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LGHL Five good omens for 2025 from Ohio State’s Spring Game

Five good omens for 2025 from Ohio State’s Spring Game
Michael Citro
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Ohio State Spring Showcase

Photo by Ben Jackson/Getty Images

Several performances and plays from the OSU Spring Game were potential harbingers of good things for the upcoming college football season.

Sure, this may be the latest Ohio State Spring Game story in the history of OSU Spring Game stories, but I didn’t want to interrupt the three-week countdown ranking the touchdowns from the Buckeyes’ national championship run. I also wanted to have the opportunity to watch the Spring Game a couple of times, so waiting to write this column afforded me the chance to do that.

It’s easy to overreact to a glorified practice like the OSU Spring Game. It looks like a football game, so it gives the appearance that the things happening on the field are transferrable. Some things are transferrable, but it’s still a scrimmage. Game planning isn’t a part of it and it’s impossible to gauge how aggressive the defense is, knowing they aren’t going to be allowed to blow up the quarterback, running backs, and receivers the way they could in a real game.

That tendency to overreact is why I wanted to get multiple looks to see if there was anything that might translate into the 2025 season. I definitely saw some things I liked, and I’m not going to read too much into the defense not getting more stops or making more big plays. I believe the rules of the Spring Game tend to hinder the defense playing more like it would in a real game.

This is what stood out to me:

Take a Bow, Running Game


One of the big questions for 2025 is how Ohio State can replicate the success the Buckeyes had in the run game in 2024 with both Quinshon Judkins and TreVeyon Henderson leaving and the offensive line getting rebuilt on the outside. The offense may have partially shown the answer in the Spring Game.

Again, taking into account the fact that sometimes whistles blew without contact and the defense not being allowed to tee off, the running game was impressive. Bo Jackson (88 yards), Sam Williams-Dixon (64), and C.J. McDonald (35) — albeit the latter in more limited action — all looked good.

As important as that was to see, it was even more important to see the offensive line opening holes that allowed those running backs to routinely gain three to five yards without being touched. If Ohio State’s offensive line can play opposing defenses that well in games that matter, it’ll be a great 2025 for the running game.

Julian Sayin Looks the Part


Although Lincoln Kienholz started with the first teamers at the beginning of the game and Julian Sayin started with the twos, the latter looked like the more game-ready quarterback. Kienholz’s first drive was riddled with nervy throws that missed open receivers.

Sayin looked poised and in command of the offense, and he threw accurate passes. Sayin completed 17 of his 24 attempts for 175 yards and a touchdown. Mylan Graham could have given him another touchdown pass but stumbled out of his break and couldn’t get his second hand up to catch a pass while wide open in the end zone.

More than his accuracy, Sayin looked like he understood what he was seeing on the field and making the appropriate reads and check downs.

Max Klare is a Weapon


It’s a long-running joke that every year is “the year of the tight end” at Ohio State. The Buckeyes have had some great tight ends, but the receivers have been so good, it’s almost a win for the defense to check down from Jeremiah Smith to Jelani Thurman.

Transfer Max Klare, who scored a touchdown in the Spring Game, is the kind of tight end who could have a huge year if Ohio State’s play calling allows him to. Klare should blast past any linebacker assigned to cover him. He runs great routes, gets open, and snatches the ball out of the air well.

Klare should be able to soften up any defense that keeps its safeties wide to compress the room Smith, Carnell Tate, Brandon Inniss, and others have to work in.

Speaking of Weapons...


Redshirt freshman Graham looks like a future star who might not have to wait long to enjoy that future. His long catch and run for a touchdown was a highlight, but Graham did a lot of good things in the Spring Game, and he must get snaps in 2025.

I think he will get those snaps, much like Tate and Inniss each got on the field early, but Graham may end up better than both of them, and there is a greater than zero percent chance that he finishes 2025 not only as a starter, but perhaps even the team’s second-leading receiver.

What About the Defense?


All of the above is about the offense, but there were good performances on the defense as well, although the format of the Spring Game is not necessarily conducive to flash on defense, especially for the starters who left the game after only a few snaps. Sonny Styles showed up early in the game and made a few plays, including a tackle for loss on a Donaldson run.

Aaron Scott Jr. was a defensive back who made some plays. Although he was also on the ground for the missed touchdown Graham couldn’t haul in from Sayin, Scott made several good plays in coverage, including an effective pass breakup in the end zone on Graham.

Inky Jones made a great break on the ball for his third-quarter interception after Eric Mensah put pressure on Tavien St. Clair. Faheem Delane’s interception also was the result of a great read and a quick, decisive undercut of the route.

Staying with the secondary, Lorenzo Styles Jr. made a great pass breakup down the sideline on Graham. Jaylen McClain broke up a pass in the end zone that was all but caught already by Thurman.

Finally, Logan George pressured the quarterback on a couple of successive plays early in the game. Linebacker Payton Pierce had a big pop on Donaldson on the game’s second series as well.



All of the above could be good omens for the 2025 Buckeyes. Losing such integral pieces at quarterback, the top two running back spots, and along the offensive line, probably the most optimistic takeaway was the running game, but we’ll see the fall if the Buckeyes can do that against a defense with a game plan and no restrictions on who (or how hard) they can hit.

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LGHL Former Ohio State golfer Neal Shipley secures first professional win on Korn Ferry Tour

Former Ohio State golfer Neal Shipley secures first professional win on Korn Ferry Tour
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Augusta Chronicle

Katie Goodale / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Shipley won low amateur honors at the 2024 Masters Tournament and the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst

Neal Shipley, the former Ohio State golfer who made national headlines after playing with Tiger Woods at the 2024 Masters Tournament, has secured his first professional win on the Korn Ferry Tour

Shipley won the LECOM SunCoast Classic in a five-hole playoff over Seungtaek Lee after finishing 18-under with rounds of 64-68-70-64. In the final round, he shot a 7-under 64 with birdies on holes No. 7 through 12, jumping eleven spots up the leaderboard.

He won on the fifth playoff hole with a long birdie putt.

Shipley made national headlines after finishing runner-up in the 2023 U.S. Amateur and earning low amateur honors at the 2024 U.S. Open at Pinehurst and the 2024 Masters Tournament.

In the final round at the Masters, Shipley played with 15-time major winner Tiger Woods. He was also featured on the third season of Full Swing on Netflix.

Shipley played three seasons at James Madison University from 2019-2022 and his remaining two seasons of eligibility at Ohio State University from 2022-2024. He claimed his lone collegiate victory at the 2024 Southwestern Invitational.

After his graduate season in Columbus, Shipley turned professional. His first event as a professional was the Beachlands Victoria Open on the 2024 PGA Tour Americas, where he finished T9.

In his first three events on the PGA Tour after turning pro, Shipley had a top-20 finish at the 2024 Rocket Mortgage Classic, a missed cut at the John Deere Classic, and a T6 at the ISCO Championship.

After this week's win, Shipley is now ranked third on the Korn Ferry Tour Points List. If Shipley finishes the year in the top 20 on the points list, he would earn a PGA TOUR card for the 2026 season.

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LGHL Freshman Focus 2025: Quincy Porter

Freshman Focus 2025: Quincy Porter
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


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Ohio State freshman wide receiver Quincy Porter | Via @QuincyPorter18 on Twitter

Continuing our series highlighting each of the Buckeyes’ incoming freshmen with one of the nation’s top wide receiver prospects.

Ohio State’s 2025 recruiting class featured 26 commitments and ranked No. 4 in the country, not including transfer portal additions. Each of these new Buckeyes hopes to one day become a star in Columbus, just like so many highly touted prospects before them. As part of Land-Grant Holy Land’s series Freshman Focus, we will take a look at all of these new members of the scarlet and gray and what they can bring to the team.

Next up on the list is five-star wide receiver, Quincy Porter.



Ohio State has quickly become Wide Receiver U under position coach Brian Hartline. Beginning his coaching career as a quality control assistant, the seven-year NFL vet took over the wide receiver room in 2018. From landing Garrett Wilson in his first recruiting class in 2019 to now coaching college football’s best player in Jeremiah Smith — and all the superstars in between — Hartline has compiled talent in the room like none other.

That trend continued in the 2026 class, as Ohio State was able to land five-star wide receiver Quincy Porter out of Oradell, New Jersey. As a result of Hartline’s incredible run of blue chip wideouts, there was very little pomp and circumstance around the commitment of Porter, but make no mistake about it: the Buckeyes have got themselves another stud pass-catcher.

Porter was one of three five-star commits for Ohio State in this cycle, joining quarterback Tavien St. Clair and cornerback Devin Sanchez. The 6-foot-4, 205-pound receiver was the No. 5 WR and No. 23 overall player nationally per the 247Sports Composite, as well as the No. 1 player out of the Garden State.

Porter secured scholarship offers from nearly 40 schools, including all of the heavy-hitters, but chose the Buckeyes out of a top six that also included Alabama, Michigan, Oklahoma, Penn State and Texas A&M. Notably, Porter was scheduled to take a visit with the Wolverines in early June following a weekend in Columbus, but decided instead to cancel that trip and pull the trigger on becoming a Buckeye.


BREAKING: Elite 2025 WR Quincy Porter has Committed to Ohio State, he tells me for @on3recruits

The 6’4 205 WR from Oradell, NJ chose the Buckeyes over Michigan, Penn State, Alabama, & others

Is ranked as a Top 32 Recruit in ‘25 (per On3) https://t.co/vsTMv2iyJZ pic.twitter.com/P8s3IeOZpS

— Hayes Fawcett (@Hayesfawcett3) June 14, 2024

Hartline had his eyes on Porter for quite some time, first extending the offer back in January of 2023. The wide receiver made multiple trips to Ohio State during the recruiting process, and ultimately the program’s track record of success at developing players for the NFL at the position swayed him to Columbus. Penn State made a heavy push for Porter late in the game, but he believed in Hartline and stuck with his commitment.

Porter got better and better over the course of his career at Bergen Catholic. After catching 35 passes for 686 yards and 11 touchdowns as a sophomore, he followed it up with 41 catches for 969 yards and 16 TDs as a junior, being named NJ.com’s Offensive Player of the Year. He capped things off with a senior campaign totaling 57 receptions for 969 yards and 11 TDs, helping lead the Crusaders to their fourth-straight New Jersey Non-Public A state championship.


A multi-sport athlete, Porter also ran track and field at Bergen Catholic, running a 23.56 200-meter as a sophomore and an 11.12 100-meter as a junior, per MileSplit. Porter also got some run on the defensive side of the ball, picking off five passes as a defensive back during his junior season.

As a talented, productive wide receiver, Porter shot up the rankings during the recruiting process, eventually earning himself five-star status. In his scouting report, Andrew Ivins of 247Sports projected Porter as a future first round NFL Draft pick. Here is some more of what Ivins had to say of Porter’s abilities:

“Big-featured linear threat with good long speed and no shortage of potential. [..] Large web gives him an advantage in 50-50 situations while mid-flight body control allows him to snag back-shoulder targets. Has been utilized primarily as a deep-ball specialist over the years, but has taken screen and swing passes to the house as he will make one or two cuts and then find his top gear. [...] Should be viewed as one of the top wide receiver prospects in the 2025 cycle with his size and athleticism...”

Porter has made a great first impression since arriving on campus, becoming the first freshman in his class to shed the black stripe. It was the third year in a row that a freshman wide receiver was the first to earn the honor, with Carnell Tate doing so in 2023 and Jeremiah Smith achieving the feat last offseason.

Porter then made his presence felt in Ohio State’s spring game, catching four passes for 50 yards as one of the team’s leading receivers.


St. Clair. struggled early, but settled in and played well.

IMO, he oozes with potential. The ball jumps out of his hand, as you can see from this dart to Quincy Porter pic.twitter.com/nHAFjmDZQi

— Buckeye HQ (@RealisticBuck) April 12, 2025

Despite his clear talent and potential, it will be tough for Porter to see the field much in 2025 with all of the guys in front of him. Ohio State loses Emeka Egbuka, but returns Smith, Tate and Brandon Inniss in addition to another former five-star in redshirt freshman Mylan Graham and sophomore Bryson Rodgers.

There is a bit of a logjam in Hartline’s room, but Porter came here to compete and be developed by the best, and his time will come.

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