One down. The (relative) calm before the storm continues on as the Michigan Wolverines go through a two-week stretch as heavy favorites before running into a gauntlet of equally talented giants. Up next in this four-game slate is a trip to Columbus as the Ohio State Buckeyes will be looking for revenge after falling in Ann Arbor a couple Fridays ago.
Ohio
No. 2 Michigan at Ohio State College Basketball Preview
While some do not like the idea of two of the three two-play slots locked into rivalry games each year, sports are just more fun when the stakes are a little bit higher. Currently sitting precariously on the bubble, there is nothing Ohio State would like more than to significantly bolster its resume by knocking off its No. 2-ranked bitter rival. Michigan is the favorite here, but do not expect anything easy.
No. 2 Michigan (21-1, 11-1) at Ohio State (15-7, 7-5)
Date & Time: Sunday, Feb. 8, 1 p.m. ET
Location: Value City Arena, Columbus, OH
TV/Streaming: CBS
The first game was uncomfortably close for 30-plus minutes, with the Buckeye actually leading with 10 minutes left in the game. Michigan pulled away late and won by 12, getting 18 points (and 9 rebounds and 4 assists) from Yaxel Lendeborg, interior production from Morez Johnson and Aday Mara, and impressive defense from across the roster, particularly late.
Michigan 2PT Shooting: 62.7% (1st B1G)
Old reliable was on display against Penn State (67.6%), and just about every conference game except for the win over Michigan State has featured impressive shooting inside the arc. That was certainly the case against Ohio State last time, as the Wolverines converted a ridiculous 75.9% of their attempts. This helped offset a pretty cold 5-for-23 effort from deep, but as we have discussed before, those sort of outputs seem much more likely than the hot long-range shooting on Thursday.
Ohio State is 12th defensively in conference play, but has been the fourth-worst against two-point shooting, which is a bad combination here. Last time, Michigan took 24 of its 29 two-point shots at the rim and converted 24 of those, and even 4 of 5 jumpers went in. There is no reason to deviate from this plan, and the Buckeyes are coming off four straight games where opponents have feasted in this department (66.4%).
Michigan’s worst enemy would be the temptation to keep launching from three unnecessarily. Ohio State is decent at three prevention, while the Wolverines are very volatile. The real issue is the opportunity cost: when twos are falling at such a high clip, taking shots from deep just is not worth the trade off. Michigan still attempts plenty of threes a game, but it must lean into the mismatch down low again.
Ohio State Adj. Offense: 4th B1G (22nd overall)
The reason Ohio State is on the edge of NCAA Tournament conversation is the offense. There is not really a singular area that jumps out — each of Kenpom’s four factors rank between fifth and ninth in conference play — so really this is just an all-around solid attack. The Buckeyes do not heavily favor threes, and can move the ball well but do not rack up a ton of assists, doing all this at an average tempo.
What is working then? Definitely Bruce Thornton, who ranks 13th nationally in ORtg thanks to his 63.6% effective field goal rate. He has made 40% of his threes this year, as has John Mobley (41.2%), who is the other volume shooter from deep. In general, though, Ohio State will try to find mismatches then drive to the rim, though plenty attempts will come from the midrange too.
In Ann Arbor, this approach was simply not sufficient against the Michigan defense. Thornton scored just 10 points (after logging 20-plus in his previous three games) and the Buckeyes were merely average from two (50.0%) and three (29.7%). Nothing came easily in that game, and unless the home team is able to convert a disproportionate number of tough looks, I think history repeats itself on Sunday.
Ohio
Black bear spotted in Licking County as sightings rise across Ohio
LICKING COUNTY, Ohio (WCMH) — When you think of wild animals in central Ohio, a black bear likely isn’t the first thing that comes to mind. That’s why one Licking County family said they couldn’t believe their eyes.
It was an average afternoon drive home for father and son, Justin and Aaron Rhodes, when something walked into the road in front of them.
“I didn’t even think it was real at first, so that’s why I had to do the double take,” Justin said.
Aaron said he thought it was “just a weird looking dog”.
To their disbelief, it was a bear. The sighting comes just one year after the animal was spotted in Licking County for the first time in more than two decades.
“It’s kind of hard to believe that they’re even around this area,” Justin said. “I’ve lived in this area for about 24 years now, so it’s been quite a while, and I’ve never seen one before.”
These sightings are becoming more common. The Ohio Division of Wildlife said the black bear population is growing in the state, and they expect those trends to continue. Ohio saw a record number of confirmed sightings in 2025.
Lindsey Krusling, a wildlife communications specialist with the Ohio Division of Wildlife, said they are seeing more breeding females establish homes in the state, signaling the species is returning. Experts said the work restoring natural forest land is a big reason why.
“We’re starting to get some black bears coming in from neighboring states like Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Kentucky,” Krusling said. “They’re naturally crossing those state borders and coming back to Ohio because we have more of that habitat available to them, especially those forested areas.”
As the black bear population grows, the Division of Wildlife is expanding its research. They are putting radio collars on some bears they find in the state to help track data, such as if the bears are staying here, how far they’ve traveled and if they’re successfully having cubs.
“We’re trying to get quite a bit of data from these bears, and we’re super excited to see where this takes us,” Krusling said.
The research is in the beginning stages, but they expect population growth to continue, Krusling said.
Sighting reports can be submitted here to help the Division of Wildlife track black bear populations throughout the state.
Ohio
Lorain woman killed, three children injured in Ohio Turnpike crash in Elyria (UPDATED)
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Ohio
Licking County real estate transfers for June 1-5, 2026, hit $865,000
Real estate transfers in Licking County, Ohio, range from $85,000 to $865,000
The following are property transfers recorded in Licking County from June 1-5, 2026.
First name indicates the seller; second name represents the buyer
Buckeye Lake
- 502 Providence Lane; Cohagen, Christopher C and Lori A; Adams, Jeffrey L and Boyce-Adams, Jo Anna; 6/1/2026; $511,000
- 131 Cranberry Lane; Smart, Amy and Kidwell, Kevin K; Sew and Minor, Christian; 6/1/2026; $262,000
Etna Township
- 116 Cameron Drive SW; Ray, Erica L; Darjee, Sanjay and Laxmi and Dil; 6/2/2026; $412,000
- 119 Kraner St. SW; Adkins, Zane and Amy; Culbertson, Brenton Howard; 6/1/2026; $368,500
- 160 Dusky Willow Drive; Willow Reserve LLC; Martin, Alaina K; 6/2/2026; $290,940
Granville
- 119 Derwyn Del Way; Lifer, David C and Julia H; Martin, Michael and Lisa; 6/1/2026; $865,000
- 39 Victoria Drive; Acton, Wendy S and Paul J; Cannon, Matthew Evan and Zywica, Natalie Nicole; 6/2/2026; $835,000
Granville Township
- 49 Alberry Drive; Halliday, Lucas and Breayne; Howe, Jason and Kathryn; 6/2/2026; $570,000
Harrison Township
- 102 Whirlaway Loop; Rice, Dawn (Trustee); Bope, Maria and Shane; 6/2/2026; $420,000
Heath
- 1306 Kacey Court; Fischer Homes Columbus II LLC; Owens, Blake Andrew and Taylor Marie; 6/2/2026; $437,779
- 805 Fieldson Drive; Flowers, Ingrit; Harder, Noah C; 6/2/2026; $250,000
Hebron
- 802 Cumberland Meadows Circle; Lines, Marlene S; Gerhart, Jamie A and Ralph W Jr; 6/2/2026; $232,000
Johnstown
- 101 Bigelow Drive; McGovern, Matthew S and Jennifer L; Sanford, Jessica; 6/2/2026; $442,500
Liberty Township
- 5844 Nichols Lane Road NW; La Jeunesse, Garth E and Debra; Nesselroad, William Heath and Annie; 6/1/2026; $629,000
- 7211 Northridge Road NW; Devault, Robert E Jr and Joann; Esbenshade, Travis M and Lowe, Shelby M; 6/1/2026; $495,000
Newark
- 2110 Overlook Way; D.R. Horton-Indiana LLC; Tarsha, Michele A; 6/1/2026; $433,335
- 1162 Taylor Ave.; Heath Fluid LLC; Anglada, Gabriel P and Salina T; 6/1/2026; $200,000
- 32 Postal Ave. W.; Palmisano, Phil; Moore, Dominic Michael and Miksich, Paige Elizabeth; 6/1/2026; $198,900
- 75 Gay St.; Velez, Marcos A; Camell, Campbell; 6/1/2026; $155,000
- 655 Evans St.; TNL; McRada Properties LLC; 6/1/2026; $145,000
- 63 Wallace St.; FDA Peachtree LLC; Burns, Amber L; 6/2/2026; $86,500
- 404 10th St.; Synergy Group Properties LLC; Busy Boys Restoration LLC; 6/2/2026; $85,000
Reynoldsburg
- 8447 Rodebaugh Road; Collins, Carol J; Thorpe, Kimberley Lynn and Henry, Steven; 6/2/2026; $340,000
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