for Texas in Cotton Bowl; newcomers take part
Patrick Murphy, Bucknuts

Three observations from Buckeyes open practice period ahead of Cotton Bowl
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row

No, it’s not that Parker Fleming


OHIO STATE v TEXAS
ADVANCED STAT PREVIEW pic.twitter.com/U0QnjDAQEI

— parker fleming (@statsowar) January 6, 2025

Ohio State Freshman Running Back Sam Williams-Dixon Enters the Transfer Portal, Will Not Remain With Team Through CFP
Chase Brown, Eleven Warriors

Buckeyes defensive end Mitchell Melton entering transfer portal
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row

Why OSU doesn’t list Emeka Egbuka as its all-time leading receiver – yet
Lori Schmidt, The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State finds renewed success on offensive line in CFP thanks to three-man guard rotation
Patrick Murphy, Bucknuts

Ohio State: Donovan Jackson shining at left tackle on Playoff stage
Bill Landis, Dotting The Eyes

Luke Montgomery settling into guard rotation, improving with each CFP rep
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row

Is Ohio State alone in its inability to get holding penalties called?
Bill Rabinowitz, The Columbus Dispatch


"I felt like I belonged there."#Texas QB Quinn Ewers says he built very special relationships with the guys during his short time at Ohio State. Him and Jack Sawyer were roommates and he's very excited to see his former teammates again. #Buckeyes pic.twitter.com/yZQjnvykw2

— Nicole Shearin (@NicoleShearintv) January 6, 2025

Texas QB Ewers remembers his brief time as a Buckeye with fondness
Bill Rabinowitz, The Columbus Dispatch

Caleb Downs gets second crack at Texas, this time as a Buckeye
Dave Biddle, Bucknuts

Silver Bullies Jack Sawyer, J.T. Tuimoloau rush toward OSU sack record
Rob Oller, The Columbus Dispatch


On the Hardwood


Ohio State men get epic double-overtime road win at Minnesota 89-88
Justin Golba, Land-Grant Holy Land

Takeaways: In must-win game at Minnesota, Ohio State finds a way
Adam Jardy, The Columbus Dispatch


Wasn't pretty, but we got it done

The Minnesota Native gets to lead the fight song ️ pic.twitter.com/hyTUU4KTuW

— Ohio State Hoops (@OhioStateHoops) January 7, 2025

Jaloni Cambridge’s return to 100% health necessary with upcoming Ohio State stretch
Thomas Costello, Land-Grant Holy Land


Outside the Shoe and Schott


Women’s Ice Hockey: No. 2 Buckeyes stun No. 1 Wisconsin in seventh-round shootout victory after 3-3 tie in regular time
Cameron Moone, The Lantern


Jenna Buglioni nets it five-hole to get the shootout win for @OhioStateWHKY over No. 1 Wisconsin‼️#B1GHockey x @WCHA_WHockey pic.twitter.com/1oviiFIGjs

— Big Ten Hockey (@B1GHockey) January 5, 2025

And now for something completely different...


As seen on @Jeopardy tonight #GoBucks pic.twitter.com/CofHZgptx0

— The Ohio State University Marching Band (@TBDBITL) January 7, 2025

Continue reading...

LGHL Silver Bullets Podcast: Oregon rewind, Ohio State news, and Texas preview

Silver Bullets Podcast: Oregon rewind, Ohio State news, and Texas preview
Michael Citro
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: Rose Bowl-Ohio State at Oregon

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The Rose Bowl has been won. On to the Cotton Bowl!


Subscribe: RSS | Apple | Spotify | iHeart Radio



Ohio State was able to ring in the new year the right way, obliterating the Oregon Ducks in the Rose Bowl to earn a place in the College Football Playoff semifinals. The Buckeyes opened the game white hot on both sides of the ball, carving up the Duck defense in just a few plays and harassing Dillon Gabriel when Oregon’s offense tried to get things going. It was a few plays from being a perfect game from Will Howard, Jeremiah Smith, TreVeyon Henderson, Jack Sawyer, Caleb Downs, Cody Simon, and company.

We looked back at the quarterfinal matchup, gladly ate some necessary crow over our score predictions from last week, checked to see how our picks to click performed (spoiler: one of us picked both the offensive and defensive MVPs of the game), and broke down the game’s key plays.

After our Oregon rewind, we discussed the other College Football Playoff games and bowl games involving Big Ten teams. The conference continues to show well against everyone else. SEC fans are quick to point out that it’s for no reason other than the games being meaningless, though. The B1G couldn’t possibly be having a good year, and there’s no way the SEC took a half step down in 2024, so just get that thought out of your head right now.

After checking the scoreboard, we discussed some transfer portal news. It was completely up to date at the time we recorded, but since then the Buckeyes have added a linebacker and lost a running back. Life, especially in the portal era, comes at you fast.

Finally, we looked ahead to Friday’s titanic tilt against Texas in...Texas. Yes, the road before Ohio State was stacked as much as it could be against the Buckeyes when this journey began, but that’s what you get for losing to Michigan. We checked out the Longhorns’ rankings and discussed Ohio State’s challenges before selecting our offensive and defensive picks to click and making our score predictions.

We would love to hear from you, so please reach out with your feedback and questions below in the comments section or send us an email. Any questions directed toward us will be answered on our next show.

Be sure to subscribe, rate, review, share, and follow the show over on Twitter at @SilvrBulletsPod.

As always, thanks for listening!



0:20 - A look back at a thoroughly satisfying revenge win over the Oregon Ducks in the Grandaddy of them All.

35:21 - A walk through the other College Football Playoff games and B1G-centric bowl games with a side order of transfer portal news.

1:04:31 - The College Football Playoff continues for Ohio State with a semifinal matchup against former Buckeye Quinn Ewers and his Texas teammates. We preview and predict it.

Continue reading...

LGHL Ohio State offers handful of Florida recruits

Ohio State offers handful of Florida recruits
Dan Hessler
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


12812006.0.jpg

2027 five-star WR Julius Jones | via Gabby Urritia, 247Sports

The Buckeyes were hot on the recruiting trail Monday, offering a handful of targets out of Florida.

Ohio State is now 2-0 in the newly expanded College Football Playoff following a resounding 41-21 victory over Oregon on New Years Day. With the win, Ryan Day and the Buckeyes will now have the challenge of playing Texas in the playoff semifinals. With a chance at reaching the national championship, the Buckeyes will be hard at work preparing for Friday’s game.

That being said, recruiting never stops — especially for the Ohio State coaching staff. While making it this far in the playoffs is certainly a good thing, it does make recruiting more difficult right now, and programs that are no longer playing have additional time to travel the country and recruit the nation’s top high school talents.

But again, recruiting never stops for Ohio State and Ryan Day and the coaching staff are finding other ways to recruit, mainly by having fresher faces visit with recruits. On Monday, Ohio State had staff members like director of recruiting strategy Nick Murphy, among others, travel south to visit with blue-chip recruits. While Murphy seemingly spent the majority of his time in North Carolina, the headlines Ohio State made Monday were more focused in Florida.

Ohio State offered a handful of recruits from both the 2026 and 2027 classes from the Sunshine State on Monday, and below are just a few:

Five-star WR Julius Jones


Class: 2027
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, FL / St. Thomas Aquinas
Size: 5-foot-10 / 160 lbs.


I have just receive an offer from The Ohio State University!@IamGlennHolt @CoachHarriott @ChadSimmons_ @Rivals @247recruiting @adamgorney @JohnGarcia_Jr pic.twitter.com/8BGtldZ1dE

— Julius Jones .Jr (@julius_jones_) January 6, 2025

Four-star Auburn WR commit Denarius Gray


Class: 2026
Hometown: Hollywood, FL / Chaminade-Madonna Prep
Size: 6-foot-2 / 178 lbs.


Extremely Blessed To Receive An Offer From The Ohio State University. @Dameon8 #AGTG pic.twitter.com/nZNvSseajO

— Denairius Gray (@xklvsive_1) January 6, 2025

CB Zayden Gamble


Class: 2027
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, FL / St. Thomas Aquinas
Size: 5-foot-11 / 165 lbs.

IOL Jayden Dean


Class: 2027
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, FL / St. Thomas Aquinas
Size: 6-foot-3 / 277 lbs.


Early Morning Blessings!!! I Am Blessed To Receive A Offer From The Ohio State University✝️ @ChadSimmons_ @JohnGarcia_Jr @adamgorney @JerryRecruiting @larryblustein @Andrew_Ivins @OhioStateFB @SFEFounder @ShawnFace @Therula99 @CoachHarriott @KenyatisS @mikeromano71 pic.twitter.com/vFTVSylHOF

— Jayden Dean ★★★★☆ (@J_Dean34) January 6, 2025

QB Derrick Baker


Class: 2027
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, FL / St. Thomas Aquinas
Size: 6-foot-2 / 220 lbs.


Beyond blessed to receive an offer from @OhioStateFB #AGTG #FTF #GoBucks pic.twitter.com/gpWwaX9DvW

— Derrick Baker 2027 QB (@derrickbakerQb1) January 6, 2025

CB Jaden Carey


Class: 2027
Hometown: Fort Lauderdale, FL / St. Thomas Aquinas
Size: 6-foot / 165 lbs.


Blessed to receive an offer from The Ohio State University ⚪#AGTG #GoBucks@CoachHarriott⁩ ⁦@STA_Football⁩ ⁦@J_Nelson1⁩ ⁦@OhioStateFB⁩ ⁦@Andrew_Ivins⁩ ⁦@RivalsFriedman⁩ ⁦@stephenwagOn3⁩ ⁦@TheUCReport⁩ ⁦@adamgorneypic.twitter.com/3cRKqnP3Ty

— Jaden Carey (@JadenCarey22) January 6, 2025

LB Bryant Junius


Class: 2026
Hometown: Hollywood, FL / Chaminade-Madonna Prep
Size: 6-foot-1 / 190 lbs.


Blessed to receive an offer from Ohio State University #AGTG #gobucks @JohnGarcia_Jr @adamgorney pic.twitter.com/FuYo0IpMZ9

— Bryant Junius (@BRYANTJUN4) January 6, 2025

ATH A’mir Sears


Class: 2028
Hometown: Pembroke Pines, FL / West Broward
Size: 6-foot-1 / 162 lbs.


WOWWW!!! EXTREMELY BLESSED TO RECEIVE AN OFFER FROM THEE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY!! ❤️ #gobucks @CoachQ954 @PrepRedzoneFl @JohnGarcia_jr @Andrew_Ivins @JerryRecruiting @zack_poff_mp @SWiltfong_ @RyanWrightRNG @markpantoni pic.twitter.com/l4ZG8VrxBi

— A’mir Sears (@AmirSears21) January 6, 2025

K Noah Sidan


Class: 2026
Hometown: Hollywood, FL / Chaminade-Madonna Prep
Size: 5-foot-11 / 175 lbs.

Three-star WR Jasen Lopez


Class: 2026
Hometown: Miami, FL / Chaminade-Madonna Prep
Size: 5-foot-10 / 165 lbs.

Continue reading...

Filter

Back
Top