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Nick Swisher Field @ Bill Davis Stadium

APRIL 15, 2019
SECOND-LARGEST CROWD AT BILL DAVIS STADIUM
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    COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Ohio State baseball team’s doubleheader Saturday was the second-largest crowd at Bill Davis Stadium as 5,280 fans watched the Scarlet and Gray host a Big Ten Conference series vs. conference-rival Michigan. The number was just shy of the Bill Davis Stadium attendance record of 5,306 fans in a doubleheader vs. Minnesota on May 18, 2002.

    After winning a 10-5 contest on Friday night vs. the Wolverines, Buckeye fans came out to support the Baseball Buckeyes on a beautiful afternoon in Columbus. The series vs. the Maize and Blue was also Alumni Weekend as the team recognized the 1994, 1999 and 2009 Big Ten Championship teams. A jam-packed Bill Davis Stadium witnessed another big win over Michigan in game one as the team won, 10-4. The series win over the Wolverines was the third straight home series victory against the Maize and Blue.

    Top 10 Bill Davis Stadium Attendance Numbers:
    1. 5,306 – vs. Minnesota – May 18, 2002 (DH)
    2. 5,280 – vs. Michigan – April 13, 2019 (DH)
    3. 5,170 – vs. SW Missouri State – June 7, 2003 – Super Regional
    4. 5,128 – vs. Minnesota – May 21, 2005 (DH)
    5. 5,090 – vs. SW Missouri State – June 8, 2003 – Super Regional
    6. 4,705 – vs. Illinois – May 10, 2008 (DH)
    7. 4,702- vs. BGSU – May 28, 1999 – Regional
    8. 4,455 – vs. Michigan – April 23, 2004
    9. 4,424 – vs. Indiana – May 15, 1999
    10. 4,393 – vs. CSF – June 5, 1999 – Super Regional
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https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/second-largest-crowd-at-bill-davis-stadium/
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Mid-Week game vs. Xavier from Nick Swisher Field @ Bill Davis Stadium (FIRE BEALS)

APRIL 16, 2019
OHIO STATE DEFEATS XAVIER, 8-5, TUESDAY NIGHT IN COLUMBUS


COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Ohio State bats sprayed 13 hits, while fifth-year senior right-handed pitcher Thomas Waning claimed his first career win as the Buckeyes defeated Xavier, 8-5, Tuesday night at Nick Swisher Field at Bill Davis Stadium. Left-handed reliever Andrew Magno struck out two in the ninth to claim his sixth save. At the dish, junior right fielder Dominic Canzone continued to swing a hot bat, going 3-for-5 with a homer and two runs scored. Junior first baseman Conner Pohl drove in two runs in a two-hit game, while senior left fielder Brady Cherry also homered and drove in two runs. With the win the Buckeyes improve to 21-17 overall, while the Musketeers drop to 14-23 in 2019.

STARTER TALK
Waning from Maple City, Mich., faced his former team in his first start as a Buckeye and it was fantastic, tossing a career-high four scoreless innings with one hit, two strikeouts and no walks. In a controlled start, Waning picked up his first career win to improve to 1-0.

BUCKEYES ON THE BOARD EARLY
Ohio State scored two runs on three hits vs. XU right-handed starter Nathan Berg. Canzone extended his reached base streak to 34 games in his first at-bat with a lead-off single. RBI singles Pohl and Brent Todys made it 2-0.

DINGERS IN THE SECOND
Ohio State added three more runs in the second on two long balls by the Buckeyes. Canzone crushed the first pitch he saw off Berg deep over the wall in right for his 10th homer of the season. Cherry then tattooed a 1-0 pitch over the wall in left for a two-run homer and his ninth of the year to put the score at 5-0.

MORE RUNS IN THE FOURTH
Ohio State scored three more runs in the fourth to open up the game to 8-0. Pohl ripped a line drive to right and it got by the Xavier right fielder for a stand-up RBI triple, the first of his career. Dingler hit a 2-2 pitch off the end of his bat and it spun pass the first baseman for a RBI single as Pohl scored. A sac fly by Zach Dezenzo scored the eighth run.

TO THE BULLPEN
Right-handed pitcher Will Pfennig relieved Waning to start the fifth and tossed one scoreless frame. Right-handed pitcher Joe Gahm got out of a bases-loaded sixth with a fly out to keep Xavier off the board. Right-handed pitcher Bayden Root struck out the side in the seventh. Cherry made his fourth appearance on the mound in the eighth. He allowed five runs on two hits with three walks and two strikeouts. Chris Givin hit a grand slam to put the Musketeers within three runs. Right-handed reliever TJ Brock recorded the final out of the eighth on a strikeout. Magno tossed a scoreless ninth with two strikeouts for the save.

UP NEXT
Ohio State travels to face Maryland in a three-game Big Ten road series Friday-Sunday at Shipley Field in Bob “Turtle” Smith Stadium.

GAME NOTES

  • Ohio State improves to 32-12 all-time vs. Xavier.
  • Each Buckeye starter recorded a hit in the game. It was the first time all nine Buckeye starters recorded a hit in the game since the team had 22 hits vs. Nebraska April 1, 2018.
  • Canzone extended his reached base streak to 34 games and extended his hit streak to 11 straight contests.
  • Other reached base streaks extended: Dingler (14), Foppe (8), Pohl (6), Dezenzo (6) and Todys (4).
  • Other hit streaks extended: Dingler (9), Dezenzo (6), Todys (4) and Winand (3).
  • Thomas Waning made his first collegiate start tonight vs. the Musketeers. He claimed his first career win as a Buckeye tonight in a career-high four innings of work.
  • Todys drove in his ninth RBI in the last six games.
  • Canzone hit his 10th home run of the season, while Cherry knocked his ninth homer of the year.
  • Multi-hit games: Canzone (18), Pohl (11) and Dezenzo.
  • Multi-RBI games: Cherry (9) and Pohl (7).
  • Magno picked up his sixth save of the year.
https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/ohio-state-defeats-xavier-8-5-tuesday-night-in-columbus/
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Heartland Poker Tour

I'm sure there are bound to be some poker players among the OSU students and fanbase. I'm the marketing manager for Heartland Poker Tour. We're a nationally televised poker tour that has been around since 2005. We've awarded more than $100 million in prize pool money over the years.

For the first time ever, we're bringing the tour to Ohio. The event at Hollywood Columbus will run April 18th through the 29th. There are a variety of tournaments each day with buy-ins starting at $90 and going all the way up to $1,650. I'm guessing we'll end up paying out well over $1 million dollars in this series.

You can find all of the details at HPTpoker.com. You must be 21 to play. Let me know if there are any questions I can answer. Hope to see a few of you there.

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Mid-Week game vs. Dayton from Nick Swisher Field @ Bill Davis Stadium (FIRE BEALS)

Won 4-2

https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/ohio-state-downs-dayton-4-2-wednesday-night-in-columbus/

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Ohio State baseball team defeated Dayton, 4-2, Wednesday night at Nick Swisher Field at Bill Davis Stadium. Junior right-handed pitcher Jake Vance claimed the win after throwing four scoreless innings of relief to improve to 3-2 on the year, while junior left-handed reliever Andrew Magno picked up his fifth save of the season. With the win, the Buckeyes improve to 18-16 overall, while the Flyers drop to 18-14-1 in 2019.

QUOTE FROM COACH
“We’ve been trying a lot of things with the pitching staff and putting Milheim in the start was something he’s done his whole life,” head coach Greg Beals said. “He pitched his team to state championship team last year as a starter. Today was probably his best outing of the year for us. Jake Vance also had his best performance of the year for us. He pitched with intensity and attacked the zone. Magno shuts it down at the end. I wish we didn’t have to use our closer, but we needed to continue the winning ways heading into a big weekend with that team up north coming to our place on Friday night.”

continued...
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2019 NCAA Basketball Tournament Discussion (Official Thread)

In case you forgot: Last year the UMBC Retrievers defeated the Virginia Cavaliers 74–54, becoming the first No. 16 seed to defeat a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. ... Virginia finished their season at 31–3 while UMBC improved to 25–10.

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:slappy:
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Program in turmoil (maybe not)

Harold Olsen 259–197 (.568) 154–135 (.533) 4 B1G titles, 4 "Final Fours"

HAROLD G. OLSEN: OHIO STATE'S LONGEST-SERVING BASKETBALL COACH AND GODFATHER OF THE FINAL FOUR

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Tonight, Texas Tech and Virginia will take the court in front of more than 70,000 fans inside of a converted football stadium, making it a far cry from the first NCAA Tournament championship game 80 years ago.

Back then, the tournament was known simply as the NCAA postseason national playoffs, created by the National Association of Basketball Coaches in response to the National Invitational Tournament's introduction a year prior. The NIT, operated by the Metropolitan Intercollegiate Basketball Association, was considered to be too focused on teams from the New York City area, as NYU and Long Island University were two of the six teams selected in the inaugural event.

The president of the NABC at the time was anything but a New Yorker, with deep Midwestern roots and a prominent position as head coach at one of the region's largest institutions. By 1939, Harold G. Olsen had already established himself as a prominent figure within the sport, credited with initiating the 10-second rule in 1937 while acting as head coach of the Ohio State basketball program.

Before he arrived in Columbus in 1922, however, the sport was largely an afterthought on campus, having failed to win a league title once in the decade since joining the Western Conference, known today as the Big Ten. Olsen's hiring would eventually prove to be a turning point in the school's vaunted athletic history, as the former All-American player at Wisconsin had found success in four seasons as a coach at Bradley and Ripon Colleges.

As The Lantern wrote upon the news of Olsen's hiring:

"Announcement of the appointment of Harold G. Olsen, former University of Wisconsin athlete, as basketball coach at Ohio State, was met with approval loudly voiced in all University quarters Sunday.

"Mr. Olsen's record as a basketball player, and as a coach at Ripon, Wis., is the kind that a man coming to fill the position at Ohio State should have.

...

"Basketball at Ohio State has not kept pace with the standing required in football. Mr. Olsen is to make basketball his major -- if not his sole -- endeavor. With the opening of school next fall he will set his men to work. There will be no waiting for the conclusion of the football season so as to release athletes and coaches from one sport for the other.

"As the situation is viewed at the distance of eight months, it would seem that the conference is due for somewhat of a jolt next season when the race for the basketball championship gets under way."

The 1922-23 Buckeyes went 1-11 in conference play and finished tied for last place.

But Olsen would eventually turn things around, winning the league title in his third season after finishing 14-2.

After 20 seasons in the old Armory, a hulking brick structure located on the current site of the Wexner Center for the Arts, the team moved its home games to what's now known as Taft Coliseum at the Ohio Expo Center and State Fairground for the 1920 season. At the Fairgrounds, crowds of 5,000 or more regularly began filing in to watch Olsen's teams compete, as the Buckeyes would finish with a record over .500 in 17 of his 24 seasons at the helm.
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Led by the conference's leading scorer and All-American forward Jimmy Hull's 18 and 25-point scoring performances, the Buckeyes took down Wake Forest 64-52 and Villanova 53-36 at the historic Palestra in Philadelphia, earning a trip to Evanston nine days later. But once again, the Ohio State squad had trouble containing a Pacific Coast Conference foe, falling 46-33 to the Ducks.

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Though his teams wouldn't return to the tournament for another five seasons, Olsen worked to expand its influence as the NCAA basketball committee chairman. The final moved to the larger Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City from 1940-42 before a six-year stint at Madison Square Garden aimed at competing directly with the NIT.

By this time, Olsen's influence had expanded beyond the basketball court, as he was eventually named an assistant to Ohio State athletic director L.W. St. John. When the undefeated 1944 football team featuring Heisman Trophy winner Les Horvath and star lineman Bill Willis was denied the chance to go to the Rose Bowl after having gone the year prior, Olsen publicly came out against the decision.

"These fellows were the best, cleanest, and grandest fellows to play for Ohio State," he told The Lantern after the decision was announced by the Big Ten. By this point in time, however, Olsen's troops on the hardwood had entered the national spotlight again themselves.
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Taylor is honored with a banner hanging in the rafters of Value City Arena alongside the retired numbers of five players, the earliest of whom (John Havlicek and Jerry Lucas) first set foot on campus in 1959. Alongside Taylor's name is that of Thad Matta, who himself reestablished Buckeye basketball in the national picture with a pair of Final Four appearances.

Without banners, statues, or buildings bearing his name, Olsen's legacy remains hidden behind those of his successors in Columbus. However, visitors of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts will see his name among the hall's first class of honorees in 1959. http://www.hoophall.com/hall-of-famers/harold-olsen/

Olsen was, and still should be, considered one of the foremost contributors to the game's evolution and popularity, even if it's not always reflected on the campus where he spent nearly a quarter-century coaching.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio...ketball-coach-and-godfather-of-the-final-four
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BTN Here’s where Big Ten teams land in way-too-early 2019-20 top 25 polls

Here’s where Big Ten teams land in way-too-early 2019-20 top 25 polls
BTN.com staff via Big Ten Network

Yeah, yeah, yeah, everyone knows the Big Ten hasn't won the national title since Michigan State cut down the nets in 2000. If the way-too-early 2019-20 polls play out, the Big Ten could be snapping its skid next season in Atlanta.

Continue reading...

Northwestern Series from Nick Swisher Field @ Bill Davis Stadium Columbus, OH (FIRE BEALS)

Meanwhile Illinois, ttun, etc actually care about their baseball programs
Fuck ttun but the other B1G programs concerns me. This program has been on a downward spiral for some time and Smith is satisfied with a damned social director.

Fire Beals! and let us get the show on the road.
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