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Cleveland, OH
Ohio high school boys basketball scores: Friday, Jan. 23, 2026
CLEVELAND, Ohio — OHSAA boys basketball scores from Friday in Ohio, as provided by The Associated Press.
Ada 56, McComb 54
Alliance 65, Carrollton 44
Amherst Steele 79, Avon Lake 71
Andover Pymatuning Valley 93, Middlefield Cardinal 72
Anna 61, Houston 34
Arcadia 63, Leipsic 50
Arcanum 65, W. Alexandria Twin Valley S. 46
Archbold 76, Metamora Evergreen 40
Arlington 58, Pandora-Gilboa 30
Ashland 62, Wooster 43
Ashland Crestview 68, Monroeville 57
Ashtabula Lakeside 63, Conneaut 42
Attica Seneca E. 59, Bucyrus Wynford 50
Aurora 58, Cuyahoga Falls 56
Barnesville 48, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 43
Batavia 59, Clarksville Clinton-Massie 43
Batavia Clermont NE 41, Lees Creek E. Clinton 38
Bellbrook 46, Franklin 39
Beloit W. Branch 45, Alliance Marlington 33
Belpre 65, New Matamoras Frontier 57
Berlin Hiland 71, Sugarcreek Garaway 41
Bethel-Tate 60, Felicity-Franklin 47
Botkins 64, Sidney Fairlawn 32
Bowerston Conotton Valley 49, E. Can. 45
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 49, Stow-Munroe Falls 21
Bridgeport 73, Cameron, W.Va. 43
Bristol 76, Warren Lordstown 56
Brookville 64, Carlisle 48
Burton Berkshire 63, Wickliffe 24
Caledonia River Valley 98, Shelby 65
Camden Preble Shawnee 74, Ansonia 49
Can. Cent. Cath. 83, Youngs. Mooney 42
Can. McKinley 81, Can. Glenoak 60
Can. South 68, Navarre Fairless 34
Carey 52, Upper Sandusky 44
Casstown Miami E. 37, Sidney Lehman 26
Cedarville 79, Spring. Greenon 55
Celina 52, Kenton 38
Chagrin Falls 75, Rootstown 61
Chagrin Falls Kenston 74, Willoughby S. 49
Chesapeake 67, Dawson-Bryant 34
Chillicothe 54, Hillsboro 50
Chillicothe Unioto 61, Chillicothe Huntington 43
Chillicothe Zane Trace 69, Bainbridge Paint Valley 30
Cin. La Salle 47, Cin. Elder 23
Cin. Moeller 52, St. Xavier (OH) 49
Cin. NW 86, Purcell Marian 51
Cin. Oak Hills 53, Cin. Sycamore 33
Cin. Princeton 45, Fairfield 42
Cin. Winton Woods 49, Loveland 34
Cin. Wyoming 67, N. Bend (Cleves) Taylor 31
Cols. Africentric 55, West 48
Cols. Centennial 89, Cols. Whetstone 28
Cols. Linden-McKinley 40, Cols. Beechcroft 35
Cols. Marion-Franklin 59, Cols. Briggs 57
Cols. Mifflin 80, Columbus International 41
Cols. Northland 57, East 41
Cols. Walnut Ridge 75, Cols. Eastmoor 64
Columbiana 74, E. Palestine 39
Columbus Grove 52, Spencerville 49
Convoy Crestview 69, Delphos Jefferson 52
Copley 53, Kent Roosevelt 52
Cortland Maplewood 60, Windham 28
Cory-Rawson 86, Marion Elgin 68
Creston Norwayne 47, Apple Creek Waynedale 40
Day. Northridge 86, DeGraff Riverside 38
Defiance Ayersville 58, Hicksville 48
Delphos St John’s 73, St. Henry (OH) 50
Delta 47, Swanton 33
Detroit Catholic Central, Mich. 50, Toledo St John’s Jesuit 41
Dover 54, Lexington 31
Doylestown Chippewa 80, Rittman 50
Dublin Coffman 70, Powell Olentangy Liberty 54
Edon 74, Pioneer N. Central 73
Elyria 77, N. Ridgeville 59
Euclid 93, Mentor 76
Findlay 62, Tol. Whitmer 53
Franklin Furnace Green 70, Portsmouth Clay 54
Fredericktown 72, Danville 49
Ft. Recovery 43, Coldwater 36
Galion Northmor 58, Cardington-Lincoln 54
Gallipolis Gallia 64, Proctorville Fairland 50
Gates Mills Hawken 74, Hunting Valley University 67
Genoa 77, Pemberville Eastwood 46
Genoa Christian 88, Northside Christian 38
Goshen 73, New Richmond 23
Greenwich S. Cent. 60, Norwalk St Paul 57
Grove City 47, New Albany 42
Hamilton 62, Middletown 57
Hamilton Badin 69, Cin. McNicholas 31
Hamilton Ross 63, Oxford Talawanda 44
Hamler Patrick Henry 73, Wauseon 58
Harrod Allen E. 62, Lima Cent. Cath. 61, OT
Hartville Lake Center Christian 46, Medina Christian Academy 38
Haviland Wayne Trace 53, Defiance Tinora 38
Heartland Christian 65, Lowellville 60
Hilliard Bradley 43, Cols. Upper Arlington 33
Holgate 42, Gorham Fayette 26
Hubbard 70, Canfield S. Range 61
Huber Hts. Wayne 69, Beavercreek 54
Independence 57, Beachwood 43
Ironton 65, South Point 32
Ironton St. Joseph 60, Portsmouth Sciotoville 35
Jeromesville Hillsdale 62, West Salem Northwestern 32
Kettering Alter 63, Day. Carroll 27
Kirtland 61, Mantua Crestwood 30
LaGrange Keystone 89, Lorain Clearview 39
Leesburg Fairfield 71, Manchester 36
Leetonia 61, Salineville Southern 50
Lewistown Indian Lake 63, St. Paris Graham 31
Liberty Center 72, Bryan 49
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 56, Cin. Colerain 46
Lima Bath 66, Elida 58
Lima Shawnee 55, Defiance 47
Lima Temple Christian 60, Mt. Victory Ridgemont 51
Lucasville Valley 61, Portsmouth W. 47
Macedonia Nordonia 64, Twinsburg 55
Madison 81, Ashtabula Edgewood 73
Mansfield 74, Millersburg W. Holmes 54
Maria Stein Marion Local 58, New Bremen 23
Marion Harding High School 39, Bellville Clear Fork 33
Marion Pleasant 70, Ontario 64
Massillon Jackson 43, Uniontown Lake 32
Massillon Washington 72, Massillon Perry 52
Maumee 64, Fostoria 55
Mayfield 80, Chardon 69
McDermott Scioto NW 49, Beaver Eastern 39
Medina Highland 47, Barberton 46
Mentor Christian 48, N. Ridgeville Lake Ridge 41
Milford (OH) 47, Cin. Anderson 39
Milford Center Fairbanks 67, Mechanicsburg 35
Minerva 80, Salem 55
Minford 62, S. Webster 54
Minster 51, Rockford Parkway 44
Mogadore Field 57, Akr. Coventry 56
Montpelier 65, Pettisville 44
Mt. Vernon 46, Newark Licking Valley 45
N. Can. Hoover 82, Green 44
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 66, Sycamore Mohawk 26
Nelsonville-York 61, McArthur Vinton County 47
New Concord John Glenn 74, Crooksville 33
New Franklin Manchester 73, Orrville 67
New Hope Christian 63, Stewart Federal Hocking 54
New London 65, Collins Western Reserve 57
New Paris National Trail 57, New Lebanon Dixie 52
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 55, Bucyrus 32
Newark 67, Logan 39
Newark Cath. 63, Hebron Lakewood 44
Niles McKinley 69, Struthers 62
Norton 63, Lodi Cloverleaf 40
Oak Harbor 48, Tontogany Otsego 46
Oak Hill 49, Crown City S. Gallia 44
Olmsted Falls 59, Avon 50
Orange 80, Christian Community School 24
Ottawa-Glandorf 57, St Marys 31
Ottoville 70, Ft. Jennings 59
Painesville Riverside 79, Eastlake North 34
Paulding 62, Edgerton 51
Philo 57, Byesville Meadowbrook 43
Pickerington Central 81, Canal Winchester 61
Plymouth 75, Ashland Mapleton 52
Poland Seminary 63, Girard 49
Portsmouth Notre Dame 64, New Boston Glenwood 19
Racine Southern 52, Waterford 47
Richwood N. Union 65, Bellefontaine Benjamin Logan 54
Riverside Stebbins 68, Greenville 65, OT
Russia 46, Jackson Center 39
Sheffield Brookside 59, Oberlin 51
Shekinah Christian 67, Granville Christian 38
Sidney 63, Fairborn 48
Smithville 57, Dalton 42
Solon 79, N. Royalton 69
Spring. Shawnee 61, Spring. NW 36
St. Edward (OH) 72, Louisville 51
Steubenville Cath. Cent. 55, Zanesville Rosecrans 53
Streetsboro 54, Peninsula Woodridge 44
Strongsville 72, Medina 54
Stryker 57, W. Unity Hilltop 39
Sullivan Black River 41, Wellington 32
Sylvania Northview 60, Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 53
Tol. Christian 57, Tol. Emmanuel Baptist 49
Trenton Edgewood 53, Monroe 45
Troy 58, Xenia 55
Uhrichsville Claymont 63, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 52
Urbana 61, Bellefontaine 46
Utica 60, Johnstown Northridge 57, OT
Van Buren 33, Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 20
Van Wert 47, Wapakoneta 42
Van Wert Lincolnview 80, Bluffton 66
Vermilion 51, Port Clinton 31
Versailles 69, New Knoxville 31
Vincent Warren 75, Ross County Christian 61
W. Chester Lakota W. 38, Mason 26
W. Jefferson 61, N. Lewisburg Triad 33
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 58, Magnolia Sandy Valley 48
Warrensville Hts. 62, Bedford 52
Washington C.H. 53, Greenfield McClain 40
Waverly 60, Wheelersburg 48
Waynesfield-Goshen 53, N. Baltimore 51
Wellston 68, Athens 60
Westerville Cent. 64, Pickerington North 62
Westerville N. 75, Hayes 33
Westerville S. 78, Sunbury Big Walnut 55
Westlake 45, Lawrence School 0
Willard 68, Milan Edison 44
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 54, Latham Western 53
Zanesville Maysville 71, Dresden Tri-Valley 63
POSTPONEMENTS AND CANCELLATIONS=
Mansfield Christian vs. Mansfield St. Peter’s, ppd.
Tol. Scott vs. Lima, ppd.
Cleveland, OH
Gas prices jump across Northeast Ohio, with some stations nearing $5
CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) -Drivers across Northeast Ohio have watched gas prices climb sharply over the past few days, with some stations coming close to the $5 mark and analysts say relief may not be coming soon.
At one Cleveland gas station, the price on the sign read $4.99, a number drivers say is becoming harder to avoid.
Many people filling up Wednesday evening told 19 News they’re frustrated by the rapid increases.
“It’s crazy. Sooner or later, we’re going to be at like $5 or like $6,” one driver said.
Another driver added, “We’re getting gas now, but not here.”
According to AAA, the average price for gas in Ohio is $4.22 for regular fuel as of Wednesday. In Cleveland the average was $4.23.
One major factor: crude oil prices. Those prices are trading above $100 a barrel, which can raise the cost of gasoline.
“Crude oil is the main ingredient of gasoline,” said Jim Garrity, the director of public affairs for AAA east central. “So, when it goes up and down, even by a couple dollars here and there, that has an impact on the pump.”
Experts say the last time Ohio experienced prices this high was 2022, when the Russia-Ukraine conflict pushed gas prices above $5 a gallon.
Garrity added even when the U.S. isn’t buying oil directly from certain countries, global events can still affect prices here.”
“Even though we’re not importing Iranian oil in America, it is a globally traded commodity,” Garrity said. “When you see an impact happen overseas well, that splash has ripples and those ripples make their way to us.”
When 19 News was at another Cleveland gas station, prices changed quickly: within about 30 minutes, the price jumped from $4.79 to $4.99. It cost us $30.55 for a little more than six gallons.
“The lady said they went up 70 cents,” another driver said. “She said it was $4.19 earlier, then it shot up to $4.79. Now it’s $4.99. I was going to get gas yesterday, but I forgot.”
One driver who uses premium gas said the surge hits even harder.
“It’s $4.99, I just texted my buddy yesterday, like oh it jumped 80 cents,” the driver said. “I’m glad I’ve got a company card, but this is my personal and I’ve got to spend almost $6 a gallon on gas because it’s premium.”
As for whether prices will drop soon, Garrity says it depends on what crude oil does next.
“What happens next remains to be seen with crude oil prices,” he said.
Garrity says a few options to say on gasoline is drive less or Slow down.
“The faster you go, at AAA, we have found every roughly 5 miles over 50 an hour you’re going, you’re exponentially burning fuel less efficiently and that’s making you a less safe driver, but it’s also making your car work harder and burning fuel less efficiently,” Garrity said.
Copyright 2026 WOIO. All rights reserved.
Cleveland, OH
Skeletal remains of woman missing for 7 years found in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (WJW) — The Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office has identified skeletal remains found earlier this month at a home on Cleveland’s east side as a woman who’s been missing since 2019.
Paige Natassia Coffey, of Bratenahl, Ohio, was reported missing on May 17, 2019, after having no contact with family members for several days, according to the FBI.
Coffey was 27 years old at the time of her disappearance and would have turned 35 later this year.
Coffey was last seen on May 7, 2019, at a Home Depot in Cleveland, according to investigators.
Cleveland Missing on Wednesday, April 29, released a statement on behalf of Coffey’s family:
“They are devastated by this loss, and we at Cleveland Missing grieve alongside them,” wrote co-founder Sylvia Colon. “They wish to extend their heartfelt gratitude to everyone who helped search for Paige, and to the members of the media who kept her story alive.”
Her remains were found on April 17, 2026, at a vacant home on the city’s east side, according to the medical examiner’s office.
The cause and manner of Coffey’s death are still under investigation.
The Bratenahl police chief told Nexstar’s NewsNation last year they had identified a person of interest in the case: Coffey’s former boyfriend, with whom she had recently reunited.
The last time Coffey was seen was with Mason, on a store’s surveillance footage from May 2019, reported NewsNation.
Federal court records show Mason has been jailed since 2024, awaiting trial on a firearm charge in Ohio’s Northern District federal court.
Greg Nelsen, FBI Cleveland special agent in charge, released a statement earlier this year, asking the public for new leads:
“We understand someone with information may be hesitant to come forward out of fear. Know that your identity can remain anonymous when sharing information with the FBI. We encourage anyone with information, no matter how long it has been, how insignificant you may think it is, or if there are details you may now remember, such as overhearing or recalling another person discussing Paige, seeing her with another person during or since the time she went missing, or knowing someone who may have information that we should talk to and think that person could be helpful in the investigation, to step up.”
The FBI recently offered a $10,000 reward for information on her whereabouts.
Cleveland, OH
Cleveland has Ohio’s highest apartment rents – NEOtrans
The Collins Apartments on Carter Road is one of two major developments to open in the past year on Scranton Peninsula in Cleveland’s Flats. But it wasn’t enough to meet Greater Cleveland’s demand for more multifamily units (NEOtrans). CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE THEM.
Multifamily construction not meeting demand
A new report released today by international real estate firm Colliers shows that multifamily development in Greater Cleveland isn’t keeping up with demand. The result is that average rents in the Cleveland area are now the highest of any metro area in the state.
Colliers said that 1,601 apartments are typically built each year in Greater Cleveland to meet an average annual demand of about 1,976 multifamily housing units — the second-highest demand in the state behind Columbus’ 7,156 units.
But while metro Columbus had 9,123 apartments under construction in the first quarter of 2026, metro Cleveland had only 1,203 apartments being built in that same three-month period.
By comparison, Greater Cincinnati has a typical annual demand for 1,121 units of multifamily housing which is met by an annual average of 1,944 units. But in the first quarter of 2026, Cincinnati had 3,575 apartments under construction.
That translated into an average rent per square foot in January-March 2026 of $1.60 in Greater Cleveland, $1.58 in Cincinnati and $1.47 in Columbus.
More apartment construction is needed in Greater Cleveland to keep up with demand. Without it, the metro area will continue to have the highest rents per square foot in the state (NEOtrans).
The typical size of an apartment in Cincinnati is slightly larger than those in Cleveland, so the average monthly rent for an apartment in Cincinnati is the highest at $1,511. Cleveland is next at $1,419 and Columbus third at $1,405.
“The development pipeline (in Cleveland) continues to shrink, with units under construction falling to about 1,203 from 1,461 last quarter and 3,672 one year ago,” Collier said in its report.
“That drop in future supply is one of the most important trends in the market right now, because it should help Cleveland maintain healthy occupancy and support rent growth as 2026 moves forward,” the report explained, noting that higher rents will attract new construction.
“That is a strong signal for the market, especially after several years of elevated deliveries,” the report noted. “Over the last five years, Cleveland has generally operated in the mid-95 percent occupancy range, and current performance remains in line with that trend.”
The other big development on Cleveland’s Scranton Peninsula is Triton at The Flats, opening after The Collins across the street (NEOtrans).
In part, Colliers used data generated by Real Capital Analytics, a data model managed by MSCI Inc., a finance, equity and real estate analysis company headquartered in New York City.
“Cleveland’s multifamily market remained healthy in Q1 2026, with inventory rising to approximately 178,925 units and occupancy holding at 95.8 percent,” Colliers said in its report.
The report noted that while construction locally has dropped below demand, vacant units are filling the gap. Yet Cleveland had fewer vacant units than Ohio’s other two big C’s.
“Vacant units totaled about 7,533, down from roughly 7,719 last quarter,” Colliers said of Cleveland’s apartment market. “Demand continued to absorb most of the new supply, keeping overall fundamentals stable.”

Not all new multifamily inventory comes from new construction. In Downtown Cleveland, most of it comes from converting older, obsolete office buildings into housing plus other uses like hotel and retail, as seen here with Project Scarlet’s remake of the Rose Building at East 9th Street and Prospect Avenue (NEOtrans).
Greater Columbus may have Ohio’s largest multifamily inventory at 218,113 apartments, it also has the most vacant units at 10,382. Greater Cincinnati’s inventory had 173,050 apartments with 7,562 of them vacant in the Q1 2026.
“Market conditions also improved from a year ago,” Colliers said. “Occupancy increased from 94.5 percent in Q1 2024 to 95.8 percent in Q1 2026, showing that Cleveland has been able to work through added inventory without a meaningful drop in performance.”
Leasing conditions are still competitive in the Cleveland market and the market remains on solid footing. Colliers said newer projects are creating pressure in certain pockets, especially where owners are competing for renters more aggressively, but the broader market continues to benefit from steady demand and a stable base of occupied units.
“In simple terms, Cleveland is not overheating, but it is also not slipping,” the report summarized. “It is holding up well.”
END
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