Ohio
Reporters detail being on the field during Michigan-Ohio State postgame fight
(CBS DETROIT) – The Michigan Wolverines pulled off one of their biggest upsets ever against their rival on Saturday, taking down the No. 2 Ohio State Buckeyes with a 13-10 win on the road.
However, the teams weren’t done fighting even after the final whistle. A skirmish at midfield following the game generated more headlines than the unexpected results.
“Couldn’t see for about 10-15 minutes and a lot of the Michigan players and people in the area had the same type of reaction,” said Clayton Sayfie, staff writer for The Wolverine.
Sayfie said he was one of the people who was pepper sprayed while filming a video of the brawl between Michigan and Ohio State football players following Saturday’s game. He said it’s sad to see a celebration turn violent the way it did in Columbus, Ohio.
“It’s unfortunate when things escalate to that degree but at the same time, part of this, as long as it doesn’t get out of hand, is why we love college football,” Sayfie said.
Garrick Hodge, Ohio State football writer for Eleven Warriors, sees a future where teams are penalized for planting a flag on an opposing team’s field, but he doesn’t think it will stop happening.
“I mean, when the discipline for each team is you essentially get fined, what is the approximate fine that an SEC team bestows on a team that storms the field, and there’s no suspensions on either side? It’s really tough for me to get worked up about this,” Hodge said.
On Sunday, the Big Ten handed down $100,000 fines for both programs. In a statement, the Big Ten said the teams’ actions violated the conference’s sportsmanship policy.
“Not only did the actions of both teams violate fundamental elements of sportsmanship such as respect and civility, the nature of the incident also jeopardized the safety of participants and bystanders,” the statement said.
Alejandro Zuniga, a 247 Sports writer covering Michigan football, says this isn’t the first time Michigan planted its flag on “Block O,” but this was the first time Ohio State responded.
“If you’re Ohio State, I’m sure their players have a lot of grief for letting Michigan plant the flag on them two years ago in 2022. So, I don’t necessarily fault them for trying to respond even though I think it ultimately went too far when it becomes a physical altercation,” Zuniga said.
Hodge gave his thoughts on what Ohio State head coach Ryan Day was doing during the skirmish.
“I think he just had kind of a deer in the headlights look. Maybe that’s a bad look, maybe it’s not, but either way, he seem to not realize what happened until most of the chaos was already over,” he said.
Zuniga explained the difference he noticed in the way both coaches handled their teams.
“I think (Michigan coach) Sheronne Moore handled it well. The events happened where he wasn’t, and then he got into it and did his best to de-escalate what was a very difficult situation. (Ohio State coach)Ryan Day, we saw the angles. I would hope the leader of a program would try and de-escalate a situation instead of standing by and letting it happen, especially when it got to a physical situation,” Zuniga said.
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Ohio
Emeka Egbuka defends Ohio State WR Carnell Tate’s selection to Titans
Tampa Bay Buccaneers and former Ohio State wide receiver Emeka Egbuka is defending former Buckeye Carnell Tate.
Tate has received some scrutiny after he was selected as the first wide receiver in the 2026 NFL Draft, despite not having been Ohio State’s top receiver target in college. Appearing on the “Up and Adams” show May 6, Egbuka shut down the narrative that meant Tate would not find success with the Tennessee Titans.
“I mean, we can see the correlation,” Egbuka said. “That was the same talk that was about me when I was coming out of the draft. At the end of the day, it’s all semantics. If you can play football, you can play football, and Carnell Tate can play football.”
Selected with the No. 20 pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, Egbuka finished his final college season with 1,011 receiving yards, more than 300 fewer than Jeremiah Smith in his freshman year. Egbuka led the team in receptions with 81 compared to Smith’s 76 catches.
With Buccaneers wide receivers Mike Evans and Chris Godwin Jr. playing fewer than 10 games during the 2025 season due to injuries, Egbuka led the team in receiving yards with 938. He finished fifth in 2025 AP Offensive Rookie of the Year voting.
Tate, the No. 4 overall pick in this year’s draft, was called a “talented player” by New York Giants wide receiver Malik Nabers during Bleacher Report’s draft night coverage on April 23, but Nabers questioned Tate’s selection.
“I don’t see him being a number one,” Nabers said. “He hasn’t been the number one on the team he’s been on. You have to be a number one on the team that you’re coming from to be a number one receiver on the team you’re going to. … You can’t be the second.”
Green Bay Packers edge rusher Micah Parsons, also on the broadcast, quickly dismissed Nabers’ statement by bringing up that former Buckeyes receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba was a second option while in college.
“You said you got to be number one on the team that you’re coming from. … [Jaxon Smith-Njigba] was not number one. Bro, you got to understand that the number one [Ohio State] player will be the number one pick in the draft next year. … Give him a chance to fulfill the role,” Parsons said.
Tate finished the 2025 season with 875 receiving yards and nine touchdowns, second to Smith with 1,243 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns.
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