Ohio
Ohio State’s Top Athletes of 2024-25
Ohio State’s 2024-25 year in sports is officially complete, and what a year it was.
The Ohio State football team won the national championship by conquering the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff. Ohio State’s pistol team won its fifth straight national title, and the dance and cheer teams won national championships, too. Ohio State’s men’s lacrosse, men’s soccer, men’s and women’s tennis and women’s swimming and diving teams all won Big Ten championships, and the women’s hockey team played in its fourth straight national championship game.
Dozens of individual Ohio State athletes had standout seasons along the way. Today at Eleven Warriors, we’re highlighting the best of the best Buckeyes from the last 12 months.
We’ll start with an honor roll of athletes who didn’t quite make our top 20 rankings but still deserve special recognition for their excellence this past fall, winter or spring. Then, we’ll count down the 20 best Buckeye athletes of the year from 20 to 1.
The rankings, while undeniably subjective, took into account the individual accolades each athlete received, the impacts each of them made on their respective teams’ success and whether their performance over the past year was historic and/or record-setting.
Honor Roll
TreVeyon Henderson, Emeka Egbuka, Cody Simon and JT Tuimoloau, Football
I limited myself to ranking only five football players in the top 20, but I couldn’t write this article without giving four additional football Buckeyes some well-deserved recognition for their contributions to Ohio State’s title run.
Egbuka, Henderson and Simon were all captains for the national captains and had standout senior seasons in their leadership roles. Henderson led the Buckeyes with 1,367 yards from scrimmage and was a dynamic weapon throughout the year, highlighted by his 75-yard touchdown off a screen pass in the Cotton Bowl. Egbuka had a team-leading 81 receptions for 1,011 yards and 10 touchdowns on his way to setting Ohio State’s all-time receptions record for a career. Simon blossomed into one of the nation’s best linebackers as a fifth-year senior, leading the Buckeyes’ top-ranked defense with 112 total tackles.
Tuimoloau became the first-ever Ohio State defensive end to earn first-team All-Big Ten honors in three straight seasons as he had one of the most productive seasons ever for a Buckeye DE, recording 21.5 tackles for loss and 12.5 sacks.
Jaloni Cambridge and Cotie McMahon, Women’s Basketball
Cambridge and McMahon both earned first-team All-Big Ten honors for the 2024-25 season. McMahon, who led the Buckeyes with 16.5 points per game, earned first-team All-Big Ten honors for the second straight year and was also an AP All-America honorable mention. Cambridge earned Big Ten Co-Freshman of the Year honors as she averaged 15.4 points and 3.9 assists per game in her first season as a Buckeye.
McMahon left Ohio State after the season to transfer to Ole Miss, but Cambridge will enter her second season at OSU as a strong candidate to be one of the Buckeyes’ top athletes of 2025-26.
Bruce Thornton, Men’s Basketball
As has been the case in all of his first three years at Ohio State, Thornton was the bright spot in another disappointing season for the men’s basketball Buckeyes. He earned second-team All-Big Ten honors as he ranked seventh in the Big Ten in scoring (17.7 ppg) and eighth in the conference in assists (4.6 apg).
His 3.15 assist-to-turnover ratio was the ninth-best in men’s college basketball last season, but it wasn’t enough to get Ohio State to the NCAA Tournament. Thornton enters his senior season at Ohio State still seeking his first appearance in the Big Dance.
Teah Chavez, Women’s Tennis
Chavez earned All-American and unanimous All-Big Ten honors as she went 26-9 in singles during the 2024-25 season. Ranked 18th in the year-end ITA singles rankings, Chavez won the ITA Midwest Region Most Improved Player award and led the Buckeyes to a Big Ten Tournament championship as their court one player throughout the postseason.
Jack Anthrop, Aidan Kim and Alexander Bernard, Men’s Tennis
Anthrop, Kim and Bernard all earned first-team All-Big Ten honors as they led Ohio State to its 19th consecutive Big Ten championship in men’s tennis.
Kim, a Florida transfer, was the Buckeyes’ No. 1 singles player and finished the year ranked eighth in the ITA singles rankings, earning All-American honors for making the Round of 16 at the NCAA singles championship. Anthrop led the Buckeyes with a 28-5 singles record for the season. Bernard went 20-11 for the season as Ohio State’s No. 1 singles player.
Emily Londot, Women’s Volleyball
Londot earned first-team All-Big Ten honors for the fourth straight year as she ranked fourth in the Big Ten in kills (510) and 21st in the NCAA in points per set (5.09). She earned AVCA Northeast All-Region honors for a fifth straight year to conclude her Ohio State career, and was selected in the 10th pick of the Pro Volleyball Federation draft by the Omaha Supernovas.
Shane Wetzel, Men’s Volleyball
Wetzel earned first-team All-MIVA and honorable mention All-American honors as he led the Buckeyes with 399 kills and 472.5 points on their way to an 18-11 record. The junior opposite hitter ranked in the top 18 nationally for the season in both kills and points per set.
Emma Peschel, Women’s Hockey
Peschel helped lead Ohio State to its fourth straight national championship game appearance as one of the nation’s best defensemen. The Buckeye junior earned first-team All-WCHA and second-team All-American honors as she led Ohio State with 42 blocked shots and scored 34 points from the back line.
Gunnarwolfe Fontaine, Men’s Hockey
With 17 goals and 23 assists, Fontaine was the leading scorer for Ohio State’s best men’s hockey season from an overall record standpoint in seven years. Fontaine – who would certainly be near the top of a ranking of the Ohio State athletes with the best names – tied for fifth in the Big Ten with 40 points and led the Buckeyes to the Big Ten Tournament final with an overtime game-winner as part of a two-goal effort against Penn State in the semifinals.
Tristan Jankovics and Tomas Navikonis, Men’s Swimming
Navikonis and Jankovics were Ohio State’s top performers at the Big Ten men’s swimming and diving championships, where Navikonis won conference gold in both the 100 free (41.55) and 200 free (1:31.01) while Jankovics won the Big Ten title in the 400 individual medley (3:35.31).
Jankovics followed that up by winning the silver medal at the NCAA championships as the second-place finisher in the 400 IM, breaking his own school record with a time of 3:34.98, while Navikonis earned honorable mention All-American placement in the 200 free as well as the 4×50, 4×100 and 4×200 freestyle relays.
Sienna Angove and Mila Nikanorov, Women’s Swimming
Angove and Nikanorov led Ohio State to its fifth Big Ten women’s swimming and diving championship in six years.
Angove won the 400 IM (4:03.92) and scored points in five different events at the conference meet, then followed that up with an eighth-place finish in the 400 IM at the NCAA meet to earn All-American honors. Nikanorov scored points in four events at the Big Ten championship, including a second-place finish in the 1,650-yard freestyle, then earned All-American honors in two different events with sixth-place finishes in both the 500 free (4:36.68, an Ohio State record) and the 1650 free (15:51.95).
Leah Bertrand, Women’s Track and Field
Bertrand wrapped up Ohio State’s year in sports with an excellent performance at this past weekend’s NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships, finishing fourth in the 200-meter dash (22.6 seconds) and fifth in the 100 (11.21) to earn All-American honors in both events.
The senior sprinter broke multiple school records in her final season as a Buckeye, setting Ohio State’s 100-meter dash record (10.92 seconds) during the outdoor season and 60-meter dash record (7.19) with her third-place run at the Big Ten Indoor Championships.
The Cheer and Dance Teams
It’s hard to single out individual athletes from cheerleading and dance routines, but the entire teams deserve recognition for their victories at this year’s UCA/UDA College Nationals. The cheerleading team won the national championship in the game day competition – where they showed off the same skills they utilize inside Ohio Stadium during football games – while the dance team won gold in the D1A Jazz competition at College Nationals.
20. Bobby Van Buren, Men’s Lacrosse
19. Siggi Magnusson, Men’s Soccer
Magnusson and Van Buren are both in the top 20 for the same reason: They were first-team All-American defenders for Big Ten championship teams.
Van Buren led the way for Ohio State men’s lacrosse to be one of the nation’s best defensive teams as the Buckeyes won the Big Ten regular-season and tournament championships. Magnusson led the way for Ohio State men’s soccer to be one of the nation’s best defensive teams as those Buckeyes also won Big Ten regular-season and tournament titles and earned the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament before making a run to the College Cup semifinals.
18. Luciana Perry, Women’s Tennis
Perry earned All-American honors for the second year in a row as she became just the second player in Ohio State women’s tennis history to make the quarterfinals of the NCAA singles tournament. As just a sophomore, Perry became the first player in program history to make the Round of 16 at the NCAA singles tournament twice.
Perry also won the singles title at the ITA Midwest Regionals, then went 18-3 in singles matches during the dual match season to finish the year with a 32-7 record. She earned unanimous All-Big Ten honors, helped lead Ohio State to the Big Ten Tournament title and finished the year ranked ninth among all singles players in women’s college tennis.
17. Blaine Simpson, Pistol
A freshman from Sidney, Ohio, Simpson won the national championship in sport pistol and finished second in the individual aggregate at this year’s Intercollegiate Pistol Championships, helping lead Ohio State’s most dominant team to its fifth straight title.
16. Donovan Jackson, Football
Jackson was arguably the most important player of Ohio State’s national championship run. His successful midseason shift from left guard to left tackle saved the Buckeyes’ offensive line after Josh Simmons’ season-ending injury – and made him a first-round NFL draft pick in the process as he allowed zero sacks in Ohio State’s final eight games of the season, even while facing some of the nation’s best edge rushers in the College Football Playoff.
In recognition of his excellent play at both left tackle and left guard, Jackson earned first-team All-Big Ten honors for the third straight year as well as first-team All-American honors from numerous media outlets. The Minnesota Vikings selected him with the 24th pick in the 2025 NFL draft.
Donovan Jackson’s successful shift to left tackle made him one of Ohio State’s top athletes of 2024-25.
15. Jazmyn Burns, Softball
Ohio State’s offense was the best in the nation in Kirin Kumar’s first season leading the program, and Burns was a big reason why. A first-team All-American, Ohio State’s catcher set Ohio State and Big Ten records by hitting 25 home runs, tied for the fifth-most in the NCAA this season. She also ranked fifth nationally in slugging percentage (1.006) and tied for eighth nationally in batting average (.455).
Unfortunately for the Buckeyes, they’ll have to replace Burns in next season’s lineup as she transferred to Texas Tech following the season.
14. Joy Dunne, Women’s Hockey
Ohio State ranked second in the country in goals last season – behind only Wisconsin, the team it lost to in the national championship game – and Dunne was the biggest reason why. She ranked third in the NCAA with 29 goals and sixth in the nation with 62 total points.
A second-team All-WCHA honoree, Dunne was also a top-10 finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Award, the top individual honor in women’s college hockey. With two more seasons at Ohio State still to go, Dunne is on pace to become the Buckeyes’ all-time leader in both goals and points if she continues to be as productive as she was in 2024-25.
13. Kary Hollenbaugh, Women’s Golf
Hollenbaugh tied a school record by winning four different tournaments this year, earning medalist honors at the Therese Hession Regional Challenge, the Spartan Suncoast Invitational, the Clemson Invitational and the Therese Hession Buckeye Invitational.
She also earned a second-place finish at the Big Ten championship, finished 34th at the NCAA championship and qualified for the U.S. Women’s Open. The junior from New Albany finished at even or under par in seven of Ohio State’s 11 stroke play tournaments and led the team with a scoring average of 71.15. In recognition of all of that, Hollenabugh earned first-team All-American honors from Golfweek.
12. Caleb Fyock, Men’s Lacrosse
Fyock – who might have the best nickname of any Ohio State athlete, “Big Tasty” – was the nation’s best goaltender this season, leading the NCAA with a 61.2% save percentage (the best by a Buckeye goalie in the 21st century) and earning first-team All-American honors.
The 6-foot-2, 297-pound sophomore also earned Big Ten Specialist of the Year honors as his dominance in net led the Buckeyes to their first-ever Big Ten championship.
11. Kailyn Dudukovich, Women’s Soccer
Dudukovich was one of the most prolific scorers in all of women’s college soccer, tying for second nationally with 19 goals during the 2024 season. She earned first-team All-American and unanimous All-Big Ten honors and led the Buckeyes to a 14-6-3 season that culminated with a run to the Round of 16 in the NCAA Tournament.
Dudukovich finished her four-year Ohio State career with 44 goals and 98 total points, breaking the program records in both categories.
10. Ruby Remati, Artistic Swimming
Remati started her year by helping Team USA win a silver medal in the team competition at the Paris Olympics, America’s first Olympic medal in artistic swimming in 20 years. The junior from Massachusetts followed that up by winning the national championship in A figures at the Collegiate Championships, where she was also a part of Ohio State’s second-place trio, third-place team and fourth-place duet routines that earned the Buckeyes a third-place finish in the national standings.
9. Will Howard, Football
Howard was a Buckeye for only one season, but he sure made the most of it. The Kansas State transfer proved to be exactly what Ohio State needed at quarterback as he broke Ohio State’s single-season completion percentage record (73%) while providing exemplary leadership for the Buckeyes along their journey to a national title.
By the end of the season, Howard made a strong case for being the best quarterback in all of college football with his outstanding play in the College Football Playoff, in which he completed 82 of 109 passing attempts for 1,150 yards and eight touchdowns with two interceptions to lead Ohio State to wins over Tennessee, Oregon, Texas and Notre Dame.
8. Jack Sawyer, Football
Like Howard, Sawyer was both one of the best players and best leaders for the Ohio State football team throughout the 2024 season, providing constant disruption up front for the Buckeye defense while serving as a team captain. Also like Howard, he took his game to another level in the CFP to lead the Buckeyes to a national championship.
Across four CFP games, Sawyer tallied 13 tackles, 4.5 sacks and a jaw-dropping seven pass breakups. He cemented his standing as one of Ohio State’s best athletes of the year when he made one of the greatest plays in school history by strip-sacking Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers, recovering the fumble himself and running it all the way to the opposite end zone for an 83-yard scoop-and-score touchdown that secured a Cotton Bowl and punched the Buckeyes’ ticket to the national championship game.
7. Makenna Webster, Field Hockey and Women’s Hockey
Webster ranks as Ohio State’s top female athlete of 2024-25 because of her excellence across two different sports.
Ohio State’s female recipient of the 2025 Big Ten Medal of Honor, Webster started her year in field hockey by earning second-team All-American honors, ranking in the top eight nationally with 16 goals and 42 total points for the 2024 season as she led the Buckeyes to a 14-5 campaign – its best record in 14 years. She followed that up by helping lead the women’s ice hockey team to its fourth straight national championship game appearance as she scored 35 points (12 goals, 23 assists) in just 30 games.
Makenna Webster was a star for two different Ohio State teams in 2024-25. (Photo: Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch/USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)
6. Marcus Klemp, Pistol
Klemp was the individual aggregate champion at the Intercollegiate Pistol Championships, finishing second in both sport pistol and air pistol to top the final leaderboard. His efforts not only won him an individual national championship but led Ohio State to its fifth straight team national championship, giving Klemp – a freshman from Montana – the distinction of being both the top individual and the leader of the top team in his sport.
5. Kameron Nelson, Men’s Gymnastics
Nelson made gymnastics history during the regular season when he became the first gymnast in the world – at any level – to land two triple-back somersaults in the same floor routine.
Congratulations to Kameron Nelson on making history as the first gymnast in the WORLD to compete two triple backs in a floor routine
What an incredible accomplishment after all of the work hes put in!!#GoBucks | @B1GGymnastics pic.twitter.com/YqZwmuj0In
— Ohio State Men’s Gym (@OhioStateMGYM) January 12, 2025
The Ohio State senior followed that up by winning the NCAA championship in the vault, becoming the first Buckeye gymnast in six years to win a national championship. He also earned a third-place finish at the national meet in floor to become a two-event All-American.
4. Caleb Downs, Football
Downs was expected to be the best safety in college football last season from the moment he transferred to Ohio State from Alabama, and he lived up to that expectation and then some. Even on a defense loaded with standout seniors, Downs became the immediate star of the top defense in the country as the Buckeyes built their 2024 defense around him.
Downs earned unanimous All-American honors as he recorded 82 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss, two interceptions and six pass breakups and ran a punt back 79 yards against Indiana for Ohio State’s first punt return touchdown in a decade. Whether he was lined up in deep centerfield or attacking closer to the line of scrimmage, Downs made an impact on every play as Ohio State led the country in both points and yards allowed per game last season.
3. Jesse Mendez, Wrestling
Mendez makes the top three of our list of Ohio State’s top athletes for the second year in a row after he defended his NCAA wrestling championship in the 141-pound weight class.
He faced a bit more adversity in his path to this year’s title than he did last year, as he missed the podium at Big Ten championships with losses to Nebraska’s Brock Hardy and Penn State’s Beau Bartlett, but he redeemed himself by beating Bartlett and Hardy in succession to claim the national crown. With his title defense, Mendez became just the sixth wrestler in Ohio State history to win multiple national championships.
2. Michael Adedokun, Men’s Soccer
Adedokun was the best player in men’s college soccer last season, becoming the first-ever Buckeye to win the MAC Hermann Trophy, soccer’s equivalent of the Heisman.
The senior midfielder from Nigeria led the Buckeyes with 11 goals and 11 assists, tying him for the seventh-most points in the nation in 2024. His excellence in the middle of the field led Ohio State to one of its greatest seasons in program history as the Buckeyes went 16-2-4, won both the Big Ten regular-season and tournament championships and made the College Cup for just the second time ever.
1. Jeremiah Smith, Football
As great as all the athletes on this list were this year, picking Ohio State’s top athlete of the year wasn’t a hard choice.
Smith rapidly became the biggest star in Ohio State sports as he obliterated OSU’s freshman receiving records, catching 76 passes for 1,315 yards and 15 touchdowns on his way to earning Big Ten Receiver and Freshman of the Year honors. By the end of the season, Smith was the most feared and respected receiver in college football as he dominated in some of Ohio State’s biggest games of the year, including back-to-back 100-yard, two-touchdown games against Tennessee and Oregon in the CFP.
No. 4 capped off his historic freshman year and solidified his standing as Ohio State’s best athlete of 2024-25 by catching a 56-yard deep ball from Will Howard late in the fourth quarter against Notre Dame that effectively clinched the national championship.
Now, Ohio State’s best athlete of 2024-25 will look to be even better in 2025-26 as he enters his second year as a Buckeye with two more seasons at the collegiate level still to come.
Ohio
Northeast Ohio school closures for Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2026; Cleveland School District plans to resume classes
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland Metropolitan School District is going to give it a try Wednesday.
The city’s school district posted a message on its website Tuesday night that it intends to resume classes Wednesday. However, the message says the district intends to monitor weather conditions overnight.
Temperatures are expected to go as low as minus-3 degrees with wind chills at minus-15, according to the National Weather Service. The predicted temperature at 7 a.m. is 1 degree with wind chills at minus-11. A cold weather advisory is in effect until 11 a.m. Wednesday.
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That’s led dozens of districts to already cancel classes for Wednesday, including Akron Public Schools, Avon Lake City Schools, Elyria City Schools, Lorain City Schools, Medina City Schools and Strongsville City Schools.
Below is a list of closures and delays for Wednesday, Jan. 28. For a more complete list that includes day cares, preschools, Head Start programs and church programs, go to the list from cleveland.com/The Plain Dealer news partner WKYC Channel 3.
Academy of St. Bartholomew
Akron Public Schools
Albert Einstein Academy (all campuses)
Amherst Exempted Village Schools
Archbishop Hoban High School
Around the Sun Montessori School
Ashtabula Area City Schools
Ashtabula County Tech Campus
Avon Lake City Schools
Avon Local Schools
Barberton City Schools
Berea City Schools
Bethel Baptist Christian Academy
Black River Career Prep High School
Brooklyn City Schools
Brunswick City Schools
Buckeye Joint Vocational School District
Buckeye Local Schools (Ashtabula County)
Buckeye Local Schools (Medina County)
Building Bridges
C.A.S.T.L.E High School (Parma)
Cascade Career Prep
Central Christian School
Chapel Hill Christian School, North and South
Chippewa Local Schools
Christian Community School
Cleveland Arts & Social Sciences Academy
Clearview Local Schools
Cleveland Central Catholic High School
Cleveland Shambhala Center
Cleveland Sports Academy
Cloverleaf Local Schools
Community Action Head Start (Akron, Barberton)
Conneaut Area City Schools
Constellation School Westpark Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Stockyard Community Middle
Constellation Schools Eastside Arts Academy
Constellation Schools Elyria Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Elyria Community Middle
Constellation Schools Lorain Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Lorain Community Middle
Constellation Schools Madison Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Old Brooklyn Community Middle
Constellation Schools Old Brooklyn Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Parma Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Parma Community Middle
Constellation Schools Parma Community High School
Constellation Schools Parma Community Intermediate
Constellation Schools Puritas Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Puritas Community Middle
Constellation Schools Stockyard Community Elementary
Constellation Schools Westpark Community Middle
Constellation Schools Westside Community School of Arts
Constellation Schools Pearl Road Elementary
Copley Fairlawn City Schools
Cornerstone Community School
Corpus Christi Academy
Coventry Local Schools
Crestwood Local Schools
Cuyahoga Falls City Schools
Dale Roy School
Education Alternatives (Bedford, Brook Park, Elyria, Ravenna, Springfield, Willoughby)
EHOVE Career Center (two-hour delay)
Elyria Catholic High School
Elyria City Schools
Fairlawn Lutheran School
Fairview Park City Schools
Field Local Schools
Geneva Area City Schools
Ginn-Thompson School for Girls
Global Ambassadors Language Academy
Global Village Academy
Gospel Haven Academy (two-hour delay)
Grand Valley Local Schools
GSCELC SCOPE Academy
Hametown Christian Academy
Happy Hearts
Hartville Christian School
Highland Local Schools
Hiram College
Holy Cross Lutheran School
Holy Family (Stow)
Holy Name High School
Horizon Science Academy Denison Middle, Cleveland Middle, High School
I.D.M.R. Akron
Imagine Bella Academy
Immaculate Heart (Cuyahoga Falls)
Incarnate Word Academy Elementary
Innovation Academy West
Insightful Minds
Jefferson Area Local Schools
Kent City Schools
KidsLink School
Kingsway Christian School
Lake Center Christian Schools
Lake Ridge Academy
Lawrence School (Lower, Upper)
Lincoln Park Academy
Lorain City Schools
Lorain Preparatory School
Magnificat High School
Maplewood Career Center
Mayfair Christian School
Medina Christian Academy
Medina City Schools
Medina County Career Center
Midview Local Schools
Mogadore Local Schools
Monroe Preparatory Academy
Noble Academy (Cleveland)
Nordonia Hills City Schools
North Olmsted City Schools
North Ridgeville City Schools
North Royalton City Schools
Northside Christian Academy
Olmsted Falls City Schools
Open Door Christian Schools
Orchard Park Academy (Akron)
Our Lady of Angels Elementary
Our Lady of Elms (all closed)
Padua Franciscan High School
Parma City Schools
Parma Heights Christian Academy
Pathways to Success
Portage Learning Center (Atwater, Kent, Ravenna, Streetsboro)
Positive Education Program
Pymatuning Valley Local Schools
R G Drage Career Center
Ramah Junior Academy
Ravenna School District
Redeemer Christian Elementary
Regina Coeli-St. Joseph
Revere Local Schools
Rising Sun Centers
Royal Redeemer Lutheran
S.U.P.E.R. Learning Center
Seton Catholic School
Sheffield-Sheffield Lake City Schools
Southeast Local Schools (Portage County)
Springfield Local Schools (Summit County)
SS Philip and James School (Canal Fulton)
St. Adalbert (Cleveland)
St. Albert the Great Elementary
St. Angela Merici.
St. Anthony of Padua (Akron, Lorain, Parma)
St. Augustine (Barberton)
St. Charles Borromeo School
St. Columbkille Elementary
St. John Lutheran (Cleveland)
St. John School (Ashtabula)
St. Joseph-Randolph
St. Jude Elementary (Elyria)
St. Leo The Great (Cleveland)
St. Mary Elementary (Elyria)
St. Mary Immaculate (Avon)
St. Mary (Akron)
St. Mary (Berea)
St. Michael Archangel
St. Patrick Elementary (Kent)
St. Paul Lutheran (Westlake)
St. Peter Elementary (Lorain)
St. Peter (North Ridgeville)
St. Sebastian Elementary
St. Stanislaus Elementary
St. Thomas More Elementary
St. Vincent-St. Mary High School (two-hour delay)
STEAM Academy (Warrensville)
STEPS Academy
Stepstone Academy
Stow-Munroe Falls City Schools
Streetsboro City Schools
Strongsville City Schools
Sts. Joseph and John (Strongsville)
Summit Academy Elementary (Akron, Lorain)
Summit Academy (Akron Middle, Secondary)
Summit Academy-Akron Secondary
Summit Christian School
Tallmadge City Schools
The Golden Key School
The Lippman School
Urban Vision (Akron)
Wadsworth City Schools
Warrensville Heights City Schools
Washington Park Community School
Windfall School
Wings of Change
Ohio
Defensive Coordinator Matt Patricia Has Four Word Phrase As Ohio State Rallying Cry
Ohio State Buckeyes defensive coordinator Matt Patricia isn’t returning to Columbus to mess around. He wants to win and wants to do so immediately to erase the bad taste from the Buckeyes’ Cotton Bowl loss to the Miami Hurricanes last month.
To do so, Patricia needed a mindset shift. It’s one made famous by ex-Ohio State legend Woody Hayes, whose words still resonate with Buckeye faithful to this day.
“You Win With People.”
“When you go into a new building, man, you better leave all that baggage behind,” Patricia said, via The Silver Bulletin.” “You [had] better leave that behind because they don’t deserve it or they’re not there in that same space.”
Patricia wants his players to remember, whether it’s ex-safety Caleb Downs or a practice squad plsyer thst he wants to remain in their life for as long as he can instead of just being transactional.
“I really have a lot of joy in this and love being around the guys and the relationships,” Patricia said. “I’ve got guys that I coached in the 90s, and I’m still really close with, and guys that don’t call, they just be like, ‘Hey, I need your advice on this,’ or after football, career advice and things like that. So I love being that mentor.”
Patricia does tend to use the growth vs. fixed mindset, channeling the growth mindset as his main source of positive coaching.
“I just try to take it one step at a time,” Patricia said. “I always want to have that growth mindset. I always want to be a curious learner.”
Matt Patricia Finds Inner-Motivation to Lead Buckeyes
Nonetheless, though, one thing is non-negotiable.
“I’m gonna give you everything I got,” Patricia said. “I’m really gonna sacrifice everything I can to make sure I come through for you.”
Regardless of the outcome, that’s Patricia’s constant message.
Everything can be reset, which Patricia realized after a failed stint with the Detroit Lions.
“I wasn’t my best version,” Patricia said. “I think learning that is really important. That’s how you get better as a coach, as a person.”
Now, he says feels much better about himself overall. Especially when it comes to mentoring players where he knows they will be successful with the next level like Downs.
“I think just in general with Caleb [Downs], just the amount of experience he has playing football is probably the most important thing,” Patricia said. “And his professionalism, and how he prepares, is probably the best example that I can point to for all the players.”
With Patricia at peace, the Buckeyes defense can move forward as well.
It remains to be seen whether everything pays off. Come August, we will find out.
Ohio
3 thoughts on Ohio State hiring Arthur Smith as offensive coordinator
Ohio State is set to bring in Arthur Smith as its next offensive coordinator, replacing Brian Hartline, who was recently named the head coach at South Florida.
Here are three thoughts on Smith’s imminent hire:
Ohio State head coach Ryan Day values NFL experience
The hire follows a familiar pattern, as Smith is the latest coordinator to bring an NFL background to Ohio State.
Six of the eight offensive and defensive play-callers hired by Day over his tenure have spent previous years in the NFL.
Smith’s career arc most closely mirrors Matt Patricia, the Buckeyes’ current defensive coordinator. Both were rising stars during the 2010s and landed head-coaching jobs at the peak of their ascents before washing out and returning to roles as coordinators.
After Smith was fired by the Atlanta Falcons at the end of 2023, he spent two seasons as the Pittsburgh Steelers’ offensive coordinator, helping them to twice reach the playoffs.
The approach worked well with Patricia, who elevated the Ohio State defense with NFL-style concepts that ranged from multiple fronts to coverage disguises as he replaced Jim Knowles last offseason. The Buckeyes finished 2025 with the best defense in the Football Bowl Subdivision, allowing the fewest points per game since Alabama 2011.
It figured to be worth repeating on the other side of the ball, especially after Day had relied on a first-time play-caller last year in Hartline, who had been the Buckeyes’ wide receivers coach before the promotion.
The experience of the 43-year-old Smith also allows Day to continue in a CEO-style role after remaining the primary play-caller for the offense in his first five seasons at the helm of the program. Day began delegating play-calling in 2024, though he briefly returned to the role for the College Football Playoff in December.
Arthur Smith adds a complementary strength
Smith’s best year as an offensive coordinator was with the Tennessee Titans in 2020.
The Titans were one of the highest-scoring offenses in league with an average of 30.7 points per game that ranked fourth out of 32 teams. They leaned on star running back Derrick Henry, who became only the eighth running back to rush for 2,000 yards in a season.
The Titans also finished drives during Smith’s two years as coordinator, ranking first in 2019 and second in 2020 for their red-zone touchdown percentage. They reached the end zone on three out of every four trips inside opponents’ 20-yard line.
If the success translates to Ohio State, it would pair well with the vertical passing that has long been the defining strength of Day’s offenses.
There were only five FBS quarterbacks in 2025 who completed more deep balls, as defined by Pro Football Focus as passes traveling at least 20 yards, than redshirt freshman Julian Sayin.
But the Buckeyes experienced a drop-off with both their running game, which went from 5 yards per carry in 2024 to 4.6 yards in 2025, and red-zone efficiency, where their touchdown percentage of 75.81% fell to 66.67%.
Smith should help in both areas, potential improvement that would enhance an offense that remains stacked with talent due to the return of Sayin and star wide receiver Jeremiah Smith.
The absence of Chip Kelly, the former offensive coordinator who elevated the Buckeyes’ running game during their national championship season, was noticeable last fall.
The hope for the Buckeyes is that Smith can help them to rediscover the balance.
Scheme is the priority at Ohio State
Two assistants will replace Hartline.
Day made the first hire earlier in January with Cortez Hankton as receivers coach before finding Smith.
The addition of Smith will leave Ohio State with a staff of 11 primary on-field assistant coaches, one more than in recent seasons.
The expansion is the result of the NCAA’s removal of limit on staff sizes, a rule change introduced in 2024 allowing schools to hire an unlimited number of assistants to coach during practices and games.
The only restriction that remains in effect involves recruiting. FBS teams can send only 10 assistants off campus to recruit in addition to their head coach.
The current setup suggests Smith would not be out recruiting. It would be a rare arrangement for a coordinator, but not unprecedented, as Clemson coach Dabo Swinney has other assistants on the road in place of offensive coordinator Chad Morris and defensive coordinator Tom Allen.
As Ohio State moves in a similar direction, it would leave Smith largely focused on game planning and play-calling for their offense without having to travel for recruiting.
Smith would also be Day’s first offensive coordinator without being assigned to a position group.
Joey Kaufman covers Ohio State football for The Columbus Dispatch. Email him at jkaufman@dispatch.com and follow along on Bluesky, Instagram and X for more.
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