Quantcast
Channel: Cleveland Sports News
Viewing all 53367 articles
Browse latest View live

This is it: Cleveland Indians have three chances to secure city's second major professional championship of 2016

$
0
0

Cleveland waited 52 years for a title before LeBron James delivered on the grand stage. Now, the Indians stand on the doorstep of claiming the city's second major professional title in a 133-day span.

CHICAGO -- The backdrop is familiar: A Sunday night, on the road at a hostile venue, against the team that produced the regular season's best record.

The Cavaliers finished the job in June. Can the Indians follow suit in October? Or will they have to attempt to secure their first championship in 68 years after a flip of the calendar?

Cleveland waited 52 years for a title before LeBron James delivered on the grand stage. Now, the Indians stand on the doorstep of claiming the city's second major professional title in a 133-day span.

The sports world works in mysterious ways.

"We're in a good spot," said reliever Andrew Miller. "We have a long way to go, though."

Here are a few quick thoughts on the Tribe.

1. First time for everything: On Saturday night, Miller surrendered the first run of his postseason career, which spans 25 1/3 innings.

"He must have gotten lazy because he thought we had a big lead," quipped Jason Kipnis.

Miller's career postseason ERA is 0.36. His 29 strikeouts this season are a major-league record for a reliever.

2. Back at it: Will Miller be available to pitch for a third straight day?

"Oh, absolutely," he said. "I'm not going to miss that."

He logged 1 1/3 innings in Game 3 and two innings in Game 4. He totaled 44 pitches in the two outings, two fewer than he threw in Game 1.

3. Laundry time: Miller said he hasn't washed his jock strap since a rough outing in early September. He hadn't allowed a run since, until Chicago's Dexter Fowler socked a solo home run off of him in Game 4.

"He was due for a little laundry," Kipnis said.

Kipnis lives out dream with Series homer

4. Know the name: If the Indians shut the door on the Cubs, Corey Kluber figures to be a strong choice for series MVP. He has limited Chicago to one run across 12 innings, and he owns a postseason ERA of 0.89 in five starts. Two of those outings have come on short rest.

"He might be a little bit under the radar for some reason, but we're glad we have him," Miller said. "He's as good as they come. He's dominant."

Said Kipnis: "He hasn't gotten his due. He's won a Cy Young and he still isn't necessarily a household name. I don't think he's going to have to worry about that anymore."

Cubs gets fanfare, Indians get wins

5. Still helping: Kluber even delivered a single that produced the go-ahead run in Saturday's game. He used a bat that belonged to Michael Brantley. Even though Brantley has missed the majority of the season, he's still contributing.


Yes, Dick's Sporting Goods will re-open tonight if Indians win World Series

$
0
0

There are Dick's locations at Crocker Park, South Park Mall, Great Northern, The Shoppes at Parma, Legacy Village, Chapel Hill, Great Lakes Mall, Bainbridge Shopping Center and Midway Market Square.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- You know the drill by now, sports fans. When a Cleveland team wins a championship, immediately line up at the Dick's Sporting Goods near you for the first crack at official locker room gear.

That'll be the case once again tonight as the Indians go for their first World Series trophy since 1948. Dick's locations at Crocker Park, South Park Mall, Great Northern, The Shoppes at Parma, Legacy Village, Chapel Hill, Great Lakes Mall, Bainbridge Shopping Center and Midway Market Square will all open immediately should the Tribe pull off win in Game 5 tonight in Chicago.

The atmosphere will be even more festive at the Crocker Park and Great Lakes stores with live music, a rally wall to take selfies in front of and cheer cards for fans to sign.

All stores will have extended hours into the wee hours, before restocking and re-opening at 6 a.m. Monday. If the Indians don't clinch tonight, well, then rinse, repeat starting on Tuesday when the World Series resumes back here in Cleveland.

The Indians Team Shop at Progressive Field will be open only to fans attending the watch party if the Tribe wins it all tonight. 

Cleveland Indians vs. Chicago Cubs World Series Game 5: First pitch time, TV, radio and streaming information

$
0
0

Here's where you can catch Cleveland vs. Chicago in Game 5 of the World Series on Sunday.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Cleveland Indians play Game 5 of the 2016 World Series Sunday at Wrigley Field against the Chicago Cubs. Here's how to watch, listen and stream the action online.

What: Cleveland Indians (10-2) vs. Chicago Cubs (8-6).
Where: Wrigley Field.
When: 8:08 p.m.
TV: Fox.
Radio: WTAM, 1100 AM.
Online: MLB.TV (premium subscription); FoxSportsGo

Chicago notable: This is the 47th time the World Series has gone 3-1, and only six times has the team up 3-1 ended up losing the Series.

Cleveland notable: Of the 47 previous World Series to go 3-1, the team that was ahead managed to close the Series out in Game 5 more than 56 percent of the time.

Catch the coverage from before the game; join in the live chat and stick around for full postgame coverage. For all Indians information, be sure to check out cleveland.com/tribe.

Cleveland Indians' path to World Series title? Ace Corey Kluber must win his starts

$
0
0

The Indians are trying to win the World Series with a three-man rotation and a hellacious bullpen. For that to work, ace Corey Kluber has to win his starts. So far, so good. Watch video

CHICAGO - When the Indians sat down to set their starting rotation for the postseason, they quickly came to one conclusion.

"We knew Corey Kluber had to win his starts," said pitching coach Mickey Callaway. "We didn't express that to him, but when you're sitting down and looking at everything, Kluber's starts were going to be the most important."

Kluber didn't need anyone to tell him the importance of his starts. He knew Carlos Carrasco had a broken right hand. He knew Danny Salazar had a strained flexor muscle in his right forearm. He didn't know Trevor Bauer would be attacked by one of his drones, but still the math was simple.

The Indians were going to try and win the World Series with a three-man rotation and a hellacious bullpen, which put the burden of production on the ace of the staff - Kluber. It sounds impossible, but they're almost there.

Kluber made his fifth start of the postseason Saturday night when the Indians beat the Cubs, 7-2, to take a 3-1 lead in the World Series. He is 4-1 with a 0.89 ERA in those five starts.

In the World Series, Kluber is 2-0 with a 0.75 ERA. If the series goes to seven games, he'll make his second straight start on short rest and third of the postseason.

"We knew if Kluber could win, the other guys could come through and we'd have a chance to accomplish what we want to accomplish," said Callaway.

What the Indians want is a World Series title. They haven't won one since 1948 and right now it's one win away. Kluber is a big reason why.

"Kluber should be a household name," said second baseman Jason Kipnis.

He isn't, but that's OK. No one on the Indians - outside of maybe manager Terry Francona - is. They are the houseguest who has overstayed their welcome. In the American League they ruined the postseason plans for upper crust Red Sox and Blue Jays. Now they've taken aim at the young and talented Cubs, the darlings of the National League.

"It really is Cleveland against the world," said Kipnis a few days ago.

In five postseason starts, Kluber has 35 strikeouts in 30 1/3 innings. He's tied with Orel Hershiser for the most by an Indians' pitcher in a single postseason. Kluber's 15 strikeouts in the World Series is a franchise record.

Kluber enjoys first postseason experience just fine

How good has Kluber been in October? His 35 strikeouts tie him for ninth place in postseason history with Hall of Famers Bob Gibson and Tom Seaver. Kluber's ERA of 0.89, among pitchers with at least 30 innings, ranks second in history for a single postseason.

There's more. In 2014 Madison Bumgarner pretty much won the World Series for the Giants all by himself. He started and won Games 1 and 5 and pitched the final five innings for the save in Game 7 against the Royals. In 21 innings, he struck out 17 and allowed one run.

If the Cubs force a Game 7, Kluber could come close numbers.

The Indians entered the postseason with a rotation of Kluber, Bauer and Josh Tomlin. The only other pitcher to make a start in their 12 postseason games has been rookie Ryan Merritt in Game 5 of the ALCS against Toronto. It was either Merritt or a bullpen game and Merritt gave the Tribe's 4 1/3 scoreless innings to help clinch the pennant.

The Tribe swept Boston in the ALDS, so Kluber, Bauer and Tomlin didn't get overexposed. In the ALCS, Kluber had to pitch on short rest for the first time in his career and lost Game 4. Bauer will be pitching on short rest in Game 5 on Sunday night against the Chicago's Jon Lester. If the series returns to Cleveland for Game 6 on Tuesday night, it will be Tomlin's turn.

Kluber says he's OK on short rest for Game 4 of World Series

Asked how the Indians devised the plan that has brought them to the brink of a championship, Callaway said desperation had a lot to do with it.

"The injuries made us do that," he said. "I don't think that was the plan at all, but when you lose two of your starting pitchers, you have to adapt. Our backs were against the wall."

Kluber pitched like that Saturday night. The Cubs came out swinging early, trying to be aggressive because they knew Kluber lives in the strike zone. They took a 1-0 lead in the first inning before Kluber said enough.

"They were swinging at first pitches early," said Callaway. "He didn't let that change his plan to get ahead. He could have easily tried to go outside the zone and tried to get them to chase. And that would have only been doing them favor."

While Kluber's counterpart, John Lackey, complained about umpire Marvin Hudson's strike zone, Kluber just kept throwing strikes.

"He did a great job," said Callaway. "He threw about 70 percent (actually 72 percent) of his pitches for strikes against one of the better hitting teams in baseball and they were out there swinging at the first pitch. So he didn't back down. He continued his game plan and executed it very well."

Slowly, but surely Kluber and the offense turned a New Year's Eve party at Wrigley Field into a Monday afternoon game against the Phillies in August. The fans were on Kluber early as he warmed up in the visitor's old school bullpen down the right field line.

"It's different in stadiums like this," he said. "You're basically in the stands warming up. People are yelling stuff at you. In a way I think it's almost comical because they think it has an affect on you.

"In the beginning I heard stuff, then I think you just kind of zone it out."

Lonnie Chisenhall watched Kluber work from right field.

"I always love seeing him on the mound," said Chisenhall. "He gave up that run early and then there was nothing. Nothing ever seems to faze him.

It was especially true Saturday night when Kluber and some other unwelcomed houseguests turned out the lights early at Wrigley.

Former Ohio State great John Hicks will be missed by Cleveland John Hay High School alumni (photos)

$
0
0

John Hicks, one of the greatest offensive lineman in college football history while at Ohio State, died on Saturday.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Former NBA star Charles Oakley was thankful when a street  outside of John Hay High School was renamed in his honor in September -- but he wasn't sure it should have been.

"I am thankful a street was named after me but I said it should've been John Hicks before me because he paved the way," Oakley told The Plain Dealer on Sunday. "He did a lot for Hay. When he retired from the NFL, he came back to the school and dedicated his time."

Hicks, the former Ohio State and NFL offensive lineman, died on Saturday in Columbus due to complications from diabetes. He was 65. His wife Cindy confirmed his death to The Plain Dealer. She said the family will announce further details soon.

"I'm sorry to hear about his death," said Oakley, who spent 19 years in the NBA. "When I played football in high school, it was Hicks who inspired me. John meant a lot to guys like me, Tim McGee and Anthony Hancock."

Hicks, a 1969 graduate of John Hay High, was one of the greatest prep football players in the history of the Cleveland area. He was ranked No. 6 among the top 50 greats in a poll conducted by The Plain Dealer.

Hicks was a two-time All-American for the Buckeyes. He was the first player to ever start in three Rose Bowls and he won the Outland Trophy and Lombardi Awards as the best offensive and interior lineman in the country in 1973. Also that year, Hicks was the last lineman who was runner-up in the vote for the Heisman Trophy.

Hicks was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2001. He played professionally for the New York Giants and Pittsburgh Steelers.

Hicks was dedicated to his high school alma mater. Last spring, he led an Ohio State-Michigan Celebrity Dinner and Auction in Cleveland to raise money for athletics at his school.

McGee, a former wide receiver with the Cincinnati Bengals, said Hicks dedicated himself to John Hay until he died. His leadership, McGee said, was the key to the fundraisers to support the school and other causes.

"It was John who helped Jack Tatum in his latter years with fundraisers to help support him," McGee said. "I saw John last a few months ago. His health was starting to fail him but he was still Hicks -- serious and would straighten you out if he had to. The only thing that stopped him from whipping my butt is that I was faster than him ... I'm going to miss John."

Top-seeded Solon, St. Ignatius aim to shift balance of power: OHSAA Division I statewide football playoff preview

$
0
0

Solon, St. Ignatius and defending state football champion St. Edward are among contenders in Division I of the OHSAA playoffs.

CLEVELAND, Ohio – Here is a statewide preview of the OHSAA Division I football playoffs.

The Ohio High School Athletic Association announced Sunday the first-round matchups and seedings. Check out brackets, top contenders, players to watch and more.


All first-round games are slated for 7:30 p.m. starts Friday. Each round also will be held during the same time and day. The state championship game will be held at Ohio Stadium in Columbus with a date and time determined at a later date.


PAIRINGS


Region 1


No. 8 Canton GlenOak (6-4) at No. 1 Solon (9-1)


No. 5 Massillon Jackson (7-3) at No. 4 St. Ignatius (9-1)


No. 7 Euclid (7-3) at No. 2 St. Edward (7-2)


No. 6 Canton McKinley (6-4) at No. 3 Stow (9-1)



Region 2


No. 8 Lewis Center Olentangy Orange (6-4) at No. 1 Powell Olentangy Liberty (10-0)


No. 5 Medina (8-2) at No. 4 Toledo Whitmer (8-2)


No. 7 Findlay (7-3) at No. 2 Dublin Jerome (9-1)


No. 6 Lewis Center Olentangy (7-3) at No. 3 Lorain (8-2)



Region 3


No. 8 Lancaster (6-4) at No. 1 Huber Heights Wayne (9-0-1)


No. 5 Hilliard Davidson (8-2) at No. 4 Dublin Coffman (8-2)


No. 7 Pickerington North (7-3) at No. 2 Hilliard Bradley (9-1)


No. 6 Springfield (7-3) at No. 3 Pickerington Central (9-1)



Region 4


No. 8 Springboro (7-3) at No. 1 Cincinnati Colerain (10-0)


No. 5 Cincinnati St. Xavier (5-5) at No. 4 Fairfield (7-3)


No. 7 Cincinnati Sycamore (6-4) at No. 2 Lebanon (7-3)


No. 6 Cincinnati Elder (6-4) at No. 3 Mason (6-4)


All games scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday.


CONTENDERS


Cincinnati Colerain: From start to finish, the Cardinals remained atop cleveland.com’s Ohio Super 25 rankings. They secured their 17th straight Greater Miami Conference championship in Week 9 and seek their first state crown since 2004. Coach Tom Bolden’s crew has not been to the state semifinals since 2006, but this talented core can end that drought.


Huber Heights Wayne: The Warriors reached Columbus the last two years, and lost to St. Edward both times. The biggest change is at quarterback. Messiah deWeaver graduated, is now at Michigan State, giving way to sophomore Rashad McKee. He has senior running back Fred Pitts and receivers L’Christian Smith, a junior, and senior Matt Wilcox as targets. They have helped McKee to 1,749 yards and 18 touchdowns passing in nine games. Junior pass rusher Alex Reigelsperger leads another talented group on that side.


Olentangy Liberty: The Patriots are the Region 2 frontrunner. A year ago, they were one of the Columbus-area teams that had to travel north and lost to Solon before the OHSAA switched back to four regions. They have made changed amid this year’s run. Senior A.J. Smith is a capable quarterback, taking the place of standout and Ohio State commit Brendon White, who has battled injury.


Pickerington Central: If there is a team that can unseat Wayne in Region 3, it’s coach Jay Sharrett’s bunch. Only Upper Arlington beat them in the regular season, and it took overtime to do so.


Solon: A veteran group returns for coach Jim McQuaide. The Comets reclaimed the Greater Cleveland Conference crown, which they shared last year, and did it with new starters at quarterback (senior Joe Bubonics) and running back (junior Thomas Wilks).



Stow: Ten defensive starters on this team helped the Bulldogs reach last year’s state semifinals, where they lost to eventual champion St. Edward. Coach Mark Nori will lean on that group for another run with senior quarterback Kyle Vantrease again leading the offense. The line is big, headed by tackle Mike Miranda and Matt Esterle on the left side.



St. Edward: What’s different about this year’s St. Edward team? Speed. As usual, the Eagles graduated most of their previous state championship squad. Their bid for a third straight crown comes with senior quarterback Kevin Kramer, running back Curtis Szelesta and receiver Kordell Hoover leading the offense. However, the defense will guide this team if — and when — weather conditions change. Defensive end Justin Herrold leads a group that is strong at linebacker with Antonio Hills and junior Omar Fattah, plus a secondary led by big-play senior Melvin Jackson.



St. Ignatius: The Wildcats missed last year’s playoffs, but they are back with a team built to be a tough out. Coach Chuck Kyle’s squad has a big, talented offensive line paving the way for running back Mark Bobinski. Quarterback Patrick Ryan also can tuck the football and run, and the Wildcats might need more of it. Senior running back Jimmy Andrews, a fixture for three seasons, suffered a broken arm in Week 9 and is doubtful to return. Defensively, the linebacking corps lead the way with the trio of seniors Adam Shibley, James Leyden and John Velotta.



LOWER SEED NO ONE WANTS TO PLAY


No. 6 Cincinnati St. Xavier: The Bombers not only were derailed by injuries, but also played one of the state’s toughest schedules. They opened with California’s St. John Bosco, faced Indiana heavyweight Warren Central and a powerful St. Xavier team from Louisville, Kentucky. That’s just out of state. Division I favorite Colerain and two-time defending Division II OHSAA champion Cincinnati La Salle also lined up against this squad, which made playoffs despite a .500 record.


BEST OPENING-ROUND GAME


No. 6 Olentangy at No. 3 Lorain: Former Lorain coach Mark Solis brings his Braves to George Daniel Field. Solis left Lorain in 2013 for Olentangy, his fifth stop as a head coach. This marks the second straight year Solis faced a former school. His team played host to Elyria last season in the opening round.


PLAYERS TO WATCH


Dakota Allen, Lebanon: A 6-foot-5, 210-pound senior quarterback is an Eastern Kentucky commit and threw for 1,972 yards and 21 touchdowns. A year ago, he threw for 2,844.


Jackson Carman, Fairfield: A 6 -6, 290-pound junior lineman, Carman is the state’s top-rated junior, according to 247Sports.com. He leads a talented class at Fairfield, which includes defensive end Malik Vann on the other side of the football.


Sean Clifford, St. Xavier: The Bombers are the trickiest team to expect in the playoffs, and Clifford is a prime example of why. The Penn State commit at quarterback has battled injuries all season, and he missed St. Xavier’s Week 9 loss to St. Ignatius. His best lineman and Clemson commit, Matt Bockhorst, has been out all year. Clifford is an intriguing watch just based on whether he plays.


Daniel Davis, Springfield: A senior all-purpose back, the 6-1, 178-pound Davis rushed for 1,200 yards and caught another 470 for a team that must battle Huber Heights Wayne in the Greater Western Ohio Conference. Davis scored 12 touchdowns, including seven on the ground.


Jimmy Daw, Medina: His 6-foot-3, 215-pound frame makes him a challenge to bring down. It took him only four games to take down Medina’s single-season touchdown mark of 16 scores.


Mogran Ellison, Pickerington Central: Ellison has been a touchdown machine for the Tigers, who won the Ohio Capital Conference’s Ohio Division. The 6-1, 220-pound senior had 14 touchdowns through nine weeks, including four in a 43-21 Week 9 win at Reynoldsburg.


Joe Gobble, Stow: Pick a side — linebacker or running back. Gobble can make an impact at either side, whether it’s sharing the offensive workload with junior Terrian Wray or covering the field with Stow’s experienced defense. The 6-foot-1, 180-pounder has been mistaken for his older brother, who took All-Ohio Offensive Player of the Year honors last year, but this Gobble brings his own style.


Nick Kovacs, Springboro: An All-Ohio selection last season, Kovacs led the GWOC with 1,022 yards receiving on 76 receptions. He scored 12 touchdowns.


Amir Riep, Colerain: One of a handful of Ohio State commits in this year’s senior class, the 5-11, 185-pound Riep is one big reason teams in Region 4 likely won’t pass much against the Cardinals. Colerain has three shutouts to its credit, including wins against Division II favorite Cincinnati La Salle and Division I rival Fairfield. Only two teams managed more than two touchdowns against Riep and this defense. They will be tested in the first round by Springboro quarterback Brody Mahle, who threw for 2,144 yards and 25 touchdowns.


L’Christian Smith, Huber Heights Wayne: While Jaylen Harris is the state’s top receiver in the senior class, Smith holds the same distinction in the junior class. The 6-6, 205-pounder provided matchup problems in last year’s state title game for St. Edward, which had two Division I college recruits then in Antonio Butler (Nebraska) and Carl Jones (Syracuse). Smith caught a team-high 563 yards and seven touchdowns on 48 receptions.


Leonard Taylor, Springfield: A four-star junior recruit at tight end and defensive end, according to 247Sports.com, Taylor moved to quarterback. He is 6-6, 240 pounds and passed for more than 500 yards despite playing the position sparingly for the first half of the season.


Brendon White, Olentangy Liberty: White can do just about everything for the Patriots, the top seed in Region 2. The son of former Ohio State player William White is headed to the Buckeyes, too. He’s played quarterback for the first time, but an ankle injury cost him two games and forced him out of Liberty’s Week 9 win. He did not play Friday in a 35-14 win at Pickerington North. In fact, the Patriots went to a third quarter back in that one — and sophomore Mitch Okuley threw for more than 300 yards.


CLEVELAND.COM PICKS


Final four: St. Ignatius, Olentangy Liberty, Huber Heights Wayne, Colerain.


State champ: Colerain. The Cardinals’ talent and path in Region 4 are favorable. They are helped the OHSAA’s move from two super regions to four. That might not have been apparent, entering the season, but play on the field has proven otherwise.


Contact sports reporter Matt Goul on Twitter (@mgoul) or email (mgoul@cleveland.com). Or log in and leave a message below in the comments section.

Browns stretch the field with McCown at QB -- Bud Shaw's Halftime Take

$
0
0

The Cleveland Browns dominated the New York Jets in Sunday's first half, taking a 20-7 lead into the locker room. Can they make it stand up?

CLEVELAND, Ohio - Halftime observations from the rainy lakefront where the Browns lead the Jets, 20-7...

* Josh McCown's return allowed head coach/offensive coordinator Hue Jackson to go no-huddle and it paid off immediately when McCown led a 75-yard drive to give the Browns a 7-0 lead on the game's first possession.

* So the Browns won the toss and took the ball for once?

Um. No. The Jets won the toss and deferred.

Might be something to the idea of scoring first, or giving yourself a chance to set the early tempo by taking the ball when you win the toss.

* McCown is the only Browns' quarterback who stretches the field, which comes in handy against a team with a great run defense.

* Ricardo Louis still can't catch.

* The Browns' run defense is still susceptible to cutbacks. Matt Forte bumped one run left for 18 yards on second-and-eight.

Bilal Powell ran a 35-yard draw for a TD on third-and-10, the Jets taking advantage of a Browns defense with six defensive backs.

* The Browns went three-and-out after the Jets scored to make it 10-7. But the Browns defensive responded and hounded Ryan Fitzpatrick with two blitzes. A dropped pass and the Jets kicked it back.

* The Browns' defense tipped four Fitzpatrick passes.

* Hue Jackson went two second-quarter possessions without a running play, then the Browns finally broke one on an inside handoff to Duke Johnson Jr. for a 16-yard gain on third-and-short.

* Terrelle Pryor (six catches, 101 yards) beat Darrelle Revis almost every which way possible in the first half.

* McCown was 16-27 for 228 for one TD in the first half, good production especially considering Browns receivers (including Pryor) had trouble holding on to a wet football.

* The Browns are notorious for allowing TDs and field goals just before halftime. This time the Jets took over at the 25 after Isaiah Crowell's TD plunge and couldn't get anything done.

Three plays later, they punted. The Browns added a field goal as time expired.

* The overall sense of the first half: the Browns are better than their 0-7 record (high praise, I know) and the Jets might just be as bad as theirs (2-5.)

Cleveland Indians also a winner in World Series Game 4 TV ratings

$
0
0

The Cleveland Indians' 7-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs in Game 4 of the World Series gave Fox at least triple the audience of any other network and the best Saturday-night World Series rating since 2009.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Saturday is always the least-watched night of the week in network television, but that did not stop Game 4 of the World Series from delivering top TV ratings.

The Cleveland Indians' 7-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field brought the best Saturday-night Series rating since 2009 (Yankees-Phillies), according to overnight figures from Nielsen. The national 10.5 rating and 19 percent share of audience put Fox in first place for the night with at least triple the viewers of any other network.

Unsurprisingly, Cleveland ranked first in the overnights from the nation's 56 metered TV markets. WJW Channel 8's broadcast of the game averaged a 39 rating -- meaning it was seen in 39 percent of the Cleveland market's households with TV -- and a 62 share,  meaning 62 percent of the households in which a TV was turned on.

Viewing peaked about 10:30 p.m., with a 43 rating and 67 share. (The night's second-place primetime program, CBS's "48 Hours" on WOIO Channel 19, just cracked a 2 rating.)

In Chicago, Game 4 scored a 30 rating and 52 share.


Donovan Peoples-Jones, the No. 1 WR in the '17 class, includes Ohio State in top five

$
0
0

Peoples-Jones has a top five and the Buckeyes made the cut along with Florida State, Michigan, Michigan State and Florida.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State has only hosted one non-committed official visitor this year, and it was five-star wide receiver Donovan Peoples-Jones of Detroit (Mich.) Cass Tech. 

Now Peoples-Jones has a top five and the Buckeyes made the cut along with Florida State, Michigan, Michigan State and Florida. 

"First, I want to thank God for blessing me with all of my abilities and opportunities," Peoples-Jones wrote on his Twitter account Sunday. "I would also like to thank each coach who has taken their time to recruit men along this process. I value the connections and relationships that I've encountered throughout this time. 

"It has also been fun visiting so many new players. After praying on it, I will be moving forward with these select group of universities." 

Rated the No. 1 wide receiver in the 2017 recruiting class in the 247Sports composite rankings, Peoples-Jones is considered a Michigan favorite. But the Buckeyes rolled out the red carpet for Peoples-Jones on his official visit during for the Indiana game. 

Inside Donovan Peoples-Jones Ohio State official

Starting lineups, World Series Game 5: Cleveland Indians vs. Chicago Cubs

$
0
0

The Indians have a chance on Sunday night to secure their first championship in 68 years.

CHICAGO -- The Indians have a chance on Sunday night to secure their first championship in 68 years.

They'll rely on Trevor Bauer to supply a strong start. 

Here are the starting lineups and the pitching matchup for Game 5 of the World Series.

Pitching matchup: RHP Trevor Bauer vs. LHP Jon Lester

Lineups

Indians

1. CF Rajai Davis

2. 2B Jason Kipnis

3. SS Francisco Lindor

4. 1B Mike Napoli

5. LF Carlos Santana

6. 3B Jose Ramirez

7. RF Brandon Guyer

8. C Roberto Perez

9. P Trevor Bauer

Cubs

1. CF Dexter Fowler

2. 3B Kris Bryant

3. 1B Anthony Rizzo

4. LF Ben Zobrist

5. SS Addison Russell

6. RF Jason Heyward

7. 2B Javy Baez

8. C David Ross

9. P Jon Lester

Ohio State football No. 6 in final AP poll before first College Football Playoff rankings

$
0
0

Here's where the Buckeyes landed in the AP poll and the coaches poll.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The Associated Press college football poll really has not mattered all season. But I get that fans get excited/worked up about where your team lands in any poll.

But don't get upset about this anymore, because really, IT DOES NOT MATTER.

The first College Football Playoff rankings come out on Tuesday night. Whatever is in this week's AP and coaches poll has no bearing on how the committee is going to select teams. It's the other way around. The AP and coaches poll react and change based on the playoff rankings.

Look at what happened last year:

The top five in the AP poll after Week 9 last year were: Ohio State, Baylor, Clemson, LSU and TCU. The first playoff poll, which came out two days later, had: Clemson, LSU, Ohio State, Alabama, Notre Dame.

The playoff selection committee's methodology is different. It's less of a straight poll and more of a ranking fueled by discussion that includes multiple rounds of voting. The AP poll has 61 voters from all over the country who have different voting strategies and loose criteria.

This is why the playoff is better, and why I tried to predict what the committee was going to do at the top of the rankings in my AP ballot this week.

All that said, I wouldn't expect much difference between the AP poll and the playoff rankings. The top 10 seems pretty clear cut, perhaps with some minor tweaking.

So Ohio State is No. 6 in this week's AP poll (it doesn't matter). Alabama, Michigan, Clemson, Washington and Louisville make up the top five (it doesn't matter). The Big Ten has four teams in the top 10 with Wisconsin at No. 8 and Nebraska at No. 9 (it doesn't matter).

The full AP poll is below.

The Buckeyes jumped up two spots in this week's Amway coaches poll to No. 6. Alabama, Michigan, Clemson, Washington and Louisville made up the top five there. You can see the full coaches poll below.

Associated Press Top 25 Poll

1. Alabama (60 first-place votes)

2. Michigan (1)

3. Clemson

4. Washington

5. Louisville

6. Ohio State

7. Texas A&M

8. Wisconsin

9. Nebraska

10. Florida

11. Auburn

12. Oklahoma

13. Baylor

14. West Virginia

15. LSU

16. Utah

17. Western Michigan

18. North Carolina

19. Florida State

20. Penn State

21. Colorado

22. Oklahoma State

23. Virginia Tech

24. Boise State

25. Washington State

Amway coaches poll

1. Alabama (63 first-place votes)

2. Michigan

3. Clemson (1)

4. Washington

5. Louisville

6. Ohio State

7. Texas A&M

8. Wisconsin

9. Florida

10. Nebraska

11. Oklahoma

12. Auburn

13. Baylor

14. LSU

15. West Virginia

16. Utah

17. North Carolina

18. Western Michigan

19. Florida State

20. Colorado

21. Virginia Tech

22. Oklahoma State

23. Penn State

24. Boise State

25. Washington State

Hue Jackson's Monday press conference Week 9: Live updates at 2:30 p.m.

$
0
0

Hue Jackson will address local media on Monday in the aftermath of Sunday's 31-28 loss to the Jets.

BEREA, Ohio - Hue Jackson will address local media on Monday in the aftermath of Sunday's 31-28 loss to the Jets.

Get live updates from today's press conference right here from cleveland.com Browns reporters Mary Kay Cabot, Dan Labbe and Scott Patsko, as well as other media covering the team.

This post has live updates in the Twitter widget below and also in the comment section, where you can join in the discussion. Check elsewhere on cleveland.com/browns for complete coverage of the team.

Are the Cleveland Browns going 0-16? (video)

$
0
0

Sunday's contest against the Jets was seen as one of Cleveland's more winnable games. Watch video

CLEVELAND, Ohio - The Browns are 0-8 and the only winless team in the NFL. They are halfway to doing something that has happened only once in NFL history: a winless 16-game season, which was posted by the Detroit Lions in 2008.

Sunday's game against the New York Jets was seen as one of Cleveland's more winnable games, but the Browns lost at home, 31-28.

In this video, cleveland.com Browns reporters Mary Kay Cabot and Dan Labbe talk about the chances Cleveland ends the season winless. How many games do you see the Browns winning? And which games on the remaining schedule are their best shot? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

browns-remaining-schedule.jpg

Everything Urban Meyer said during his Monday news conference previewing Ohio State vs. Nebraska

$
0
0

Meyer held his Monday news conference recapping a win over Northwestern and previewing Nebraska.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Everything Urban Meyer said at his Monday news conference recapping Northewestern and previewing Nebraska.

Urban Meyer: A lot of respect for our opponent, our players do, too, certainly after that game.

Champions on defense were Mike Hill, Jalyn Holmes, Dre'Mont, Tyquan. And then the back end, Marshon and Malik Hooker. Player of the game was Gareon Conley.

On offense, we had J.T. graded at champion. Mike Weber played really, really hard, graded a champion as well.

Three receivers: Best blocking performance we've had down field: Curtis Samuel, K.J. Hill and Parris Campbell.

Offensive line three of the five. It's great to see Isaiah bounce back, had a very good game. Jamarco Jones and Pat Elflein. And co-players of the game on offense were Noah Brown and Billy Price.

Noah played exceptionally hard. Special teams player of the week was Eric Glover-Williams.

Our prime-time game against Nebraska. Very good team. Really impressed with our conference, with the quality of play, players and teams we we're playing, and these guys are really good. So I'll answer questions for you.

Q. I'm going to ask you about Malcolm Pridgeon. He's the guy that I think you guys were counting on entering the season. Any chance he'll be able to come back this year or is his season over?

Meyer: I think we'll get him for bowl practice or something. But he won't play this year.

Q. I know you said after the game Parris Campbell sprained his ankle?

Meyer: Not bad. It's high, but he's questionable this week. But it's much better than we thought.

Q. I know that the last two weeks probably have not been the best performances you had or what you had in mind. But have you ever had teams, when you're dealing with some of the young players where they just go in this straight line and every week, every performance is better than the last one, has that ever happened?

Meyer: Every performance is better than the other one.

Q. I'm sure you're frustrated, but also maybe you anticipate that there's going to be some rough edges?

Meyer: Sure. Of course there is. I think '14 -- I'm just thinking back, with the young teams, '14 -- and I hate to keep putting everybody in that category -- but '14 was the team that we had the double overtime win. We didn't play exceptionally well that game. And that's just college football now right now, too.

So I do -- I guess I'm not normally like this, but I see a lot of positives from our teams because I know what we're playing and I know these young guys and they are getting better because I see it from maybe a different angle, viewpoint than a lot of other people.

I do see some very good positives. I like the fact that you get in a street fight and you win it. And that's a good sign of the future's very bright here. We have really two seniors that are playing in Pat and Tyquan -- well, Tyquan's not, he's got another year -- and Dontre. You've got a bunch of young cats going and swinging hard and practicing hard.

So I guess I'm much more positive. Do I wish that we were -- that 56 points and all those kind of things, sure, but we're a work in progress.

And I gotta make this clear, too. A lot of it, it's a quality opponent. I know they maybe didn't start the season well, but they held Indiana and Michigan State to very low rushing totals and much improved defense.

Q. Maybe it sounds too harsh to call them growing pains, but when a young player encounters them, how do you coach them out of it? What is the key to getting past that plateau?

Meyer: That's the essence of our job. Great question. Every player's different. Every team's different. Now we've got the wear and tear, because the bye week was so early. So you have to be very cautious of that. You're entering week nine and ten of a season with little depth -- some depth issues.

So that's the essence. Take us a couple of hours to have that conversation about who we are as a team and who the individuals are that we have to coach through growing pains, I guess.

I don't think growing pains is -- it's part of the way it is. Every school in the country is dealing with it. I would say this, too, that it's very fragile. You just go home at night, sink into that chair and go, ooh, that team lost, that team lost. It happens. It's very fragile. You've just got to keep swinging -- one game at a time, one quarter at a time of play.

Q. Building on that question, I asked you on Saturday whether this team is ready for pursuit of championships in November. How good do you feel about that right now?

Meyer: I'd be disappointed if that was even brought up anywhere around here. That's just -- we know what we are. We've got two tackles with some -- their ankles are going to be fine, but two sprained ankles during the course of the game.

So -- teams don't think that way. Really, let's get -- we just flipped the film on of a team that's, I think they're still ranked in the top ten. A top ten team. They play like it. They look like it. And that's the only concern.

Q. In regards to that question, you seemed optimistic, you liked behind the scenes what you see. What specifically do you like?

Meyer: I'm just a big fan of work ethic, high-character people that go to work, understand where we are. Understand we're not as explosive as maybe we'd like to be. We're not as tight on coverage as we were earlier in the year and let's fix it as opposed to whatever. And enjoy the damn win and had a victory meal last night and go about our business.

Q. Did you think it would be like this five years ago?

Meyer: Been like?

Q. This attitude?

Meyer: I have no idea. Five years ago, when was that? I don't know.

Q. I guess it's more the psychological stuff. When your season's on the brink, so to speak, if a loss could end a lot of things for you, how do you keep a team in the moment? How do you keep them, I guess, you keep --

Meyer: These are great questions. And it depends on the team. It depends on the individual. I've got a leader at quarterback. So those are all great questions. The conversation around this facility and all focus is on the next game. And that might sound coach-speak it is and that's the way it is.

And that's what I like about these guys. Pat Elflein is not coming in here talking about, hey, tell me about the college football playoffs and the rankings coming out. That conversation I'm sure is everywhere else. But in here, especially with the guys playing, the focus is on playing a very good team.

Q. You just mentioned that Noah Brown played a really good game for you guys. What do you like about the way he's playing so far this year?

Meyer: He's just a tough guy. Did you guys see the Q draw, the last 35-yard run he got two people on the ground, got the corner down and then hit the safety.

Three plays before that, he had man underneath coverage and they were basically double teaming him. He came free on a corner route and made the play to move the chains. So just a tough guy, tough hard-nosed player. Very consistent with his ball skills, and just a tough guy. I just love being around him and I think he's playing well.

Q. This is your guys' first major recruiting weekend, night game. I was wondering, every year in your guys' recruiting class there seems to be one or two players that emerges as a leader in that group helping you guys. I think at least probably recruit on the Internet, on social media. I was just wondering to have a guy, or one of the guys that's a leader in that class be on his official visit the same weekend as some of your major targets, how important is that from a leadership/recruiting aspect to have somebody that's already committed in the class who is outwardly --

Meyer: I think the obvious answer is it's essential. I mean, nowadays, with all the group chats -- and we actually really have those conversations in the spring where we're putting classes together -- who is the bell cow? Who is the King? Who is the guy that's going to be the, run those -- that's where Mark Pantoni does a good job. We recognize that. They a lot of times end up being the leaders on your team as well. They have the characteristic. So those are very important.
Q. Parris has emerged as one of the go-to important guys in this offense. How is this going to change things if he can't go?

Meyer: We'll be down one less player. And Bin Victor has been so close, we've just got to get him pushing through the hump. And James Clark and Terry McLaurin have got to has to step up and play.

Q. I want to ask you about Curtis Samuel. When you recruit him out of Brooklyn, which is a very different place from Columbus, what in his personality, I guess, would be the thing, that made you confident that he could make this transition to Ohio State, to Columbus, to a place very different from home?

Meyer: Very unique place, Brooklyn. I actually love Brooklyn. I love the delis there and love the people. His high school coach is a very good friend of ours. He kind of patterns his program after ours. And Danny Lambert is his name. And you meet Curtis' mom and dad, you're going to find out what your going to get. He's a wonderful kid that takes his academics very seriously, very clean lifestyle and a talented guy. There was no doubt once you got to know his whole, who surrounded him.

Q. I know there's a lot of talk around here about getting him the ball more.

Meyer: Let me make it clear, I've been places -- been at times where there's no one to get the ball to. So we're good. Ask all you want.

Q. I guess I would say, he seems perfectly fit for the role that you have him in?

Meyer: Perfect.

Q. I imagine that's the reason you wanted him here. Are you still trying to feel ways of do you get to the fourth quarter and go, man, we've only had eight touches for this guy?

Meyer: Not as much this year. I've done that in the past, but we certainly script plays with the idea of getting him his 15, whatever it is that. 15's kind of the number or more.

Q. The Northwestern's best receiver --

Meyer: You asked me the other day if you're being fair, remember that?

Q. I do.

Meyer: Are you?

Q. Am I being fair to you?

Meyer: Yeah.

Q. I was thinking about that this weekend. (Laughter)

Meyer: We'll switch spots. (Laughter).

Q. We can go sit, I have a lot of internal feelings about this as well.

Meyer: No. (Laughter).

Q. Northwestern's best receiver, was he in the slot a lot in that game? I don't know if you guys maybe -- and do you just cover the slot guy with your slot --

Meyer: We got caught -- the two or three that got us were outside leverage. And it was man-free outside leverage, and he did a nice job on stemming his routes. We were behind him and he made some plays.

Q. Do you play your defense and you play your defense, or sometimes --

Meyer: You should adjust, and those are conversations our coaches are having.

Q. And when you see a team and a coach like Mike Riley at Nebraska, you've been through this, you go to a new place, to see what they've done from last year, they had a lot of close losses, didn't have the year they wanted to have, and to see where Nebraska is right now, when you look at the Nebraska team, what do you think of what they've done from last year to this year?
Meyer: I know Mike very well. I've known him for a long, long time. We're friends. And I think he's one of the great coaches.

I'm not surprised. First of all, they have very good players. The previous staff loaded them up really good. So we knew that because Coach Pelini did a good job recruiting. And it's Nebraska.

So he's utilizing his talent very well. Not surprised. They were -- I didn't study them because we didn't play them last year, but they were very close to having a great year. Couple of real close losses.

Q. Branden Bowen's number for last week makes him an eligible receiver. Do you expect him to continue to do that?

Meyer: Yeah, we're looking at him at post routes and corner routes. (Laughter). He's just -- we had a couple of injuries at the tight end position. And he's a guy that's really earned some playing time.

So I anticipate -- and he can catch, by the way. But he played pretty good in that game.
Q. When you look at the structure of the Big Ten now, when you look at the teams that are in the middle, is it just tougher to win because those teams are better than they used to be?

Meyer: I think that's a very good assessment of -- I can speak on -- yeah, just even watching the film on the teams we don't play.

And I'd be -- I haven't timed it, but I bet their out-of-season or out-of-conference record is pretty good because I'm seeing a lot of good football teams in our conference now.

Q. Did you see emerging stuff in the downhill -- downfield passing game, in this game, that encouraged you? Just what were your thoughts on that?

Meyer: Yeah, the team we played kind of -- they played soft enough that that forced it -- that's why you saw a lot of the intermediate stuff that we started the game. And J.T., I thought, played really well.

Certainly the first three drives and the last few drives were fantastic. I'm seeing improvement. We're not as explosive as we have been. And is it the receivers' fault? No. Is it because James Clark came clean? We missed him on a deep ball.

Q. You see that coming?
Meyer: I do see it coming.

Q. What's the encouraging side; that there are some shots that almost --

Meyer: We have talented guys. And in practice we see them improving. And like anything, it takes -- throwing the football is timing. We're seeing a lot of press coverage.

When you separate from press, it has to be an accurate throw and we have to protect the quarterback. It's all three. It's nothing new. It's the essence of throwing the ball.

Q. No. 25 on Nebraska, their safety, seems to be a really active --
Meyer: Great player.

Q. -- get-after-it guy. What jumps out to you about him?
Meyer: Fast, tough. Tim was telling us about him. Got our scouting report on him. He's a draftable player, very draftable player and just real fast and physical.

Q. And you were talking about the focus on the here and now, this week, this quarter, this game. You have the first college football playoff rankings come out Tuesday. It will give you an assessment of at least what people are thinking about you. In your mind, how important is that first set of rankings to know whether you're in the picture?

Meyer: Oh, it's important. Not for us. It's important. I won't look at it. I'm sure people will tell me about it, including my person of 27 years of marriage will tell me about it when I get home.

But, I mean, it's not going to change the way we work. And I'm sure we'll be somewhere around there. But we've got to improve and play well Saturday against a very good team.

Cleveland Browns have no more easy answers on schedule and teams scouting Joe Haden for a trade: National Perspective

$
0
0

The Browns stormed out to a 20-7 lead in the first half before crumbling in the final 30 minutes, a familiar Sunday script.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- With Josh McCown back at quarterback, the Cleveland Browns looked primed to win their first game of the season. 

If only NFL games were 30 minutes. 

The Browns stormed out to a 20-7 lead in the first half before crumbling in the final 30 minutes, following a familiar Sunday script of getting close, but not being good enough to get in the win column.

Here is a gathering of thoughts on the Browns' loss from writers and analysts: 

CBS Sports hands out grades for every Week 8 game, and taking it easy on the Browns once again, the site believes their performance deserved a "C." 

"Obviously, we're all used to the Browns losing games at this point, but what you might not know is that they're losing them at a record pace. The loss to the Jets was the team's 11th in a row, tying a franchise record. To add insult to injury, the fans couldn't even spell Dawg Pound correctly.

On the bright side, Josh McCown did look somewhat competent in his return to the field (341 yards, two touchdowns, two interceptions)."

ESPN.com's Pat McManamon reflects on the Browns' most recent loss and discusses what it means when it comes to the chances of avoiding a winless season.

"The Browns are staring at the likelihood an 0-16 season. The first half of the season ended without a win and with a poor performance against a beatable team in the Jets. The next opponent is Dallas, which figures to be a big favorite. There are no easy answers on the schedule when it comes to the Browns erasing that zero in the win column."

CBS Sports' Jason La Canfora believes teams around the NFL should try to pry Joe Thomas away from the Browns by Tuesday's trade deadline. He lists the six most likely suitors and an explanation why he would perfect for a playoff contender.

"Let me get this straight: The Browns have engaged in trade talks about Thomas and are obviously in let's-collect-every-draft-pick-we-possibly-can-and-make-sure-they-all-make-our-roster mode. Yet normally aggressive general managers like John Schneider (Seattle) or Steve Keim (Arizona), whose starting QBs were hounded and pounded again Sunday by defenses not exactly known for doing such, can't strike a deal?

At a time when offensive line play is as bad as many can recall, there is the possibility of landing Thomas, still only 31, and still very much a top-eight left tackle with a very team-friendly contract of $8 million a year for two more full seasons. Outside of New England, there is no super team in the league, with both conferences largely up for grabs. And you're going to tell me the phone lines in Cleveland won't be burning up ahead of Tuesday's 4 p.m. ET trade deadline. For real?"

SI.com's Greg Bedard goes through the Sunday slate, giving his observations. The Browns finally get a mention under the "Numbers sometimes lie" category.

"Score of the Browns' loss to the Jets. Doesn't seem all that bad for a team searching for its first victory, but when you consider the Browns scored eight points with 12 seconds left and that they had a 20-7 halftime lead, it was a brutal loss. At least only about 40,000 saw it, instead of the announced 67,000 (another number that lies). The Moneyball era in Cleveland isn't off to a flying start."

Pro Football Focus lists the 10 worst players from Week 8. After leading a touchdown drive early, McCown fizzled, receiving the 10th worst grade of anyone.

"The Browns probably would have earned their first win of the season this week if they had better QB play. McCown was supposed to provide a stabilizing influence as a veteran QB, but he just isn't that kind of player. While he passed for 341 yards, he also threw two interceptions and completed just 27.8 percent of his passes when pressured. McCown suffered from an unusually high six drops, but even with those factored in, his decision-making was poor."

Speaking of Pro Football Focus, the site once again seemed to like the performance of the offensive line, led by Joe Thomas, who received the highest grade of anyone on offense.

"Several members of the Browns' offensive line turned in good performances in pass protection. John Greco and Austin Pasztor were both on the field for 57 pass-blocking snaps, and neither surrendered a single QB pressure. Joe Thomas only surrendered two QB hurries on 56 pass-blocking snaps." 

SI.com's Andy Benoit highlights the silver linings for the Browns in a lost season, starting with the head coach. 

"Hue Jackson remains one of the best play designers in football. He employs a litany of formations, pre-snap shifts and personnel packages. Lately, those have all been part of concepts that define the read for the quarterback. In other words, Jackson's play designs alone determine where the ball goes. Often it's an "either here or there" read, typically against a predicted coverage. All teams do this to a certain extent, but doing it on an every-down basis with a cavalcade of inexperienced (and physically limited) QBs is a whole other challenge. With 14-year veteran Josh McCown now back, Jackson can expand the sophistication of his passing concepts. This will be a better aerial attack in the second half of the season."

Jason Cole, from Bleacher Report, says Thomas isn't the only player that could be moved from the Browns prior to the trade deadline, as teams are doing due diligence on Joe Haden. 

More Tweets


Here's what Cleveland and Chicago are betting on the World Series

$
0
0

As the World Series heads into the sixth game, friendly bets continue to be made between Cleveland and Chicago.

CLEVELAND, Ohio - As the World Series heads into the sixth game - friendly bets continue to be made between Cleveland and Chicago.

Here's a rundown of what's on the line.

Cuyahoga County and Cook County: "Taste Of" challenge. From Cleveland: Bertman Original Ball Park Mustard, beef brats from the West Side Market and Mitchell's Ice Cream. From Chicago: Eli's Cheesecake, Garrett Popcorn and soul food from MacArthur's Restaurant.

Cleveland State University and the University of Illinois at Chicago: Bertman Original Ball Park Mustard vs. deep dish pizza.

B'nai Jeshurun Congregation in Pepper Pike and Anshe Emet Synagogue in Chicago: The rabbi in the losing city will travel to the synagogue in the winning city to engage in a debate on the Jewish significance of baseball, according to the Cleveland Jewish News.

Catholic Diocese of Cleveland and Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago: The Cleveland diocese will feed more than 100 guests of the evening supper program for the homeless in Chicago vs. deep dish pizzas and baked goods to feed more than 100 guests of the Bishop William M. Cosgrove Center in Cleveland.

Catholic leaders make World Series bet

Ohio Gov. John Kasich and Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner: Great Lakes Brewing Company beer and Bertman Original Ball Park Mustard vs. deep dish pizza and microbrewery beer.

Ohio U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown and Illinois U.S. Sen Dick Durbin: Beer from Cleveland's Platform Beer Co. vs. Chicago's Goose Island Brewery.

Ohio U.S. Sen. Rob Portman and Illinois U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk: Case of Great Lakes Oktoberfest beer vs. case of Goose Island 312 beer.

LeBron James and Dwyane Wade: If the Indians win, in January, when the Chicago Bulls come to town Wade will walk in dressed as a Cleveland Indian. If the Chicago Cubs win, in December, when Cleveland comes to Chicago, James has to walk into the arena dressed like a Chicago Cub.

Kimpton hotels: Scofield hotel in Cleveland offering $99 rates to Chicago residents in December vs. five Kimpton hotels in Chicago offering $99 rates to Cleveland residents in December. Both subject to blackout dates.

Legal Aid Society of Cleveland and Chicago LAF: Pierogis vs. deep dish pizza.

PNC Financial Services offices in Cleveland and Chicago: "Taste of Cleveland" basket with pierogi, Slyman's corned beef, Mitchell's ice cream and a case of Great Lakes Christmas Ale vs."Taste of Chicago," including  Loui Malnati's Chicago-style pizza, Vienna Beef, Gerrett Popcorn and a case of Pabst Old Style Beer.

City Club of Cleveland and City Club of Chicago: Loser has to preside over a forum wearing opponent's jersey.

Cedar Point and Illinois Six Flags Great America: The losing park has to temporarily rename a ride during opening weekend 2017 - and the winning park gets to choose both the ride and the new name. The losing park must post a video of park staff singing the other city's anthem.

Cleveland's Antonio's Pizza and Chicago's Lou Malnati's Pizza: The wager includes pouring pizza sauce over someone's head and cooking meals.

J.T. Barrett, Chris Worley, Raekwon McMillan and more: See Ohio State football videos

$
0
0

See videos of Ohio State football players. Watch video

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Monday is the biggest reporting day of the week on the Ohio State beat. 

It's the day we use to ask our questions and gather quotes and sources for the upcoming stories for the week. 

But if you want the information now -- or you like seeing the football players actually answering the questions -- this is the perfect post for you. Below are the raw videos of the players who were made available, including quarterback J.T. Barrett, linebackers Raekwon McMillan and Chris Worley and defensive end Jalyn Holmes. 

Barrett: 

McMillan: 

Worley: 

Holmes: 

Cody Kessler cleared from concussion and has chance to start vs. Cowboys

$
0
0

Rookie quarterback Cody Kessler was cleared from his concussion and will be available to start Sunday against the Cowboys.

BEREA, Ohio - Browns rookie Cody Kessler has been cleared from his concussion and will be available to start Sunday vs. the Cowboys.

But coach Hue Jackson wasn't ready to name him the starter just yet.

If he starts, he'll go against fellow rookie Dak Prescott, the fourth-round pick who's won six straight games for Cowboys.

Jackson wants to see Kessler go through the practice week first. If he looks good and gives them the best chance to win, he'll get the nod over Josh McCown, who lost 31-28 to the Jets on Sunday.

The loss dropped the Browns to 0-8 for the first time since 1975.

Kessler suffered a concussion in the loss to the Bengals. He was hoping to be cleared to face the Jets, and came close on Friday, a source told cleveland.com.

High school football playoffs schedule, OHSAA brackets throughout Ohio 2016

$
0
0

See all regional brackets for the OHSAA football playoffs.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — High school football fans, cleveland.com has you covered with interactive, printable brackets for Ohio's 26 regions, as well as customizable schedules by date or school for the OHSAA playoffs.

Here are links by division to brackets for all 26 regions, including neutral site information. The brackets are all printable and interactive. Click on the school names to see the team pages with all of the season-long content.


DIVISION I


Region 1


8 Canton GlenOak (6-4) at 1 Solon (9-1)


7 Euclid (7-3) at 2 St. Edward (7-2)


6 Canton McKinley (6-4) at 3 Stow (9-1)


5 Massillon Jackson (7-3) at 4 St. Ignatius (9-1)


Region 2


8 Olentangy Orange (6-4) at 1 Olentangy Liberty (10-0)


7 Findlay (7-3) at 2 Dublin Jerome (9-1)


6 Lewis Center Olentangy (7-3) at 3 Lorain (8-2)


5 Medina (8-2) at 4 Toledo Whitmer (8-2)


Region 3


8 Lancaster (6-4) at 1 Huber Heights Wayne (9-0-1)


7 Pickerington North (7-3) at 2 Hilliard Bradley (9-1)


6 Springfield (7-3) at 3 Pickerington Central (9-1)


5 Hilliard Davidson (8-2) at 4 Dublin Coffman (8-2)


Region 4


8 Springboro (7-3) at 1 Cincinnati Colerain (10-0)


7 Cincinnati Sycamore (6-4) at 2 Lebanon (7-3)


6 Cincinnati Elder (6-4) at 3 Mason (6-4)


5 Cincinnati St. Xavier (5-5) at 4 Fairfield (7-3)


DIVISION II


Region 5


8 Barberton (8-2) at 1 Aurora (9-1)


7 Bedford (7-3) at 2 Chardon (10-0)


6 Brecksville-Broadview Heights (8-2) at 3 Warren G. Harding (9-1)


5 Copley (8-2) at 4 Hudson (8-2)


Region 6


8 Avon Lake (7-3) at 1 Avon (10-0)


7 Westlake (7-3) at 2 Holland Springfield (10-0)


6 Olmsted Falls (7-3) at 3 Midview (9-1)


5 Glenville (7-3) at 4 Whitehouse Anthony Wayne (7-3)


Region 7


8 Uniontown Lake (6-4) at 1 Massillon Perry (8-2)


7 Dublin Scioto (7-3) at 2 Massillon Washington (8-2)


6 Columbus West (9-1) at 3 New Albany (7-3)


5 Pataskala Licking Heights (8-2) at 4 Columbus Franklin Heights (9-1)


Region 8


8 Cincinnati Anderson (7-3) at 1 Troy (9-1)


7 Harrison (6-4) at 2 Cincinnati Turpin (10-0)


6 Trenton Edgewood (8-2) at 3 Cincinnati La Salle (8-2)


5 Kings Mills Kings (8-2) at 4 Miamisburg (8-2)


DIVISION III


Region 9


8 East (7-3) at 1 Alliance Marlington (10-0)


7 Warren Howland (7-3) at 2 Archbishop Hoban (9-1)


6 St. Vincent St. Mary (6-4) at 3 Dover (7-3)


5 New Philadelphia (8-2) at 4 Buckeye (9-1)


Region 10


8 Bay (7-3) at 1 Toledo Central Catholic (10-0)


7 Ashland (7-3) at 2 Sandusky (9-1)


6 Lexington (7-3) at 3 Clyde (8-2)


5 University School (7-3) at 4 Bowling Green (7-3)


Region 11


8 Thornville Sheridan (8-2) at 1 Columbus St. Francis DeSales (10-0)


7 Whitehall-Yearling (8-2) at 2 Columbus Bexley (10-0)


6 Chillicothe (8-2) at 3 Columbus Hamilton Township (8-2)


5 Columbus Beechcroft (9-1) at 4 Columbus Eastmoor Academy (8-2)


Region 12


8 Tipp City Tippecanoe (7-3) at 1 Franklin (10-0)


7 Trotwood-Madison (8-2) at 2 Wapakoneta (9-1)


6 Cincinnati Mount Healthy (8-2) at 3 New Richmond (9-1)


5 Dayton Belmont (7-2) at 4 St. Marys Memorial (9-1)


DIVISION IV


Region 13


8 Holy Name (6-4) at 1 Perry (10-0)


7 Notre Dame Cathedral Latin (7-3) at 2 Crestwood (9-1)


6 Hubbard (8-2) at 3 Youngstown Cardinal Mooney (7-2)


5 Struthers (9-1) at 4 Woodridge (10-0)


Region 14


8 Benjamin Logan (9-1) at 1 Port Clinton (9-1)


7 Bellevue (7-3) at 2 Ottawa-Glandorf (9-1)


6 Caledonia River Valley (7-3) at 3 Lewistown Indian Lake (10-0)


5 Columbus Bishop Hartley (7-2) at 4 Plain City Jonathan Alder (9-1)


Region 15


8 Duncan Falls Philo (8-2) at 1 Heath (10-0)


7 Wintersville Indian Creek (8-2) at 2 Steubenville (9-1)


6 Cambridge (7-3) at 3 Johnstown-Monroe (9-1)


5 Carroll Bloom-Carroll (7-3) at 4 Shelby (9-1)


Region 16


8 Chillicothe Unioto (8-2) at 1 Cincinnati Wyoming (10-0)


7 Cincinnati Taft (8-2) at 2 Clarksville Clinton-Massie (9-1)


6 Cincinnati Indian Hill (9-1) at 3 Kettering Archbishop Alter (10-0)


5 Germantown Valley View (9-1) at 4 Waverly (9-1)


DIVISION V


Region 17


8 Garrettsville Garfield (7-3) at 1 Canfield South Range (9-1)


7 Black River (7-3) at 2 Orwell Grand Valley (9-1)


6 Akron Manchester (7-3) at 3 Canton Central Catholic (6-3)


5 Wickliffe (8-2) at 4 Leavittsburg Labrae (7-3)


Region 18


8 Genoa Area (7-3) at 1 Creston Norwayne (9-1)


7 Marion Pleasant (8-2) at 2 Pemberville Eastwood (9-1)


6 Columbus Academy (8-2) at 3 Milan Edison (9-1)


5 Swanton (9-1) at 4 West Salem Northwestern (8-2)


Region 19


8 West Lafayette Ridgewood (9-1) at 1 Wheelersburg (10-0)


7 Baltimore Liberty Union (7-3) at 2 Sugarcreek Garaway (10-0)


6 Ironton (7-3) at 3 Coshocton (8-1)


5 Chillicothe Zane Trace (8-2) at 4 Nelsonville-York (8-2)


Region 20


8 Blanchester (7-3) at 1 Cincinnati Hills Christian Academy (10-0)


7 Brookville (5-5) at 2 Coldwater (9-1)


6 Jamestown Greeneview (8-2) at 3 Carlisle (8-2)


5 Cincinnati Aiken (7-3) at 4 West Milton Milton-Union (7-3)


DIVISION VI


Region 21


8 Jeromesville Hillsdale (7-3) at 1 Cuyahoga Heights (10-0)


7 Columbia (8-2) at 2 New Middletown Springfield (8-2)


6 Dalton (7-3) at 3 Kirtland (9-1)


5 Lisbon David Anderson (9-1) at 4 Louisville St. Thomas Aquinas (8-2) 


Region 22


8 Defiance Tinora (7-3) at 1 Hamler Patrick Henry (10-0)


7 Gibsonburg (8-2) at 2 Bucyrus Wynford (10-0)


6 Attica Seneca East (8-2) at 3 Defiance Ayersville (10-0)


5 North Robinson Colonel Crawford (8-2) at 4 Liberty Center (8-2)


Region 23


8 Columbus Bishop Ready (7-3) at 1 Hannibal River (9-0)


7 Centerburg (8-2) at 2 Beverly Fort Frye (10-0)


6 Barnesville (8-1) at 3 Chesapeake (9-1)


5 Newark Catholic (6-4) at 4 Bellaire (6-4)


Region 24


8 West Liberty-Salem (6-4) at 1 Maria Stein Marion Local (9-1)


7 Cincinnati Summit Country Day (7-3) at 2 Delphos Jefferson (9-1)


6 Casstown Miami East (7-3) at 3 Mechanicsburg (10-0)


5 St. Henry (7-3) at 4 Spencerville (8-2)


DIVISION VII


Region 25


8 East Canton (6-4) at 1 Norwalk St. Paul (10-0)


7 North Jackson Jackson-Milton (7-3) at 2 Mogadore (8-2)


6 Toronto (8-2) at 3 Warren John F. Kennedy (9-1)


5 Windham (7-3) at 4 Monroeville (9-1)


Region 26


8 Lakeside Danbury (7-3) at 1 McComb (9-1)


7 Lucas (7-3) at 2 Arlington (7-3)


6 Convoy Crestview (7-3) at 3 Tiffin Calvert (6-3)


5 Leipsic (7-3) at 4 Hicksville (7-3)


Region 27


8 Zanesville Bishop Rosecrans (7-3) at 1 Waterford (9-1)


7 Canal Winchester Harvest Preparatory (7-3) at 2 Shadyside (8-2)


6 Danville (7-3) at 3 Portsmouth Sciotoville Community (10-0)


5 Racine Southern (8-2) at 4 Glouster Trimble (8-2)


Region 28


8 Cincinnati Hillcrest Academy (8-2) at 1 Covington (10-0)


7 McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley (7-3) at 2 Troy Christian (9-1)


6 Sidney Lehman Catholic (7-3) at 3 Minster (6-4)


5 Fort Recovery (6-4) at 4 Ada (7-3)

Should London have an NFL team?

$
0
0

The NFL just played its third regular season game in London, the league's seventeenth contest at Wembley Stadium since 2007.

The NFL just played its third regular season game in London, the league's seventeenth contest at Wembley Stadium since 2007. The league has made no secret of its ambitions to place a permanent team in the U.K., but still faces significant obstacles. International fans say London is ready for an NFL team and team owner interest is very real. But critics and players say the travel logistics and cultural differences make London a pipe dream. What do you think? Vote below! 

PERSPECTIVES

For NFL fans in London, supporting American football no longer results in ridicule. And the league has rewarded London with more and more games. But can it make the logistics work?

According to NFL UK, more than 30,000 players and coaches are involved with football in the country. It is the fastest-growing sport at British universities, and participation in youth flag football leagues has risen 90.6 percent from last fall.
london.jpg 

It's cute that the NFL keeps bringing more regular season games to London. But this isn't simply as easy as adding an expansion team in Las Vegas. This is a whole separate country with its own rules and regulations. That's a lot of red tape to overcome. Here are 3 other reasons why the NFL in London probably won't work:

  1. Being compensated in the U.K. is taxing (pun intended)
  2. Some NFL players could be denied working visas
  3. The NFL Players Association could veto any changes to work conditions

Nonsense! London is ready and if there's money to be made, the NFL will make it happen. The league routinely sells out Wembley Stadium, something many other sports cannot claim -- and create a new way for the NFL to make money, by scheduling triple-headers on Sunday:

British interest in the NFL is legitimate. Sunday games in America kick off in London at 6 p.m. and 9 p.m., making them watchable, unlike NBA games, which begin at 1 a.m. Five NFL games are aired live each week in London by the same network that airs the Premier League. And back in America, a London team would allow the NFL to sell yet another broadcast window. The NFL started last season to kick off the London games at 9:30 a.m.

It's great that people in London want to see NFL games, but who in the NFL would want to relocate to London to play football? Think of the physical toll eight games on the road would take on a professional athlete. Would significant others want to leave the country so their spouse can play overseas? Probably not. And that means the London team would be stocked with losers:

Well then, what happens when a London-based team is trying to attract free agents? Whether it's an expansion team or the Jaguars (who are the likeliest team to relocate anyway) the situation will be perpetual losing for years. The only way to turn it around will be by attracting quality free agents and building through the draft. So, the question must be asked: Who would choose to play in London and deal with never-ending jet lag unless it was for a gigantic contract?

Let's not get carried away. It's not like the NFL would be sending players to the North Pole. London really isn't that bad of trip for players -- and if selected for relocation, London would be the largest city in the league. How's that for a draw?

The concerns have become so overblown in recent years it's useful to remember the context. We're talking about eight games over the course of a 16-week season. The flight time from New York to London is about the same as the flight time from New York to Los Angeles, and players will be enjoying it all in fully stocked-out, private jets. What about the problems for teams not based on the East Coast? It's not exactly rocket science: Do what the Rams did last week and fly straight from your previous game, which in their case was Detroit.

Yeah, but none of these concerns even touch upon the fact that adding a team in London could potentially give other teams a competitive advantage in the playoffs:

There would obviously be some significant logistical obstacles for both teams involved, as well as whoever is broadcasting the game, and the NFL is considering how to best sort through that from a competitive standpoint. Let's face it, every extra 12 hours off is a huge factor come the postseason, and the schedule needs to be as fair and balanced as possible.

The Tylt is focused on debates and conversations around news, current events and pop culture. We provide our community with the opportunity to share their opinions and vote on topics that matter most to them. We actively engage the community and present meaningful data on the debates and conversations as they progress. The Tylt is a place where your opinion counts, literally. The Tylt is an Advance Digital, Inc. property. Join us on Twitter @TheTylt or on Facebook, we'd love to hear what you have to say.

Viewing all 53367 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images