Ohio
Ohio high school football scores for Week 3: Friday, Sept. 6, 2024
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Week 2 high school football scores from around Ohio, as provided by The Associated Press.
Akr. East 26, Elyria 19
Akr. Hoban 56, Akr. Buchtel 0
Akr. Springfield 13, Minerva 7
Albany Alexander 44, Belpre 0
Amanda-Clearcreek 17, Frankfort Adena 7
Amherst Steele 24, N. Olmsted 7
Andover Pymatuning Valley 34, Jefferson Area 6
Ansonia 46, New Lebanon Dixie 6
Archbold 15, Defiance Tinora 14
Arlington 44, Ada 43
Ashland 35, Linsly, W.Va. 0
Ashtabula St John 22, Beachwood 3
Ashville Teays Valley 35, Pataskala Watkins Memorial 12
Aurora 37, Chesterland W. Geauga 0
Austintown-Fitch 35, Can. Glenoak 0
Avon 13, Cle. Glenville 12
Bainbridge Paint Valley 30, Greenfield McClain 7
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 12, Danville 8
Bay (OH) 17, Hunting Valley University 7
Beavercreek 48, Day. Thurgood Marshall 0
Bellaire 16, Bishop Tonnos, Ontario 13
Bellbrook 16, Germantown Valley View 3
Bellefontaine 29, Westerville Cent. 7
Bellville Clear Fork 28, Lexington 3
Beloit W. Branch 48, Girard 7
Bergen Catholic, N.J. 35, Massillon Washington 21
Berlin Center Western Reserve 35, Columbiana 7
Beverly Ft. Frye 38, Wheeling Central, W.Va. 19
Bishop Hartley 49, Day. Chaminade Julienne 23
Bishop Watterson 41, Westerville N. 6
Bloom-Carroll 31, Plain City Jonathan Alder 21
Bluffton 63, Defiance Ayersville 7
Brookville 33, St. Paris Graham 0
Bucyrus Wynford 33, Collins Western Reserve 22
Burton Berkshire 51, Conneaut 26
Byesville Meadowbrook 46, Cambridge 0
Caldwell 43, Wellsville 0
Caledonia River Valley 37, Delaware Buckeye Valley 7
Camden Preble Shawnee 40, New Paris National Trail 6
Campbell Memorial 30, Warren Champion 25
Canal Fulton Northwest 35, Louisville 28
Canal Winchester 31, Worthington Kilbourne 7
Canfield S. Range 38, Barberton 0
Cardington-Lincoln 46, Bucyrus 8
Carlisle 37, Day. Northridge 30
Carmel, Ind. 44, Centerville 23
Cathedral Preparatory School, Pa. 16, Painesville Riverside 14
Celina 42, Van Wert 14
Centerburg 44, Worthington Christian 21
Chagrin Falls Kenston 37, Chagrin Falls 14
Chardon 28, Avon Lake 7
Chardon NDCL 28, Bedford 6
Chesapeake 41, Racine Southern 9
Cin. Aiken 28, Reading 22
Cin. Anderson 64, Morrow Little Miami 0
Cin. Deer Park 39, Norwood 8
Cin. Elder 30, Springboro 6
Cin. Finneytown 22, Lockland 18
Cin. La Salle 18, Kettering Fairmont 12
Cin. Moeller 42, E. Central, Ind. 13
Cin. Mt Healthy 19, Wilmington 13
Cin. Princeton 14, W. Chester Lakota W. 6
Cin. Summit 22, Lees Creek E. Clinton 18
Cin. Taft 36, Kettering Alter 7
Cin. Turpin 30, Cin. Walnut Hills 7
Cin. West Clermont 24, Lebanon 14
Cin. Winton Woods 22, Milford (OH) 3
Clayton Northmont 15, Cin. Withrow 14
Cle. Cent. Cath. 14, Cle. John Marshall 6
Cle. Hay 20, Independence 0
Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 30, Oberlin 0
Cle. Rhodes 28, Garfield Hts. Trinity 20
Cle. St Ignatius 35, Dublin Coffman 21
Cle. VASJ 60, Mansfield 0
Clyde 42, Tol. Waite 0
Coldwater 55, Ft. Recovery 8
Cols. Briggs 44, Cols. Franklin Hts. 8
Cols. DeSales 35, Cols. Africentric 14
Cols. Grandview Hts. 17, Johnstown Northridge 14, 2OT
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 34, Cols. Centennial 0
Cols. Marion-Franklin 20, Parma Hts. Holy Name 7
Cols. St. Charles 38, Cols. Independence 14
Cols. Upper Arlington 28, Reynoldsburg 13
Cols. Walnut Ridge 44, Cols. Beechcroft 12
Columbia Station Columbia 43, West Salem Northwestern 13
Columbus Grove 27, Hamler Patrick Henry 13
Convoy Crestview 37, Haviland Wayne Trace 16
Cortland Lakeview 19, Youngs. Liberty 6
Creston Norwayne 51, Heath 29
Crooksville 19, Sugar Grove Berne Union 7
Cuyahoga Falls 21, Ravenna SE 6
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 28, Peninsula Woodridge 0
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 52, STVM 0
Cuyahoga Hts. 35, Mantua Crestwood 0
Dalton 34, Mogadore 0
Day. Carroll 23, Cols. Northland 14
Day. Christian 15, Miami Valley Christian Academy 3
Defiance 14, St Marys 10
Delaware Hayes 35, Mt. Vernon 0
Delaware Olentangy Berlin 40, New Albany 14
Delta 31, Millbury Lake 14
Detroit Cass Tech, Mich. 20, Can. McKinley 3
Detroit Catholic Central, Mich. 21, Tol. Cent. Cath. 7
Dola Hardin Northern 29, Cory-Rawson 0
Dover 42, Millersburg W. Holmes 9
Doylestown Chippewa 12, Akr. Coventry 0
Dresden Tri-Valley 14, Clarksville Clinton-Massie 13
Dublin Scioto 35, Thomas Worthington 9
Eaton 28, Oxford Talawanda 7
Edgerton 49, Montpelier 6
Edon 48, Hicksville 8
Fairborn 42, W. Carrollton 6
Fairfield 56, Cin. Sycamore 13
Fairfield Christian 30, Stewart Federal Hocking 0
Fairview 35, Sheffield Brookside 14
Findlay 35, Sylvania Southview 20
Findlay Liberty-Benton 31, McComb 6
Franklin 42, Washington C.H. 7
Ft. Loramie 35, Covington 15
Galion 42, Upper Sandusky 0
Galion Northmor 47, Ashland Mapleton 7
Galloway Westland 46, Grove City Cent. Crossing 17
Garrettsville Garfield 20, Parma Normandy 12
Gates Mills Gilmour 33, Gates Mills Hawken 13
Geneva 21, New Middletown Spring. 14
Genoa 17, Huron 7
Glouster Trimble 18, McArthur Vinton County 6
Grafton Midview 27, Elyria Cath. 0
Granville 48, Johnstown 12
Green 14, Tallmadge 6
Grove City 34, Hilliard Bradley 14
Hamilton Badin 17, Trenton Edgewood 7
Hamilton Ross 34, Cin. NW 0
Harrison 49, Cin. Indian Hill 19
Hilliard Davidson 45, Dublin Jerome 14
Holgate 52, Stryker 12
Hudson 27, Cle. Hts. 14
Jamestown Greeneview 42, W. Liberty-Salem 14
Jeromesville Hillsdale 42, Loudonville 7
Kenton 37, Elida 0
Kings Mills Kings 28, Loveland 20
Kirtland 22, Perry 21, 3OT
LaGrange Keystone 34, Ashland Crestview 0
Lakewood 21, Kent Roosevelt 13
Lancaster 28, Marysville 14
Lawrence North, Ind. 42, Huber Hts. Wayne 21
Leipsic 35, Bloomdale Elmwood 7
Lewis Center Olentangy 27, Westerville S. 14
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 36, Hilliard Darby 17
Lewisburg Tri-County N. 21, Bradford 18
Lewistown Indian Lake 28, Harrod Allen E. 21
Liberty Center 37, Tontogany Otsego 7
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 27, Hamilton 24, OT
Lima 49, Marion Harding 24
Lima Bath 49, Lima Shawnee 23
Lima Perry 34, Pioneer N. Central 0
Lodi Cloverleaf 22, Akr. Garfield 12
Lorain 8, Sandusky 0
Lorain Clearview 20, McDonald 7
Lowellville 47, Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 8
Macedonia Nordonia 35, Mayfield 7
Madison 18, Eastlake North 0
Magnolia Sandy Valley 55, E. Can. 16
Malvern 38, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 28
Manchester 28, Franklin Furnace Green 21
Maple Hts. 24, Cols. Linden-McKinley 0
Maria Stein Marion Local 42, St. Henry (OH) 9
Marion Elgin 34, N. Baltimore 0
Marion Pleasant 48, Whitehall-Yearling 6
Martins Ferry 34, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 3
Mason 20, Cin. Oak Hills 7
Massillon Jackson 31, Stow-Munroe Falls 7
Massillon Tuslaw 48, Warsaw River View 6
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 40, Waynesfield-Goshen 38, 3OT
Mechanicsburg 40, Spring. Greenon 12
Medina Buckeye 41, Akr. Ellet 0
Medina Highland 37, Brunswick 0
Mentor 50, Erie McDowell, Pa. 14
Metamora Evergreen 36, Rossford 6
Middletown 16, Cin. Colerain 10
Middletown Madison 38, Blanchester 14
Milan Edison 12, Gibsonburg 7
Milford Center Fairbanks 38, Cedarville 21
Milton-Union 28, Day. Oakwood 23
Mineral Ridge 54, Louisville Aquinas 13
Minster 41, Anna 14
Mogadore Field 21, Rootstown 0
Monroe 31, Bishop Fenwick 14
Monroeville 36, Attica Seneca E. 13
Mt Gilead 32, Grove City Christian 13
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 21, Arcadia 7
Mt. Orab Western Brown 38, Chillicothe 20
Mt. Victory Ridgemont 14, Morral Ridgedale 8
N. Bend (Cleves) Taylor 35, Cin. Woodward 0
N. Can. Hoover 40, Akr. North 6
N. Ridgeville 10, N. Royalton 0
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 33, Howard E. Knox 0
Napoleon 53, Sylvania Northview 0
Navarre Fairless 28, Uhrichsville Claymont 6
Nelsonville-York 33, Baltimore Liberty Union 0
New Bremen 30, Rockford Parkway 0
New Franklin Manchester 40, Alliance Marlington 0
New Lexington 30, McConnelsville Morgan 0
New London 36, Vanlue 0
New Madison Tri-Village 38, W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 6
New Matamoras Frontier 34, Beallsville 0
New Philadelphia 28, Wooster 7
New Richmond 28, Cin. Western Hills 6
New Richmond 36, Cin. Western Hills 6
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 21, Fairport Harbor Harding 14
Newark 35, Zanesville 15
Newark Licking Valley 20, Bishop Ready 14
Newcomerstown 50, Bowerston Conotton Valley 0
Northwood 30, Kansas Lakota 17
Norton 20, Akr. Firestone 13
Norwalk 7, Tol. Rogers 6
Oak Harbor 42, Port Clinton 7
Olmsted Falls 35, Canfield 6
Ontario 34, Mansfield Madison 14
Orange 37, Wickliffe 23
Orchard Lake St. Mary’s Prep, Mich. 47, Toledo St John’s Jesuit 0
Orrville 59, Can. Cent. Cath. 37
Painesville Harvey 22, Ashtabula Edgewood 13
Pandora-Gilboa 41, Van Buren 14
Parma Padua 28, Rocky River Lutheran W. 0
Pataskala Licking Hts. 27, Thornville Sheridan 7
Paulding 27, Delphos Jefferson 2
Pemberville Eastwood 48, Wauseon 7
Perrysburg 35, Fremont Ross 0
Pickerington N. 38, Pickerington Cent. 27
Piqua 24, Riverside Stebbins 13
Poland Seminary 19, Oberlin Firelands 0
Portsmouth W. 27, Hillsboro 21
Powell Olentangy Liberty 31, Gahanna Lincoln 0
Purcell Marian 32, Cin. Madeira 25
Richfield Revere 35, Ravenna 0
Richwood N. Union 14, Chillicothe Zane Trace 8
Rittman 37, Greenwich S. Cent. 14
Salem 13, E. Liverpool 7
Sandusky Perkins 49, Rocky River 0
Sandusky St. Mary 35, Sebring McKinley 0
Shelby 34, Bellevue 0
Sherwood Fairview 34, Bryan 6
Smithville 30, Lucas 25
Solon 22, Shaker Hts. 21
Sparta Highland 42, Coshocton 28
Spencerville 24, DeGraff Riverside 21
Spring. Kenton Ridge 58, Cols. Mifflin 0
Spring. NE 20, Spring. Cath. Cent. 7
Spring. Shawnee 20, New Carlisle Tecumseh 0
Springfield 15, Trotwood-Madison 14
St. Xavier (OH) 35, Indpls Cathedral, Ind. 31
Steubenville 31, Youngs. Mooney 21
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 8, Zanesville Rosecrans 7
Strasburg 42, Leetonia 0
Streetsboro 49, Alliance 13
Strongsville 21, Berea-Midpark 6
Struthers 40, Cin. Dohn 6
Sullivan Black River 44, Brooklyn 0
Sunbury Big Walnut 24, Groveport-Madison 13
Sycamore Mohawk 36, Castalia Margaretta 14
Tiffin Columbian 56, E. Cle. Shaw 0
Tipp City Tippecanoe 72, Greenville 7
Tol. Christian 21, Grand Rapids NorthPointe, Mich. 0
Tol. Ottawa Hills 56, Swanton 6
Tol. St. Francis 49, Birmingham Brother Rice, Mich. 28
Tol. Start 28, Holland Springfield 7
Tol. Whitmer 45, Oregon Clay 14
Toronto 50, Weir, W.Va. 0
Twinsburg 25, Copley 22
Uniontown Lake 24, Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 0
Urbana 34, Tipp City Bethel 7
Utica 18, Fredericktown 15
Vandalia Butler 21, Troy 13
Vermilion 41, Willard 12
Versailles 17, Delphos St John’s 7
Vienna Mathews 20, Newton Falls 6
W. Jefferson 28, London Madison-Plains 21
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 31, Carrollton 0
Wadsworth 51, Medina 7
Wapakoneta 42, Ottawa-Glandorf 14
Warren Harding 15, Massillon Perry 9
Waynesville 49, Goshen 7
Wellington 21, Plymouth 14
Westlake 30, Warrensville Hts. 6
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 49, Bowling Green 19
Williamsburg 20, Cin. Mariemont 0
Willoughby S. 28, Lyndhurst Brush 7
Windham 26, N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 14
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 52, Hannibal River 6
Wooster Triway 41, Apple Creek Waynedale 16
Xenia 48, Sidney 7
Youngs. Boardman 15, Youngs. Chaney High School 0
Youngs. East 36, Cle. JFK 0
Youngs. Ursuline 27, Farrell, Pa. 0
Youngs. Valley Christian 23, Brookfield 6
POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS
Cle. Adams vs. Elmore Woodmore, ccd.
Crestline vs. Cle. Collinwood, ccd.
Ohio
Three Buckeyes Who Proved They Belong at Ohio State Spring Game
Fans got their first glimpse of the 2026-2027 Buckeyes during their spring game earlier today. In contrast to last year’s offensive takeover, it was the defense this year that shined for the most part.
With this, we still saw plenty of Buckeyes that proved that they are ready to play, and ready to play now. Here are three standouts from the Ohio State Spring Game.
Chris Henry Jr.
Coming into the game, most Ohio State fans had already penciled Chris Henry Jr., the No. 1 WR in the 2026 class according to ESPN, as the successor to Carnell Tate in the Buckeye offense.
Anyone that didn’t, probably should now.
The freshman wideout hauled in 4 passes for 96 yards, including a 40-yard touchdown catch in the second quarter.
Playing all snaps on the outside, Henry Jr. looked very poised, showcasing smooth route running and breakaway speed. The connection between him and another Buckeye on this list was the highlight of the offense for the day. There is no doubt he should be an immediate contributor in this Ohio State offense.
Tavien St. Clair
After a subpar showing at the spring game last year, Tavien St. Clair showed flashes of the top-10 recruit he was just two years ago.
He dazzled early with two big completions to Chris Henry Jr., showing off his big arm in the process.
His touchdown pass to Henry Jr. was a beautiful look off from St. Clair, who launched it right to the right pylon to find the freshman wideout.
It was not all sunshine and rainbows for St. Clair on the day though, as he was forced into a couple three-and-outs as well as a few balls that could have been intercepted.
All in all, all tools are there for St. Clair to be great when his number is called, and another year of growth under Julian Sayin should help him get there.
Beau Atkinson
Buckeye fans were surprised when Beau Atkinson was basically a non-factor on the defensive line a season ago, as the hype around him coming from North Carolina was immense.
The player they expected to see last year was on full display, as the senior finished the day with a sack and an interception off a Julian Sayin batted ball at the line of scrimmage.
His high motor was one to watch early, as his get-off and confidence at the position looked vastly improved from last year. He is one to seriously watch to be the starter next to Kenyatta Jackson Jr. come September.
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Ohio
Ohio nursing homes ‘dump’ vulnerable patients at homeless shelters in shocking trend
A vulnerable woman, suffering from multiple health conditions and alcohol-related dementia, was “dumped” at a homeless shelter by an Ohio nursing home, prompting staff to call the fire department.
The woman, who was diabetic, managing a tibia fracture, and incontinent, arrived at the shelter carrying “a large bag of medications.”
Federal inspectors from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) documented the incident following an August 3, 2023, inspection, noting the woman was “unclear of what was going on, scared, and not sure who dropped her off there.”
The Eastland Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Columbus had involuntarily discharged the woman after she was caught drinking beer at the facility. While staff reportedly sought a substance abuse rehabilitation bed, none were immediately available.
Eastland staff failed to contact the county’s psychiatric bed board for alternative placement before taking her to the shelter, where she faced a waiting list of about 100 people.
The incident highlights a disturbing trend, described by industry experts as rare but increasingly common, where nursing homes transfer medically fragile patients to homeless shelters. CMS, which funds most nursing home care in the U.S., has previously faulted Eastland and six other facilities for similar discharge practices in recent years.
The shelter at first declined to admit the woman, leaving her outside in the late-summer heat. Staff eventually relented, letting her sit in the lobby with a glass of cold water while they summoned a city rapid response team, including the fire department and a social worker.

Neither Eastland nor the CMS inspectors could locate the woman by the time the report was published.
“In addition, the events of what occurred at the addiction recovery center or how/why Resident #83 ended up at the homeless shelter … could not be determined as the facility was unable to provide any additional information regarding Resident #83,” the inspection report says.
The administrator at Eastland declined to return phone calls about the inspection. Facility staff declined to provide contact information for Garden Healthcare, the corporate owner of the nursing home, which operates five other facilities, according to CMS data. It doesn’t publish any contact information online.
Most of the patients in these situations are older, homeless, unemployed and lack support networks of family or friends that might be checking in on them, according to Chip Wilkins, who leads the city of Dayton’s Long Term Care Ombudsman program, which acts as a legal advocate for long term care patients.
“We are starting to deal with it more and more. The facilities are so closely monitored on discharges, but yet they still try and send them to hospitals and not take them back. Or drop them off at homeless shelters,” he said in an interview.
“I would say certainly over the last six months there has been an uptick.”
Leilani Pelletier, the statewide ombudsman, said she didn’t have ready access to data that could confirm whether the discharges to homeless shelters have increased in frequency statewide.
But health care is as subject to macroeconomic forces like inflation as other sectors of the economy. And Medicaid, which pays for most nursing care, is under increasing cost pressure as federal lawmakers have reduced program funds.
The challenges nursing facilities in Ohio are facing reflect a broader and concerning trend affecting facilities across the country, said Scott Wiley in a statement, CEO of the Ohio Health Care Association, an industry trade group.
“This issue has been growing as more residents face unstable housing,” he said. “State oversight and resources are needed to help tackle the issue on a larger scale to find meaningful, long-term solutions for Ohioans who struggle with homelessness. It will require a collaborative approach that a single nursing facility provider is not equipped to manage on their own.”
The state ombudsman’s office gets copies of every involuntary discharge from a nursing home in Ohio. One of the first things they check, Wilkins said, is the proposed discharge location.
Homeless shelter discharges are priority cases because they’re almost always unsafe, he said. They can’t manage the 10 to 20 medications they might need daily. Some rely on wheelchairs or walkers.
“Invariably, that ends up being a horrible experience for the individual because they’ll go to the shelter, and typically, within two to three days, the shelter will send them to the hospital because they can’t meet their needs,” Wilkins said.
Often, the issues trace back to insurers, including Medicaid and Medicare, that cut off residents’ benefits. Sometimes the facilities cite aggressive behavior or substance use.
Homeless shelters aren’t built to handle medically fragile patients. They aren’t medical centers. Some may require residents to climb to a top bunk, a tall task for older patients.
Marcus Roth, director of communications of the Coalition on Homelessness and Housing in Ohio, said the practice puts the shelters in a tight spot. They’re tending to a population they’re not equipped to handle, but they’re also the de facto safety net.
“The emergency shelter system, to the extent we have a system, is often the only thing available when other interventions don’t work,” he said.
Pelletier emphasized in an interview that such involuntary discharges to shelters against residents’ wishes are rare. That said, she estimated about 13,000 Ohioans are discharged from a nursing home each month.
Nursing homes, she said, have legal obligations to make sure that discharges are “safe and appropriate.” And it’s not up to the facilities, she said, to unilaterally decide where a person should go.
Whether a shelter is “safe and appropriate” is a fact-specific question. Pelletier said there are instances where it could be, pending the care needs of the resident and abilities of the shelter. It’s the kind of thing that ombudsmen hone in on when reviewing discharges.
“The real issue is when people are discharged to a homeless shelter and there’s been no work or investigation done on if that would be a safe or appropriate discharge,” she said.
It didn’t matter that its patient was diabetic and struggled to manage his blood sugar. Neither did his history of glaucoma, cataracts, or suspected autism, or his 22 years of residency at the nursing home.
What mattered is that his insurance stopped paying, and the Laurels of Hillsboro wanted him out, according to a Dec. 29, 2025 CMS inspection of the facility. The facility was sold in July 2025 and rebranded to Hillsboro Health and Rehab, but state and federal records reflect the previous name.
The man told CMS inspectors in an interview that nursing home staff never told him he was being taken to a homeless shelter.
Federal law says nursing home residents must be given at least 30 days’ notice before a discharge, barring health and safety emergencies. But the patient at Hillsboro, who isn’t identified in the investigation, wasn’t given any. According to his former roommate, facility staff misrepresented the discharge, claiming he’d be going to an assisted living apartment as opposed to an emergency shelter that would only house him for up to 90 days.
The man wasn’t taught to manage his medications and showed up at the shelter without any needles to use. He struggled to see with his cataracts. He had no driver’s license, birth certificate or other documents he would need to get a job, income or housing.
“I can’t believe they would do someone dirty like that,” the patient’s roommate said to CMS inspectors.
Hillsboro, via a receptionist who declined to provide her name over the phone, declined to comment but said the facility is now in “substantial compliance” with the state.
In some of the facilities cited by CMS, the providers allegedly failed to ensure patients got their medications as they were discharged to homeless shelters. And some failed to provide patients their 30 days of notice before an involuntary discharge.
Meadowbrook Manor, in Trumbull County, sought to discharge a patient with an array of long-term illnesses and a history of substance use and homelessness, according to a July 8 inspection. He was given a 30-day discharge notice, but was sent to a shelter 20 days later regardless.
He was given two weeks’ worth of medications, but no prescriptions, medical appointments or care plan. The shelter staff identified a “mismatch” given the man had trouble walking and couldn’t climb a ladder to reach a top bunk, as the facility requires.
Meadowbrook staff refused to take him back.
At New Lebanon Rehabilitation and Healthcare Center, a woman’s insurer sent her a termination letter for her treatment for a series of neural and spinal disorders, plus depression and arthritis.
While she was entitled to 30 days’ notice, the facility gave her roughly 24 hours before discharging her to a homeless shelter. The facility’s social services director said he didn’t know where the woman actually went, only that a friend picked her up.
Ohio
Central Catholic offensive tackle Jimmy Kalis picks Ohio State | Trib HSSN
By:
Friday, April 17, 2026 | 7:01 PM
Jimmy Kalis will play his college football at Ohio State.
Central Catholic’s 6-foot-8, 285-pound star lineman, surrounded by family, friends and other supporters, gave a verbal commitment to the Buckeyes live on Rivals’ YouTube channel Friday evening.
He thanked many of the people who supported him along his journey, including teammates and coaches.
“I want to thank all of the schools that gave me a chance and believed in me,” Kalis said. “I am really thankful and blessed for all these opportunities I got.”
The soon-to-be senior chose Ohio State over a group of five other finalists that included Georgia, Texas, Clemson, Miami and LSU.
Kalis, a Rivals 4-star offensive tackle, collected more than 40 Power Four scholarship offers with Alabama, Cal, Duke, Florida, Florida State, Indiana, Miami, Michigan, Michigan State, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Ole Miss, Oregon, Penn State, Pitt, Purdue, Tennessee, Washington, WVU and Wisconsin among the others.
He is the No. 234 overall prospect and No. 21 offensive tackle in the Class of 2027, according to the Rivals Industry Ranking.
Kalis went through an extensive recruiting process that included visits to several of the top schools on his list.
In an interview with Rivals in February, Kalis said Ohio State was “very high on my list because they have been there and been very consistent since Day 1. They develop OL at a high level and have an elite culture and they take pride in getting guys to the next level.”
Kalis was part of a powerful Central Catholic offensive line in 2025 that helped the Vikings rack up 40.8 points per game.
Central Catholic went undefeated in Class 6A, finished 13-2 overall, defeated North Allegheny, 42-7, for the WPIAL title and advanced to the PIAA championship game before falling to La Salle College.
Kalis’ efforts were celebrated with numerous all-star honors including an all-conference second-team nod.
“It’s been an awesome ride watching Jimmy grow and mature,” Central Catholic coach Ryan Lehmeier said. “He’s earned this opportunity. He’s played really well throughout his career with us. He’s a great kid who is so focused on what he wants, and he’s worked so hard towards that. He’s been a delight to coach, and I hope all of our kids are able to reach their max potential. For guys like Jimmy to have this opportunity, I couldn’t be more happy for him.”
Kalis has had a strong support system, and throughout the recruiting process, he leaned on the experience of both his father, Todd, and older brother, Kyle.
Todd Kalis, a Minnesota native, attended Division I Arizona State as a 6-6, 300-pound guard and was selected by the Vikings in the fourth round of the 1988 NFL Draft. He played for the Vikings, Steelers and Bengals over his eight-year NFL career.
Kyle Kalis, recruited by Michigan out of St. Edward High School in suburban Cleveland, got an opportunity as a lineman (6-4, 305) in the NFL with Washington, Indianapolis, Cleveland, and Oakland from 2017-2020.
Jimmy’s mother, Kristen, was a former college basketball player. She is 6-1.
Michael Love is a TribLive reporter covering sports in the Alle-Kiski Valley and the eastern suburbs of Pittsburgh. A Clearfield native and a graduate of Westminster (Pa.), he joined the Trib in 2002 after spending five years at the Clearfield Progress. He can be reached at mlove@triblive.com.
Tags: Central Catholic
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