Ohio
Ohio State Advances to NCAA Regional Final
ADDITIONAL INFO: Outcomes | Ohio State Roster | Fb | Twitter | Instagram
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The No. 16 seed Ohio State girls’s gymnastics crew is headed to Saturday’s NCAA Regional Ultimate in Norman, Okla. In a meet that got here all the way down to the ultimate rotation, the Buckeyes earned a crew rating of 197.350 to complete second in Thursday night time’s NCAA Regular Regional Second Spherical, .075 forward of third-place Arkansas.
Ohio State’s closing crew rating is its greatest rating on the street this season and highest NCAA regional rating in program historical past. The rating bests this system’s earlier report, earned final season, by .425.
The Buckeyes advance to the NCAA regional closing for the second time within the final three seasons, with their final Candy 16 look in 2021.
MEET NOTES
- Ohio State began the meet off sturdy, recording a meet-high 49.525 on ground within the opening rotation. Lexi Edwards tied for first total with a 9.950. Ella Hodges (9.925) and Claire Gagliardi (9.900) added 9.900s for the Buckeyes. The crew additionally counted 9.875s from Payton Harris and Tory Vetter.
- Within the second rotation, the Buckeyes earned the second-best vault rating of the night time with a 49.275. In her first NCAA regional look, Harris completed second total with a 9.925. Edwards tied for ninth with a 9.875 whereas Sydney Jennings recorded a 9.850. The Buckeyes solely counted scores 9.800 or larger as Raina Malas earned a 9.825 and Vetter recorded a 9.800.
- Harris scored the very best for the Buckeyes on uneven bars with a career-high 9.900 on the equipment. Riccardi earned a 9.900 for Ohio State whereas Edwards, Alexis Hankins and Emma Pritchard scored a 9.875, 9.850 and 9.800, respectively. The crew completed with a rating of 49.325.
- The ultimate rotation of the night time had the Buckeyes on beam, however Ohio State earned a 49.225 to safe the top-two end and a ticket to the regional closing. Vetter completed tied for third total with a career-high tying 9.925. Harris tallied her third 9.900 of the night time within the rotation. Hodges, Jennings and Pritchard all earned 9.800s.
- Harris gained the all-around on Thursday night time, incomes a career-high 39.600 for the Buckeyes. The freshman led the second-place finisher by .075. She was second total amongst all all-around opponents on the regional, together with the primary session. She was simply .025 shy of this system report all-around rating.
SCORES
Vault: Harris – 9.925; Edwards – 9.875; Jennings – 9.850; Malas – 9.825; Vetter – 9.800; Riccardi – 9.750
Uneven Bars: Harris – 9.900; Riccardi – 9.900; Edwards – 9.875; Hankins – 9.850; Pritchard – 9.800; Miller – 9.350
Beam: Vetter – 9.925; Harris – 9.900; Hodges – 9.800; Jennings – 9.800; Pritchard – 9.800; Hankins – 9.700
Ground: Edwards – 9.950; Hodges – 9.925; Gagliardi – 9.900; Harris – 9.875; Vetter – 9.875; Riccardi – 9.750
All-Round: Harris – 39.600
UP NEXT
The Buckeyes will compete towards No. 1 seed Oklahoma, No. 8 Alabama and No. 9 on the Norman Regional Ultimate on Saturday, April 1 at 6 p.m. ET from the Lloyd Noble Middle. The meet might be carried on ESPN+.
#GoBucks
Ohio
Judge rejects 2nd Amendment argument from illegal immigrant living in Ohio charged over possession of 170 guns
A federal judge denied a request to dismiss a gun charge against an illegal immigrant in Ohio who had been in the U.S. for more than 15 years, rejecting the man’s argument that he has a right to bear arms.
Carlos Serrano-Restrepo was charged earlier this year and was subsequently indicted for possession of a firearm by an alien unlawfully in the U.S., according to WSYX.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives began investigating and watching Serrano-Restrepo after he purchased at least 22 firearms, and claimed to be a U.S. citizen on the firearms forms.
ABOLISH THE ATF? REP. BURLISON WANTS TO ELIMINATE ‘DISASTER AGENCY’ HE SAYS HAS BEEN VIOLATING 2ND AMENDMENT
Agents conducted a search of his home and seized roughly 170 firearms, tens of thousands of rounds of ammunition and smoke/marine markers.
Serrano-Restrepo said some of the guns were purchased for self-defense.
Photos that agents took at his home revealed he kept firearms in gun safes. Some handguns were also mounted in holsters on the wall of a closet.
MORE REPUBLICAN WOMEN BUYING FIREARMS, WHILE GUN OWNERSHIP DECLINES AMONG MALE DEMOCRATS: POLL
The suspect’s lawyer submitted a motion to dismiss the charge on the argument that he has the right to bear arms under the Second Amendment.
The judge denied his motion to dismiss the charge on Thursday, writing in his opinion that “disarming unlawful immigrants like Mr. Serrano-Restrepo who have not sworn allegiance to the United States comports with the Nation’s history and tradition of firearm regulations.”
“Mr. Serrano-Restrepo’s as-applied challenge lacks merit,” the judge continued. “The swearing of an oath of allegiance occurs through the naturalization process, not through his asylum application or his years of living in the United States.”
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
His trial is scheduled for Jan. 21, 2025.
Serrano-Restrepo moved from Arizona to Orient, Ohio, in 2022. He told the court he last unlawfully entered the U.S. in 2008.
He also owns a business that remediates fire and flooding damage.
Ohio
Ohio State Buckeyes’ Biggest Weakness Revealed Before Michigan Game
Ryan Day and the Ohio State Buckeyes were able to take care of business against the Indiana Hoosiers on Saturday. Now, they are set to prepare for the massive rivalry matchup against the Michigan Wolverines to end the regular season.
Ohio State has been unable to beat Michigan for the last three years. In order to get a spot in the Big Ten Championship Game, they’ll need to snap that losing streak.
At this point in the year, the Buckeyes absolutely look like a national championship favorite. However, there is one weakness that is worth monitoring.
David Pollack, a former star college football linebacker and a current analyst, spoke out about the one weakness that he sees with Ohio State.
“I don’t see a lot of gamewreckers,” Pollack said. “But I don’t see a lot of weaknesses, except at the cornerback spot. I’ve got to address the cornerback spot as a weakness. I’ve seen enough to know. There are enough penalties back there, enough flags, enough big plays that it’s not a strength.”
All season long, the Buckeyes’ cornerbacks have underperformed. Denzel Burke has looked nothing like the expected first-round pick talent that he was being hyped up to be. Davison Igbinosun has been heavily penalized and has struggled as well.
Going up against other elite national championship contenders will be a tough task with a struggling secondary.
Outside of the cornerback position, everything else seems to look solid. If they can fix the issues and get better production out of it, they would be a much more complete contender.
Thankfully, the talent is there for them to improve. Both Burke and Igbinosun are talented players who have simply struggled this season. They are more than capable of turning things around.
All of that being said, the stage has been set for Ohio State and Michigan. On paper, the Buckeyes should be able to dominate the game, but rivalry games can get tricky. It will be interesting to see what ends up happening.
Ohio
Paul Finebaum names CFP National Champion favorite between Oregon, Ohio State
With just one week remaining in the regular season, there is only one team across all of college football that remains undefeated at this point: the Oregon Ducks.
So, it stands to reason that the undefeated Ducks should be the favorite to end the 2024 hoisting the College Football Playoff National Championship trophy, right?
Not according to SEC Network host and ESPN personality Paul Finebaum.
“I’m ‘Paul Out’ with block letters. I don’t even think Oregon is the best team in the Big Ten, let alone the favorite to win it all,” Finebaum said during Sunday morning’s ‘Paul-In, Paul-Out’ segment on ESPN’s SportsCenter. “And thanks Ducks fans waking up on the West coast, I’m aware that you beat Ohio State. But Ohio State, to me, looks like the best team in the country.
“I think they’ll have a fun game in a couple of weeks in the Big Ten championship game, and both are going to go to the Playoffs and be in very good shape. But Oregon, to me, looks a tad below Ohio State.”
As Finebaum reminded the college football world, this exact matchup has already been decided on the field once this season, with the Ducks eking out a 32-31 win in Eugene in mid-October. While it’s not official yet, all expectations are Oregon (11-0, 8-0 B10) and Ohio State (10-1, 7-1) will meet again in the Big Ten Championship game in Indianapolis.
But in the meantime, Finebaum is sticking by the preseason favorite Buckeyes.
Ryan Day wanted to ‘leave no doubt’ vs. Indiana
Ryan Day wanted to leave no doubt during Ohio State’s 38-15 win over Indiana Saturday in Columbus and it certainly worked out by the time the game came to its conclusion.
After trailing 7-0, Ohio State ripped off 31 straight points to erase any opportunity of the Hoosiers pulling off the biggest win in school history. The Buckeyes and Hoosiers came in No. 2 and 5 in the latest College Football Playoff rankings.
But with Day and Ohio State one step closer to the Big Ten Championship vs. Oregon, they can put this game to rest.
“Game got a flip there with the punt return (for a touchdown by Caleb Downs),” Day told FOX’s Jenny Taft postgame. “I thought, you know, we had a chance to really separate ourselves in the first half. We didn’t do that. I thought we played well in the second half. I thought we played physical all across the board, and our guys had a great look in their eye. And so now it’s onto the rivalry game.”
As far as scoring the final touchdown, despite a 31-15 lead with less than two minutes to go, Day and Ohio State wanted to leave their mark.
“Well, you say, leave no doubt,” Day said. “And you know, these guys want to finish the game the right way. TreVeyon (Henderson) did the right thing going down at the one-yard line. We ate up the clock. We didn’t want to put the defense back out there. You just never know in games like this, it’s a top five matchup. So we wanted to finish it the right way and make sure that everybody knows that this is the Ohio State Buckeyes.”
Nick Kosko contributed to this report.
-
Business1 week ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Science5 days ago
Trump nominates Dr. Oz to head Medicare and Medicaid and help take on 'illness industrial complex'
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'
-
Technology7 days ago
Inside Elon Musk’s messy breakup with OpenAI
-
Lifestyle1 week ago
Some in the U.S. farm industry are alarmed by Trump's embrace of RFK Jr. and tariffs
-
World1 week ago
Protesters in Slovakia rally against Robert Fico’s populist government
-
News7 days ago
They disagree about a lot, but these singers figure out how to stay in harmony
-
News1 week ago
Gaetz-gate: Navigating the President-elect's most baffling Cabinet pick