Ohio
Urban Meyer Drops Bold Statement About Ohio State
Urban Meyer is a name that Ohio State Buckeyes fans love. He led the program to a lot of success and has put together one of the most successful college football head coaching careers in recent history.
He has stayed active when talking about Ohio State and has been very much positive about the Buckeyes.
Heading into today’s game against the Nebraska Cornhuskers, there are a lot of questions surrounding Ohio State.
After losing to the Oregon Ducks, there are real concerns that they could end up missing the College Football Playoff if they lose another game. They also have a tough schedule ahead of them.
Despite their loss to Oregon and all of the questions surrounding the Buckeyes, Meyer spoke out with a very bold take about Ohio State.
In a recent quote, Meyer did not hold back from his bold thoughts about the Buckeyes.
“I still think they have the best talent in the country,” Meyer said Friday. “I think they were one yard short against Oregon. It’s not time to panic; it’s time to get better. You were exposed a little bit in pass defense, so the corners got to play better, you got to get more pressure on the quarterback, but those are all fixable things. So I don’t anticipate there’s panic. I mean there’s pissed off, but I don’t think there’s panic.”
Meyer is 100 percent correct. Ohio State is still very angry about their loss to the Ducks. They came up just one point short and nearly had a chance at a game-winning field goal on the final drive.
Unfortunately, they were unable to get the job done and suffered their first loss.
Ryan Day is a great head coach and the Buckeyes absolutely have the most talented roster in the nation. One loss will not define the rest of their season.
Getting back on track starts today for Ohio State. Beating Nebraska in convincing fashion is their goal. If they can accomplish that goal, they will head to Penn State next week for a chance at redemption.
Ohio
Puff Johnson on campus but not ready to play for Ohio State yet
In-season roster addition Puff Johnson has arrived on Ohio State’s campus, but the sixth-year transfer won’t be in uniform for the Jan. 20 home game against Minnesota.
That was the message from coach Jake Diebler on Jan. 19, just three days removed from Johnson having a temporary restraining order approved by a Franklin County judge granting him immediate eligibility to join the Buckeyes during the 2025-26 season. He’s on campus, listed in the official game notes and is on the roster, but seeing him in action against the Golden Gophers would be too much, too soon according to Diebler.
“Gotten a chance to work him out a couple times,” the coach said. “It’s a daily evaluation as to when he’s going to be ready to play in a game … (but) no, do not anticipate him being on the court (against Minnesota).”
Johnson was granted eligibility on Jan. 16 and, logistically, couldn’t make it to campus on time for the 1 p.m. tip against UCLA. After the 86-74 win for the Buckeyes, Diebler said the next steps would involve physically getting Johnson in the building and starting to assess where he was physically while assimilating him with his new teammates. Although he had been taking classes, Johnson had not been on campus for months while hoping to be granted eligibility.
Suddenly, he’s a Buckeye, and now the 25-year-old wing is getting a crash course on this year’s team.
“There’s two things: there’s him physically being ready to play in a game and then there’s him within how we play and learning what we’re doing and things, being ready to play in a game,” Diebler said. “He’s working really hard at both to be ready as quickly as possible. I don’t know when that’s going to be quite yet, but we’ve at least gotten started and started working on it.”
Johnson was seeking this sixth year of eligibility in part because injuries limited him to 14 games as a freshman at North Carolina in 2020-21 and 17 games last year at Penn State. After the UCLA game, Diebler said Johnson had told him that he was in good shape, but the coach said exactly what that meant would remain to be seen.
On Jan. 19, Diebler said early impressions are positive.
“The thing we’ve got to check is game shape,” he said. “When you’re playing up and down multiple possessions against live bodies, that’s a different impact than just running up and down against no defense. That’s what we’re in the process of evaluating, but he’s a guy who’s wanted this and been preparing for this, but there’s a different type of game shape.”
As far as a baseline level of fitness, Diebler said, “I feel good about where he’s at.”
Johnson will wear No. 6 for the Buckeyes. He is listed at 6-foot-8, 200 pounds on the team’s updated official roster and is expected to slot into Ohio State’s rotation on the wing when he’s up to speed. In 111 career games, Johnson has averaged 5.3 points and 2.6 assists but is expected to help Ohio State on the defensive end.
“He’s got an ability to guard multiple positions,” Diebler said. “He’s got good positional size. He has familiarity with this conference. He’s shown an ability to rebound. All those things are really good. He’s been a guy who’s had some decent steal numbers in the last two years as well, which is an area we’ve got to continue to get better in. Defensively, that’s where it starts.”
Johnson averaged 1.4 steals per game for Penn State last season and averaged nearly one steal per game during his two years with the Nittany Lions. In 2024-25, he also averaged a career-best 10.2 points per game.
“He can play multiple positions,” Diebler said. “And, because of his experience and basketball IQ, we anticipate him being a guy who is a blender on the court, a guy who adds to what already is a really good chemistry this team has. He’s got to play to his strengths: cutting, rebounding, catch and shoot 3s, driving, scoring, but also within what we’re doing.”
Ohio State men’s basketball beat writer Adam Jardy can be reached at ajardy@dispatch.com, on Bluesky at @cdadamjardy.bsky.social or on Twitter at @AdamJardy.
Ohio
Which central Ohio college football players moved in transfer portal?
The transfer window in college football closed Jan. 16, and several players from central Ohio were among the thousands nationwide who took advantage in finding new teams.
Some of them found familiarity in moving, whether with former teammates, coaches who previously recruited them or both.
Here are the Columbus-area players who transferred to Football Bowl Subdivision programs in the past two weeks, according to the On3 transfer tracker. Players’ new schools are listed next to their names, with their previous school in parentheses:
Braydon Alford, Michigan (Butler)
Position: Wide receiver
Class: Sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Dublin Jerome
The son of Michigan running backs coach Tony Alford, who formerly coached the same position at Ohio State, Braydon Alford did not appear in any games in two seasons at Butler after a high school career that saw him catch 90 passes with 1,487 all-purpose yards and 10 touchdowns as a senior at Jerome. Alford earned third-team all-state in Division I as a senior.
Landon Beal, Ohio State (Maine)
Position: Long snapper
Class: Redshirt freshman
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Grove City
The 6-foot Beal long snapped for the Dawgs and did the same this past season at Maine after redshirting his first year with the Black Bears in 2024. Beal was the second long snapper picked up by the Buckeyes in the portal, after Dalton Riggs was added from Central Florida.
Rasheem Biles, Texas (Pittsburgh)
Position: Linebacker
Class: Junior
Eligibility remaining: One season
High school: Pickerington Central
The two-time all-Atlantic Coast Conference linebacker and the top-ranked transfer at his position, according to 247Sports, is headed to the SEC for his final college season.
Biles had 101 tackles, including 17 for loss, and three touchdowns in 10 games in 2025 and 185 total stops and 10 sacks in three years at Pitt. He was a second-team all-district defensive back as a senior at Central despite missing most of the season because of injury.
Biles and the Longhorns host Ohio State on Sept. 12.
Preston Bowman, Ohio University (Kentucky)
Position: Wide receiver
Class: Freshman
Eligibility remaining: Four seasons
High school: Pickerington North
Bowman will join a slew of Pickerington players in Athens after a freshman season at Kentucky in which he redshirted. Bowman caught 52 passes for 1,248 yards and 13 touchdowns as a senior at North – he also averaged 34.9 yards per punt – and was named OCC-Ohio Offensive Player of the Year and first-team all-state in Division I.
Francis Brewu, Notre Dame (Pittsburgh)
Position: Defensive lineman
Class: Sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Thomas Worthington
Another departure from Pitt, Brewu will reunite with former position coach Charlie Partridge in South Bend. Brewu, who also visited Ohio State, had 7½ tackles last season with a sack, forced fumble and two quarterback hurries. He had four total sacks in two seasons and, according to a South Bend Tribune story, benches 475 pounds and squats 700. A first-team all-state honoree in Division I as a senior, Brewu started 12 of 13 games in 2025 after overcoming thumb and hamstring issues in 2024.
Kamari Burns, Kansas State (Cincinnati)
Position: Edge rusher
Class: Redshirt sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Gahanna Lincoln
Burns will remain in the Big 12 after playing 11 games without a start this fall for the Bearcats, finishing with 11 tackles and half a sack. Burns, who helped Gahanna reach a Division I state semifinal as a senior and redshirted as a freshman, matched his career high of three tackles in a game twice.
Sam Dixon, South Carolina (Ohio State)
Position: Running back
Class: Redshirt freshman
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Pickerington North
Dixon entered the transfer portal after each of the past two seasons and is leaving Columbus this time, having caught on with a Gamecocks team that went 4-8 last fall. Dixon, who played half his senior season at North after transferring from Millersburg West Holmes, ran for 53 yards in four games as a freshman during OSU’s national championship season but never made a dent in the Buckeyes’ rotation of backs this year, running for 9 yards and scoring a touchdown in his only appearance, a Week 2 win over Grambling State.
Terris Dudley, Connecticut (North Carolina State)
Position: Linebacker
Class: Redshirt freshman
Eligibility remaining: Four seasons
High school: Hilliard Bradley
The former safety from Bradley will end up playing for Jason Candle after all, having originally committed to Toledo when Candle was coach of the Rockets before switching to the Wolfpack, for which he did not play a snap in the fall. Candle was hired at Connecticut in December. Dudley had 116 tackles, including 77 solo, as a senior and earned third-team all-state in Division I.
Dawayne Galloway, Akron (West Virginia)
Position: Defensive back
Class: Redshirt freshman
Eligibility remaining: Four seasons
High school: Marion-Franklin
A four-star cornerback in high school who had 1,478 all-purpose yards as a senior in 2024, Galloway did not see any game action as a freshman in Morgantown and retains all of his college eligibility. Akron went 5-7 last season and is seeking its first winning season and bowl appearance since 2017.
Tyler Gillison, Ohio University (Michigan State)
Position: Defensive line
Class: Redshirt junior
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Pickerington Central
Gillison’s third college stop brings him back to his home state. He made two tackles in nine games last fall for the Spartans and missed the 2024 season because of injury after two years at Cincinnati. A first-team all-state honoree in Division I as a senior in 2021, Gillison is the younger brother of former Michigan State tight end Trenton Gillison.
Ethan Grunkemeyer, Virginia Tech (Penn State)
Position: Quarterback
Class: Redshirt freshman
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Olentangy
Grunkemeyer hopes to build on his late-season success with the Nittany Lions in a new setting but with a familiar coach – James Franklin, who recruited Grunkemeyer to Happy Valley but was fired at midseason. Grunkemeyer threw for 1,339 yards and eight touchdowns with four interceptions in seven games as a starter, guiding Penn State to wins in its final four games. He took over as the starter after Franklin’s firing and the loss of starter Drew Allar to a broken ankle.
Grunkemeyer threw for 3,517 yards and 39 touchdowns as a high school senior in 2023.
Sign up for our high school sports newsletter
Sid Kaba, Minnesota (Marshall)
Position: Defensive lineman
Class: Redshirt sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: KIPP Columbus
Kaba comes to the Big Ten after recording 18 total tackles, including 2½ for loss and half a sack, in nine games for the Thundering Herd in 2025. Kaba, a three-star prospect for KIPP and first-team all-state honoree in 2022, started his college career at Western Michigan but did not play a game for the Broncos in 2023 or 2024. He is expected to boost a Golden Gophers defensive tackle group decimated by graduation.
Andrew Marshall, Minnesota (Eastern Michigan)
Position: Linebacker
Class: Junior
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Bloom-Carroll
The latest college stop for Marshall, the Division III state Defensive Player of the Year as a senior in 2022, is Minnesota after he recorded 61 tackles last fall at Eastern Michigan. Marshall, who originally signed with Ohio University and played a year at Lackawanna Community College, has 121 tackles in three college seasons and was an honorable mention All-American at Lackawanna in 2024. He also rushed for 1,099 yards and 14 touchdowns as a high school senior.
Angelo McCullom, Texas A&M (Illinois)
Position: Defensive line
Class: Sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Pickerington North
A three-star recruit out of high school and first-team all-state honoree in Division I as a senior, McCullom started two games at nose tackle last fall – against Ohio State and Washington – and will join an Aggies team coming off a College Football Playoff appearance. McCullom had 21 tackles in 19 games with the Illini, including 2½ sacks.
Roman Pearson, Kansas (Ball State)
Position: Safety
Class: Junior
Eligibility remaining: One season
High school: Pickerington Central
A son of former Ohio State and NFL running back Pepe Pearson, Roman Pearson was a two-year starter at Bucknell before coming to Muncie last fall and recording 27 tackles, an interception and half a tackle for loss. Pearson, who helped Central win the Division I state championship in 2019, had 40 tackles and started 11 games in 2024 at Bucknell.
Hammond Russell IV, Wisconsin (West Virginia)
Position: Defensive line
Class: Redshirt senior
Eligibility remaining: One season
High school: Dublin Coffman
A first-team all-state honoree in Division I as a high school senior, Hammond will finish his college career playing for former Buckeye Luke Fickell with the Badgers. He had 40 tackles the past three seasons for the Mountaineers, including two sacks, 2½ stops for loss and a forced fumble last fall. Younger sister Imarianah led Reynoldsburg’s girls basketball team to the 2022 Division I state championship and played one collegiate season at WVU.
Kaden Saunders, Southern Mississippi (Penn State)
Position: Wide receiver
Class: Graduate
Eligibility remaining: Two seasons
High school: Westerville South
Limited by injuries in four seasons at Penn State, including missing all of 2025, Saunders played in three games in 2022, 12 in 2023 and four in 2024. Saunders, a four-star receiver in high school who had 1,867 career yards and was a two-time first-team all-state selection, had eight catches for 77 yards and a touchdown as a Nittany Lion.
Justin Terry, Virginia Tech (Ohio State)
Position: Offensive line
Class: Redshirt sophomore
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Pickerington Central
After one year with the Buckeyes in which he played in six games at right tackle and did not allow a quarterback pressure, according to Pro Football Focus, Terry became the second area product after Grunkemeyer to head to Blacksburg. Terry will be reunited with offensive line coach Matt Moore, who recruited him to West Virginia out of high school and coached with the Mountaineers until 2024. Terry was honorable mention all-state in Division I as a senior at Central.
Ethan Thanthanavong, Kent State (Defiance)
Position: Quarterback
Class: Freshman
Eligibility remaining: Three seasons
High school: Bloom-Carroll
A prolific high school passer with 6,369 yards and 70 touchdowns in four seasons, Thanthanavong is headed to Division I after a freshman season at Defiance in which he completed 112 of 170 passes for 1,468 yards and 10 touchdowns with six interceptions. Thanthanavong saw action in seven of the Yellowjackets’ 11 games. He was Division III district Offensive Player of the Year as a senior and earned first-team all-state.
Jaden Yates, Houston (Mississippi)
Position: Linebacker
Class: Junior
Eligibility remaining: One season
High school: Gahanna Lincoln
Yates’ only season with the Rebels after two years at Marshall ended in a CFP semifinal. One of several Ole Miss players to enter the portal after the departure of coach Lane Kiffin to LSU, Yates had 55 tackles, including 1½ for loss and half a sack, in 2025 and has 181 stops in his college career. His 120 tackles as a sophomore led the Sun Belt Conference and ranked ninth nationally.
High school sports reporter Dave Purpura can be reached at dpurpura@dispatch.com and at @dp_dispatch on X.
Ohio
Grading 5 UCLA Starters After Loss to Ohio State
The Bruin had a rough game against Ohio State, still we saw a lot of improvement compared to their last matchup against Penn State.
This was simply not UCLA’s game, while there were times of great individual perfomances it was not enough to get over the edge. Looking ahead the Bruins next matchup will come against No. 5 Purdue; a game where the Bruins on this list will need to improve massively.
One of Donovan Dent’s better games of the season. However, it was not enough to help the Bruins to a win here. What was most surprising from this matchup was his three-point shooting. He took four shots, which is the most he has taken all season, along with his two makes, which matched his total number of threes made this season.
He earns a B+ because, while his scoring improved it was simply not enough to warrent a higher grade. Overall, not a bad performances especially with his seven assists to two turnovers. We just need to see more scoring as the season enters it’s last stretch.
After his 30-point performance, it seems like Trent Perry has come back down to earth. The scoring that made him so invaluable was not present in this one. However, it was expected to see shots start to miss. But this does not excuse his inefficiencies.
He earns C+, because outside of scoring he was able to make a impact facilitating and rebounding. For those reason we can’t give him a lower grade. Moving forward, we could see Perry’s role start to diminish once Skyy Clark comes back. While he had a case, this game proved how volatile he can be.
This really could have been a great game for Eric Dailey Jr if he had not fouled out early in the second half. He played just 18 minutes, but his production was what kept UCLA in the game in the first half. We will never know how good a game Dailey Jr would have had.
Daily Jr. played a great game, and this B rating could have been much higher if he had played the rest of the game. His grade feels pretty good, but moving forward, he cannot get into foul trouble, especially with how impactful a player he is.
Great game from Tyler Bilodeau. However, his scoring is a little inflated as his points came very sporadically. There were large stretches of time where Bilodeau would go quiet, especially at the start of the second half, where he didn’t find points until the 11:35 mark of the half.
A++ grades don’t come often, but Tyler Bilodeau earned every bit of it. Despite some inconsistency with his scoring efficiency, he still accounted for 40% of UCLA’s points. Add in nine rebounds, and his overall impact is impossible to overlook. Without him, the Bruins simply didn’t have many answers offensively.
Ensure you follow on X (Twitter) @UCLAInsideronSI to keep up with every story surrounding UCLA athletics! Please let us know your thoughts on this when you like our Facebook page WHEN YOU CLICK RIGHT HERE.
Never again miss one major story related to your beloved Bruins when you sign up for our 100% FREE newsletter that comes straight to your email with the latest news. SIGN UP HERE NOW
-
Montana1 week agoService door of Crans-Montana bar where 40 died in fire was locked from inside, owner says
-
Virginia1 week agoVirginia Tech gains commitment from ACC transfer QB
-
Montana1 week ago‘It was apocalyptic’, woman tells Crans-Montana memorial service, as bar owner detained
-
Minnesota1 week agoICE arrests in Minnesota surge include numerous convicted child rapists, killers
-
Detroit, MI5 days agoSchool Closings: List of closures across metro Detroit
-
Lifestyle5 days agoJulio Iglesias accused of sexual assault as Spanish prosecutors study the allegations
-
Oklahoma1 week agoMissing 12-year-old Oklahoma boy found safe
-
Oregon1 week agoDan Lanning Gives Oregon Ducks Fans Reason to Believe