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Ohio State at Indiana, Saturday, March 8, 2025, 3:45 PM on CBS

From the Hoosier perspective:

What to Expect: Indiana vs. Ohio State​

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Indiana concludes the regular season Saturday afternoon against Ohio State at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. The Buckeyes are 17-13 and 9-10 in the Big Ten.

Indiana won the first meeting 77-76 in overtime on Jan. 17 in Columbus.

Saturday’s game will tip at 3:45 p.m. ET on CBS
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Two teams desperately needing a win will meet on Saturday in Bloomington. The Hoosiers and Buckeyes are squarely on the bubble with the Big Ten tournament and Selection Sunday looming.

Indiana is coming off a hard-fought 73-64 loss at Oregon, which snapped its three-game winning streak. Ohio State survived a double overtime thriller on Tuesday in Columbus against Nebraska, another bubble team.

The winner will feel good about its NCAA tournament chances, while the loser will leave with work to do in Indianapolis next week to secure a bid.

THE FIRST MATCHUP
Indiana’s narrow win against the Buckeyes in Columbus was one of its better performances of the season. The Hoosiers responded to back-to-back 25-point losses against Iowa and Illinois with better energy from the opening tip.

Indiana nearly collapsed after it built a 68-58 lead with 5:12 to play. The Hoosiers were outscored 13-3 to finish regulation and fell behind in overtime before outlasting the Buckeyes.

Senior wing Luke Goode had a career night at Value City Arena. The Illinois transfer poured in a career-high 23 points and shot 7-for-14 from the field, including a 4-for-7 mark on 3s. His fourth 3-pointer of the game, with just over a minute left in overtime, proved to be the game-winner.

With Malik Reneau sidelined with a knee injury, Indiana emphasized Oumar Ballo in the post early and often. The 7-footer scored 21 points on 8-for-14 shooting from the field and a 5-for-7 mark from the foul line. Ballo also pulled down 15 rebounds and eight of them were on the offensive end. Ballo played 40 minutes and also had three assists, two blocked shots and a steal.

The Hoosiers also got a key performance from Kanaan Carlyle off the bench. Carlyle, who played well in Tuesday’s loss at Oregon, logged 36 minutes against the Buckeyes. He had 13 points on 5-for-12 shooting and didn’t commit a turnover. Carlyle scored 10 of his 13 points after halftime.

For Ohio State, all three of its backcourt players had big games. Freshman John Mobley scored a team-high 22 points and hit several big shots from the perimeter. Mobley was 5-for-11 on 3s and is shooting 40.2 percent on triples.

Indiana also had trouble defending San Diego State transfer Micah Parrish. The 6-foot-6 wing had 19 points and was disruptive defensively (three steals). Junior point guard Bruce Thornton also played well despite a rough shooting night from distance. Thornton was 6-for-9 on 2s and finished with 18 points, six rebounds and three assists in 43 minutes.

Both teams were missing key pieces in the first meeting. Reneau was unavailable for Indiana and the Buckeyes were without forward Devin Royal, who averages 13.6 points, seven rebounds and 1.1 assists in 28.3 minutes per game. The 6-foot-6 Royal shoots 52.5 from the field and is a versatile scoring threat.

TEMPO-FREE PREVIEW

(All stats are for conference games only and conference rankings in parenthesis are updated through Wednesday’s games.)

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Ohio State is an above-average 3-point shooting team that also gets to the line and converts its opportunities. The Buckeyes shoot 35.2 percent from deep in Big Ten games and score 30.5 percent of its points from 3, which is middle of the pack in the conference and nationally.

The Buckeyes have the fifth-best free throw rate (FTA/FGA) in the league and are shooting 78.4 percent from the stripe, which ranks third in the conference. Thornton shoots 84.1 percent, Mobley 88 percent, Royal 78.2 percent and Parrish 79.1 percent from the stripe.

Defensively, the Buckeyes have two key issues. Ohio State is 14th in the Big Ten in defensive rebounding percentage and last in opponent free throw rate. Indiana had 14 offensive rebounds and went 17-for-23 from the line in Columbus.

WHAT IT COMES DOWN TO

The KenPom projection is Indiana by one with a 54 percent chance of a Hoosier victory. Bart Torvik’s ratings favor Indiana by two with a 57 percent chance for the Hoosiers to prevail.

Indiana should have one of its liveliest crowds of the season. It’s senior day in Bloomington and the Hoosiers can take another step towards an NCAA tournament berth with a win. While not an elimination game for either team with the Big Ten tournament looming, the winner will have far less pressure going to Indianapolis and will also avoid a Wednesday game.

The Hoosiers are playing arguably their best basketball of the season at the right time. Indiana won three straight games before Tuesday’s loss at Oregon. The final score of that contest was not indicative of how close the game was as IU led in the final two minutes before it had to foul, which allowed Oregon to stretch the lead.

The keys for Indiana are dominating the paint, converting opportunities at the line and not allowing the trio of Thornton, Mobley and Parrish to get in rhythm offensively.

LGHL Ohio State women’s basketball remains optimistic entering postseason play

Ohio State women’s basketball remains optimistic entering postseason play
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 Maryland

Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images

Despite losing in College Park, the overtime defeat gives the team hope heading into a Friday Big Ten Tournament debut

Last season, Ohio State women’s basketball was on a tear. The Buckeyes won 15 games in a row in conference play, securing the sole ownership of the Big Ten regular season title, setting up what the team hoped was a longer postseason than their trip to the Elite Eight in 2023. Then the wheels fell off.

Head coach Kevin McGuff’s side went to Iowa to face guard Caitlin Clark in her last regular season game in Iowa City. In a contest full of emotion and national attention, Clark secured the NCAA points record from Pete Maravich and the Buckeyes couldn’t overcome the Black and Yellow. A small blip before the postseason, but it proved to be just the first impact that turned into a fast-growing crack in the foundation — then the Maryland Terrapins punched a hole in it.

In the Big Ten Tournament, Ohio State entered as the No. 1 seed, and came in with a track record of not losing in the quarterfinals when entering with a double-bye under McGuff.

However, the Terrapins beat the Buckeyes by 21 points and Ohio State hopped right back on the plane home from Minneapolis, Minnesota to try and regroup for the NCAA Tournament. The Buckeyes beat the Maine Black Bears, needing to rebound from a tough start, and then couldn’t hold off the Duke Blue Devils in the Second Round of March Madness.

That’s all in the past, but Ohio State stands on the precipice of another March, beginning Friday at the Big Ten Tournament. However, this time things are different.

For one, the team integrated three new starters in the offseason. It’s taken time to get players used to each other, and key leaders from past campaigns are now either in the pros, on the Ohio State bench or both.

Then there’s the second difference - the Buckeyes haven’t been on a tear at all this season. Ohio State won 17 games to start the season, but that was a weak non-conference schedule masquerading as a tear.

Ohio State has been pushed and pulled to this point of the season through strong individual performances from forward Cotie McMahon and freshman point guard Jaloni Cambridge. Any tough win was either the by-product of a player reaching new levels of competing or opponents wrestling away leads. There have not been many team battles to overcome adversity, until the final day of the regular season.

The Buckeyes lost in overtime to the Maryland Terrapins 93-90 on a last second overtime three-point winner by Terps guard Sarah Te-Biasu, but that defeat puts Ohio State in a better spot for the postseason, much better than last season.

Against Maryland, Ohio State lacked lineup consistency with McMahon and Cambridge each sitting on the bench for periods of time they would normally be playing due to foul trouble. In the second half, down nine points, it looked like the Buckeyes were on their way to a humbling defeat but a weird thing happened and Ohio State fought and clawed back into the game.

“I was proud of the team, the way we competed,” said McGuff. “I thought our competitive character and effort was where it needed to be.”

McGuff isn’t one who believes a loss is a good way to learn lessons, sharing in the past that winning also lets teams learn lessons, so the positives of how the team competed were followed up with a “but.”

“But we made too many mistakes. A lot of turnovers that led to easy Maryland baskets and a couple opportunities for key defensive stops that we didn’t get.”

Last season, the Buckeyes looked like a team that knew they could win, but the confidence got the best of them at the end of the season and in the postseason. This edition of the Scarlet and Gray doesn’t have that same belief. When the team did, specifically against the Penn State Nittany Lions, it ended in defeat. Penn State entered that game without a Big Ten win on the season and ended the regular season on Sunday with only that one win in conference play.

Not having that kind of confidence is a good thing.

Ohio State can’t afford to expect a win to come to them. There needs to be that fight that the Buckeyes showed without their top scorers on the floor in an environment that goes beyond a normal college basketball game in the Big Ten. Not only were the coaches yelling, but the fans and players joined in. The officiating crew was struggling to keep up with the intensity on and off the court.

Despite the loss, it has the Buckeyes feeling better about heading into the postseason.

“It shows our togetherness, our toughness,” said graduate senior guard Madison Greene. It gives us confidence even if we didn’t have a great outcome today, coming into the Big Ten Tournament and March, I think if we have that same mindset and energy I think we’ll be good.”

Greene was part of the group leading that comeback charge, playing 33 minutes, which is her most in a game coming off the bench. In large part due to Cambridge only playing 18 minutes before fouling out. Greene added 12 points, her highest total in Big Ten play this season in a subdued role.

The Buckeyes also leaned on the play of guard Taylor Thierry, who played 43 minutes and led all Ohio State scorers with 21 points. A performance unlike Thierry this year after the senior took a more backseat role in the offense.

While the cast of characters is different, the show is the same for Ohio State, and they are playing more like the 22-23 edition of this program. That team had to battle to come back in multiple games. That team didn’t lack fight. For any tough, lopsided, defeat there were two-to-three double-digit comebacks.

This season’s edition of the Buckeyes has the talent and it’s proven that throughout the season. Outside of McMahon and Cambridge, guard Chance Gray has games hitting deep shots with frequency, forward Ajae Petty is on a three-game double-double streak and bench players like Kennedy Cambridge and Elsa Lemmila provide sparks nearly every game.

How will that transfer to the postseason where each game could be the team’s last?

“I think we’re in a good spot,” said McGuff. “Today we could’ve won, we didn’t, and give Maryland credit, they made some big plays down the stretch especially. But we’ve played well the last three games against really good competition and so I think we’re in a pretty good spot.”

Ohio State has wins against ranked Michigan State and an overtime victory over a surging Iowa Hawkeyes team that has three wins in their last four games, plus a narrow, two-point, defeat to the UCLA Bruins. It bodes well for the Buckeyes and shows that despite an up and down season, not all hope is lost for the Scarlet and Gray.

“We’ve got to take that same competitive character into next weekend in Indy” said McGuff. “Just be a little bit better in controlling the things we can control and we’ll be a bit better.”

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LGHL McGuff on McMahon controversy, closing the book on overblown public response

McGuff on McMahon controversy, closing the book on overblown public response
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 Maryland

Photo by G Fiume/Getty Images

Ohio State moves on from the middle fingers momentarily taking over the Cotie McMahon search engine results.

Put the name “Cotie McMahon” in a search engine over the past three years and a number of highlight plays, shows of pure emotion and accolades popped up. On Monday, those shifted to a different kind of result with opportunistic news outlets looking for clicks “reporting” on the middle fingers given by the junior forward to the Maryland Terrapins’ student section in Sunday’s 93-90 Buckeyes loss.

Look past the obvious intentions of outlets like Fox News writing an article about a successful black woman in a moment of frustration and the moment fit into a game that had tension on both sides, a technical foul and an environment in College Park that sounded like a powder keg about to explode.

On Thursday, one day before Ohio State women’s basketball heads to Indianapolis to play in the annual Big Ten Tournament, head coach Kevin McGuff addressed the situation.

Here is coach McGuff’s full statement:

“Good to have everybody here. It’s good to see you guys. And just real quickly, we obviously took a tough loss against Marilyn on Sunday. And we had an unfortunate incident with Cotie [McMahon] where she kind of lost control of her emotions there for a moment and did something out of character for her. And we are addressing that internally with her.”

While opposing fans and people with their own heinous motivation for going after McMahon are likely on the side of punishing the junior, McGuff followed that up with confirmation that the team, the Big Ten and the NCAA are not taking the situation any further, which is the right thing to do.

Look further into the game, the moment, and the response and it is not something that would normally garner the same attention if it were in the pro ranks, or even if it happened elsewhere in college sports. Ohio State has history, with former football player Marcus Hall showing the middle finger to Michigan fans in 2013, resulting in a reprimand from the conference but nothing additional.

Emotion is part of the sport, and McMahon shows more than most. Over the years, McGuff is known for his fair share of jokes at McMahon’s personality that is beloved by fans and grates opposing fans, but McGuff continued on Thursday talking about how that emotion isn’t a detriment — it is a benefit.

“We talk to her, we talk to all of our players,” said McGuff. “When she’s got really positive emotion going in the right direction, it really drags the whole team with her. Her being mindful of that, and that energy is really powerful and we want to use it in a positive way and it’s extremely impactful for us.”

Now it’s time to go back to the reality that much worse things have happened in a basketball game than a player sending their thoughts back to a college basketball crowd, and now spend time watching great basketball.

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LGHL Ohio State’s men’s and women’s hockey compete in conference tournament action this weekend

Ohio State’s men’s and women’s hockey compete in conference tournament action this weekend
Brett Ludwiczak
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The women’s team will look to win the WCHA Final Faceoff, while the men’s team opens up Big Ten Tournament play.

While the eyes of the hockey world were on the Columbus Blue Jackets over the weekend because of the NHL’s Stadium Series game, both Ohio State hockey teams had notable weekend series.

The Buckeye men’s team closed out their regular season schedule by splitting a series with the Michigan Wolverines. The women’s team had little trouble with St. Thomas in the first round of the WCHA Tournament, securing a spot in the WCHA Final Faceoff this weekend.

Now both squads will look to add to their resumés to bolster their seeding for their upcoming NCAA Tournament runs.


Women’s hockey


We’ll start off with the Ohio State women’s hockey team, since they will be wrapping up their conference tournament, while the men’s team will just be starting the Big Ten Tournament this weekend.

Nadine Muzerall’s squad swept St. Thomas in Columbus over the weekend, beating the Tommies 5-1 on Friday, followed by a 4-1 win on Saturday. With the victories, the Buckeyes will now face Minnesota on Friday afternoon in a WCHA Final Faceoff semifinal.

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Joy Dunne opened up the scoring for Ohio State 1:31 into the game on Friday night. Dunne also scored the first goal of Saturday’s game at the 1:36 mark of the first period. With goals in both games, Dunne has now put a puck in the back of the net in each of the last six games. The Buckeye star also added three assists over the two games, increasing her team-high point total to 52 points on the season. The 23 goals Dunne has scored is just two shy of tying Jocelyn Amos for the team lead.

The star of Friday night’s game was undoubtedly Mira Jungåker, who scored two goals and dished out two assists in the 5-1 win over St. Thomas. The freshman defenseman from Sweden also had an assist in Saturday’s victory. After a slow start to the season, it is obvious that Jungåker is gaining comfort on the ice and could be a big factor for the Buckeyes the rest of the season.

Winning both games for Ohio State over the weekend was goaltender Amanda Thiele, who continues to add to her impressive Buckeye career between the pipes. Thiele is now 18-5-2 on the season, giving her 69 career wins as an Ohio State goaltender. Although Hailey MacLeod has seen a decent amount of time at goalie for the Buckeyes, expect to see Thiele the rest of the way because of her tremendous amount of experience in high pressure postseason games.

Now Ohio State will take on a Minnesota team who they defeated in three of their four meetings during the regular season. The Buckeyes won the first game between the teams 4-3 on October 11th in Columbus, followed by a shootout win the next night.

The Golden Gophers and Buckeyes would meet in Minneapolis a few months later. Minnesota’s 3-1 win on Jan. 31 would be their only one over Ohio State so far this season, but the Buckeyes did earn some revenge the next day with a 7-3 triumph. The most notable performance in those games was in the final matchup when Sloane Matthews recorded a hat trick to lead Ohio State to victory.

The Golden Gophers enter Friday’s semifinal with a 27-10-1 record after winning two of three games over Minnesota State over the weekend. Minnesota won the first game 6-1 but Minnesota State was able to avoid the sweep by winning the second game 5-4 in double overtime. The Golden Gophers righted the ship in Sunday’s game, winning 6-2. Emma Kreisz had two goals and three assists to lead the way in game one, while Abbey Murphy netted two goals in game three.

There’s no question that Abbey Murphy is the star for Minnesota after she has recorded 29 goals and 30 assists so far this season. The only other Golden Gopher skater with more than 40 points is Ella Huber, who has 44 points on the season. Peyton Hemp and Natalie Mlynkova each have been credited with 31 points.

In goal, Hannah Clark has done the bulk of the work this season, starting 32 games, posting a 23-8-1 record with a 2.25 goals against average and .907 save percentage.

The winner of Friday’s second semifinal will go on to face the winner of the game between Wisconsin and Minnesota-Duluth that will be played first on Friday. The final will take place on Saturday afternoon at 3:00 p.m. ET. All games from the WCHA Final Faceoff can be seen on B1G+.


Men’s hockey


When it comes to Ohio State’s men’s hockey team, the Buckeyes already had clinched a top-three spot in the Big Ten standings heading into last weekend’s action, ensuring they would play at home in the first round of the Big Ten Tournament. Even though the pressure was off when it came to having an edge in the first round, Ohio State still wanted to best their rival when the Michigan Wolverines came to Columbus for two games last week.

Ohio State opened up the two-game series with a 2-1 overtime victory over the Wolverines before Michigan was able to win Friday night’s game 4-3. William Smith scored the game-winner 1:22 in overtime on Thursday to earn the win for the Buckeyes. Friday night’s game saw Michigan jump out to a 4-1 lead.

While Ohio State showed fight with two goals in the third period, they weren’t able to complete the comeback and send the game into overtime.

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

With how the last weekend of the Big Ten regular season shook out, the Buckeyes will host Wisconsin in a best-of-three series this weekend at Nationwide Arena. Ohio State swept all four meetings with the Badgers this season, winning 2-1 in overtime and 2-1 in regulation in Madison back in October, followed by 4-1 and 4-2 wins in Columbus last month. Wisconsin enters this weekend’s games with a 12-19-3 record on the season.

Max Montes was a force in the games in Madison, scoring both goals in the overtime win in the first meeting between the schools. Riley Thompson would score 21 seconds into the second game, while Montes added some insurance with a goal a minute into the third to win the next night. Thompson would go on to score two goals in the first game in Columbus, and Montes would tie the final meeting of the regular season in the second period before Damien Carfagna and Davis Burnside netted goals to complete the regular season sweep of the Badgers.

Ohio State can’t take Wisconsin lightly because anything can happen on the ice. While Ohio State has Gunnerwolfe Fontaine, Riley Thompson, and Davis Burnside as 30-point scores this season, the Badgers counter with Quinn Finley, Ryland Mosley, and Gavin Morrissey. At goaltender, Tommy Scarfone can be tough to get pucks past, posting a 2.64 goals against average and three shutouts this season.

All of this weekend’s games between Ohio State and Wisconsin are scheduled to start at 7:00 p.m. ET, and can be seen on B1G+. The winner will move on to the next round of the Big Ten Tournament, with their opponent depending on how the rest of the action around the conference over the weekend shakes out.

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LGHL Uncut: Jake Diebler discusses ridiculous double overtime win over Nebraska

Uncut: Jake Diebler discusses ridiculous double overtime win over Nebraska
Connor Lemons
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Buckeyes blew a lead, then came back in dramatic fashion.

Throughout the season, Land-Grant will be bringing you uncut audio primarily from Ohio State press conferences but also from individual interview sessions.

Listen to the episode and subscribe:


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In the early morning hours of Wednesday, March 5, Jake Diebler spoke to the collective Ohio State and Nebraska media contingent about the game, how proud he was of his team, and what it was like on the sideline on every final possession.

Micah Parrish and Bruce Thornton spoke briefly as well, giving big grins when the NCAA Tournament came up. Parrish said this was the wildest game he’s played in since transferring to Ohio State.

Nebraska head coach Fred Hoiberg also spoke, saying Ohio State has a “great roster” and that the coaching staff does a great job running designed actions for all five starters.



Connect with Connor:
Twitter:
@lemons_connor

Theme music provided by www.bensound.com


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LGHL Ohio State offers 2029 California running back, makes the cut for 2026 RB

Ohio State offers 2029 California running back, makes the cut for 2026 RB
Caleb Houser
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: CFP National Championship-Ohio State Practice

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Ohio State’s latest offer goes out on Wednesday to an eighth grade California native.

Ohio State’s coaching staff has many great aspects when it comes to recruiting, but the ability to build relationships many times what sticks out the most. Sure, the program pillars of winning and development also stand atop of the list, but the coaches the Buckeyes have do a fantastic job of making sure their mantra of the brotherhood rings true on the recruiting trail.

Longer lasting relationships in recruiting tend to help more compared to knowing a player for less time, and the Buckeyes got a big time jump start on Wednesday when they offered their latest running back prospect by way of the 2029 recruiting class.

Taking to social media to share his latest recruiting update, California native Makai Buchanan made it clear how excited he was to have Ohio State now officially in his recruitment. Position coach Carlos Locklyn made quite the impression when the two spoke about his newest offer.

Just an eighth grader, there’s a long time before any decision is coming, but offering this early on in the process shows not only the caliber of player he is and will be, but also a chance for the Ohio State staff to really build a strong bond with Makai over the next few years of his recruitment.

At any rate, the 6-foot, 165 pound middle school phenom can now add Ohio State to the mix joining the likes of Arizona, Arizona State, Ole Miss, Syracuse, and Texas A&M as the schools who have gotten an early start to recruiting what looks to be one of the top class of 2029 players when the rankings come available.


THANK YOU JESUS AGTG! After an amazing conversation and FaceTime call with Coach @Locklyn33 I am super blessed and honored to receive an offer from THEE NATIONAL CHAMPS OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY!! @GregBiggins @adamgorney @ChadSimmons_ @Andrew_Ivins @Bucknuts247 @CoachTroop3pic.twitter.com/fqFEa67uIJ

— Makai Buchanan (@MakaiBuchanan24) March 6, 2025

Ohio State remains in the mix for 2026 running back target​


Sticking to the running back theme, Wednesday also brought some good news to Ohio State’s efforts recruiting the position in the current 2026 cycle. A class for the Buckeyes that wants two at the position, Locklyn has offers out to many if not all of the top backs in the country, and is in good position for multiple.

Narrowing down his top schools list to just six and keeping the Buckeyes right in the mix, Alabama native Ezavier Crowell also has Alabama, Auburn, Florida State, Georgia, and Texas still in his consideration. An impressive cut down from his nearly 40 offers, Crowell is on his way to making a final push towards a commitment, and the Buckeyes are thrilled to still be in contention for another top player.

The No. 27 player nationally and the second ranked running back per the 247Sports Composite, Crowell won’t be an easy one to steal out of prime SEC country. What the Buckeyes can tote however is the fact that Locklyn is an Alabama native himself, which doesn’t hurt, and in addition Ohio State did just sign Anthony “Turbo” Rogers to their 2025 class, who is also an Alabama product.

It won’t be a surprise to see the Buckeyes lean in on their ties to Alabama both from their position coach and their recent recruiting success. Needing two guys to reload the room in 2026, Crowell’s name is one worth continued monitoring.


NEWS Elite RB Ezavier Crowell is down to 6 schools, @Hayesfawcett3 reports.

Crowell is the No. 2 RB in the 2026 class.

Read: https://t.co/pH2svwWKZx pic.twitter.com/kDOcruVaP6

— On3 Recruits (@On3Recruits) March 6, 2025

Quick Hits​

  • Continuing to add names to their visit list for spring ball in the coming weeks, Ohio State will play host to a local prospect when 2027 linebacker Jackson Reynolds makes his way to campus for an unofficial visit on April 5.

An unranked in-state linebacker, the 6-foot-3, 198 pound athlete out of Bishop Waterson has yet to land an offer, but does have the attention of several programs. Kentucky, Northwestern, Notre Dame, and now Ohio State have all extended invites for him to be on their campuses.

One to keep an eye on moving forward, the Buckeyes love recruiting in-state linebackers and he very well could be a more serious target in the near future.


April 5th Locked In @OhioStateFB

Thanks for the invite @etwill21

Looking forward to seeing @JLaurinaitis55 in action. He always brings the juice! Can't wait to see what the "D" looks like with Coach Patricia too. Always love being in the WHAC! #intothestormpic.twitter.com/yG97XCsqCh

— Jackson Reynolds | C/O '27 | 6'3 195 (@JW_Reynolds44) March 5, 2025

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