Ohio
Which central Ohio girls wrestlers advanced to OHSAA state tournament?
The Olentangy Orange girls wrestling team pulled away on day two of the district tournament for its fourth consecutive title since the Ohio High School Athletic Association added the sport in 2023 and sixth overall.
The Pioneers (183) finished ahead of runner-up Marysville (131) on March 8 at Big Walnut. The top four finishers in each weight class advanced to state March 13-15 at Value City Arena.
“It gets tougher every year,” Orange coach Brian Nicola said. “This is one the toughest districts in the state. You have all these great teams here and everyone comes in ready to battle. The girls wrestled really hard, so I was very excited.”
Mackenzie Carder (120 pounds) and Lacie Knick (130) won titles for Orange, which will have eight wrestlers at state as its seeks a third consecutive title in that tournament.
Marysville has five state qualifiers, led by 100-pound district champion Avery Riley.
Canal Winchester senior Razilee Wisseh advanced to her fourth state tournament and earned her 150th career win, beating Gahanna Lincoln’s Jordan Mills 9-4 in the 170 final.
Here are the central Ohio state qualifiers from the girls district tournament. When four qualifiers are listed for a weight class, they are in order of finish.
100: Avery Riley (Marysville), Kenleigh Ballance (Pickerington North), Mila Cruz (Watkins Memorial), Aaliyah Dawson (Reynoldsburg)
105: Hali Rayburn (Hilliard Bradley, third), Ellianna Perry (Watkins Memorial, fourth)
110: Ashlynn Brokaw (Mount Vernon, first), Andrea Acheampong (DeSales, third), Delaney Tackett (Orange, fourth)
115: Reagan Johnson (Thomas Worthington, first), Arden Heckman (Westerville North, third), Malaya DiMasso (Olentangy Liberty, fourth)
120: Mackenzie Carder (Orange, first), Cami Leng (Marysville, second), Skylar McCuen (Olentangy, fourth)
125: Kendleigh Dowalter (Grove City), Kara Hockenbery (West Jefferson), Kelly Lemons (Bradley), Sarah Amonette (Orange)
130: Lacie Knick (Orange, first), Mina Gee (Gahanna Lincoln, second), Payton Morse (Watkins Memorial, third)
135: Adison Justice (Licking Valley, first), Chloe Tompkins (Orange, second), Katelyn Norris (Big Walnut, third)
140: Nora Johnson (Hartley, second), Alanna Smith (Orange, third), Cara Leng (Marysville, fourth)
145: Reese Thomas (Jonathan Alder, first), Tara Davis (Orange, second), Andrea Mendez (Marysville, third)
155: KyLee Tibbs (Gahanna, first), Maya Keane (Hartley, second), Tamia Davis (Orange, third), Brielle Proffitt (Watkins Memorial, fourth)
170: Razilee Wisseh (Canal Winchester), Jordan Mills (Gahanna), Grace Glandorff (Bradley), Evelyn Krauss (Delaware Hayes)
190: Mykah Bailey (Gahanna, first), Abbey Enders (Liberty, second), Emma Bolton (Highland, third)
235: Tara Nagel (Madison-Plains, first), Maci Lee (Marysville, fourth)
High school sports reporter Frank DiRenna can be reached at fdirenna@dispatch.com and at @DispatchFrank on X.
Ohio
Ohio pizzeria named 25th-best in the world at international competition
Is it a pizza? Or is it a cookie?
This April Fool’s Day collab between Lion Cub’s Cookies and Mikey’s Late Night Slice is a sweet and savory bit of the flavors of both.
Tucked away about an hour south of Columbus, one small pizzeria is making big headlines.
Lievita, an Italian-American restaurant in Chillicothe, competed in the 2026 International Pizza Expo Pizza Challenge last week, where it says it beat out hundreds of competitors from across the globe. Its cheese pizza, entered in the Best Cheese Pizza Division, won 25th-best in the world and third-best in the Midwest, according to a Facebook post from the restaurant.
The International Pizza Challenge, which debuted in 2007, is described as the largest and one of the most esteemed pizza-making competitions in North America “and possibly the world,” according to the expo’s website.
The bake-off features 680 of the world’s top pizza-makers baking their signature pizza live at the expo, with pies judged by a panel of renowned and accredited chefs. The competition took place over three days from March 24-26.
This year’s results have not yet been released on the International Pizza Expo’s official website.
A couple days after announcing its victory, Lievita shared that it gained around 700 new followers on Facebook, pushing its audience to over 5,000.
The restaurant, located at 85 N. Paint St., also changed its hours to adjust for the “surge in demand” for its pizza, according to an April 1 post. Lievita will close one hour earlier every day except Sunday to optimize labor hours and better manage inventory and prep to avoid running out of items.
The restaurant’s new hours are 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday and Sunday, and 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday and Saturday.
This isn’t the first time central Ohio’s pizza has recently picked up national attention. Just a few days ago, the New York Post praised Columbus-style pie in an article about the city’s unique pizza, characterized by a thin crust, toppings to the edge and a square cut.
Reporter Emma Wozniak can be reached at ewozniak@dispatch.com or @emma_wozniak_ on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Ohio
Helen Rankin, the first Black woman in the Ohio House, dies at 89
L. Helen Rankin, the first Black woman to serve in the Ohio House of Representatives, died March 22 at age 89.
Rankin, a Democrat, served 16 years in the Ohio House, representing districts in Cincinnati from 1978 to 1994.
She was appointed to succeed her late husband, James W. Rankin, who died of pneumonia in June 1978 while in office. She completed his term, then won the seat outright in the general election later that year.
She was elected to seven terms representing the 25th Ohio House District, which included Evanston, Walnut Hills, Mount Adams and Hyde Park, then after re-districting, a term for the 30th District, covering Avondale, Bond Hill, Pleasant Ridge and Kennedy Heights.
Who was Helen Rankin
Rankin, born in Georgia on Sept. 12, 1936, moved to Cincinnati to study business administration at the University of Cincinnati. Before taking office, she worked as an intake supervisor at the Cincinnati Community Action Commission.
She was a 41-year-old mother of three when she took over her husband’s House seat. She proceeded to earn her own legacy her own way, quietly behind the scenes.
She fought to preserve Medicaid reimbursement for health clinics and worked to reform Ohio’s Title XX program to provide services for low-income, elderly and disabled persons.
Her signature achievement was introducing a bill that made insurance companies cover the costs of mammograms. She introduced the bill four times before it finally passed and was signed into law by Gov. George Voinovich in 1992.
“It was landmark legislation. She was very persistent and overcame a lot of obstacles on that,” the late Rep. William Mallory told the Cincinnati Post when Rankin retired in 1994.
“Representative Rankin didn’t just break barriers, she built pathways,” said Rep. Terrence Upchurch, D-Cleveland, president of the Ohio Legislative Black Caucus, in a statement on Instagram. “Her legacy is reflected not only in the policies she passed, but in the lives she touched, the communities she strengthened, and the doors she opened for generations to come.”
Helen Rankin services April 10
After she retired, Rankin was co-chair of Shalom Habitat for Humanity Project, helping to build homes in Walnut Hills, and active with her church, New Vision United Methodist Church.
She was preceded in death by her first husband, James W. Rankin; her second husband, William B. Merritt; and her brothers, Thermon Key and Andrew Key. She is survived by her children, Sharon Moon, James W. Rankin Jr. and Connie Ross; seven grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
A visitation will be held April 10 at 10 a.m., followed by a funeral service at noon, at New Vision United Methodist Church, 4400 Reading Road, Paddock Hills. She will be interred at Walnut Hills Cemetery.
Ohio
Five Best NFL Draft Landing Spots for Ohio State Safety Caleb Downs
There are prospects who fit systems. And then there are prospects who become the system.
Caleb Downs is firmly in the second category.
The reigning Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, Jim Thorpe Award winner, and Lott Trophy recipient has made one thing clear throughout the draft process: his value isn’t tied to position. It’s tied to impact.
“At the end of the day, it’s not safety, it’s who affects the game,” Downs said during an appearance on The Rich Eisen Show. “If you affect the game in a lot of ways, that’s what’s most important.”
That mindset is exactly why his draft range has been so wide, and why multiple teams across the board make sense as landing spots.
1. New York Giants
If there’s a team that makes sense near the top of the draft, it’s the Giants.
They need help across the defense, and Downs offers an immediate solution in multiple areas. He’s not just filling a role. He’s elevating the entire unit.
“If you watch my film, you see that I’m affecting the game in the box, in the deep part of the field…whatever it takes,” Downs said at the NFL Combine.
New York could plug him in anywhere and build around his versatility from day one.
2. Kansas City Chiefs
This is where things get interesting. If Downs falls to No. 9, the Chiefs may ignore other needs to select one of the most talented players in the draft.
Instead of asking him to carry a defense, Kansas City could deploy him as a true chess piece within an already elite unit.
“I feel like I have a lot of versatility… to be used in different systems in a lot of different ways,” Downs said.
That freedom could unlock even more from his game.
3. Cincinnati Bengals
The Bengals sit just behind Kansas City at No. 10, and that positioning could force their hand. If Cincinnati views Downs as a true difference-maker, it may need to move ahead of the Chiefs to secure him.
And the fit is clear. Downs brings the type of versatility and processing ability that can immediately elevate a defense.
“My mind really puts me above a lot of people… how I process the game and play with instincts,” he said at the NFL Combine.
For a team looking to strengthen the back end and add a playmaker, Downs offers both immediate impact and long-term stability.
4. Dallas Cowboys
Dallas has built its defense around speed, versatility, and playmaking. Caleb Downs fits that identity immediately.
The Cowboys hold picks No. 12 and No. 20, and while Downs will almost certainly not be available at either spot, they have the flexibility to package one or both selections in a move to land the Ohio State star.
That kind of aggressiveness would make sense for a team looking to add another difference-maker on the back end.
“If you affect the game in a lot of ways, that’s what’s most important,” Downs said during the pre-draft process.
Whether it’s setting the tone physically, rotating over the top, or creating turnovers, Downs brings the type of impact Dallas prioritizes defensively. For a team already built on speed and disruption, adding a player like Caleb could take that unit to another level.
5. Los Angeles Chargers
The Chargers would likely have to move up, but Downs feels like a natural fit for what Jim Harbaugh is building in Los Angeles.
This is a team searching for consistency and identity on defense, and Downs brings both. His ability to move across the formation, process quickly, and impact the game in multiple ways would give the Chargers a foundational piece on the back end.
“Wherever I end up…I’m going to make it work,” he said.
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