• 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.

Should semipro/college players be paid, or allowed to sell their stuff? (NIL and Revenue Sharing)

I'm just saying that these guys can have both. They can get the pussy while active as athletes without spending any money and if they have a bunch more money later it just expands the longevity of having lots of pussy options. When it comes to pussy, I think the short-term is a push between spending or saving/investing and the long term is better with saving/investing.
Upvote 0

2025 scUM Shenanigans, Arguments, etc.

Don't you have to go to the1930s for them to have an all time series lead. We all know that the 2002-2019 was a wonderful aberration, but they act like the Cooper years were indicative of the entire rivalry. Even with the Cooper years we've always had a solid series lead since 1950.
you have to go back to 1900. and Ohio State is 52-51-4 in that time span.
Upvote 0

2026 tOSU Recruiting Discussion

Kudos for betting on himself, though I know the extra $500k didn't hurt.
"Betting on himself" is the right way to put it – it's a definite risk with an unknown reward.

Instead, he should be "investing in himself." Here's what I mean....

There are two types of prospects who should always take the largest "bag":

(1) The kids who are going to be NFL stars regardless of where they go to school. For example, Jeremiah Smith and Caleb Downs. That's less than one percent of prospects; and

(2) The kids who have no reasonable chance to have a significant NFL career. That's at least 95% of prospects.

It's the kids in the middle 4-5% who really need to think about investing for the future rather than taking the biggest bag now.

If Ohio State offers a prospect $500k less than another school, that prospect needs to consider if "investing" that $500k in an Ohio State football "education" will make him a more marketable commodity in the NFL – in other words, will "earn" him more down the road than the $500k that he is leaving on the table now. Certainly, Ohio State has used that sales pitch on WR recruits who believe that learning to play the position from Brian Hartline will "pay dividends" at the next level. (Most everyone who goes to college uses a similar calculus – pay for an education to get a better job upon graduation.)

Part of the problem is that many kids in the 4-5% middle category think that they're in the top 0.1%. It will be interesting to see how often NIL money will enhance careers ... and how often it will ruin careers.

2025 scUM Shenanigans, Arguments, etc.

I'm fairly confident that Moore got his position to keep him quiet about the whole operation. Hell hath no fury like an assistant coach who has dirt on your program and wants more than what he has. *ichigan knew that when they offered him the spot. Joe Paterno knew it when he gave a spot to McQueary.

He doesn't have any dirt on the program, anymore. Maybe Day purposely lost to *ichigan last year to ensure he'd be there a few more years.
They hired him bc they figured they could offer him up to the NCAA by firing him and acting like that was a penalty. That blew up in their faces a while ago :lol:
Upvote 0

LGHL You’re Nuts: What is Ohio State’s toughest non-conference game?

You’re Nuts: What is Ohio State’s toughest non-conference game?
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: CBS Sports Classic-North Carolina at Ohio State

Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Buckeyes will run through an ACC-heavy gauntlet in the non-conference this year.

Happy TBT week, everyone. Summer basketball is back, and reigning champion Carmen’s Crew tips off Saturday night at 7:00 p.m. ET on YouTube. Their first round game is against Go Time Green Machine, which includes former Indiana guard Rob Phinisee and former St. Bonaventure guard Courtney Stockard.

To get you fired up for The Basketball Tournament, don’t forget to check out Jeff Gibbs’ interview on the Bucketheads Podcast this week.

Last week, Connor and Justin did a ‘this vs. that’ debate, arguing about whether Christoph Tilly or Brandon Noel will average more points per game this season. Both guys are expected to start and reinforce a big weakness of Ohio State last season, the frontcourt. 57% of readers sided with Connor, who picked Tilly. The remaining 43% picked Noel, which was Justin’s side.

After 213 weeks:

Connor- 97
Justin- 90
Other- 20

(There have been six ties)


This week, Connor and Justin are debating which non-conference game (that’s been confirmed) is going to be the most challenging for Ohio State this year. The Buckeyes aren’t running an SEC gauntlet this year, but they do currently have five high-major opponents on the schedule — including four ACC teams.

Ohio State has yet to announce its non-conference schedule officially, but we know that the Buckeyes will face Pitt, Notre Dame, North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Unless you think that one of the cupcake “buy games” will be the toughest game on the schedule, the answer will be one of those five. None of them are Auburn, but navigating those five games before the Big Ten schedule won’t be easy.

This week’s question: What is Ohio State’s toughest non-conference game?


Connor: North Carolina

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament First Four-San Diego State at North Carolina
Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Truth be told, Ohio State’s non-conference schedule this season is a pretty subtantial step down from last season. Virginia and West Virginia will both be breaking in first-year head coaches after missing the NCAA Tournament last season. Additionally, both of those games will be neutral site contests, so while they won’t be easy, they won’t be true road games.

The only true road game in the non-conference so far is Ohio State’s trip to Pitt in November, returning the back end of the home-and-home that starting last season. If you recall, Pitt’s Zack Austin hit a game-winning three-pointer in Columbus last year as the clock expired, getting the Panthers a 91-90 overtime victory.

Now, Ohio State has to go play at Pitt. However, most experts are picking the Panthers to finish in the bottom-four of the ACC after losing a ton from last year’s team, including Austin, Jaland Lowe, and Ishmael Leggett — three of the team’s top four scorers.

Notre Dame should be improved from a season ago, but the Fighting Irish are still coming off of a 15-18 season that included a home loss to Elon and a very close call against Buffalo. Plus, the game is in Columbus.

That really leaves us with North Carolina. The Tar Heels are the only team that Ohio State has never beaten in the CBS Sports Classic, but they will get their chance in Atlanta on Dec. 20. Carolina kept Seth Trimble (11.6 PPG) around, and added Colorado State NCAA Tournament star Kyan Evans to the backcourt as well. Former Alabama big man Jarin Stevenson transferred to Chapel Hill, too, as well as former Arizona center Henri Veesaar.

Jake Diebler and the Buckeyes will have an opportunity to knock off North Carolina in this event for the first time, but I still think the Tar Heels are going to be the most challening opponent they will face in the non-conference this fall.


Justin: Virginia

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament East Regional-Bringham Young at Alabama
Robert Deutsch-Imagn Images

After Tony Bennett retired in mid-October and longtime assistant coach Ron Sanchez took over for Virginia, the Cavaliers had a tough season and were irrelevant on a national scale. Now, in year one of Ryan Odom, they should be back.

Odom is a proven winner with a career .636 winning percentage over more than a decade of coaching mid-major programs. Virginia went 15-17 last season, and Odom was hired from in-state VCU, reportedly given a $10 million-plus roster budget for the upcoming season.

Between his great coaching record, NIL backing and an average conference, everything sets up well for Odom to succeed.

Virginia will be led BYU transfer Dallin Hall, who averaged 6.8 points, 4.2 assists and 2.2 rebounds per game for the Cougars. He was a former WCC All-Freshman selection, and should slot in on this roster nicely. Former Kansas State forward Ugonna Onyenso also joins Virginia, with the 6-foot-11 forward expected to take a huge jump for the Cavaliers.

The additions of three high-level mid-major scorers will also slide in well for Virginia.

Malik Thomas, who averaged 19.9 points per game at San Francisco, Jacari White, who averaged 17.1 points per game at North Dakota State, and Sam Lewis, who averaged 16.2 points per game at Toledo, are all elite, three-level scorers.

One of the more underrated players in the ACC will be forward Thijs De Ridder out of Belgium, who comes to campus with two years of professional experience in Spain underneath his belt. The 6-foot-8 combo forward put up 9.3 points and 4.8 rebounds while shooting 39.1% from 3 in one of the best Euro leagues.



Continue reading...

tOSU Recruiting Discussion

I think what gets lost in recruiting now, is being able to manage your current roster. Fans get too excited over the shiney new toys of the 4 or 5star HS kid. But forget all about the talent on their roster(who most were also former 4 and 5star HSers). No matter how many misses and flips OSU has lost in '26, and will lose going forward. The fact that they were able to not lose a single possible starter to the Portal this pass cycle is HUGE! And that's on top of gaining multiple transfers at positions of need. I'd much rather have OSU not have to overspend for an 18 or 17yo fresh out of HS, then keep Igbinosun, Reese, Matthews or Inniss on the roster. That's good for Texas for paying 7 figures for Tyler Atkinson, but I'm much happier that OSU held on to Reese and Styles. If OSU can limit this attrition going forward, on top of signing top 5-10 classes, then they're going to be a constant tough out. Schools like Miami, Texas, Oregon, etc will have to constantly outbid on top of recruiting their own roster.
Upvote 0

2025 scUM Shenanigans, Arguments, etc.

- Lifetime ban for Stalions.
Yikes.
Imagine if he doesn't get banned. And he zurps on somewhere else, and after 5 years or so he gets THAT program in trouble for cheating. Or... maybe he doesn't get that program in trouble... but he gets *ichigan in trouble, again. Maybe he goes to Penn State. And then for 5 years, *ichigan beats them by a total of 200-10. And it's found out that he's still working for *ichigan - he's relaying signals back to *ichigan. And they find out there's a whole network of double-agents working for *ichigan. Ha.
Anyway, anyone who hires Stalions is an idiot. Let's give them the chance to be idiots.
Upvote 0

2025 scUM Shenanigans, Arguments, etc.

I'm fairly confident that Moore got his position to keep him quiet about the whole operation. Hell hath no fury like an assistant coach who has dirt on your program and wants more than what he has. *ichigan knew that when they offered him the spot. Joe Paterno knew it when he gave a spot to McQueary.

He doesn't have any dirt on the program, anymore. Maybe Day purposely lost to *ichigan last year to ensure he'd be there a few more years.
I think Moore keeps his job as well. Who could they get to coach them through what we hope will be a period of NCAA penalties galore anyway?
Upvote 0

2025 scUM Shenanigans, Arguments, etc.

I guess this is kind of the bare minimum I need to see to be satisfied (and it is harsh because FUCK THEIR CHEATING ASSES):

- Removal of all recognition of their 2021-2023 seasons to include wins, the fugazi B1G championships, and their fugazi NC*
- 3 year postseason ban
- Significant recruiting restrictions
- 1 year suspension & show cause for Sniffles.
- Suspensions for any coaches involved in the scheme with show causes for any coach that was evasive or that outright mislead the NCAA
- Lifetime ban for Stalions.
- Significant fines & enhanced oversight on their program by the NCAA
- Thorough/aggressive public reprimand from the NCAA detailing their transgressions with names named.
- Kneel before Zod Day.

That, to me, would be as close to the "death penalty" as we will see in modern times. Now, will that impact their program as severely as we want? In today's CFB, I'm not sure. It will definitely hurt. But today's CFB with NIL isn't what it was 10 years ago. They may very well still be able to attract top recruits and field competent teams because money talks. CFB isn't about pride and pageantry like it used to be. Most top recruits look at it as a lucrative job now. If their donors still fork out $$$, they'll probably still get recruits. Where it will likely hurt the most would be their ability to attract top-flight coaches and their ability to put depth around any star player(s) they sign.
I'd buy it.
Upvote 0

Filter

Back
Top