Windsor (Conn.) Loomis Chaffee Faculty four-star offensive sort out Olaus Alinen introduced on Friday night he’ll make his school resolution amongst finalists Alabama, Georgia, Miami (Fla.), Ohio State and Oregon at 9 a.m. on July 22.
The 6-foot-6 and 315-pound Alinen, who is taken into account the Fifteenth-best offensive sort out and No. 123 prospect general within the class of 2023, picked up a suggestion from the Buckeyes in December after which made his method to campus for the primary time in March.
Throughout that multi-day go to, Alinen watched a spring apply and hung out with head coach Ryan Day and new offensive line coach Justin Frye. He additionally acquired a non-public tour of Nationwide Enviornment, as his father is a detailed pal of Columbus Blue Jackets normal supervisor Jarmo Kekalainen.
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Alinen took official visits with all 5 of his finalists in June, together with with the Hurricanes on June 3-5, Crimson Tide on June 10-12, Bulldogs on June 17-19, Geese on June 21-23 and Buckeyes on June 24-26. He then returned to his native Finland to mull over his choices together with his household.
Sadly for Ohio State, Alinen has been trending towards Miami as of late, which implies the workers will seemingly should look elsewhere as a way to fill out the category.
The Buckeyes already maintain 4 commitments alongside the offensive line from Findlay, Ohio, four-star sort out Luke Montgomery, Huber Heights (Ohio) Wayne four-star guard Joshua Padilla, Liberty Township (Ohio) Lakota East four-star guard Austin Siereveld and Greenwich (Conn.) Brunswick Faculty three-star offensive sort out Miles Walker, however the hope is to take two extra tackles.
Different targets remaining embrace Braintree (Mass.) Thayer Academy five-star Samson Okunlola, Mount Nice (S.C.) Oceanside Collegiate Academy four-star Monroe Freeling and Hyattsville (Md.) DeMatha Catholic four-star Oluwatosin Babalade, who will make his school resolution on July 31.
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Luke Goode stroked a 3-pointer with more than a minute left in overtime to give Indiana the lead and Anthony Leal blocked John Mobley Jr.’s jumper with a second left to allow Indiana to escape Ohio State with a 77-76 Big Ten Conference win Friday night.
Indiana (14-5, 5-3) now has won five of the last six meetings with the Buckeyes, including both games a year ago. Ohio State (10-8, 2-5) lost its third straight conference game, all by two points or less.
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Mobley hit a 3-pointer with 38 seconds remaining in regulation to tie the game at 71-71. Indiana held the ball before Luke Goode drove for a layup that missed, Oumar Ballo got the offensive rebound but missed the put-back, rebounded again and missed a jumper. Ohio State rebounded but was unable to get off a shot as the clock ran out.
Ohio State took the lead, 76-74, on Bruce Thornton’s three-point play with 1:26 left in overtime. Indiana’s Myles Rice drove to the basket but missed a layup to tie the game, but Oumar Ballo came down with the offensive rebound and kicked the ball to a wide-open Goode on the wing for the game-winner. Mobley missed a 3-point attempt for Ohio State and Kanaan Carlyle drove the baseline and misfired on a short jumper with :14 left.
Goode finished with a career-high 23 points and Ballo scored a double-double with 21 points and 15 rebounds with four assists and two blocks for the Hoosiers. Carlyle added 13 points.
Mobley finished with 22 points to lead the Buckeyes. Micah Parrish added 19 and Thornton added 18.
Indiana plays at Northwestern Wednesday. Ohio State plays at No. 17 Purdue Thursday.
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Indiana Hoosiers vs. Ohio State Buckeyes Highlights | FOX College Hoops
Reporting by The Associated Press.
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Ohio State coach Jake Diebler previews Texas A&M, talks 2025 class
Ohio State coach Jake Diebler previews Texas A&M and talks 2025 class in this Nov. 14, 2024 interview.
Ohio State has made the list of three finalists to sign five-star 2025 basketball prospect Caleb Wilson.
A 6-foot-9, 205-pound power forward from Atlanta Holy Innocents Episcopal School, Wilson will pick from North Carolina, Kentucky and the Buckeyes. According to a report from On3.com, he will announce his choice Jan. 23.
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Wilson is the No. 8 national prospect in the 2025 class according to 247Sports.com and the No. 5 player in the 247Sports composite.
Ohio State Buckeyes: Ohio State impresses five-star power forward Caleb Wilson on official visit
During the fall, Wilson took visits to Tennessee, UCF, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, USC, Stanford, Georgia, North Carolina and Ohio State. At the end of July, Caleb Wilson announced a list of his top 12 schools: Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Duke, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio State, Oregon, Tennessee, UCF, and USC.
That list was cut to five schools on Nov. 18: the three current finalists, Tennessee and Central Florida.
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The Buckeyes have two signees for 2025: Dorian Jones and Amare Bynum, both four-star prospects. Jones is a guard from Richmond Heights, Ohio, and Bynum a power forward from Branson (Missouri) Link Academy. Their class is ranked No. 44 nationally at 247Sports, with Jones at No. 68 in the class and Bynum at 100 but poised to rise when the rankings refresh after a strong start to his season.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Some Clevelanders hate winter. Once Christmas is over and the new year dawns, they grit their teeth and gripe about the cold and snow until March – or beyond.
But why not embrace what feels like a real January, where snow has transformed the tired brown landscape to a whimsical world of white?
Winter can feel magical, if you take it seriously — unlike my middle schoolers, whom I have to nag to wear a coat to school.
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You can’t love winter if your only interaction takes place in frigorific parking lots, dashing between your car and your destination, without boots, gloves or tuque (a Canadian word for winter hat I wish we would all adopt).
Yes, it’s cold. Yes, I prefer 75 degrees and sunshine.
But we are Clevelanders. Like the classic graphic tee, which I own in pink: “You gotta be tough.”
And you gotta deal with a 10-day streak of temperatures that didn’t break 32 degrees, whether you like it or not. The good news is our daily allotment of snow stayed on the ground.
Unlike cold rain, you can play in the snow. You can ski or snowboard, snowshoe or cross-country ski. You can sled or make snow angels, and if its warm enough make snowpeople or have a snowball fight. Snow days are the most beloved of all school holidays because of their inherent surprise.
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If you get a bluebird day with snow, even better. The sunshine bouncing off the ground can lift your spirit in bounds.
And even if you don’t, extra daylight increases serotonin levels in your brain, helping you regulate mood, sleep and appetite.
Go ice skating at an outdoor rink, like in downtown Akron or Cleveland, or in a flooded pocket park in Shaker Heights.
Hike through the woods in the Metroparks, or a just take walk around the block in the dark. (And while you’re out there, why not be a good neighbor and shovel the sidewalk. if you’re able?)
The snow softens everything; the quiet it creates feels like meditation.
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When you return home, stomp your boots, shake off the flakes and get cozy under a blanket on your couch. If you have a fireplace, take advantage. Make hot chocolate or tea and curl up with a good book. This is gezellig, a Dutch word that captures a cozy feeling of warmth, light and comfort, shared with loved ones.
I made my 11-year-old daughter sled with me a few weekends ago. Because it’s weird if a grown-up sledded by themselves. But I will ski solo any time, doing laps of moguls on North Bowl at Boston Mills.
I’ve been skiing with my family at the Boston Township enclave (“resort” is way too fancy a word for the cluster of runs) since I joined ski club in third grade. I took my kids when they were still bundled in sleepers in their car seat carrier, plunking them on a table for my dad to watch while my mom and I skied. When they were 2, my mom started teaching them.
It’s an investment to teach your kids to ski. You spend years on the bunny hill, calming tantrums and yelling “Turn! Turn!” and occasionally bribing with hot pretzels, while wishing you were swishing down black diamonds. But like so much of the hard work of parenting, the effort is so, so worth it.
Sharing my hobby with my kids means I get to keep doing it. Because now on winter weekends, we meet up with my mom and my sister’s family for fresh air and daylight and exercise. It’s a sport I hope will improve their winters for the rest of their lives.
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This year, we skiers have lucked out with snow, both natural and manmade. While last year, it was Jan. 17 before Boston Mills opened any of its advanced terrain, this year North Bowl was open before Christmas. And we’ve had real powder to play on.
With climate change, we’re seeing warmer winters and less snow. A 2023 study by the National Ski Areas Association predicts that if climate change is left unchecked, ski resorts in several states, including Ohio, could lose between 61% to 81% of their operational days by mid-century. A group called Save Our Snow (helpfully nicknamed SOS) compiles information on what the ski industry is doing to combat climate change.
Across the globe, 2024 was the hottest year ever, beating the record set the year before and breaching the international goal set in 2021 that aimed to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times.
That may be good news to Clevelanders who don’t want to don a parka to walk their dog. But how cute are dogs in the snow, whether they’re romping like my golden retriever or wearing a coat and booties?
With our 64 inches annually, we don’t even rank in the top 10 cities for average seasonal snow totals. We’re bested by:
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Syracuse, New York, 128 inches a year
Erie, Pennsylvania, 104 inches
Rochester, New York, 102 inches
Buffalo, New York, 96 inches
Boulder, Colorado, 93 inches
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Duluth, Minnesota, 90 inches
Flagstaff, Arizona, 90 inches
Anchorage, Alaska, 78 inches
Grand Rapids, Michigan, 78 inches
Worcester, Massachusetts, 73 inches
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Now that Lake Erie has begun to freeze, we’ll have less lake effect snow.
But the next time we get a pile of it, pull on your snowpants, go out and play. Because loathing winter won’t make it pass any quicker.
Cleveland.com content director Laura Johnston writes weekly about life in her 40s in the column, Our Best Life. Subscribe to the newsletter to get the column delivered to your inbox Friday mornings. Find her on Instagram @ourbestlifecle.