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Georgia Bulldogs (2021-2022 National Champions & Excellent Drivers)

Georgia football WR arrested for reckless driving and more​

Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Nitro Tuggle was arrested early Thursday morning for reckless driving and speeding beyond the maximum limits, according to the Athens Clarke County arrest records.

He was released on a $26.00 bond.....:lol:

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Kirby Smart is Taking Action to Shut Down Arrests​

Including Tuggle, Georgia's football program has now had at least 26 players arrested for speeding, DUI, or reckless driving since the fatal crash that happened on Jan. 2023......
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...... and took the lives of former UGA football player Devin Willock and recruiting staffer Chandler LeCroy.

Smart said last July that the program has tried to take a new approach with hopes of getting a point across to put a stop to these incidents.

"I can't tell you the things that we've done that no one in the country has done," Smart said, via ESPN. "Let's start with defensive driving, requiring certain incoming guys to take that course which, as far as I know, nobody in the country has done. Discipline, we suspended a player [Marcus Rosemy] for speeding and driving last year, which is rare. Nobody's ever done that. That hasn't controlled it and prevented it, so why are we still talking about it? Because we've had guys make poor decisions."

One of the new approaches that Smart and his football program have taken has been to fine players in NIL payments by the Classic City Collective.

"The [NIL] collective has fined players -- substantially," Smart said. "We've dismissed players that have been involved, and I'm talking about like routine traffic, repeated, repeated violations. ... I actually think the best key is the pocket because you look at what the NFL has done, their model is defined. And if you asked any of our players what they would rather have, they want their money. When I say substantial -- very substantial -- in terms of the hits that some guys have taken."

We will post an update once the university and Coach Smart release their statements.
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RB Sam Williams-Dixon (Official Thread)

Ohio State playmaker makes honest admission about his original decision to enter the transfer portal and leave Columbus

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Ohio State had a star-studded running back room in 2024 between TreVeyon Henderson and Ole Miss transfer Quinshon Judkins. Now that they’re off to the NFL, the Buckeyes have to turn the page.

Ohio State has two returning backs with James Peoples and Sam Williams-Dixon back as sophomores. Neither saw big playing time last year in very limited roles. Additionally, the Buckeyes brought in three running backs in the class of 2025. West Virginia transfer CJ Donaldson is expected to be a major part of the room.

One piece of the room that didn’t always look like would be returning is Williams-Dixon. The sophomore running back entered the transfer portal a couple of months ago but opted to return to Ohio State. Williams-Dixon admitted that it wasn’t the right decision to enter the portal in the first place.

“For starters, it was just me listening to the wrong people,” Williams-Dixon said on Wednesday. “I had to take care of my life. I didn’t have control of it and I got control of it. What brought me back … I didn’t want to leave. I love it here.”
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OSU Men's Basketball Recruiting/Projections/General Discussions

Basketball transfers: Which players have been linked with Ohio State in the 2025 offseason?

Nick Davidson, Nevada​

According to a March 19 report from On3's Joe Tipton, Ohio State is one of a laundry list of schools to contact the 6-10, 238-pound center. Davidson has spent four years with the Wolf Pack including a redshirt year.

Davidson earned second-team all-conference honors last season, when he averaged 15.8 points, 6.5 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 1.2 blocks and 0.8 steals per game. He shot 50 percent from the field and was 37.1% from 3-point range.

Colby Duggan, Campbell​

According to multiple reports, Ohio State is one of five schools to have contacted Duggan early. A 6-7, 220-pound sophomore forward, Duggan started 22 of 32 games for the Fighting Camels and averaged 15.7 points, 3.3 rebounds and 1.3 assists while shooting 34.0% from 3-point range. He earned first-team all-Coastal Athletic Association honors.

Duggan played 15 minutes off the bench in Campbell's 104-60 loss at Value City Arena on Nov. 22, finishing with two points, two rebounds, a block, an assist, a turnover and three fouls.

Harun Zrno, freshman/Indiana​

A 6-6, 205-pound shooting guard from Bosnia, Zrno committed to the Hoosiers but could potentially be back in play after the school parted ways with coach Mike Woodson. According to Adam Zagoria of Zagsblog.com, Ohio State, Penn State, Maryland and Miami (Florida) have all reached out to Zrno as he waits to talk with new Indiana coach Darian DeVries.
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2024-2025 College Basketball General Discussion

The questionable SEC teams will probably all lose their 1st round games, of course we will still hear about the GREATEST CONFERENCE SEASON IN THE HISTORY OF MAN!!!11!!! though.

announcer for the game last night multiple times said....

"the toughest gauntlet of conference games in the history of the sport"
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RB CJ Donaldson (Official Thread)

I'm feeling pretty good about this guy. I like that he saw what a year at tOSU did for QJ and that he's taking, clearly by working with Mick and cutting that weight, his final year seriously. That will also be helpful for Peoples and the fact that two stars co-existed and won an NC last year means nobody on this year's team can bitch or pout about game reps.
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LGHL Grading every Ohio State men’s basketball transfer of the last decade

Grading every Ohio State men’s basketball transfer of the last decade
Connor Lemons
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 Rutgers

Photo by Rich Schultz /Getty Images

Ohio State’s transfers over the past decade have been a mixed bag — some A’s and a few F’s.

College athletes transferring from one school to another has been happening for decades, and even before the transfer portal existed, the Ohio State men’s basketball program has been using transfers to supplement the roster in hopes of winning championships. Ron Lewis, Scoonie Penn, and Lawrence Funderburke – three program legends – transferred before it was “cool” to do so.

But at the turn of the decade, a global pandemic shook up eligibility rules by giving athletes a fifth year of eligibility if they played during the pandemic-impacted 2020-2021 season. In April 2021, it was announced that players would be able to transfer one time without having to sit out a year, and in 2024 the NCAA removed the “one time” from that rule, allowing players to transfer as many times as they want and become immediately eligible.

And thus, the transfer portal was born.

Wheeling and dealing in the transfer portal has livened up what used to be a dull college basketball offseason, with a batch of nearly 2,000 players transferring last spring. Ohio State added five transfers last season and saw four players transfer out.

But even before the portal, Ohio State has been supplementing its roster with at least one or two transfers nearly every season. A few have been key pieces to very successful teams. Others have fallen well short of expectations, costing the Buckeyes wins by playing poorly or not playing at all.

With that said, here is a list of every single player that has transferred into Ohio State in the last 10 years, starting with the 2014-15 season and ending with this past season. Each player is affixed with a grade based on how well they played or contributed to Ohio State’s success, based on a scientific and not at all subjective grading scale.

Walk-ons fall into their own category, and transfer players who are still at Ohio State at the time of publishing fall into the “Jury’s Out” category because those players still have time to improve or regress.


Keyshawn Woods – A

Ohio State v Iowa State
Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

Woods only averaged 10.1 points per game at Ohio State during the 2018-2019 season, but fans will remember him for stepping up big time in the final games of the season, scoring 18 points in a de-facto play-in game in the Big Ten Tournament against Indiana to get Ohio State into the NCAA Tournament as an 11-seed. He then scored a season-high 19 points against Iowa State to help the Buckeyes upset Tyrese Haliburton and 6-seed Iowa State.


CJ Jackson – A

South Dakota State v Ohio State
Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

Jackson was recruited out of Eastern Florida State College by Thad Matta in 2016, and wound up being the Buckeyes’ starting point guard for two seasons under Chris Holtmann, averaging 12.3 points per game his final two seasons. He also stunned Indiana at Assembly Hall on Senior Day 2018 with this incredible buzzer-beating three. For a player who was brought up from a junior college, Jackson exceeded expectations at Ohio State in three seasons.


Jamison Battle – A

NCAA Basketball: Big Ten Conference Tournament Quarterfinal-Ohio State vs Illinois
Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

Although Ohio State did not make the NCAA Tournament in Battle’s lone year in Columbus, it doesn’t seem fair to put blame on him. In fact, you could say that without him, Ohio State would have finished with an even worse record during the 2023-2024 season. Battle set a career-high by shooting 43.3% from three-point range and averaged 19.4 points per game over the final 10 games of the season.


CJ Walker – A

NCAA Basketball: Big Ten Conference Tournament-Ohio State vs Illinois
Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports

This might be controversial because he only averaged 9.1 points per game in two seasons, but Walker was the perfect point guard for an Ohio State team that earned a 2-seed in the 2021 NCAA Tournament. His assist-to-turnover ratio was better than 2-to-1 and he averaged 11 points, 5.0 rebounds, and 5.2 assists per game in the Big Ten Tournament and NCAA Tournament. He was also a 94% free throw shooter in his final season.


Micah Parrish – B+

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Parrish played one season at Ohio State, setting a career-high in points per game at 13.3 and leading the Buckeyes in scoring eight different times throughout the 2024-2025 season. He almost single-handedly carried the Buckeyes to a stunning road win at Purdue by scoring 22 on 8-of-10 shooting but also led the team in turnovers, many of which were of the unforced variety.


Justice Sueing – B+

NCAA Basketball: Big Ten Conference Tournament Quarterfinals - Michigan State vs Ohio State
Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

Even if you ask Sueing himself, he probably doesn’t think he reached his peak potential at Ohio State after transferring from Cal, but he was still a very steady contributor from 2020-2023, averaging double-digit points in two seasons with a lost season (due to a groin injury) sandwiched in between. Sueing scored 10+ points in 41 of his 68 games while at Ohio State, and averaged 12.3 per game during the 2022-2023 season.


Trevor Thompson – B+

NCAA Basketball: NC-Asheville at Ohio State
Joe Maiorana-Imagn Images

Thompson was a rock-solid center for Ohio State from 2014 to 2017 after transferring from Virginia Tech. He was second in the Big Ten during the 2016-17 season in rebounds per game (9.2) despite only playing 23 minutes per game. He was Honorable Mention All-Big Ten that season, scoring 10.6 points per game.


Sean McNeil – B

NCAA Basketball: Big Ten Conference Tournament Quarterfinals - Michigan State vs Ohio State
Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

McNeil was a solid contributor to an Ohio State team that finished 16-19 in 2023, averaging 9.7 points per game. He scored in double-digits in 17 of Ohio State’s 35 games, stretched the floor a bit, and was the best player in Ohio State’s Big Ten Tournament win over Wisconsin, scoring 17.


Jamari Wheeler – B

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament First Round Pittsburgh
Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Wheeler’s calling card when he transferred to Ohio State for the 2021-2022 season after four years at Penn State was his defense, being named to the Big Ten All-Defensive team twice. His defense lagged a bit in his final college season, but he did set career-highs in points per game (7.1) three-pointers made (38), and free throw percentage (86.1%), while helping take Ohio State to its most recent NCAA Tournament appearance.


Cedric Russell – B-

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

Russell was fine in limited minutes for Ohio State during the 2021-2022 season, scoring 4.2 points per game in 30 games and averaging roughly 13 minutes per game. However, he will forever be remembered as a hero for scoring a season-high 12 points off the bench against Duke at home, helping Ohio State upset the No. 1 team in the country. Prior to that game, Russell had scored a combined three points in Ohio State’s first four games.


Dale Bonner – B-

NCAA Basketball: Ohio State at Michigan State
Dale Young-USA TODAY Sports

Similar to Russell, Bonner was a role player during his one year at Ohio State, starting two of the Buckeyes’ 36 games and averaging 4.9 points on 32.8% shooting. His big moment came against Michigan State on February 25, 2024, knocking down a game-winning three-pointer over Tyson Walker to beat the Spartans, 70-67. It snapped Ohio State’s 17-game losing streak and also broke a 12-year drought where Ohio State had not won in East Lansing since the middle of the Thad Matta days.


Joey Brunk – C

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

Rounding out the “single-game heroics” part of the list is Brunk, who played for Chris Holtmann at Butler for one season and then transferred to Ohio State for the 2021-2022 season to finish his college career. He appeared in 28 of Ohio State’s 32 games, averaging 7.6 minutes and 2.4 points per game.

But against Michigan State on March 3, 2022, against Michigan State, Brunk played 32 minutes, scoring 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting as the Buckeyes won, 80-69. Both Zed Key and Kyle Young were unavailable for that game, forcing Brunk into action. After the game, Michigan State guard Gabe Brown said Brunk wasn’t even on the Spartan’s scouting report.


Andrew Dakich – C

Ohio State v Gonzaga
Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Dakich was a fine role player for Ohio State during Chris Holtmann’s first season, averaging 19 minutes per game and 2.2 shot attempts per game. His half-court buzzer-beater against top-ranked Michigan State is a core memory for a lot of fans, but in general, Dakich brought the ball up, didn’t turn it over, and only took wide-open shots. He did the job he was asked to do.


Isaac Likekele – C-

NCAA Basketball: Big Ten Conference Tournament Second Round - Iowa vs Ohio State
Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

“Ice” Likekele contributed across the stat sheet, leading Ohio State in assists nine times during the 2022-23 season and grabbing five or more rebounds 12 different times. He handled the ball quite a bit and only averaged 1.1 turnovers per game during the season, but generally, Likekele did not excel in any area of the game and did not give Ohio State the scoring pop it hoped he would bring after averaging 8.9 points per game at Oklahoma State for four years prior to transferring.


Seth Towns – C-

NCAA Basketball: Ohio State at Iowa
Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports

Since he was a local product, everyone was rooting for Seth Towns to be a star at Ohio State when he transferred from Harvard in 2020, but knee injuries never let him fully show what he had from 2020-2022. His 3.8 points per game during his one healthy Ohio State season sticks out like a sore thumb on his career stats page, and he only averaged 11 minutes per game. It’s unfortunate that his body did not allow him to play freely for his hometown school.


Anthony Lee – D

Miami v Ohio State
Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images

After leading the AAC in rebounding at Temple during the 2013-2014 season, Lee transferred to Ohio State for his final year of eligibility but gradually lost minutes to both Amir Williams and Trey McDonald before suffering a season-ending groin injury against Rutgers on February 8, 2015. Lee ended the season averaging 3.4 points and 2.3 rebounds per game.


Ques Glover – D

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Admittedly, Glover was forced into a larger role this past season than was originally planned for a guy who had not played basketball in two years. Meechie Johnson abruptly leaving the team after 10 games slid Glover up the totem pole from emergency ball handler to the main backup to Bruce Thornton and John Mobley Jr. Glover had moments where he played high-level defense and forced turnovers.

Still, those moments were overshadowed by puzzling shot selection and too many times where larger players took advantage of his height on defense. For the season, he averaged 4.4 points on 34.5% shooting and was 34.4% from beyond the arc.


Tanner Holden – D

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Joseph Scheller/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

Even with his buzzer-beating, game-winning shot against Rutgers on December 8, Holden’s full body of work during the 2022-2023 season fell far short of what everyone expected after being named First Team All-Horizon League twice at Wright State.

Statistically speaking, Holden was fine in small samples, shooting 47.8% overall and 50% from three-point range, but he only played 13.5 minutes per game and it seemed like the role he envisioned at Ohio State may not have been the role the coaching staff had in mind when he transferred. After scoring 12 points against Robert Morris in the season opener, Holden did not score in double-digits again for the rest of the season.


Jimmy Sotos – F

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

Sotos never really got comfortable at Ohio State, only appearing in 12 games during the 2020-2021 season before a separated shoulder ended his season. He appeared in 19 games the following season, averaging 7.7 minutes per game and scoring 1.8 points per game.

By the end of the season, he had fallen behind Malaki Branham, Jamari Wheeler, and even Cedric Russell on the depth chart. All together, Sotos scored 54 points in 31 games at Ohio State over two seasons.


Meechie Johnson – F

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Johnson’s return to Ohio State was brief and not particularly successful. He appeared in 10 games this past season, averaging 9.1 points on 35.5% shooting and 35.7% from downtown. After scoring five points in a loss to Auburn on December 14, it was announced that Johnson was taking a leave of absence from the team for personal reasons, and he never returned.

Johnson’s absence added a tremendous amount of pressure on all of Ohio State’s guards, particularly John Mobley Jr., who was forced to abandon the training wheels immediately and play 30+ minutes per night. Johnson’s 10-game performance was not an “F” but his season-long contributions fell tremendously short of what Ohio State planned on getting from the Cleveland kid when he transferred back to Ohio State.


WALK ON’S


Danny Hummer (2017-20) and Owen Spencer (2022-24) transferred to Ohio State as walk-ons. Both get an A for effort.


JURY’S OUT


Evan Mahaffey (2023), Aaron Bradshaw (2024), and Sean Stewart (2024) all have at least one year of eligibility remaining. They weren’t included here, because they are still on the roster and any evaluation of their complete performance at Ohio State would be premature right now.

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MLB General Discussion (Official Thread)

To save the feelings of the umpires. Which is doubly stupid.......you're off the hook now. You still get paid to stand behind the catcher to do things like listen for foul balls or call outs at the plate or whatever else dumb shit umpires do back there. You just don't have to hear it every time you blow a call. Win fucking win.

and when it tells you strike, and you know you are 100% right, you can go full Leslie Nielsen back there.

Get more joy out of your work.
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MLB General Discussion (Official Thread)

I still don't understand the challenge version of ABS.

Why not have the system just tell the umpire ball/strike on every pitch and not waste the time/energy/emotions on the challenges?

I cannot wrap my head around anyone not wanting every pitch to be called correctly.
To save the feelings of the umpires. Which is doubly stupid.......you're off the hook now. You still get paid to stand behind the catcher to do things like listen for foul balls or call outs at the plate or whatever else dumb shit umpires do back there. You just don't have to hear it every time you blow a call. Win fucking win.
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Cleveland Cavs (2016 NBA Champions)

Regrettably the better team won last night
Obvious signs of mental and physical fatigue.. lackadaisical ball handling and passing
Dream of Jarrett making some monumental leap that Mobley is making.. both need more physical strength
Jerome is in a funk.. refs are in his head and they're winning.. Devin Carter quickness made him look stuck in mud
Dunno what's up with Mitchell
but I agree with BBH on the timing..

They're not smiling and laughing right now
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BP Bracket 2025 (in honor of Jake)

I am in….ready to battle for next to last place….
Over my brackets lead weighted, concrete shoes body in Lake Erie :biggrin2:

Side note, I will be “working” at the final four this year. Company has some business with the city of San Antonio and the Alamodome. Me and a couple coworkers will be “testing” and “monitoring” things during the games.

Edit: well shit completely misread your statement :lol:
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