Ohio
Day: Big Ten deserves 4 automatic spots in CFP
COLUMBUS, Ohio — After winning the first 12-team College Football Playoff and a national title as an at-large selection in 2024, Ohio State coach Ryan Day would like to see future models include at least four automatic qualifying spots for the expanded Big Ten.
As college football leaders discuss the next version of the CFP, beginning with the 2026 season, there has been recent pushback against templates that include more automatic spots for the Big Ten and the SEC.
At last week’s SEC spring meetings, support grew for a model that included automatic entries for the top five conference champions and 11 at-large spots in a playoff that would expand from 12 to 16 teams next year. Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark and league administrators last week also voiced support for the 5+11 CFP model.
The Big Ten has not publicly advocated for a specific playoff model, but it has discussed one that would automatically include four teams for the Big Ten and for the SEC, two each for the Big 12 and ACC, and one for the top Group of 5 champion. The Big 12 and the ACC opposed that plan.
“We’re in the Big Ten, and we have 18 teams and some of the best programs in the country,” Day told ESPN. “I feel like we deserve at least four automatic qualifiers.”
Day noted how the most recent Big Ten expansion added the top teams from the original Pac-12, including the only two — Oregon and Washington — that made the four-team CFP and played for national titles. Washington reached the championship game after the 2023 season, falling to Michigan, and Oregon won the Big Ten last fall and earned the No. 1 overall seed in the CFP, losing to Ohio State in a quarterfinal matchup at the Rose Bowl.
“You would have had at least a team or two [in the CFP] from out there,” Day said, referring to the original Pac-12. “So it only makes sense when you have 18 teams, especially the quality of teams that you would have [in] that many teams representing the Big Ten.”
Day added that a CFP model with more automatic spots will benefit the sport because it will incentivize stronger nonconference scheduling, especially given the discrepancies in conference scheduling models.
Big Ten and Big 12 teams play nine league games per season, while SEC and ACC teams play eight. Ohio State reached last year’s CFP with two regular-season league losses, but it also didn’t face a Power 4 opponent in nonleague play. Michigan won the final national title of the four-team CFP without playing a Power 4 nonconference opponent.
The Buckeyes open the 2025 season by hosting Texas, last year’s SEC runner-up and a team they defeated in a CFP semifinal matchup at the Cotton Bowl.
“If you don’t have those automatic qualifiers, you’re less likely to play a game like we’re playing this year against Texas, because it just won’t make sense,” Day said. “If we do, then you’re more likely to do that, because we play nine conference games in the Big Ten. The SEC doesn’t. So it’s not equal.”
Both Ohio State and national runner-up Notre Dame played 16 games last season — a number that will become the norm with an ever-expanding playoff. Day said his team, which played its best during the CFP run, benefited from a larger roster, with him noting that roster limits of 105 following the impending House-NCAA settlement will provide challenges.
“I’m concerned about 16 or 17 games with a 105-man roster,” Day said. “With 120, it’s about maxed-out. You have to stay healthy, and all it takes are a couple injuries during that long of a run. But in the NFL, you can hire somebody off of waivers. In college football, you can’t. I’m concerned about the length of the season with 105.”
Ohio
MSU football to host highly-coveted Ohio OT prospect in April
Michigan State football will host a highly-coveted offensive lineman from Ohio for an unofficial visit in April.
Dominic Black of New Madison, Ohio will reportedly visit Michigan State in mid-April for an unofficial visit, according to Bleed Green MSU. Black will visit Michigan State on April 16, and also has upcoming visits lined up with Ohio State (March 28) and Virginia Tech (April 11).
Black is currently an unranked and unrated offensive tackle in the 2027 class. He is listed at 6-foot-5 and 290 pounds, and plays for Tri-village High.
While Black may not be ranked at the moment, he certainly will be at some point based on the number of schools that have already offered him. According to 247Sports, he holds offers from Michigan State, Boston College, Maryland, Minnesota, Kentucky, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, West Virginia and a host of group of six schools.
Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5.
Ohio
OHSWCA Division II state duals 2026: Who won? How NE Ohio fared
CLEVELAND, Ohio — West Geauga placed sixth at the 2026 OHSWCA Division II State Dual Championships after battling through three competitive matches at Bishop Watterson High School on Saturday.
Columbus DeSales captured the state championship with a 42-27 victory over Bishop Watterson.
The Wolverines opened tournament action with a narrow 38-33 loss to New Lexington in the quarterfinals. West Geauga then rebounded in the consolation bracket, defeating Canfield 44-29 before falling to Bellevue 45-33 in the fifth-place match.
Several West Geauga wrestlers delivered consistent performances throughout the day. Caden Kaleal earned three victories at 120 pounds, including two technical falls and one pin. Brian Denamen, Austin Wheatley, and Maveric Milnar each secured three wins across the three duals.
Against Canfield, the middle and upper weight classes carried the Wolverines to victory. Zander Joltin at 138 pounds and Daniel Russell at 144 pounds recorded pins, joining Denamen at 165, Wheatley at 175, and Milnar at 285 in the pin column.
Blake Welker contributed wins at 190 pounds in two of the three matches.
In the championship dual, Bishop Watterson rallied late behind James Krzyzewski at 175, Landon Lucas at 190, Michael Boyle at 215, and A.J. DeMassimo at 285 but couldn’t overcome the early deficit.
DeSales won seven of the first eight matches to build a commanding lead, with Josh Sheets at 126 pounds, Deakin Cygan at 132, and Grayson Debevoise at 138 earning pins.
West Holmes claimed third place in the tournament’s closest finish, edging New Lexington 34-33. Dylan Sours clinched the victory for West Holmes with a pin in the heavyweight bout.
New Lexington finished fourth. Tyson Spicer at 144 pounds and Harrison Ratliff at 150 recorded key wins in the third-place dual.
See complete results from Saturday’s event.
Ohio
Ohio’s squirrel tax of 1807 relevant to today’s property tax debate
Voters sound off on proposed property tax reform (1)
Franklin County voters sound off on proposed property tax reform with Dispatch reporter Sheridan Hendrix
Ohio once had a squirrel tax. No kidding.
The legislature made a quota for every property owner. To reduce the out of control squirrel population in 1807, Ohio would exempt your property tax bill for every squirrel skin one provided as proof of squirrel population reduction.
Ohio has an agricultural value reduction program to reduce property tax on land used for agriculture. Manufacturing equipment is automatically exempt from sales and use tax.
Thus, the pattern has been clear for 220 years: Tax what you don’t want. Exempt what you do.
Taxes can be both counterproductive and counter intuitive.
ONE THOUGHT: Tax what you don’t want
Taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and cannabis are “sin” taxes designed to generate revenue on things that government wishes to discourage.
Ohio’s 1807 squirrel tax is a shining example. Bring us your squirrel skins or pay more tax.
Arguably, some local places in Ohio have purposely taxed themselves more in order to keep certain real estate investments out.
SECOND THOUGHT: Exempt what you do want
Exemptions for job-creating globally-competitive capital investment just makes sense.
Ohio automatically reduces property taxes on agriculture land and has for decades. It’s called CAUV. Tax farmland more? You’ll get less farmland.
Trade this year’s revenue for a longer-term future of more revenue is the biggest point with local property tax exemption authority.
Trade incremental property tax one year for greater income tax now and in the future.
THIRD THOUGHT: Watching the great tax debate in Ohio
Though action has been taken from the Ohio General Assembly, there could be more to come in the debate sparked by rising property taxes. And it’s not just property taxes in play. Talk about redirecting local income taxes, removing sales tax exemptions, and curbing real estate tax diversions are among the items open for debate. Should an over $20 billion hole emerge in Ohio’s collective state and local tax portfolio from a possible statewide referendum, there’s nothing off the table.
That’s why the principle from 1807 is key to remember.
Tax what you don’t want. Exempt what you do.
By the way, that Ohio squirrel tax had to be repealed in 1808, because it worked. The squirrel population was decimated and taxpayers were afraid they couldn’t gather enough squirrel skins to avoid the tax.
Rick Platt is President and CEO of the Heath-Newark-Licking County Port Authority with over three decades of experience in Ohio industrial development. He is a board member of JobsOhio.
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