Ohio
Seniors show up in big moments, lead Ohio to hard-fought win – WOUB Public Media
Seniors show up in big moments, lead Ohio to hard-fought win
By: Andrew Bowlby
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ATHENS, Ohio (WOUB) – “It’s March 1, there’s no better time in sports than March Madness,” Ohio coach Jeff Boals said, after earning his 150th career win and 14th in the month of March. Ohio took down Bowling Green 66-59 on Friday night.
Ahead of Friday’s conference matchup, Ohio honored its two senior guards, Jaylin Hunter and Miles Brown. The pair have combined to score 30% of the Bobcats points this season, posting 23.8 per game.
“Just thank you, thank you,” Brown said to Bobcat fans after his final game at the Convo. “The guys sitting from the front row all the way up into the top I feel like we’re just connected and we’re just a family.”
Pregame festivities didn’t translate into a great start for either team, with little offensive success in the opening minutes. After eight minutes, the teams combined for 10 points and 10 turnovers.
A bit of a shocking start considering both the Bobcats and Falcons have top-five scoring offenses in the MAC.
Despite the rocky beginnings, Brown made a pair of free throws, and added a made three on the next possession to kickstart the Ohio offense after what felt like an eternity of waiting.
Midway through the half, the Bowling Green offense began to find its legs as well. Senior guard Trey Thomas made a deep three at the shot clock buzzer, a part of a 8-0 run, to give Bowling Green a 24-19 lead.
Ohio called a quick timeout to reset as a tight first half was slipping away. Out of the break, Brown knocked down a mid-range jumper to settle Ohio down. Shortly after, Shereef Mitchell added consecutive 3-pointers to tie the game at 28.
With just 3.7 seconds remaining in the first half, Ohio got possession back and nearly converted a scoop putback by Ajay Sheldon. However, after an extensive review, it was ruled the shot came after time had expired, and the teams went into the locker room even.
Brown credited the late surge in the first half to Ohio trusting that shots were going to start falling.
“We just wanted to lock in defensively. Once we really locked in our defense, we knew our offense would come, and you saw that at the end of the half,” Brown said.
Early in the second half, Falcons big-man duo of Jason Spurgin and Rashaun Agee began to take advantage of their size and cause damage in the paint. Agee scored 10 of his 17 points in the second half and collected 11 rebounds on the night to earn his 15th double-double of the season.
Every time Ohio was building momentum and pulling away, Bowling Green answered, and kept the game close until the last moments.
After the under four media timeouts, it was announced that a technical foul had been assessed to Boals. That resulted in Bowling Green making four consecutive free throws to tie the game at 57 with under three minutes to play.
“Don’t talk about my technical, my wife’s going to kill me,” Boals said jokingly postgame. “I’m going to make an oath; no more technical [fouls] because it almost cost us again.”
But it did not cost Ohio. Primarily because of the late-game clutch shooting.
Hunter, who was 0-7 from the field, nailed a go-ahead corner three to send the Convo into a frenzy. A few moments later, AJ Clayton added the knockout punch from the top of the key, extending the Bobcats lead to 63-57 with only 30 seconds to go.
Even after the difficult shooting night, Ohio put the ball in the hands of its stars, and it paid off in a big way.
“Early in the year we were losing these games,” Boals said. “We’re a completely different team right now, different focus, different mindset, different mentality and playing with a lot of confidence.”
For Hunter, even though his night didn’t include a standard scoring outburst, he found ways to affect the game and lead Ohio to a final home win on the 2023-24 campaign.
“Thank you for embracing me with open arms,” Hunter said as his parting words with Ohio fans. “Sticking with myself and this team through tough times, and we’re going to try and pay it off up in Cleveland.”
Before Ohio heads to Cleveland for the Mid-American Conference tournament, it will play a pair of road games at Buffalo and Miami to cap the regular season.
Ohio
Thousands head to Columbus for 23rd annual Home Improvement Show at Ohio Expo Center
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WSYX) — Thousands of people are expected to head to downtown Columbus for the 23rd annual Home Improvement Show this weekend.
Organizers say visitors can find ideas for everything from small interior design projects to major renovations.
The event is being held at the Ohio Expo Center and includes seminars, exhibits and demonstrations from local and national companies.
The show begins at noon Friday and runs until 6 p.m.
It continues Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Adult tickets cost $5 at the door.
Ohio
Matt Patricia sought stability in return as Ohio State football defensive coordinator
Matt Patricia’s contract extension earlier this offseason included a pay raise that figures to make him the highest-paid assistant coach in college football this year.
But Patricia, who will make $3.75 million in guaranteed compensation as Ohio State’s defensive coordinator in 2026, also held an appreciation for his situation.
“Ohio State is such a special place, not only just the history, the tradition, the football program, the school, but the people here,” Patricia said. “Having a chance to have a little stability with my family, it’s hard when you have to move your family around, your kids and the new school and all that.”
Before he joined Ryan Day’s staff last year, the 51-year-old Patricia had bounced around as an assistant in the NFL for much of the decade.
He spent 2021 and 2022 in a variety of roles with the New England Patriots, then a year as a defensive assistant with the Philadelphia Eagles. He took off from coaching in 2024. The frequent relocation gave him perspective.
“We had an unbelievable experience settling into Columbus,” Patricia said. “Everybody’s been so nice and welcoming. It feels like home. It’s a big deal for us to be in a place where everybody’s happy. That’s really important.”
Patricia had a significant impact on the Buckeyes in his first year replacing Jim Knowles. Despite heavy roster attrition following their national championship season, he kept the defense atop the Football Bowl Subdivision. For the second straight season, no one allowed fewer points than Ohio State.
The 9.3 points per game allowed by the Buckeyes were the fewest by any defense since Alabama in 2011.
The success made Patricia a hot commodity on the coaching market, rebuilding his reputation as a sharp and creative football mind only a decade removed from his tenure as a Super Bowl-winning defensive coordinator for the Patriots. He was a finalist for the Broyles Award as the nation’s top assistant.
Patricia said he heard about opportunities in the NFL and elsewhere across the college football landscape, though none of them would pry him away from Ohio State.
“It wasn’t necessarily something where you’re looking to leave,” Patricia said, “but you do have to listen when those things come up. I’m just glad everything worked out.”
His challenge in his second season mirrors his previous one, as the Buckeyes are again managing the loss of eight starters on defense.
But unlike 2025, they have fewer returning pieces, relying on a larger class of transfers to help fill the holes on the depth chart.
“With as much coming into the program for the first time, not only are you trying to catch them up on the football scheme, but you’re also trying to catch them up on everything else,” Patricia said. “This is how we work, this is how we do things, this is the standard we’re looking for, this is how we practice, this is how we prepare, this is how we go to school. That has to be also taught. It becomes a lot, but that’s why you bring in the right guys that have the mental makeup to do all that.”
Joey Kaufman covers Ohio State football for The Columbus Dispatch. Email him at jkaufman@dispatch.com and follow him on @joeyrkaufman on X.
Ohio
Which central Ohio schools get the best results for their money?
Gahanna Lincoln High’s principal shares thoughts on new building
Principal Jessica Williams speaks about the new Gahanna Lincoln High School on Tuesday, Feb. 24, in Gahanna, Ohio.
Which central Ohio school districts get the most bang for their buck?
On average, school districts in Ohio spend $16,069 per-pupil for education, according to the education think tank Fordham Institute.
However, different district types spend different amounts of money. For example, large urban districts with very high poverty spend around $21,000 per-pupil, but small towns with low poverty spend around $14,900. The district type closest to the state average are those considered rural and high poverty and suburban districts with low poverty.
Aaron Churchill, lead Ohio researcher for the Fordham Institute, said that urban districts – like Columbus City Schools, the state’s largest district – often have higher spending because they can pull more in tax revenue and the state supports them at a higher rate because they are serving a higher proportion of disadvantaged students. Small, high-poverty towns on the other hand, generate less tax revenue from property values and district employee wages, the highest expense for schools, may be lowered by less market competition.
Churchill said schools should be focused on directing their funding toward initiatives that improve student outcomes and achievement.
“It’s making sure we’re focused on quality, we’re focused on performance, and that we’re rewarding performance,” Churchill said. “And we don’t do enough of that in the education system now.”
Churchill said there is a long-running debate among education researchers about whether increasing spending translates to meaningful results for students. Overall, school funding has increased on average over $2,000 per-pupil since 2015 and reached a record-high in 2025, according to the Fordham Institute.
“You can see in the numbers that we’re spending more than we ever have,” Churchill said. “The real million-dollar question is ‘Can our schools spend the money well?’”
Which central Ohio districts have the best results compared to funding?
The Dispatch compared overall spending per-pupil for central Ohio school districts to the ODEW’s performance index, using 2025 state data.
The Performance Index uses the performance level results for students in third grade through high school on Ohio’s state testing. The Performance Index (PI) score accounts for the level of achievement of every student, not just whether they are “proficient.” Higher performance levels receive larger weights in the calculation, but all achievement levels are included. Overall, the state average of performance scores was 91.8, according to 2025 state data.
The central Ohio school district with the highest spending was Columbus City Schools, which spent $24,505 per pupil and received a PI score of 60.7. The district with the highest PI was Grandview Heights Schools, which received a 106 PI score and spent $21,567 per pupil. New Albany-Plain Local Schools was a close second in PI at 105.1 while spending more than $4,000 less than Grandview Heights at $16,923 per-pupil.
Here’s how central Ohio schools stack up by spending versus achievements on tests, according to the Ohio Department of Education (sorted by highest spending per-pupil):
- Columbus City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $24,505; PI score: 60.7
- Grandview Heights Schools – Spending per-pupil: $21,567; PI score: 106
- Bexley City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $21,025; PI score: 102.7
- Dublin City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $18,702; PI score: 97.6
- Worthington City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $18.573 ; PI score: 94.3
- Madison-Plains Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $17,646; PI score: 88
- New Albany-Plain Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16,923; PI score: 105.1
- Westerville City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16,815; PI score: 89.7
- Olentangy Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16,780; PI score: 103.9
- Groveport Madison Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16,236; PI score: 72.6
- Upper Arlington City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16,282; PI score: 103.6
- Canal Winchester Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $16.154; PI score: 89.1
- Average Ohio school district – Spending per-pupil: $16,069; PI score: 91.8
- Reynoldsburg City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,956; PI score: 72.2
- Gahanna-Jefferson City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,742; PI score: 89.7
- Hilliard City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,694; PI score: 90
- South Western City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,600; PI score: 78.5
- Whitehall City Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,593; PI score: 66.95
- Johnstown-Monroe Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $15,163; PI score: 94.5
- Jonathan Alder Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $14,803; PI score: 95.9
- Pickerington Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $14,470 ; PI score: 90.9
- Big Walnut Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $14,239; PI score: 95.1
- London City – Spending per-pupil: $13,750; PI score: 81.3
- Marysville Exempted Village Schools – Spending per-pupil: $13,608; PI score: 95.5
- Licking Heights Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $13,585; PI score: 85.4
- Hamilton Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $12,971; PI score: 82.2
- Bloom-Carrol Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $12,720; PI score: 90.89
- Licking Valley Local Schools – Spending per-pupil: $12,587; PI score: 85
Cole Behrens covers K-12 education and school districts in central Ohio. Have a tip? Contact Cole at cbehrens@dispatch.com or connect with him on X at @Colebehr_report
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