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Ohio high school football scores for Week 5: Friday, Sept. 20, 2024

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Ohio high school football scores for Week 5: Friday, Sept. 20, 2024


CLEVELAND, Ohio — Week 5 high school football scores from around Ohio, as provided by The Associated Press.

Ada 35, McComb 20

Akr. East 37, Hunting Valley University 9

Akr. Hoban 45, Cle. St Ignatius 14

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Amanda-Clearcreek 33, Circleville 26

Amherst Steele 60, Berea-Midpark 41

Anna 21, St. Henry (OH) 14

Arcanum 37, Lewisburg Tri-County N. 0

Archbold 28, Delta 24

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Ashland 37, Maple Hts. 20

Ashland Crestview 67, New London 0

Ashville Teays Valley 17, Reynoldsburg 7

Athens 35, McArthur Vinton County 7

Attica Seneca E. 34, Carey 31

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Aurora 49, Copley 12

Avon 38, N. Ridgeville 7

Avon Lake 24, Grafton Midview 17

Bainbridge Paint Valley 58, Williamsport Westfall 28

Barnesville 63, Hannibal River 0

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Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 30, Kansas Lakota 0

Batavia 83, Bethel-Tate 0

Beaver 32, Salem 25

Beaver Eastern 27, Racine Southern 21

Beavercreek 19, Miamisburg 10

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Bedford 33, Lyndhurst Brush 0

Bellaire 26, Cambridge 6

Bellbrook 17, Kettering Alter 7

Bellefontaine 49, Lewistown Indian Lake 14

Belmont Union Local 48, Sarahsville Shenandoah 7

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Beloit W. Branch 48, Warren Howland 13

Belpre 34, Beallsville 12

Berlin Center Western Reserve 41, Lowellville 22

Beverly Ft. Frye 51, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 6

Bishop Watterson 41, Chardon 9

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Blanchester 22, Goshen 8

Bloom-Carroll 70, Baltimore Liberty Union 6

Bluffton 55, Spencerville 7

Bowerston Conotton Valley 41, Bridgeport 6

Bowling Green 28, Sylvania Northview 0

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Brookville 21, Middletown Madison 0

Burton Berkshire 31, Wickliffe 0

Caledonia River Valley 35, Marion Pleasant 0

Camden Preble Shawnee 70, Bradford 12

Can. Cent. Cath. 27, Alliance 14

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Can. McKinley 38, Massillon Perry 7

Canal Fulton Northwest 31, Navarre Fairless 14

Canal Winchester Harvest 50, Day. Dunbar 15

Canfield S. Range 37, Struthers 13

Carlisle 34, Franklin 7

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Castalia Margaretta 26, Elmore Woodmore 7

Celina 38, Kenton 35

Centerburg 42, Loudonville 7

Chagrin Falls 40, Independence 0

Chardon NDCL 52, STVM 14

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Chesterland W. Geauga 42, Ashtabula Edgewood 14

Chillicothe Unioto 51, Chillicothe Huntington 14

Chillicothe Zane Trace 23, Piketon 20

Cin. Aiken 43, Cin. Summit 0

Cin. Anderson 41, Kings Mills Kings 0

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Cin. Country Day 55, Batavia Clermont NE 27

Cin. Elder 17, St. Xavier (KY), Ky. 15

Cin. Hills Christian Academy 68, Cin. Gamble Montessori 0

Cin. Indian Hill 42, Cin. Deer Park 7

Cin. La Salle 43, Cin. Withrow 19

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Cin. McNicholas 38, Purcell Marian 8

Cin. Moeller 45, St. Xavier (OH) 37

Cin. Mt Healthy 35, Bishop Fenwick 10

Cin. NW 28, Cin. Western Hills 13

Cin. Princeton 30, Mason 7

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Cin. Sycamore 14, Cin. Colerain 7

Cin. West Clermont 49, Milford (OH) 21

Cin. Winton Woods 49, Cin. Walnut Hills 0

Cin. Wyoming 35, N. Bend (Cleves) Taylor 26

Circleville Logan Elm 41, Lancaster Fairfield Union 20

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Clarksville Clinton-Massie 21, Harrison 17

Cle. Benedictine 39, Shaker Hts. 7

Cle. Glenville 48, Cle. E. Tech 0

Cle. Hay 34, Cle. Collinwood 0

Cle. JFK 18, Cle. Lincoln W. 0

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Cle. Rhodes 36, Cle. Adams 12

Clyde 56, Port Clinton 21

Coldwater 24, Minster 21

Collins Western Reserve 60, Ashland Mapleton 20

Cols. Africentric 36, Cols. Briggs 22

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Cols. Bexley 34, Landmark Christian 13

Cols. DeSales 35, Bishop Ready 21

Cols. Eastmoor 34, West 0

Cols. Grandview Hts. 24, Chesapeake 6

Cols. Marion-Franklin 34, Cols. Independence 20

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Cols. Upper Arlington 36, Grove City Cent. Crossing 0

Cols. Walnut Ridge 46, Columbus South 0

Columbiana 42, Lisbon David Anderson 26

Columbiana Crestview 68, Ravenna SE 19

Columbus Grove 65, Delphos Jefferson 6

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Corning Miller 35, Sugar Grove Berne Union 0

Cortland Lakeview 34, Niles McKinley 8

Creston Norwayne 42, Rittman 3

Crooksville 22, McConnelsville Morgan 12

Crown City S. Gallia 42, Oak Hill 14

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Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 21, Can. South 10

Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 49, Akr. Firestone 0

Day. Belmont 46, Day. Ponitz Tech. 0

Day. Chaminade Julienne 14, Trenton Edgewood 0

Day. Christian 35, Lockland 34

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Day. Northridge 14, DeGraff Riverside 7

Defiance 43, Lima Shawnee 7

Defiance Tinora 35, Sherwood Fairview 34

Delaware Buckeye Valley 28, Cols. Hamilton Twp. 7

Delphos St John’s 27, Ft. Recovery 14

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Dola Hardin Northern 38, Lima Perry 15

Doylestown Chippewa 49, West Salem Northwestern 14

Dresden Tri-Valley 41, New Lexington 14

Eastlake North 14, Garfield Hts. 12

Edon 50, Whiteford, Mich. 20

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Fairview 56, Beachwood 12

Fairview, Ky. 42, Franklin Furnace Green 20

Findlay 21, Fremont Ross 7

Findlay Liberty-Benton 45, Bloomdale Elmwood 0

Frankfort Adena 40, Southeastern 16

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Fredericktown 14, Mt Gilead 12

Gahanna Cols. Academy 27, Cols. St. Charles 20

Gahanna Lincoln 41, Dublin Coffman 21

Galion Northmor 41, Danville 6

Galloway Westland 41, Cols. Franklin Hts. 0

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Garrettsville Garfield 50, Warren Champion 0

Gates Mills Gilmour 42, Cle. John Marshall 6

Gates Mills Hawken 60, Ashtabula Lakeside 38

Genoa 55, Millbury Lake 28

Germantown Valley View 44, Eaton 17

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Gibsonburg 10, Tiffin Calvert 0

Girard 21, Andover Pymatuning Valley 13

Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 49, Lore City Buckeye Trail 8

Granville 44, Utica 0

Green 21, Massillon Jackson 17

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Grove City 42, Hilliard Darby 16

Grove City Christian 52, Zanesville Rosecrans 0

Groveport-Madison 35, Lancaster 7

Hamilton 34, Cin. Oak Hills 7

Hamilton Badin 38, Cin. Hughes 0

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Hamilton New Miami 47, Fayetteville-Perry 6

Hamilton Ross 28, Jackson 21

Hamler Patrick Henry 39, Bryan 0

Hanoverton United 17, Salineville Southern 14

Harrod Allen E. 48, Convoy Crestview 41

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Haviland Wayne Trace 26, Edgerton 0

Hicksville 15, Antwerp 12

Hilliard Davidson 43, Marysville 0

Hillsboro 65, Lees Creek E. Clinton 0

Holgate 50, Lakeside Danbury 6

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Howard E. Knox 49, Cardington-Lincoln 22

Hudson 35, Twinsburg 0

Huron 38, Tiffin Columbian 20

Ironton 41, Bishop Hartley 0

Ironton Rock Hill 41, South Point 20

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Jamestown Greeneview 39, N. Lewisburg Triad 7

Jefferson Area 50, Orange 42

Jeromesville Hillsdale 35, Dalton 31

Johnstown 28, Pataskala Watkins Memorial 21

Johnstown Northridge 7, Zanesville 0

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Kettering Fairmont 43, Huber Hts. Wayne 22

Kirtland 48, Cuyahoga Hts. 7

LaGrange Keystone 20, Columbia Station Columbia 7

Leavittsburg LaBrae 45, Newton Falls 0

Lebanon 25, Morrow Little Miami 7

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Leipsic 34, Arcadia 6

Lewis Center Olentangy 33, Westerville Cent. 0

Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 35, Delaware Olentangy Berlin 7

Lexington 41, Wooster 28

Liberty Center 70, Swanton 0

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Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 59, Fairfield 17

Lima 51, Tol. Bowsher 14

Lima Bath 62, Elida 56

Lima Cent. Cath. 28, Ft. Loramie 21

Lodi Cloverleaf 28, Akr. Coventry 6

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London 63, St. Paris Graham 7

Lorain Clearview 42, Oberlin 0

Loveland 23, Cin. Turpin 7

Lucas 49, Willard 19

Macedonia Nordonia 46, N. Royalton 13

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Magnolia Sandy Valley 45, Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 0

Mansfield 20, New Philadelphia 19

Mantua Crestwood 52, Brooklyn 14

Maria Stein Marion Local 48, New Bremen 7

Marietta 33, Whitehall-Yearling 20

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Marion Elgin 29, Cory-Rawson 3

Martins Ferry 49, Brownsville, Pa. 0

Massillon Washington 31, St. Edward (OH) 21

McDermott Scioto NW 35, Minford 14

McDonald 46, N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 7

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McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 38, Morral Ridgedale 8

Mechanicsburg 41, Spring. Cath. Cent. 0

Medina Buckeye 31, Bay (OH) 0

Medina Highland 49, Tallmadge 0

Mentor 35, Cle. Hts. 27

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Miami Valley Christian Academy 45, Manchester 20

Milan Edison 35, Norwalk 0

Milford Center Fairbanks 56, Spring. Greenon 21

Millersburg W. Holmes 23, Mansfield Madison 21

Millersport 30, Stewart Federal Hocking 20

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Milton-Union 49, Troy Christian 0

Mineral Ridge 42, Atwater Waterloo 18

Minerva 16, Louisville Aquinas 7

Mogadore 34, Akr. Ellet 18

Monroe 24, Washington C.H. 7

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Monroeville 41, Greenwich S. Cent. 0

Mt. Vernon 31, Heath 16

N. Can. Hoover 23, Louisville 16

N. Olmsted 28, Parma Normandy 13

N. Robinson Col. Crawford 62, New Washington Buckeye Cent. 0

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Napoleon 47, Holland Springfield 26

New Albany 17, Hilliard Bradley 14

New Franklin Manchester 31, Orrville 11

New Middletown Spring. 37, Campbell Memorial 8

New Paris National Trail 35, New Lebanon Dixie 14

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Newark 55, Logan 0

Newark Licking Valley 49, Newark Cath. 7

Newcomerstown 43, Uhrichsville Claymont 8

Northwood 67, Vanlue 8

Norton 28, Mogadore Field 7

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Norwalk St Paul 34, Plymouth 0

Oak Harbor 55, Rossford 6

Oberlin Firelands 32, Sullivan Black River 16

Olmsted Falls 42, Elyria 0

Ontario 31, Bellville Clear Fork 14

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Oxford Talawanda 35, Day. Carroll 12

Painesville Harvey 47, Conneaut 13

Painesville Riverside 31, Youngs. Boardman 21

Pandora-Gilboa 49, Arlington 28

Parma Hts. Valley Forge 55, Westlake 28

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Parma Padua 21, Elyria Cath. 0

Pataskala Licking Hts. 41, Hebron Lakewood 0

Paulding 35, Defiance Ayersville 0

Pemberville Eastwood 28, Maumee 15

Perry 44, Geneva 7

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Perrysburg 35, Oregon Clay 7

Philo 51, Byesville Meadowbrook 22

Pickerington Cent. 51, Canal Winchester 23

Pickerington N. 63, Thomas Worthington 7

Pioneer N. Central 48, Richmond Hts. 6

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Piqua 49, Greenville 0

Plain City Jonathan Alder 34, Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 0

Poland Seminary 28, Hubbard 0

Pomeroy Meigs 48, Bidwell River Valley 6

Portsmouth 34, Dawson-Bryant High School 0

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Portsmouth W. 35, Waverly 28

Powell Olentangy Liberty 42, Dublin Jerome 14

Proctorville Fairland 40, Gallipolis Gallia 7

Reading 14, Cin. Madeira 12

Richfield Revere 49, Cuyahoga Falls 0

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Richmond Edison 34, Caldwell 15

Riverside Stebbins 33, Fairborn 20

Rocky River 42, Lakewood 27

Rocky River Lutheran W. 7, Madison 6

Rootstown 34, Akr. North 6

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Sandusky 36, Vermilion 20

Sandusky Perkins 43, Bellevue 0

Sheffield Brookside 14, Wellington 12

Shelby 35, Galion 6

Sidney 58, W. Carrollton 14

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Smithville 19, Apple Creek Waynedale 14

Sparta Highland 28, Marion Harding 9

Spring. Kenton Ridge 28, Spring. Shawnee 7

Spring. NE 44, Cedarville 8

Spring. NW 34, New Carlisle Tecumseh 0

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Springboro 28, Clayton Northmont 13

Springfield 17, Centerville 3

St Bernard-Elmwood Place 52, Norwood 6

St Clairsville 35, E. Liverpool 14

St Marys 21, Ottawa-Glandorf 16

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St. Bernard Roger Bacon 28, New Richmond 20

Steubenville 42, Dover 7

Stow-Munroe Falls 21, Solon 19

Streetsboro 49, Akr. Springfield 0

Strongsville 42, Euclid 0

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Sugarcreek Garaway 41, Malvern 8

Summerfield, Mich. 34, W. Unity Hilltop 12

Sunbury Big Walnut 31, Westerville S. 28

Sycamore Mohawk 63, Bucyrus 0

Thornville Sheridan 23, New Concord John Glenn 17, OT

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Tipp City Bethel 23, Covington 17

Tipp City Tippecanoe 25, Troy 22

Tol. Cent. Cath. 41, Warren De La Salle, Mich. 6

Tol. Christian 56, Sebring McKinley 0

Tol. Ottawa Hills 59, Erie-Mason, Mich. 0

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Tol. St. Francis 44, Toledo St John’s Jesuit 30

Tol. Whitmer 63, Sylvania Southview 12

Tontogany Otsego 34, Fostoria 7

Uniontown Lake 27, Can. Glenoak 0

Upper Sandusky 37, Bucyrus Wynford 20

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Urbana 24, Richwood N. Union 6

Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 47, New Matamoras Frontier 34

Van Buren 48, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 0

Versailles 37, Rockford Parkway 12

Vincent Warren 56, Paintsville, Ky. 0

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W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 42, Union City Mississinawa Valley 20

W. Chester Lakota W. 51, Middletown 7

W. Jefferson 21, S. Charleston SE 0

W. Lafayette Ridgewood 35, Strasburg 7

W. Liberty-Salem 33, London Madison-Plains 6

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Wadsworth 56, Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 14

Wapakoneta 35, Van Wert 14

Warren JFK 38, Alliance Marlington 14

Washington C.H. Miami Trace 56, Mt. Orab Western Brown 49

Waterford 12, Nelsonville-York 6

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Wauseon 7, Metamora Evergreen 3

Waynesfield-Goshen 49, N. Baltimore 14

Waynesville 38, Day. Oakwood 14

Wellston 38, Albany Alexander 14

Wellsville 35, Leetonia 0

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West Union 36, Foxfire 14

Westerville N. 42, Delaware Hayes 30

Wheelersburg 42, Lucasville Valley 7

Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 48, Tol. Start 12

Williamsburg 40, Greenfield McClain 7

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Willoughby S. 35, Lorain 32

Wilmington 38, Chillicothe 6

Windham 61, Orwell Grand Valley 26

Wintersville Indian Creek 30, Brooke, W.Va. 24

Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 42, Rayland Buckeye 19

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Wooster Triway 42, Massillon Tuslaw 7

Worthington Christian 45, Glouster Trimble 14

Worthington Kilbourne 21, Dublin Scioto 7

Xenia 25, Vandalia Butler 17

Youngs. Chaney High School 22, Canfield 0

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Youngs. East 24, E. Cle. Shaw 0

Youngs. Liberty 56, Brookfield 38

Youngs. Ursuline 35, Warren Harding 0

Youngs. Valley Christian 56, E. Palestine 38

Zanesville Maysville 20, Coshocton 13

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Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 21, E. Can. 20

POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS

Warsaw River View vs. Zanesville W. Muskingum, ccd.



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Cleveland, OH

Cleveland Cavaliers get Max Strus injury update that fans won’t want to hear

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Cleveland Cavaliers get Max Strus injury update that fans won’t want to hear


Cleveland Cavaliers fans are going to have to wait a bit longer until Max Strus makes his debut.

Strus suffered a Jones’ fracture in his foot during the offseason and has yet to suit up for the Cavaliers this season.

On Tuesday, the Cavs issued a statement that said Strus could be sidelined at least another month due to that injury to his left foot. According to the statement, Strus has made progress in his recovery, but additional time is required in order for the fracture to be fully healed.

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“Strus will continue to advance in the rehabilitation and conditioning phase of his recovery along with ongoing medical treatment,” the statement from the Cavaliers said. “He is scheduled for a follow-up evaluation with Dr. David Porter, who performed the procedure, in conjunction with the Cavs’ medical and training staff, within the next four weeks.”

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Following that evaluation within the next four weeks, further updates and next steps for Strus returning to the hardwood will be revealed.

Injury bug has plagued Cavs

The Cavs have dealt with a plethora of injuries this season, as Darius Garland was late to make his season debut due to the toe injury that he suffered in the postseason last year. Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley have both missed extended time as well.

Recently, the team has worked towards better health and has played better basketball. Unfortunately, the Cavs find themselves 20-17, just three games above .500 as the No. 8 seed in the Eastern Conference.

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A four week evaluation timeline could put Strus’ season debut after the NBA trade deadline on February 5. Even though the Cavs have struggled, they might have a difficult time making significant upgrades to their roster due to constraints set forth by the second apron.

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Certainly, head coach Kenny Atkinson and President of Basketball Operations Koby Altman will be keeping their fingers crossed that the Cavs can keep their head above water until Strus returns. Last season, Strus started with the Cavaliers. Upon his return, he’s expected to come off of the bench, which could be an adjustment. 

Strus played in 50 games for the Cavaliers last season, averaging just under 10 points per game. His three-point shooting ability will be a welcomed addition to the Cavs, who have struggled from deep all season long.

Additionally, outside of Donovan Mitchell, Strus was Cleveland’s most reliable player during the team’s last two postseasons. The Cavs have a lot of pressure mounting to get through the second round this season. 

Surely, the Cavs will hope that Strus will be healthy enough to have an impact when games matter most. In the meantime, the team needs to make sure they’re in a comfortable postseason position.

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‘What are you doing here?’ Cleveland transplants say why they stay in Northeast Ohio – The Land

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‘What are you doing here?’ Cleveland transplants say why they stay in Northeast Ohio – The Land


The Cleveland skyline has become a familiar sight for transplants to the region. But why do so many people who visit Northeast Ohio choose to stay? (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)

On Felton Thomas Jr.’s first day of work at the Cleveland Public Library, the temperature was eight degrees below zero. 

“I walked down here in my Las Vegas coat,” Thomas recalls, “and everybody waiting for me said, ‘Oh, this is a normal winter day.’”

The library’s new leader was relieved to learn that his colleagues were kidding, sort of. And he’s become one of Cleveland’s many converts: people who come, stay and praise a town that many lifers pan.

So, over his 17 years here, has Thomas acclimated? “Acclimated? That’s not a word in my vocabulary,” he retorts. “When we have those super-cold days, I’m ‘Omigod!’ And three months of no sunshine drives me crazy.”

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And he still hasn’t adjusted to Cleveland’s hours, either. “In Vegas, all the supermarkets are open 24 hours.”

So why has Thomas stuck around? Because of our library, of course, and lots more. “I love Las Vegas, but there’s an inauthenticity to the people. Here, people are who they are.”

And most have roots here. In Vegas, “Everybody came from somewhere else. Here, everyone wanted to know what high school I’d gone to.”

When they find out, they marvel that Thomas has come and stayed. He replies by extolling the library, the Rock Hall and the Cleveland Museum of Art, where he’s on the board. He also tells them that Superior Pho beats every restaurant he’s tried in Vietnam. 

But some locals still don’t understand. “A lot of times,” he says, “folks don’t want to talk about the good things in the city of Cleveland.”

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Felton Thomas Jr. from Las Vegas has led the Cleveland Public Library since 2007. [Photo courtesy of Cleveland Public Library]

Love that Cleveland climate

It might surprise locals, especially this time of year, but President David Sharkey of Progressive Urban Real Estate says that plenty of people move to Cleveland for the weather. “People like the seasons. A young guy moved here from San Diego because he couldn’t stand the sun anymore. And I get quite a bit of people who love seeing storms come over the lake.”

Jen Ferger from Illinois finds our weather at least interesting. She’s a meteorologist who studies weather risks for insurers. “I love watching the radar here. It’s so true that the East Side gets more lake effect than the West Side, like six inches versus a dusting. That’s fascinating to me.”

She also calls Cleveland “ a mini-Chicago” without the traffic or prices. She lives near our lake and says she could never afford to live near Chicago’s coast. 

From Down Under to Up Over 

Craig Hassall from Australia leads Playhouse Square and lauds Cleveland. [Photo by Keith Berr]

Most Cleveland newbies echo Thomas about being welcomed with wonder by natives. Craig Hassall, a native Australian who leads Playhouse Square, says, “I get that all the time from locals, not from other transplants: ‘What on earth are you doing here?’”

Not surprisingly, Hassall replies by praising our arts. “Cleveland punches above its weight in its presentation and consumption of culture.” He also talks up the West Side Market, Wade Chapel at Lake View Cemetery, and the Cleveland Metroparks. “I walk every day to Edgewater Park.”

Any complaints about Cleveland? “I don’t understand why Cleveland hasn’t leveraged the asset that is Lake Erie. I went out to Sandusky and took a boat out onto the lake. There were almost no boats on the water. In Sidney or Vancouver, you’d be cheek to jowl with other watercraft.” 

From transplant to ambassador

Allison Newsome from Alabama has become a Cleveland ambassador. [Photo courtesy of Allison Newsome]

Allison Newsome from Montgomery, Ala., came here to study law at Case Western Reserve University. “A lot of people who grew up in Cleveland have constantly heard it put down,” she says. “So everybody kind of had a tour guide hat on and told me lists of fun activities.”

Newsome was happily surprised by Cleveland’s green spaces, Cultural Gardens and Playhouse Square. She also found that “it was easy to make friends. People were very inviting.”

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She likes it here so much, she volunteers as a resident ambassador for the Cleveland Talent Alliance, advising prospective and recent arrivals.

Ties of love

Bob Kimmelfield from suburban New York City followed a girlfriend to her native Cleveland. They broke up, but he stayed, married another woman and fell hard for the town. Now he plays in a band at local contra dances and leads jaunts for the Cleveland Hiking Club on our streets and our “incredible park system.”

Ivan Muzyka came from Ukraine with his mother to join relatives here. “It was lucky to move to a city with a big, strong Ukrainian community,” he says. “I was lucky to find a Ukrainian boyfriend.”

Some people want to be near family but not too near. Marjorie Preston likes being two hours away from relatives back home in Bowling Green. She chose Cleveland partly because it’s Democratic but regrets its grip by state and federal Republicans.

Boomeranging

Many locals boomerang. They go off to see the world, then come back, often with spouses from elsewhere.

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Jerome Sheriff from Chicago followed his wife to her native Cleveland. He loves downtown’s wealth of parking spaces, mostly free on weekends. He just wishes our drivers wouldn’t stop and rubberneck so much.

Jay Dumaswala from Cincinnati also followed his wife to her native Cleveland. Now he’s another Talent Alliance ambassador. “I love the Cavs,” he says. “I love the Guardians. The Browns? I don’t understand a team that abuses its fans, and people still show up.”

Louis Gideon, an ambassador too, brought his pregnant wife from New York City to his native Cleveland, partly so his family could help with the baby. Now the couple pays less rent for a place 10 times bigger in Westlake than their apartment in New York. 

Gideon likes Cleveland’s few degrees of separation. He met someone downtown who turned out to live a few doors away from him in Westlake, with kids of similar ages. “We are close friends now.”

Coming without connections

Many people move for work, school or family. But Cat Mohar and her husband moved to escape the buzzing mosquitoes and soaring home prices of Durham, N.C. After reading about Cleveland and scoping it out, they settled in Lakewood. “It’s like stuck in a 90s movie about Halloween,” she says, “where kids run freely trick-or-treating.”

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Kate Smith and her future husband came here in 2018 from Truth or Consequences, N.M., with no ties. “We fell in love with the city long-distance,” she says. “The more businesses and arts organizations I began to follow, the more we began to see how unique and scrappy and proud the Cleveland vibe is.” 

Since moving, “We have felt so welcome. The first Easter, neighbors invited us over who’d fostered over 50 kids.”

She also loves the zoo. “My husband proposed to me on the carousel.”

Stefanie and Mike English came from Albuquerque to Cleveland without connections. “We were a little tired of the desert,” she says. They chose Cleveland for its culture, lake and opportunities. They rehab homes and love our architecture. They’ve had trouble, though, finding good contractors and getting loans for properties in struggling neighborhoods.

Stephanie loves our many festivals. She loves our schnitzel. But “I don’t understand pierogies.”

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Gain some, lose some

Of course, Cleveland has plenty of outflow as well as influx. 

Rick Putka left his native Cleveland for Europe this year to flee what he sees as America’s fading economy and democracy. Michael Baron moved to New York City to enjoy its progressive politics, its energy, its diversity and his grandchildren.

Ronald Stubblefield from Baltimore came and went twice. He liked the area’s affordability, culture and strong neighborhoods. But he says, “Cleveland kept looking backward.” He saw institutions competing instead of cooperating. And “Cleveland struggles to retain ambitious Black talent that other regions readily embrace.”

Some departees still tout the town they gave up. Debbie Stone moved to California for her late husband’s career in tech law, but misses Cleveland’s art museum, orchestra and more. “I even miss the roaming deer.”

Many celebrities from Cleveland talk it up from afar. Drew Carey popularized “Cleveland Rocks.” Tom Hanks shouted “Go Tribe!” during “Saturday Night Live.” Filmmaker Joe Russo told cleveland.com that he “grew up with a real work ethic and that kind of tough-nosed Cleveland attitude… that stick-to-itiveness.”

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In Juneau, Alaska, Jeff Smith runs one of the world’s many chapters of Browns Backers. He says, “I miss the restaurants in Cleveland, live music and sports, and some of my favorite places like the West Side Market, Lake View Cemetery, etc. [But] one thing I don’t miss about Cleveland is how much people complain about the weather in winter. In Alaska, people look forward to each new season.”



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Cleveland, OH

Republican Ohio gov. candidate Vivek Ramaswamy to make ‘special announcement’ in Cleveland

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Republican Ohio gov. candidate Vivek Ramaswamy to make ‘special announcement’ in Cleveland


CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Republican Ohio governor candidate Vivek Ramaswamy shared he will make a “special announcement” in Cleveland on Wednesday evening.

The event will be held at Windows On The River in the West Bank of the Flats at 2000 Sycamore St.

The doors open at 6 p.m., and the program is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m.

Vivek Ramaswamy speaking during the second day of the Republican National Convention on Tuesday, July 16, 2024, in Milwaukee. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)(J. Scott Applewhite | AP)

Details of this campaign stop have yet to be released.

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The announcement comes on the same day the Vivek Ramaswamy for Ohio campaign shared it raised $9.88 million during the second half of 2025, which surpassed the previous record breaking $9.77 million raised during the first half of the year, “marking the strongest fundraising performance by a gubernatorial candidate in Ohio history.”

Ramaswamy has been endorsed by President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, U.S. Senators Bernie Moreno and Jon Husted, more than 70 legislators, and 65 sheriffs, the campaign listed.

On the other side of the aisle, Dr. Amy Acton is running as the Democratic Ohio governor candidate.

Acton served as the Ohio Department of Health director during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic before becoming Chief Health Advisor.

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