Ohio
Five plays that defined Mizzou’s 14-3 victory over Ohio State
Welcome back to “Five Plays”, where I’ll break down the previous week’s football game in, you guessed it, five plays. Over the past ten seasons, the average college football team has run around 70-73 plays per game, but most of them don’t matter as much as others. Oftentimes, there’s a select few that can tell the story of an entire game, and I’m here to break them down. To the film room!
One meme recap to describe Mizzou’s 14-3 win over Ohio State in the Cotton Bowl:
Above is a picture of Michael Scott (Steve Carell’s character in the NBC phenomenon The Office) holding back tears. In this scene, Michael is saying goodbye to Jim Halpert (John Krasinski’s character) before he moves away to Colorado. The two had been through a lot together; out of the 201 aired episodes of The Office, Scott was Halpert’s boss for most of them, and both played prominent roles in the show. Like many characters in the show, their relationship wasn’t always perfect, but the tears were forged by years of experiencing the highs and lows of life together.
While you see an image of Scott as the “meme”, it was almost just a black square. No actual people or things; just pure, desolate darkness encompassed in a finite frame.
Now, you might be asking yourself: Why? Why would I, with an opportunity to extrapolate any image from the Internet that I felt reasonably described the game, choose to put basically nothing as the defining image? Well, as Friday night’s game progressed, there was…nothing. Whenever either team tried to do something, most of the time, nothing happened, and it was especially odd for the usually high-flying Tigers.
Throughout this season, there’s been so much light within Mizzou football, not just with the fireworks they ignited on the field, but with all of the joyous storylines that surrounded the program. For much of Friday night, it looked like Mizzou’s flashlights died, like they didn’t have an answer. Despite Mizzou’s defense putting together arguably their best and most complete performance of the season, the offense couldn’t break through the steel wall that was OSU’s defense. At the end of the third quarter, the score was 3-0 Buckeyes. There didn’t seem to be a way through.
But of course, they found a way.
Mizzou’s done it so many times this season. Kansas State. Kentucky. Florida. In all three of those games, darkness was ever-present, and every single time, the Tigers found a way to overcome it. Their third trip to the Cotton Bowl didn’t come anywhere close to the high-scoring barnburners from the first two. This time around was gross. Ugly. Big Ten West-ian. But through injury and other peril, the Tigers never stopped fighting.
Drinkwitz said Darius Robinson battled through a groin injury, Kris Abrams-Draine went to the tent with a separated shoulder and JC Carlies got a bloody nose.
Drink told KAD he was coming out. He responded with “The hell I am!”
— Adam Ryerson (@AdamRyerson_) December 30, 2023
The celebration was forged through years of ups and downs. Several outgoing players have been in Columbia since 2020, and despite experiencing a lot of losing and turnover within the program, stuck around. Their reward? A Cotton Bowl victory over one of college football’s premier programs, and serving as the foundation for future success.
Just like Mizzou in the first half, let’s start slow, because the delightful moments in the second half were a little extra joyous because of how clunky the first half was.
Play #1: Heeeeere’s Johnny! (with an ill-timed penalty)
This technically isn’t a play — rather, this was a moment that happened during a dead ball. But its impact was too large not to feature — besides, the first half was the antithesis of the Fourth of July. There weren’t a lot of strong candidates to be featured here.
All game long, Ohio State’s offense was hamstrung. Even prior to Devin Brown injuring his ankle, the second-stringer looked flustered. The pressure Mizzou generated was clearly making him uncomfortable. Then, he injured his ankle, third-stringer Lincoln Kienholz subbed in, and the Buckeyes turned into the weather on offense: predictable.
The only issue was that Mizzou’s offense was in a similar boat — and this was despite all of their starters playing, which wasn’t the case for the Buckeyes. Most of the first half saw Brady Cook & Co. fail to register not just any explosive plays, but even consecutive positive plays. Several traits that made the Tigers so proficient on offense were nowhere to be found. They couldn’t establish the run on early downs, couldn’t take the top off the defense and, to be quite honest, couldn’t really do anything. Mookie’s Cooper 17-yard sideline catch towards the end of the half was only passing play that put a dent in OSU’s defense. Most EPA metrics read single-digit percentiles.
The need for an OSU turnover heightened with every stalled offensive drive by Mizzou. With just over 90 seconds left in the half, the Tigers almost got it. After a penalty on the punt return pushed the Buckeyes inside their own 10-yard line, two runs by TreVeon Henderson went backwards, with Henderson barely escaping the end zone on the second carry. With the aversion of a safety likely at the top of Ryan Day’s mind, he called a QB sneak that gained a yard (which gave me, a Giants fan, intense flashbacks to Jake Fromm two seasons ago). Mizzou was set to get the ball back with probably good field position.
And then a flag was thrown.
On Johnny Walker Jr.
For unsportsmanlike conduct.
(insert deflating balloon)
The flag freed Ohio State from the dungeon of their own one-yard line and nixed a golden opportunity for Mizzou’s offense to generate some momentum at the end of the half.
Here’s the penalty:
It’s clear why the referees threw the flag. After Walker Jr. and OSU’s Gee Scott Jr. get entangled after the whistle, Walker Jr. gives him a small shove, grazes his facemask and points at him. The officials deemed that mean enough to throw a flag.
Whether you thought that was deserving of a penalty isn’t the point; the fact of the matter is that discipline (or a lack thereof) cost Mizzou when they absolutely couldn’t afford a silly mental mistake. It was a trait that was present within past Mizzou squads that had largely disappeared this season.
The next quarter saw more of the same, until…
Play #2: Marquis to the rescue
Here’s an experience that’s probably relatable: have you ever tried to open a jar and it won’t budge in the slightest? That was Mizzou against Ohio State’s defense. The Tigers tried to get the Buckeyes to budge defensively, and they never would.
Then, Marquis Johnson came in with the can opener.
Ohio State just gave up its second 40+ yard play of the season.
And it comes on a 49-yard pass from Missouri QB Brady Cook to WR Marquis Johnson.
The Tigers are in the red zone. pic.twitter.com/kB58wFxqQ5
— Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom) December 30, 2023
The play-action doesn’t fool OSU’s safeties, but their attention is on everything that’s happening in front of them, which was an issue considering that Johnson was running full speed behind them. The outside cornerback, Denzel Burke (#10), was guarding the boundary, so when Johnson cut towards the middle of the field on Burke’s inside, Burke was already way behind. Couple that with Sonny Styles (#6) realizing too late that Burke needed help, and Johnson’s running free deep downfield. Ohio State’s four-man rush was stonewalled (a rare occurrence on Friday night), and Cook delivered a good enough ball for Johnson to haul it in. Lid lifted. Energy restored. Vibes arisen.
In a way, Johnson has been a get-out-of-jail free card for Mizzou’s offense this season. Need a big passing play? Get Johnson one-on-one, and good things usually happen. He set an explosive tone against Kansas State, then did the same against Memphis and Vanderbilt over the next two weeks. Most memorably of all, he was on the receiving end of the fake punt that catalyzed Mizzou’s comeback against Kentucky. Johnson’s impact is actually very comparable to a lightning bolt; infrequent, but wildly impactful when it strikes.
Even better, Mizzou finished off the drive. A few plays later, Schrader bowling balled his way into the end zone, and energy was finally radiating from the black and gold. Schrader ended his collegiate career in fitting fashion — bruising and bashing his way to success. This time, he racked up 128 rushing yards on 29 carries and a touchdown.
In a way, this game was a microcosm of not just Schrader’s career, but Mizzou’s 2023 season. They were down. They were struggling. But they kept going, and they were rewarded.
Play #3: Luther Burden III completes the St. Louis trifecta
As hope slowly began burgeoning for Mizzou, they had a chance to go up two scores in the fourth quarter, but had once again dug themselves into a hole.
Facing a 2nd-and-16, they needed Ohio State’s defense to mess up, something they hadn’t done much of all night.
And they did.
The hard count got not one, but both OSU defensive ends to jump offsides, gifting Mizzou the freedom to take a deep shot. Per usual, Brady Cook visited Theo Wease Island, and while Wease didn’t have to take flight to catch the ball, he hauled in a beautiful throw by Cook for a 31-yard gain. Then, on the next play, Schrader got hit out of bounds by Josh Proctor to make it back-to-back bad penalties by the Buckeyes.
At this point, the energy from Mizzou’s side of AT&T Stadium was becoming more and more palpable. The game felt like it was slipping away from Ohio State, in large part because one touchdown felt like two with the way both offenses had struggled all night.
It didn’t take long for the Tigers to capitalize.
Here, Mizzou actually looked like themselves: a play-action fake into a bullet for a touchdown. Everything that the Tigers probably wanted to happen on this play happened. The fake handoff sunk Cody Simon (#30), which opened up the middle of the field. Despite an Andruw Jones-ian dive from Styles and the referee being in the way, Cook’s rifle was perfectly placed between the two, and the STL-made engines of Mizzou’s offense (Cook, Schrader, Burden) all had touchdowns. Not only that, they became the first trio to have a 3,000-yard passer, 1,500-yard rusher and 1,000-yard receiver in the same season.
(Nelly voice) St. Louis y’all, uh, uh, uh-ohhhhhhhhhhhhhh, uh, can you feel that?!
Play #4: Dynamite Daylan seals the deal
In a game that saw Mizzou’s offense fail to look like themselves for a lot of it, Blake Baker’s unit put together arguably their most complete and dominant performance of the entire season. While Walker Jr. and Darius Robinson led the defensive line and Triston Newson led the linebackers, it was Carnell who made the most impact plays amongst Mizzou’s secondary.
The sophomore was fully himself from start to finish. He only registered three tackles, but he also led the team with three quarterback hurries. Like many games past, he was flying all over the place all night long, which included a huge hit on Carnell Tate. Daylan’s best work, however, came when it mattered the most.
A decade ago, Michael Sam and Shane Ray tag-teamed for a game-sealing scoop-n-score to clinch the 2013 Cotton Bowl. While Carnell and Joe Moore III’s efforts weren’t quite as electric, it still put an emphatic stamp on a postseason victory.
And that’s probably going to do it (for good).
Missouri’s Daylan Carnell strip sacks Ohio State QB Lincoln Kienholz. Joe Moore recovers.
Tigers lead, 14-3, with a bit more than 3 minutes left. pic.twitter.com/OLWuZ4xEhH
— Andy Backstrom (@andybackstrom) December 30, 2023
Here, Carnell flies. Not literally, although that would’ve been pretty gnarly if he did. But leaving Carnell unblocked on a blitz is essentially asking for a negative play. He didn’t even hit Keinholz that hard, but the speed he was traveling at combined with his perfect hit placement jarred the ball loose, and Moore was in the right place at the right time.
After the game, JC Carlies fielded questions from the media. The most common word he used throughout? Focus. Despite the defense having to bail out the offense time and time again, they remained focused, and it led to plays like this.
From then on, the game was pretty much a wrap. But there’s one final moment I’d like to highlight.
Play #5: The final kneel down
To recap, the final edition of “Five Plays” has featured not one, but two moments where the ball either didn’t move or barely moved. Kinda weird, right? Well, Friday night was kinda weird, and I thought this column should reflect as such.
What wasn’t weird, however, were the emotions as Cook took the final snap of the night. Wease immediately ran to the sideline with boundless excitement. Nathaniel Peat started dancing. Cooper, Tyler Stephens and Cam’Ron Johnson waved their arms, telling the Mizzou crowd to make their final in-game cheer a loud one. The sideline poured onto the field in celebration. And Cook? He skipped away happily, took his helmet off, ruffled his hair and roared.
It was joy. It was victory. It was liberation. Mizzou had officially completed an epic turnaround, and the engines behind it got a deserved moment to soak it all in.
Welp, there you have it. It’s over. 11-2. A top-10 AP and College Football Playoff ranking. Future pros and program legends all over the roster, with the senior class going out on top as Cotton Bowl champions. The 2023 season is now just a memory; goodbye are the moments, players and storylines that made this season one of the best in program history. Thankfully for the Missouri faithful, it’s a collective memory that’ll be looked back upon fondly.
As Rock M’s Nate Edwards said, the 2023 squad has officially entered the pantheon of all-time great Mizzou teams. Not only that, they could easily catalyze many years worth of success in Columbia, as the College Football Playoff appears to be a reasonable expectation in 2024. They had something to prove, they stood on business, and business is booming for Drinkwitz’s squad.
But why stop now?
Ohio
Gov. Mike DeWine urges Ohio residents to take advantage of sales tax holiday
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (WTAP) – Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine is encouraging Ohioans to take advantage of this year’s sales tax holiday, which will take place from midnight Friday, Aug. 7, through 11:59 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 9, 2026.
The following items qualify for the sales tax exemption during the three-day holiday: clothing priced at $75 or less per item, school supplies priced at $20 or less per item, and school instructional materials priced at $20 or less per item.
According to the Ohio Department of Taxation, “clothing” includes but is not limited to, aprons, household and shop; athletic supporters; baby receiving blankets; bathing suits and caps; beach capes and coats; belts and suspenders; boots; coats and jackets; costumes; diapers, children and adult, including disposable diapers; earmuffs; footlets; formal wear; garters and garter belts; girdles; gloves and mittens for general use; hats and caps; hosiery; insoles for shoes; lab coats; neckties; overshoes; pantyhose; rainwear; rubber pants; sandals; scarves; shoes and shoe laces; slippers; sneakers; socks and stockings; steel-toed shoes; underwear; uniforms, athletic and nonathletic; and wedding apparel.
“School supplies” only includes binders; book bags; calculators; cellophane tape; blackboard chalk; compasses; composition books; crayons; erasers; folders, expandable, pocket, plastic, and manila; glue, paste, and paste sticks; highlighters; index cards; index card boxes; legal pads; lunch boxes; markers; notebooks; paper, loose-leaf notebook paper, copy paper, graph paper, tracing paper, manila paper, colored paper, poster board, and construction paper; pencil boxes and other school supply boxes; pencil sharpeners; pencils; pens; protractors; rulers; scissors; and writing tablets.
“School instructional materials” only includes reference books, reference maps and globes, textbooks, and workbooks.
In 2026, the sales tax holiday only applies to the above back to school items. It does not apply to items that are $500 or less, food in restaurants, boats/watercrafts, titled outboard motors, motor vehicles, alcohol, tobacco, vape products, or items with marijuana. It also does not apply to taxable services and items purchased for use in business.
For more information about this year’s sales tax holiday in Ohio, you can visit the Ohio Department of Taxation’s website.
Copyright 2026 WTAP. All rights reserved.
Ohio
Suns out, ticks out – Ohio Ag Net | Ohio’s Country Journal
By Emily Nogay, VMD, MS, Ohio State University
We made it! The sun is shining, the birds are chirping, the flowers are blooming, and the Ohio temperatures are climbing. If you’re anything like me, then your skin loves the sun and the warmth it brings. Unfortunately, that also brings out those creepy eight-legged crawlies called ticks. These blood-sucking little monsters have already started to come out of the brush and become pests for humans, dogs, cats, wildlife, and our livestock species.
Ticks are ectoparasites (a parasite that lives on the skin) which have four different life stages – egg, larva, nymph, and the adult. Once hatched from the egg, the tick needs a bloodmeal in order to move to the next stage. Different tick species have different host preferences, but each life stage can also have different host preferences. With these bloodmeals, ticks can pick up an infectious agent in that blood and harbor it within their bodies to then later infect a new host when the tick feeds again, making the tick a vector for the disease. There are many different species of ticks out there, and each species is known for being a vector for different diseases (such as Lyme disease) to humans, animals, or both. However, keep in mind that just because a tick can harbor and transmit a disease does not mean every tick will, and it is not always possible to know if that tick does carry the disease, even with laboratory testing.
Over the past several years, we have seen a steady rise in temperatures, more humidity, and shorter winters. This climate change has created a more favorable environment for tick survival and transmission of the diseases they carry. Common ticks found in Ohio include the blacklegged (deer) tick, the American dog tick, and the lone star tick. These can potentially transmit diseases to humans and animals, such as Lyme disease, Anaplasmosis, Babesiosis, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, and Alpha-Gal syndrome (red meat allergy).
The Asian longhorned tick has been getting more attention recently as it is an emerging tick species. This species was first identified in the United States in 2017, originally native to East Asia, and is quickly spreading. This tick is special because it can clone itself. The females can lay eggs without needing to find a male to mate with, which is allowing this species to establish fast-growing populations. This is especially alarming for the cattle industry, as this tick is known to transmit theileriosis (Theileria orientalis). Theileriosis is a blood-borne parasite of cattle that is very similar to anaplasmosis, causing anemia, weakness, jaundice, and death. Some animals can become asymptomatic carriers,, meaning they show no symptoms but can act as a way for the disease to spread through possible blood transfers (needles, ticks, etc.). Unfortunately, there is currently no approved treatment in the U.S. for theileriosis, which means prevention is necessary.
Prevention of ticks and tick-borne diseases such as theileriosis requires integrated approaches of routine inspection, insecticide treatments and environmental management. Inspection of cattle for ticks can be difficult, but, if possible, pay special attention around the eyes, ears, neck, brisket, tail head, udder, and the inside of the legs. The most common insecticide treatments are products containing pyrethroids, which help kill ticks and prevent new ticks from attaching. Whole-animal sprays, pour-on products, ear tags, and oilers or backrubbers can be useful for protecting against flies and pinkeye as well. Pasture management, including keeping grass along wooded edges short, burning fields, limiting cattle access to wooded areas, and rotating pastures (great for endoparasites, too!) can help decrease tick populations on your herd. Producers should discuss with their veterinarian which methods are best for their operation, but keep in mind that one solution is not enough. Reducing the tick population requires an integrated management approach.
Ticks are nasty little pests that can really ruin our summer fun for humans, companion animals, and livestock. It is important to remember that ticks are everywhere, even if you cannot see them, and they can carry some nasty diseases along with them. Be sure to discuss prevention and treatment strategies for all your animals with your veterinarian and keep yourself and your family safe this summer. If you are spending time outside, be sure to consider an approved repellent and wear permethrin-treated, light-colored long sleeves and pants tucked into socks. Be sure to shower and do a tick check immediately after high-risk activities, and remove ticks promptly and appropriately if found. For more information, visit the Ohio State Bite Site at kx.osu.edu/bite.
Ohio
Part of Ohio could’ve been named Metropotamia. Here’s what happened instead
How did Cincinnati become Porkopolis? The not-so-pretty tale
Cincinnati has long been called the Queen City. For a time, though, it was known by a less flattering nickname – Porkopolis.
Before Ohio was a state, the vast, largely uncharted expanse between the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, up to the Great Lakes, was known as the Northwest Territory.
Many parties, including the British, French, Spanish, Native American tribes and Eastern states, had previous claims to portions of the territory.
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 settled the matter by organizing it as the Northwest Territory and laying the groundwork for the expansion of the United States.
The ordinance was among the most significant legislation created by the Congress of the Confederation of the United States, which governed the U.S. from 1781 to 1789, before the federal government was established by the U.S. Constitution.
Jefferson’s plan for westward expansion
Prior to the American Revolution, to strengthen British and Native American relations, King George III issued the Royal Proclamation of 1763, which forbade expansion of the colonies west of the Appalachian Mountains – an area considered an “Indian reserve.”
The British ceded that land in the 1783 Treaty of Paris following the Revolutionary War, and the new nation was ready to expand west.
The Confederation Congress pressured other states to relinquish their claims on the territory, such as Virginia’s declared boundaries extending “from Sea to Sea.”
Thomas Jefferson proposed the lands west of the Appalachians be divided into 10 states that would be equal to the original 13 colonies.
He suggested interesting names: Sylvania, Michigania, Cherronesus, Assenisipia, Metropotamia, Illinoia, Saratoga, Washington, Polypotamia and Pelisipia. What is now Ohio would have been part of Metropotamia, Washington and Saratoga.
Although a slave owner himself, Jefferson also proposed there be no slavery in the states after 1800.
Congress cut out the state boundaries, exotic names and slavery clause before passing the Land Ordinance of 1784.
Northwest Ordinance prohibited slavery in the territory
That ordinance was superseded by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which created incorporated territories led by a governor, a secretary and three judges chosen by Congress.
The Northwest Territory was designed to be carved into “not less than three nor more than five States.” Article 5 outlined a three-stage process for a state to be admitted to the Union. Once a district acquired 60,000 inhabitants, it could apply for statehood.
Slavery was not permitted in the territory. Article 6 states: “There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.”
The 13th Amendment used a similar phrase in abolishing slavery in the U.S. in 1865.
The Northwest Ordinance did have a clear fugitive slave clause, though, which allowed enslaved people who had escaped to be taken back to slavery.
Article 6 effectively made the Ohio River the dividing line between territories that prohibited or permitted slavery.
Setting the path to statehood
Under the Land Ordinance of 1785 (a different ordinance than Jefferson’s plan), the land in the Northwest Territory was subdivided into a rectangular grid system of 6-mile townships. The surveyed tracts were sold to individuals and speculative land companies.
John Cleves Symmes bought 311,682 acres between the Great Miami and Little Miami rivers, an area known as the Symmes Purchase, and resold tracts to settlers, such as the pioneers who founded Columbia, Losantiville (Cincinnati) and North Bend.
Most Native American tribes refused to acknowledge treaties signed after the Revolutionary War regarding lands north of the Ohio River that the tribes inhabited. This led to great conflict between the indigenous people and the settlers.
Military expeditions launched from Fort Washington in Cincinnati engaged forces led by Shawnee chief Blue Jacket and Miami chief Little Turtle all across Ohio until Gen. “Mad Anthony” Wayne won a decisive victory in the Battle of Fallen Timbers.
The peace treaty between the U.S. and Native American tribes really opened up the Northwest Territory for more settlers.
Rather than following the European colonial model, the Northwest Ordinance set a clear path to statehood and equality within the federal government.
Ohio in 1803 became the first new state from the territory, followed by Indiana (1816), Illinois (1818), Michigan (1837) and Wisconsin (1848).
Writing of the Northwest Ordinance in “The Law in Southwestern Ohio,” Frank G. Davis said, “By leading the Territory step-by-step to statehood, or rather statehoods, it set the pattern for the political and legal development of the entire continental U.S.”
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