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Elyria Catholic comeback falls short in 22-14 loss to Orrville

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MEDINA, Ohio — Despite watching its offense sputter, stall and struggle to get untracked all game, Elyria Catholic had one final shot. The Panthers had the ball, an eight-point deficit and 46 yards between possibly tying the game and forcing overtime, or watching their season end in the Division IV, Region 14 semifinals at Ken Dukes Stadium. It was...

MEDINA, Ohio — Despite watching its offense sputter, stall and struggle to get untracked all game, Elyria Catholic had one final shot. The Panthers had the ball, an eight-point deficit and 46 yards between possibly tying the game and forcing overtime, or watching their season end in the Division IV, Region 14 semifinals at Ken Dukes Stadium.

It was not to be for the Panthers, as Stewart Turner sealed Orrville's 22-14 victory with an interception on fourth down, ending Elyria Catholic's rally and its season.

Elyria Catholic (10-2) clawed its way back into the game when its defense partially blocked a punt and the Panthers took over on the Orrville 40 with just under three minutes to go.

Six plays and 1:11 later the Panthers had cut the 22-6 lead to 22-14 on the strength of Cory Campbell's second touchdown of the night, a 1-yard run, and the two-point conversion was good when Danny Reaser hit Zach Rogers in the corner of the end zone.

The Panthers recovered the onside kick at the Orrville 46 but could only advance it to the Orrville 36 before the offense stalled and the Panthers' season came to a bitter end.

"We took some chances at the end, had some opportunities but the breaks didn't go our way," Panthers head coach Ben Malbasa said.

Orrville (9-3) found the most effective way to slow the explosive Panthers offense was to keep them off the field. The Red Riders offense kept the ball on the ground for most of the game, grinding out yardage and running down the clock, highlighted by their marathon 12-play, 88-yard scoring drive in the second quarter which took 9:12 off the clock and ended with Mason Monheim scoring on a 5-yard touchdown run.

Keeping the Panthers off the field was a wise decision, as Elyria Catholic showed how fast its offense could get it back in the game. The Panthers quickly drove the field on the ensuing possession, needing just seven plays and 1:27 to cover 61 yards en route to their first score, an 18-yard Reaser-to-Cory Campbell touchdown pass which cut the Red Riders' halftime lead to 15-6.

Sloppy ball-handling plagued the Panthers throughout the first half, with Elyria Catholic fumbling three times and losing two. The Panthers also struggled to protect Reaser, who was sacked four times on the night and constantly pressured by the Red Riders' defense.

"They had a great game plan to pressure us," Malbasa said. "They kept coming and eventually got to him."

Bill Mayville is a freelance writer in Parma Heights.


Jeremy Ortiz scores four touchdowns as Olmsted Falls crushes Maumee

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CLYDE, Ohio -- Olmsted Falls running back Jeremy Ortiz ran for 275 yards and four touchdowns as the Bulldogs (9-3) knocked Maumee (8-4) out of the Division II playoffs,  56-28. Ortiz had 212 yards and all four of his touchdowns in the first half, giving Olmsted Falls a 35-14 lead. The Bulldogs had 504 yards of offense, 390 rushing,...

CLYDE, Ohio -- Olmsted Falls running back Jeremy Ortiz ran for 275 yards and four touchdowns as the Bulldogs (9-3) knocked Maumee (8-4) out of the Division II playoffs,  56-28.

Ortiz had 212 yards and all four of his touchdowns in the first half, giving Olmsted Falls a 35-14 lead. The Bulldogs had 504 yards of offense, 390 rushing, for the game.

Ortiz scored on runs of 1, 90, 6, and 4 yards.

The Panthers watched the Bulldogs turn three interceptions into touchdowns.

Olmsted Falls built a 28-0 lead by midway through the second quarter.

Maple Heights advances at warp speed with easy win over Sandusky

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See a photo gallery from the game here. AVON LAKE, Ohio — Maple Heights nearly batted 1.000 on Friday and rolled to a 61-27 victory over Sandusky in a Division II regional semifinal at Avon Lake Memorial Stadium.

Maple Heights quarterback Shaq Washington eludes a Sandusky player in the second quarter Friday at Avon Lake Memorial Stadium. - (Lisa DeJong / PD)

See a photo gallery from the game here.

AVON LAKE, Ohio — Maple Heights nearly batted 1.000 on Friday and rolled to a 61-27 victory over Sandusky in a Division II regional semifinal at Avon Lake Memorial Stadium.

With quarterback Shaq Washington and running backs DeVonte Ransom and Andre Stubbs igniting a devastating ground game spurred by outlandish team speed, the Mustangs scored on nine of their first 11 possessions and waltzed to their 12th consecutive victory. They advanced to next week's regional finals for the second year in a row.

Maple Heights, ranked fourth in the state by the Associated Press and eighth by The Plain Dealer, will play Olmsted Falls, a 56-28 winner over Maumee, on Friday at a site to be announced Sunday.

There wasn't much left to determine Friday after Maple Heights, state runner-up last year, scored seemingly at will and built a 34-7 lead with a little more than seven minutes to play in the first half. The Mustangs scored on six of their first eight possessions and led, 41-14, at the half.

"We thought we had [a speed] advantage and we were going to attack the things we saw on film," Maple Heights coach Todd Filtz said. "The things we game-planned for were there for us."

Washington had 100 yards and two touchdowns on six carries in the first half. Ransom had 122 yards and one touchdown on nine attempts and the lightning-quick Stubbs had 101 yards and one touchdown on just three carries. Most of the starters were on the bench by the time the fourth quarter started.

Ransom finished with 209 yards and two touchdowns on 13 carries and he also caught a 17-yard scoring pass from Washington that gave the Mustangs a 54-21 lead late in the third quarter. Stubbs, who simply outran everyone for a 67-yard touchdown in the second quarter, finished with 105 yards on just four carries.

Washington, a Cincinnati recruit, finished with 168 yards and three touchdowns on the ground and completed 9 of 16 passes for 144 yards and three touchdowns. Maple Heights, the fifth-seeded team, finished with 675 yards of offense.

"We knew we had to move the ball offensively and we knew the defense would step up," said Washington, who got the Mustangs off and running when he dashed 50 yards on the second play of the game. "The defense struggled early but they put it together at the end."

Sandusky, which upset top-seeded Avon in last week's first round, rolled up 400 yards of offense as well, but it was too little to combat the Mustangs' high-octane attack. Senior Cordney Strickland, who keyed last week's win, rushed for 99 yards and scored three touchdowns on 20 carries for the Blue Streaks (7-5), in the playoffs for the eighth time in school history.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:trogers@plaind.com; 216-999-5169

Chagrin Falls scores 42 unanswered points in regional semifinal victory

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See a photo gallery from the game here. AURORA — Just like last season’s Division IV state runner up team, Chagrin Falls is hitting its stride at just the right time. The Tigers put away Cortland Lakeview early with an emphatic 55-28 victory over the Bulldogs in a regional semifinal on Friday night at Veterans Stadium in Aurora.

Tiger Jack Campbell looks for a way past the Bulldogs Austin Haines (87) as Louie Novakovich comes up to assist on Friday night at Aurora. - (Thomas Ondrey / PD)

See a photo gallery from the game here.

AURORA — Just like last season’s Division IV state runner up team, Chagrin Falls is hitting its stride at just the right time. The Tigers put away Cortland Lakeview early with an emphatic 55-28 victory over the Bulldogs in a regional semifinal on Friday night at Veterans Stadium in Aurora.

The Bulldogs drove right down the field on the first possession of the game, taking less than 2:30 minutes to take a 7-0 lead.

"You can’t panic," said Chagrin Falls coach Mark Iammarino. "The guys had confidence when we answered offensively."

The Tigers didn’t panic at all as they scored 42 unanswered points before halftime to put the game away early.

Chagrin Falls (11-1) will advance to play the winner of Akron Manchester and Youngstown Campbell in a regional final at 7:30 p.m. Friday at a site to be determined. Lakeview’s season ends at 9-3.

Defense and special teams led the way. The Tigers held a 14-7 lead after two short Kurt Vidmer scoring runs when Everett Dishong blocked a punt as Chagrin Falls took over on the Bulldog 36. On the next play Spencer Diedrich threw a touchdown pass to Anthony DeCamillo on a reverse pass for a 21-7 lead.

Then, Paul Fredrickson returned a punt 64 yards for a touchdown and a 28-7 lead.

Diedrich followed that with a 53-yard punt return to set up a 24-yard touchdown run by Jack Campbell and a 35-7 lead. Campbell had just nine rushes, but gained 96 yards.

Cathal Chaffee capped a dominating first half when he returned a interception 42 yards for a touchdown and a 42-7 lead with 4:11 left in the first half.

Iammarino was especially pleased to see some of his reserve players make the big plays on defense and special teams.

"Some of those guys are not regulars," Iammarino said. "That’s great to see. They got a chance to perform."

Chagrin Falls finished with six sacks as well, including two from Dan Driscoll and Andrew Winkelman.

"Our ends are athletic, which really helps to get pressure" Iammarino said. "You have to pressure without blitzing. You can’t live and die with the blitz."

Big plays in fourth quarter carry Lake Catholic to victory over Warren Howland

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Lake Catholic quarterback Bryan Blondeaux scored two rushing touchdowns and made a big defensive play in the fourth quarter as the Cougars defeated Warren Howland, 24-7, on Friday night in a Division II regional semifinal. Lake Catholic (11-1) will play in the regional final for the second straight year.

Lake Catholic quarterback Bryan Blondeaux scored two rushing touchdowns and made a big defensive play in the fourth quarter as the Cougars defeated Warren Howland, 24-7, on Friday night in a Division II regional semifinal.

Lake Catholic (11-1) will play in the regional final for the second straight year.

Blondeaux scored on 5-yard run early in the fourth quarter to give Lake Catholic a 10-point lead. Moments later on defense, he stripped the ball from Howland wide receiver Brendan Cope and the Cougars' Marty Gibbons picked up the fumble and raced 65 yards for a touchdown.

Lake Catholic running back Richie Sanders carried 20 times for 144 yards.

Lake Catholic's stirring rally puts Cougars in Division II volleyball title game

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FAIRBORN, Ohio — The backs of Lake Catholic’s warm-up shirts say it all. ¶ "Finish." ¶

FAIRBORN, Ohio — The backs of Lake Catholic’s warm-up shirts say it all. ¶

"Finish." ¶

The Cougars, ranked No. 2 in the final coaches state volleyball poll, took that message to heart Friday inside Wright State’s Ervin J. Nutter Center. They overcame a two-set deficit for a 19-25, 16-25, 25-13, 25-19, 15-11 Division II state semifinal victory over 10th-ranked and three-time state champion Kettering Alter. ¶

The victory put Lake Catholic (26-2) in today’s 3¤p.m. title match against No.¤5-ranked Sunbury Big Walnut (23-5). The Golden Eagles were a 25-23, 25-13, 25-12 winner over third-ranked Mansfield Madison Comprehensive (27-2) in the other semifinal. ¶

"We played the game we wanted in sets one and two, and then I got outcoached," said Alter coach Tina Jasinowski. "As the match started to slip out of our control, I felt some of our key players started looking at the big picture, and they weren’t focused on the task at hand." ¶

In the first two sets, Alter 6-2 junior Megan Courtney was zeroed in as the Penn State recruit accounted for 13 of her match-high 25 kills. The tide turned when Lake Catholic, which hadn’t played a 5-1 offense all season, abandoned its 6-2 attack. ¶

"Actually, we practiced [the 5-1] the last 1½ weeks," said Cougars coach Rich Severino, whose team will try to win its first crown in four final four appearances. "It makes our offense a little more consistent, and we have better matchups with it. ¶

"We’re bigger at the net with it, and that was the difference." ¶

The switch in strategy put Audry Lucha at the controls and the senior setter responded with 35 assists despite being sick and practicing only once this week. ¶

"We had a hard time reading [Courtney] the first two sets," said Lake Catholic senior Kelly Stenger. "We had a better feel for her swings heading into the third set, and we were able to dig up a lot of her stuff." ¶

At about the same time, 5-10 senior Nicole Snyder and 6-0 freshman Abby Detering began to get more playing time, and the Cougars’ attack got quicker. ¶

The two lefties combined for 21 of Lake’s 50 kills while senior/Kent State recruit Bridget Grdina and 6-0 junior Bridget Wilhelm teamed up for 24 kills. Sophomore Samantha Kline led the defense with 21 digs. ¶

There were four lead changes and seven ties in the first two sets, but Lake Catholic grabbed the early in each of the final three sets and never trailed. ¶

"It’s hard for the opposing team to cheat [to one area] because we all contribute," said Grdina. 

 

 

Injuries mean Cleveland Cavaliers need bench players to carry their weight

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Neither Mo Williams nor Anderson Varejao practiced Friday, which means Ramon Sessions and Ryan Hollins must be ready.

ramon sessions.JPGView full sizeCavaliers guard Ramon Sessions, left, might see plenty of playing time tonight if guard Mo Williams has to rest because of a groin injury.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Just the other day, Byron Scott was praising his team's depth, boasting about how comfortable he felt going as many as 10 deep with his Cavaliers rotation.

Today, the Cavaliers' coach is hoping he's right.

Neither Mo Williams nor Anderson Varejao practiced Friday, and both are questionable for tonight's game against Indiana because of injuries suffered in Wednesday's loss to New Jersey.

Williams left the game in the third quarter with a strained left groin, and was limping in the locker room afterward. A similar groin injury to his right side caused him to miss three weeks in the preseason.

Varejao, meanwhile, played 35 minutes against the Nets, even after bruising his ribs in the first quarter.

For that reason, Scott said Varejao is probably more likely to play than Williams. Both will be evaluated pregame before a decision is made.

That means Ramon Sessions and Ryan Hollins can only wait and be ready. The two backups are potential fill-ins if the two starters cannot play. Sessions has started four games this season while Williams recuperated from his right groin injury. Hollins started all but two preseason games while Varejao missed time to attend his grandfather's funeral.

Sessions says he will be ready no matter what his role.

"Kind of my whole career has been back and forth a little bit -- starting some games, maybe the next game coming off the bench," he said. "It's something I'm accustomed to. I've just got to be ready to go."

Sessions already has earned significant time in the fourth quarter because of his quick grasp of Scott's Princeton offense and his ability to read opportunities and run effective pick-and-rolls. Even the guard admits, though, that the Cavaliers lose a jump-shooting weapon when Williams is out.

"He has that jump shot down, that full-speed pull-up," Sessions said. "That's something I'm trying to do. I'm learning a lot from him."

Hollins, meanwhile, calls Varejao one of the best defensive centers in the league, and admits to constantly trying to learn from him.

"His effort and his motor is crazy," Hollins said. "I consider myself a high-energy guy, but he's always going. I'm always trying to pick his brain, watching the little things he does, how he plays certain guys, the things he gets away with with the refs, and his timing. If I can take that to my game to make me a better player, it will be a big help. I feel like it already has."

There are strides to be made for Hollins, in particular. Though he scored 11 points on 4-for-5 shooting against the Nets, Scott yanked him from the game after three consecutive lapses on defense.

"What we're trying to tell our bigs is really attack the ball," Scott said. "We got soft and Ryan was kind of in the paint. We always tell him you're in no-man's land [there]; you're giving them the jump shot and you're giving the roll guy a chance to get to the basket."

The question is, did Hollins learn from being pulled out of the game?

"We'll find out [today]," Scott said.

Home cooking? The Cavaliers are 3-1 on the road and 1-3 at home this season, and Scott thinks it's all a matter of his young team trying to do too much to appease Cleveland fans.

"I think our guys probably are putting a little too much pressure on themselves," Scott said. "The fans have been fantastic showing up in bunches. When we're on the road, it's almost like us against the world and we go out there a little more free. At home, I think we just put a little too much pressure on ourselves. We've just got to relax and play the way we know we can play."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jvalade@plaind.com, 216-999-4654

Lake Erie Monsters lose player to Colorado, game to Milwaukee

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The Monsters' leading scorer, Greg Mauldin, gets called up to the Avalanche, leaving Lake Erie punchless in a 4-0 loss to Milwaukee at The Q.

Greg Mauldin.JPGView full sizeGreg Mauldin
CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Monsters could have used their leading scorer, right winger Greg Mauldin, Friday night against the Milwaukee Admirals.

Mauldin was not available because the parent Colorado Avalanche, dealing with injuries, had called Thursday and requested his services.

Such is the main hazard of being a minor-league franchise: The better the players perform, the more likely they are to be on the move.

The Mauldin-less Monsters managed eight shots in the final two periods in a 4-0 defeat at The Q.

"Losing Greg is part of life in the American Hockey League, but that doesn't excuse what happened here," Monsters coach David Quinn said. "I told our players, 'Hey, that was unacceptable.' You just can't do what we did."

Lake Erie (6-6-1-2) was shut out for the second time this season. It had no answers for goalie Mark Dekanich, who made 21 saves. Dekanich entered as the AHL leader in goals-against average (1.63) and save percentage (.941).

Dekanich crafted his second straight shutout, having beaten Grand Rapids, 1-0, Wednesday. The question is, will his shot at three in a row come early this afternoon, when the Admirals again face the Monsters at The Q? Lake Erie can only hope the quick turnaround leads Milwaukee coach Lane Lambert to go with backup Jeremy Smith.

Milwaukee (8-3-1-2) scored once in the first and second periods and twice in the third. Former Monsters forward Chris Mueller notched two goals and one assist.

Mueller gave Milwaukee a 1-0 lead when he beat Jason Bacashihua at 14:29 of the first. Defenseman Aaron Johnson's goal at 5:11 of the second made it 2-0.

Right winger Matt Halischuk scored at 2:02 of the third. Mueller accounted for the final margin with an empty-netter at 17:58.

"We were ready to play -- we had some great chances, particularly in the first 10 minutes -- but as the game wore on, they really took it to us," Quinn said. "We faded and they turned it up a notch. They out-everything-ed us in the last 30 minutes."

While the Monsters were losing, Mauldin was having the time of his NHL life several hours' drive down I-71. Mauldin scored his first goal in eight career NHL games as part of the Avalanche's 5-1 victory over the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena.

Colorado signed Mauldin, 28, as a free agent in July. He played 77 games for Bridgeport of the AHL and one for the New York Islanders last season.

Mauldin has five goals and seven assists and a plus-6 rating in 14 games for the Monsters.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dmanoloff@plaind.com, 216-999-4664



Freshmen impressive as Ohio State men's basketball team opens season with easy win

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Ohio States" highly-touted freshmen debuted with a big win, led by 24 points from Deshaun Thomas and 19 points and 14 rebounds from Jared Sullinger.

dallas lauderdale.JPGView full sizeOhio State's Dallas Lauderdale, a Solon graduate, gets a resounding dunk during the Buckeyes' rout of North Carolina A&T on Friday in Columbus.
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Deshaun Thomas drained a 3-pointer and held his shooting pose, laid in an offensive rebound and raised his arms, took a pass from Aaron Craft, dunked and smiled. After months of work focused on defense, Thomas and his fellow freshmen at Ohio State started their careers with a 102-61 win over North Carolina A&T on Friday, and though coach Thad Matta thought the Buckeyes didn't shoot that well, the points kept coming.

"I'm always playing around with my teammates, like, 'I'm going to shoot it, I'm going to shoot it,' " Thomas said of scoring his first points. "I was waiting for that moment and after that, the lights were on."

Playing 20 minutes off the bench, Thomas scored a game-high 24 points on 10-of-16 shooting, while freshman big man Jared Sullinger started and scored 19 points and grabbed 14 rebounds, becoming the first Ohio State freshman to debut with a double double since Herb Williams in 1977. The Aggies played without their usual center, and Sullinger started slowly, scoring just three points in the first half, but he eventually found his way despite facing some triple-teams.

Freshman point guard Craft added eight points, nine assists and no turnovers off the bench, and all told the six freshmen -- also including Jordan Sibert, J.D. Weatherspoon and Lenzelle Smith -- combined for 60 points, 27 rebounds, 15 assists and seven turnovers.

The veterans did their share while letting the youngsters get their feet wet before Tuesday's trip to No. 9 Florida, as Dallas Lauderdale scored 12 points, William Buford 11, David Lighty 10 and Jon Diebler nine. Lauderdale also had 13 rebounds for his first career double double and tied his career-high with eight blocked shots. The Buckeyes outrebounded the Aggies, 66-22.

"It's really, really fortunate we didn't get beat by 100," A&T coach Jerry Eaves said.

Lauderdale's eight blocks, and the three charges that Sullinger took were signs that the defense elsewhere wasn't what it needed to be.

"I don't think it was a good thing I had that many opportunities," Lauderdale said. "That means our guards were getting driven on. I was happy to do what I had to do to help the team out. I was just trying to be a force down there."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: dlesmerises@plaind.com, 216-999-4479


Kent State men's basketball team erases late deficit to narrowly defeat Iona

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Forward Justin Greene has 26 points, 14 rebounds and three blocked shots, and guard Rod Sherman adds 20 points to rally Kent State in the final 2:50 for a 73-72 victory.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The first 10 minutes and the last 2:01 Friday looked like vintage Kent State basketball. In between, the Golden Flashes' men's team tried to throw away its season opener before winning, 73-72, over the Iona Gaels in the opening game of the World Vision Classic at Cleveland State's Wolstein Center.

Junior forward Justin Greene, with 26 points, 14 rebounds and three blocked shots, and senior guard Rod Sherman, with 20 points, five assists and clutch free throws late, rallied Kent State from a 70-64 deficit in the final 2:50 with plays that made coach Geno Ford take notice.

"Down six with two minutes to play, to have that much fight, that much belief was tremendous," Ford said. "To be so young and to act like veterans. To find a way to win in a game like that, you can't put a value on it."

If this team with eight players who never have played at Kent acted like vets, it's because they were led by the only two veterans on the team.

Some hard drives to the hoop by Sherman for a big three-point play . . . a dunk by Greene on an assist from Sherman . . . a game-tying 3-pointer from Carlton Guyton (14 points, six assists) on an assist from Sherman . . . a blocked shot by Greene with 22 seconds to play and the game tied, 72-72 . . . the game-winning free throw by Greene after being fouled going to the hoop on a Sherman-Greene pick-and-roll with 1.9 seconds to play.

All inside the final 2:01.

Iona did not help its cause by going 17-of-30 from the line, even as it forced Kent into 21 turnovers.

"That's the one area we thought we could exploit against them," Iona coach Tim Cluess said of KSU's backcourt.

In the end, however, the Golden Flashes did not have a turnover in the final 7:52.

Kent State took a 35-32 halftime lead behind some pestering perimeter defense and Greene's strong inside scoring. He had 15 of his points and five of his boards at the break, making 7 of 9 shots while pacing a 21-16 Kent rebound advantage.

The Flashes nearly blew a 33-27 lead inside the final five minutes of the half as they committed four of their nine first-half turnovers in that final segment. Only some cool shooting from the Gaels -- 2-of-7 in the final minutes, 40 percent for the half -- kept the Gaels from taking advantage of Kent's miscues.

KSU next plays Bryant today at 3:30 p.m.

Cleveland State men's basketball team wins opener over Bryant

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Norris Cole has 24 points, Tre Harmon 17 and Charlie Woods 10 in the Vikings' season-opening victory.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland State put its offensive firepower on display Friday in the second game of the World Vision Classic at CSU's Wolstein Center with a 71-57 victory over the Bryant Bulldogs in front of 1,450 fans.

But inside the 24 points delivered by senior guard Norris Cole, the 17 from junior Tre Harmon and the 10 from 6-7 sophomore Charlie Woods was a strong performance from the man CSU needs most this season, center Aaron Pogue.

"I thought he did a great job," CSU head coach Gary Waters said. "Aaron was very active. He's changed his whole mind-set on the floor."

The 6-9, 275-pound pivot delivered a solid nine points and team high six rebounds in 33 relatively foul-free minutes. He also had three assists and two steals, delivering the all-around performance the Vikings will need from him all season. CSU's struggle to dominate the Bulldogs on the boards (28-26) until deep into the game is evidence of Pogue's overall importance to CSU's season-long success.

The Vikings did not put the Bulldogs away until the final eight minutes. A 57-50 lead for CSU jumped to 69-52 as Harmon scored five of his points and Cole three to let CSU cruise to the win. Yet Pogue was also in the midst of it, rebounding, kicking out passes and delivering a clutch hoop and free throw.

"I knew if I attacked the glass and got the basket, and free throw, we could get the crowd into it," Pogue said. "After that, we didn't look back."

CSU found Bryant far tougher than a team that finished 1-29 last season. The Vikings' starters all played deep into the game as only one bench player, Woods, had double-figure minutes. Meanwhile, four of five CSU starters played more than 30.

The Vikings needed every bit of their 53.6 percent shooting in the opening half to take a 41-36 lead into the break. That included 5-of-11 shooting from behind the 3-point arc. And still CSU could not shake Bryant.

The Bulldogs also made their early 3-pointers, but had a 17-14 halftime advantage on the boards that included seven on the offensive end. Clearly the return of 6-5 swingman Cecil Gresham (15 points), who missed last season with a knee injury, was a boost for the Bulldogs, along with sophomore Frankie Dobbs.

Greshman had 11 of his points at halftime, including three 3-pointers, while Dobbs, a product of St. Edward High, had eight of his 15 points to go along with his five halftime assists.

The Vikings (1-0) return to action tonight against Iona (0-1) at 6 p.m.

What to watch for today when Ohio State plays Penn State

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Linebacker Ross Homan is expected to return today after missing the previous two games with a foot injury, and that's a good thing for Ohio State.

ross homan.JPGView full sizeOhio State linebacker Ross Homan.

1. The return of Ross Homan

Ohio State linebacker Brian Rolle leads Ohio State with 47 tackles in nine games, which has him tied for 39th in the Big Ten. That's right, 38 others have more tackles than any Buckeye.

"We don't have any stars," Rolle said. "I feel like we just have guys doing the job. Guys were looking at the stats [this week] and none of our guys are at the top. We have guys pretty much even on the team. That means you have guys competing. If you've got a guy with 170 tackles and the next guy with 25, that let's you know how good the competition is there. I just feel like we have guys doing their job and not focusing on am I No. 1, am I No. 2?"

One of the reasons the Buckeyes don't have a tackler any higher is because the old No. 1 has been out for a while. Senior weakside linebacker Ross Homan was Ohio State's leading tackler before his foot was stepped on at Wisconsin, causing him to miss the past two games. Despite the absence, he's still second on the team with 41 stops. The linebackers weren't having a good night in Madison before Homan went out, and Andrew Sweat played well in his place on the weakside against Purdue and Minnesota.

But Homan's return is a big one. He's a guy who some thought might be the second-best linebacker in the Big Ten this season, behind Michigan State's Greg Jones, and if he can play near that level in November, it will make a difference for this defense.

"I always kid him about having him back," defensive lineman Cameron Heyward said. "I don't feel safe without him. But having him back is definitely a key thing. He's a ballhawk."

The coaches this week said Homan responded well to back-to-back practices. But watch to see how freely he runs and how often he's around the ball. The Buckeyes this season won't have anyone reach 100 tackles for the first time since Mike Doss led Ohio State with 87 tackles in 2001. Since then linebackers Matt Wilhelm, A.J. Hawk and James Laurinaitis made sure the Buckeyes always had a 100-tackle guy. Even Homan led the way with 106 tackles last season.

He's not going to reach those numbers. But he can play to that level.

Jantel Lavender dominant as Ohio State defeats Temple: Women's college basketball roundup

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The Buckeyes star has a career-high 37 points to lead the Buckeyes to the victory. Also, Kent State's women's team opens its season with a victory.

jantel lavender.JPGView full sizeOhio State's Jantel Lavender, top, goes up for a shot as Temple's B.J. Williams, lower left, and Natasha Thames defend Friday in Philadelphia.
Jantel Lavender had a career-high 37 points and 12 rebounds to lead No. 7 Ohio State to an 84-75 win over Temple on Friday night in Philadelphia in the season opener for both teams.

Lavender (Cleveland Central Catholic) made 16 of 22 shots, as the Owls couldn't stop the preseason All-American.

The Buckeyes were missing starting point guard Samantha Prahalis, suspended for three games by the school for a secondary NCAA rules violation.

Qwedia Wallace had a career-high 32 points to lead Temple, which hit 12 of 23 3-pointers.

The game was tied at 60 with 8:36 left before Ohio State used a 15-4 spurt to take control.

Kent State 60, Canisius 54 The Golden Flashes came up with key offensive plays late in the game to earn a victory in Buffalo, N.Y.

With the game tied at 53 with 2:24 left, Kent State's Jamilah Humes drilled a pull-up jumper. Then, after a Canisius missed 3-pointer and turnover, Ellie Shields put Kent State up by four with a layup with just over a minute remaining.

Humes led Kent State with 13 points, eight coming in the second half, while Stephanie Gibson had 12 points, including a pair of 3-pointers.

No. 4 Tennessee 63, Louisville 50 Freshman Meighan Simmons scored 22 points and a record crowd saw the Lady Vols win in Louisville, Ky., in the first regular-season game at the new KFC Yum Center.

The game set a Big East women's attendance mark of 22,124. That topped the 19,123 that then-No. 1 Connecticut drew in a visit to Louisville's Freedom Hall on Jan. 12, 2008.

No. 5 Xavier 84, S. Carolina 65 Amber Harris scored 21 points to lead the visiting Musketeers over the Gamecocks in the season opener for both teams.

No. 9 Kentucky 82, Morehead State 48 Victoria Dunlap and A'Dia Mathies scored 18 points apiece in helping the host Wildcats pull away for a win.

No. 12 Notre Dame 99, New Hampshire 48 Devereaux Peters had a career-high 23 points and eight rebounds in only 14 minutes, and the Fighting Irish opened their season by cruising past visiting New Hampshire in a record-setting rout.


Half-effort leaves Cleveland Cavaliers at complete loss against Indiana Pacers

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Another poor second half dooms the Cavaliers to their second straight loss at home, where they are now 1-4.

daniel gibson.JPGView full sizeCavaliers guard Daniel Gibson drives around the Pacers' T.J. Ford during the first half Saturday at The Q.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Coach Byron Scott stepped in front of the media after the Cavaliers' 99-85 loss to the Indiana Pacers on Saturday night at The Q.

"In the second half I thought we ran out of gas, for whatever reason," he said.

Then he corrected himself.

"I don't think we ran out of gas," he said. "I think we stopped playing."

That was quite an indictment, but he'll get no argument from the 20,562 fans in attendance, many of whom headed for the exits after the Pacers opened the fourth quarter with a 14-6 run that broke open what had been a close game.

It was the team's second straight loss at home, where they are now 1-4, and it was very much a repeat of Wednesday's loss to New Jersey.

"We have to figure out what's going on in the second half, because we have to come out with a lot more energy and effort than we did tonight," Scott said.

byron scott.JPGView full sizeCavaliers coach Byron Scott has seen his team struggle during the second half of games this season.

Especially since the Cavs were without starting point guard Mo Williams and starting center Anderson Varejao, who missed the game with groin and rib injuries, respectively. But who was missing wasn't nearly as important as what was missing. The shorthanded Cavs needed to crank up their defense and focus on offense to make up for the missing colleagues. They did neither.

Danny Granger scored 34 points, and Mike Dunleavy added 20 as the Pacers, playing the second night of a back-to-back, improved to 4-4. While it seemed like they hit every shot, they really were 19-of-35, and the Pacers as a team were 36-of-79 (45.6 percent).

"It was tough," said Antawn Jamison, who led the Cavs with 19 points and nine rebounds. "We did a pretty good job for 20 or 21 seconds on the shot clock, but they were shooting the ball with two or three seconds left on the shot clock and they were big shots -- 3-pointers and so forth.

"We knew coming into the game they're a team that can be cold at times, but when they get hot they're very dangerous."

Conversely, the Cavs didn't give themselves a chance on offense. Their ball movement was terrible, which is partly why they made just 10 of 36 shots in the second half (27.8 percent) and had nine turnovers.

Their rebounding wasn't good either. The starting point guard, Ramon Sessions, had as many rebounds -- five -- as starting center Ryan Hollins and starting power forward J.J. Hickson combined. The starting shooting guard, Anthony Parker, had as many rebounds -- eight -- as the starting front line combined.

"The one thing that really hurt us was that we stopped trusting each other on the offensive end," Scott said. "We stopped moving the ball. The one thing I keep telling them is that every time we seem to move the ball four or five passes and move our bodies, we get pretty much any shot we want.

"In the second half, we went to guys trying to do it on their own. That's not going to help us win basketball games."

Point well taken for a team that slipped to 4-5.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: mschmitt@plaind.com, 216-999-4668

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Toledo Whitmer dominates Twinsburg in Division I regional semifinal

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Toledo Whitmer built a big lead on Twinsburg and never looked back Saturday on its way to a 35-14 Division I regional semifinal victory at Ashland Community Stadium. Whitmer was up, 28-0, in the first half. The Panthers will face Toledo St. John's Jesuit next Saturday.

Toledo Whitmer built a big lead on Twinsburg and never looked back Saturday on its way to a 35-14 Division I regional semifinal victory at Ashland Community Stadium.

Whitmer was up, 28-0, in the first half. The Panthers will face Toledo St. John's Jesuit next Saturday.

The Panthers rushed for 279 yards on 48 carries, including 139 yards on 19 carries by Jody Webb. The Panthers' playmaker scored touchdowns on runs of 66 and 25 yards during the first half.

The Tigers managed to avoid being shut out when London Carter took a short pass from Aaron Macer and raced 23 yards for a touchdown with just over five minutes left in the first half.

The Tigers also scored late in the fourth quarter when Deveraux McCall returned a kickoff 50 yards for a touchdown.


Trade for Peyton Hillis could go down as one of best in Cleveland Browns history: NFL Insider

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Potentially one of the greatest trades in the history of the Browns was instigated by the Broncos, who were intent on getting anything in return for running back Peyton Hillis.

hillis.jpgView full sizeIf Peyton Hillis keeps playing well, the deal to get him from Denver might end up being one of the greatest trades in Browns history.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Nobody predicted the impact Peyton Hillis would have on this Browns season.

Even the two men who combined to acquire Hillis from the Denver Broncos in the trade involving quarterback Brady Quinn disagreed on exactly what role Hillis might fill.

Browns coach Eric Mangini said when he informed Hillis of the trade on March 14, he said, "There's no reason that you couldn't come here and have 1,000 yards and be a core part of the offense."

The fact is, even after acquiring Hillis, General Manager Tom Heckert had designs on Tennessee's Montario Hardesty as the team's feature back. Heckert traded three draft picks to the Eagles to move up and pick Hardesty in the second round. That was five weeks after Hillis was acquired.

"Obviously we liked Peyton, but we didn't think he was 'the guy' and (would) have all this production," Heckert said. "We thought he'd be a good running back and a backup fullback. We talked about how we could use him, whoever the running back was, Jerome (Harrison) or Montario, and use Peyton as a fullback who can catch, where we'd have two guys in the same backfield that could run and catch."

Circumstances put Hillis in the feature role. He seized it and provided the Browns their offensive identity.

Heckert said the trade originated when Denver coach Josh McDaniels started letting people know that a few of his players were available. Hillis, receiver Tony Scheffler and receiver Brandon Marshall were the main ones.

Mangini speaks routinely with McDaniels in the off-season and relayed the info to Heckert after the NFL combine in Indianapolis.

Hillis made a big impression on Mangini with a 129-yard rushing day in a 2008 game against Mangini's Jets. Mike Shanahan was still Denver's coach at the time.

Heckert remembered Hillis as a highly recruited high school player who was stuck behind Darren McFadden and Felix Jones at Arkansas. Hillis moved to fullback for some playing time.

The trade crystallized a few weeks later when President Mike Holmgren came to the conclusion that he needed to wipe out the team's quarterback roster. He gave the go-ahead to find a team interested in Quinn.

"We knew they were interested from the last time around (during the 2009 draft)," Heckert said of Denver. "We didn't think we'd get a whole lot draft pick-wise for Brady. We were trying. We called teams and nothing came about. So we thought, if we got Peyton, what else would we get? And then we decided on the draft picks."

In addition to Hillis for Quinn, the Browns received Denver's sixth-round pick in 2011 and a conditional pick in 2012. The conditions had to be met this season for the 2012 pick to be as high as the third round. At worst, the Browns also will get Denver's sixth-round pick in 2012.

"I think the Browns wanted me and Denver didn't want to have anything to do with me," Hillis said. "It seems that's what it looks like. You can tell the Browns really wanted me because they gave up a first-round quarterback and got me and two low-round draft picks. That meant a lot to me. It meant a lot for me to come in here and play well and get the best out of that trade."

It may go down as one of the greatest Browns' trades of all time. It will take time to rank where it belongs on the following list:

In 1962, the Browns traded defensive tackle Larry Stephens and third- and sixth-round picks to the Los Angeles Rams for quarterback Frank Ryan. Ryan played through 1968 and was the field leader on the Browns' last NFL championship team in 1964.

In 1968, the Browns traded quarterback Dick Shiner, defensive tackle Frank Parker and a draft pick to the Steelers for quarterback Bill Nelsen and defensive back Jim Bradshaw.

Nelsen, despite famously bad knees, took over for Ryan and led the Browns to the playoffs in three of the next four years. Shiner was a flop in Pittsburgh. The Rooney family would never make another trade with the Browns.

In 1977, the Browns traded draft-bust quarterback Mike Phipps to the Bears for Chicago's first-round pick in '78. On draft day, the Browns traded down in the first round with the Rams for a fourth-round pick. They used the No. 1 on tight end Ozzie Newsome, a future Hall of Famer.

In 1980, the Browns traded a second-round pick in '81 and a third-rounder in '82 to the Bills for guard Joe DeLamiellure. He completed the offensive line puzzle that powered a strong running game and protected quarterback Brian Sipe, who was named MVP. Joe D. made the Hall of Fame.

In 1984, the Browns traded their last four picks in the ninth through 12th rounds to the Bears for Chicago's three picks in an upcoming supplemental draft of players from the soon-to-be-disbanded United States Football League. The Browns used two of the picks on running back Kevin Mack and return specialist Gerald McNeil, who became integral players on their five playoff teams.

In 1985, the Browns traded first- and third-round picks in '85 and first- and sixth-rounders in '86 for the Bills' No. 1 spot in the supplemental draft. The Browns used that sleight of hand to steal quarterback Bernie Kosar away from the Vikings, who intended to take Kosar with the third overall pick in the regular draft.

The bottom line of all these deals is they springboarded the team to a run of good, winning seasons. If the trade for Hillis does the same, it will join this list.

With the New York Jets' Rex Ryan and Cleveland Browns' Rob Ryan in the house, it won't be a quiet Sunday at Browns Stadium: Bud Shaw's Sunday Spin

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The Ryan brothers' mouths won't be all that's running and running and running at the stadium, Bud Shaw writes in his Sunday Spin.

rob rex ryan.JPGView full sizeRex Ryan, left, and Rob Ryan had an infamous fight in the 1980s, but Rob Ryan is quiet on the details.
The Ryan boys' mouths won't be the only thing running at the stadium...

Rob Ryan and Rex Ryan famously duked it out once in 1985.

"The big detail that's being left out is I had him down early," the Browns defensive coordinator said Friday. "The biggest thing there for you kids at home, once you get a guy down early don't feel sorry for him and let him up. Apparently they will come back swinging."

Please, coach, by popular demand of the Parents Council, do go on.

"It was just one of those deals, a typical Ryan day," he said. "I can't go into too many details, maybe over a couple of beers one night. It's just something that happens once in awhile. Usually there's alcohol involved."

Rob Ryan spoke for 15 minutes Friday, repeatedly referring to a Browns' win today as a foregone conclusion.

When Ryan talks, it comes across more as genuine optimism than it does empty carnival barking.

He won't try to tell you, for instance, that the Browns shut down the running games of the Saints and Patriots quite the way the statistics suggest.

"I never thought either of those teams were committed to running the football," Ryan said. "New Orleans, they had had a lot of runs against Tampa the week before but I never thought there was a lot of commitment there.

"New England, they are so well coached and they've got a great team but by the end there in the second half we would rather disguise than play the run. That was what our whole mind-set at halftime (was) we were going to make them run the football but we weren't going to leave our disguise. We thought disguise was more important than stopping a run."

And so you once again saw that Browns' defensive scheme with one or two defensive linemen and a bunch of other guys milling around like they were waiting for a bus.

Sunday figures to bring a more conventional approach. The Jets were No. 1 in rushing in 2009 with 37.9 attempts and 172 yards per game. They're No. 4 this season with 31.5 attempts and 148 yards.

While the Jets may not quite boast the power running game of a year ago, the guess is the shared focus of this matchup will be that of supersized twin brothers trying to trade black eyes.

Rob Ryan, motivational speaker

Rob Ryan has the Browns circling like Sharks...

Friday morning, I delivered my Browns' pick to PD editors:

Jets 23, Browns 20.

Friday afternoon, after listening to Rob Ryan, I considered a slight change.

Browns 79, Jets -3.

But it was too late.

"We have a great attack," Ryan said. "We have a great plan for these guys. Our players are motivated, and they're excited. If they don't kill each other first, we're going to lay it on these Jets."

And this:

"We are really coming as a team and I think everybody can see it now...we have got a team here and we are going to play like that on Sunday...we are going to win this game."

Why do I get the impression Rob Ryan found "Braveheart" uninspiring and called William Wallace's Freedom speech "wishy washy?"

Spinoffs

Tony Dungy has already taken his name out of the conversation about the Dallas Cowboys' head coaching job next season, but he threw some others into the mix. "[Jerry Jones] needs a Bill Cowher or Jon Gruden or Mike Holmgren," he said on "The Dan Patrick Show."

holmgren-closeup-horiz-gc.jpgView full sizeBrowns President Mike Holmgren's name has been mentioned as a possibility to coach the Dallas Cowboys, but could he ... or any big-name coach ... work for Jerry Jones?

Look, after listening to Holmgren talk about the future a couple weeks ago, I can't see how much clearer he can make it on the will-he-or-won't-he-coach-again topic that he feels strongly both ways.

Boston's Glen "Big Baby" Davis said after the Celtics beat the Heat in Miami, "No one can spoil this night. Good for us to come and spank that (butt)." He did not specify which (butt).

Grady Sizemore and Carlos Santana were taken off the disabled list and returned to the 40-man roster. And that may pass as the most recognizable player transaction of the winter for the Tribe.

In an interview that will air on NFL Network today, Brett Favre reiterates that he won't return for the 2011 season. That should settle it.

Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor's well-considered solution to a complicated issue is that everybody should just leave Auburn quarterback Cam Newton alone and let him play. ... Why didn't the NCAA think of that?

He said it

"I remember the comments. I remember the writers. I remember the fans. I remember the coaches. I remember the people in the organization. I remember everybody there that had something to say when No. 17 exited the door." -- Whatshisname, the guy who kept forgetting to catch the ball here.

He Tweeted it

"It's been a pleasure to bring my talents to south beach." -- Boston's Paul Pierce after the Celtics beat the Miami Heat.

With that comment, Pierce might win a mayor's race in Cleveland if it were held today -- and if Charles Barkley's LeBron bashing hadn't already earned him the Republican and Democratic nomination.

He said what?

"At times it will be bumpy and this is a bumpy stretch. Nobody said this was going to be easy." -- Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra on the Heat starting the season 5-4.

Except three guys preening on stage in Miami and predicting they'd win five, six, seven titles, yep, absolutely no one.

You said it

(The Expanded Sunday Edition)

"Hey, Bud: If Mr. and Mrs. McCoy had instead named their son Horse, do you think the Browns would let him start the rest of the season?" -- Ed DiFiore, Valley View

Eric Mangini wouldn't announce Secretariat until post time even if the only other horse in his stable was Mr. Ed.

"Bud: Is Travis Hafner showing Jake Delhomme around town?" -- Joe S.

No. Just foreclosed property in Pronkville.

"Hey, Bud: I heard 17 is coming back to town. ... Does that mean Braylon Edwards will be chauffering Brian Sipe to the stadium? It would be nice to see Brian again." -- JRM

There is a .016 chance (allegedly) Sipe would get in a car driven by Edwards.

"Bud: Were Fox 8 weatherman Andre Bernier and Howard Sprague (Andy Griffth Show) separated at birth? -- Jeff Heldt, Westlake

We've been hoping to upgrade the separated-at-birth entries. So thanks for not saying Rex and Rob Ryan.

"Bud: Familiar sight: LeBron gets a foul called on him and cries; LeBron gets fouled hard and winces in pain; LeBron scores a ton of points and the team loses. Same story only farther south." -- Bob

Actually, there's one new twist. LeBron plays 44 minutes against Boston and stops just short of making it sound like 69 days underground in Chile.

"Bud: Do you think 17 will give me some butter from his fingers for my popcorn?" -- Rich

If you're a first-time "You said it" winner, you receive a T-shirt from the mental_floss collection.

"Bud: Will Randy Lerner be so pleased with the current work of Coach Mangini and President Holmgren that he'll transfer them to his soccer club?" -- Chas K, Cleveland Heights

If you're a repeat winner, you get want to find a pursuit with more redeeming social value.

"Bud: Will Brett Favre be doing commercials for overnight package deliveries? -- Joe

If you're a repeat winner with a Brett Favre entry, be thankful for the low standards here at "You said it."

The Ryan Bowl should make Cleveland Browns vs. New York Jets twice the fun

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Browns defensive coordinator Rob Ryan and his twin brother Rex share a love of football and life, and their personalities promise to play out on the field today in Ryan Bowl VIII, Rob's Browns vs. Rex's Jets.

rob ryan.JPGView full sizeBrowns defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, above, will try to shut down the offense of his brother's team today at Cleveland Browns Stadium.
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Doris Ryan knew early on that she was in for a wild and hilarious ride with her twin sons Rob and Rex, the youngest of legendary NFL coach Buddy Ryan's three boys.

"I was in the kitchen and I heard all of this crashing and giggling," she said. "The twins, who were toddlers, climbed onto a cabinet and Buddy had all kinds of football pictures on the wall. They were taking the pictures down and throwing them on the tile floor and laughing like crazy."

The Ryans have been breaking the rules and laughing about it together ever since. Today, they'll square off in Ryan Bowl VIII at Cleveland Browns Stadium, with Rex as head coach of the 6-2 Jets and Rob as defensive coordinator of the 3-5 Browns. The matchup promises to be as thrilling and original as the Ryans themselves.

"The twins have always been close, they've always loved football and they've always loved life," said Doris.

Doris and Buddy divorced when the twins were two and their brother Jim, now a lawyer in St. Louis, was 7. The boys lived with their grandmother for a few years in Oklahoma while Doris finished her doctorate at the University of Chicago. Then they moved with her to Toronto, where she became vice president of a university.

Buddy often came to stay with them in Toronto and they flew to New York on weekends to attend his Jets games. When the twins were 6, they went to the Super Bowl in Miami and watched Joe Namath make good on his famous guarantee over the Colts. The twins were inseparable, and had their own language.

"In fourth grade, they were kicked off their Pop Warner football team for hitting too hard," recalled Jim. When Buddy bought a farm in Kentucky in 1976, "the twins and I did a lot of posthole diggin', a lot of manure-spreadin' and scoopin', but we had a lot of fun," recalled Buddy.

rex ryan.jpgView full sizeJets head coach Rex Ryan inherited the bravado of his father, former NFL coach Buddy Ryan.

In junior high, the principal separated them so they'd stop fooling around so much in class. "But it backfired because they spent all of their time figuring a way to get out in the hall so they could see each other," said Doris.

The twins were not identical but looked so much alike that they could fool their teachers. "They'd sit in each other's classes and take tests for each other if one knew a subject better," said Jim.

Rob was the accident-prone one, once breaking his arm while running around a swimming pool and another time after falling out of a tree. "And being the sympathetic brothers that we were, we put cheese and all kinds of stuff down his cast," said Jim. "By the time doctor opened that cast, he had to clear the room."

Growing up in Toronto, the twins played hockey and became huge Maple Leafs fans. But toward the end of junior high, they became too much for Doris to handle and Jim convinced her to let them move in with Buddy, an assistant with the Minnesota Vikings at the time.

"The Ryans were running roughshod on Canada," said Rob. "Our lives changed when we moved in with my father. We got a little discipline."

From the minute they became ballboys for the Vikings, the twins knew they wanted to follow in their father's footsteps. "While the other boys were playing grab-ass, my boys were paying attention to everything that was going on," said Buddy.

Buddy became defensive coordinator for the Bears a year later, and the boys moved with him to Chicago. Ballboys for the Bears, they also played football and baseball in high school. Rob tells the story of how Rex, a home-run king, was down, 0-2, in the count, called timeout, borrowed Rob's left contact and smashed a home run.

"Becoming coaches was their sole focus in life," said Jim. "I don't know how they got through high school. They both read one non-sports book in their life, and that includes schoolbooks."

Buddy got them scholarships at Southwestern Oklahoma State, where they both played defense. Neither was a star but were known for hitting hard -- and living large.

"They were the campus cut-ups," said Doris.

"If you fought one of us, you had to be real tough because you had to fight both of us," said Rob.

Rex, who later found out he was dyslexic, took one semester off because of grades and moved back home with Doris. "But he should've just stayed there with Rob because they were on the phone two or three times a day," she recalled.

"They shared a wallet and a car," said Jim. "If one of them had a date, he'd say 'I need the wallet.'"

The twins rarely fought each other, except for once when Rob's date wanted Rex to double-date with her friend. Rex, who only had eyes for his fiancee Michelle, refused and a brawl ensued. Rob wound up with a broken nose and broken ankle, Rex a black eye.

"It was a typical Ryan day," said Rob. "It's just something that happens once in awhile. Usually there's alcohol involved. He was engaged, I wasn't and I wanted him to be a team player."

During commencement, both wrote "magna cum laude" at the bottom of the card the dean was to read out loud. He took one look and burst out laughing. Afterward, he showed the cards to Doris, who also had a good laugh. After graduation, the twins wanted Buddy, then head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles, to hire them, but he refused.

"He told them they hadn't earned their way into the NFL," said Jim.

Both took the long, difficult way, coaching at small colleges before landing big-time defensive coordinator posts, Rob at Oklahoma State and Rex at Oklahoma. There, they faced each other once, with Rob's team crushing Rex's, 41-26. Afterward, the two embraced on the field with cameras popping.

The next day, Doris' little neighbor girl came over and said it was sad to see the brother who lost the game crying afterward. "I told her 'It was the brother who won that was crying,'" recalled Doris. "Rob was crying because he knew Rex was going to get fired, which he did."

The Ryan twins have talked plenty of smack this week, with Rex donning a wig and stuffing a pillow under his shirt to simulate Rob, and Rob vowing "we're going to win the game."

But when they meet on the field at the end, they'll share a laugh and maybe a tear, and they'll know the family business is in good hands.

To reach this Plain Dealer Reporter: mcabot@plaind.com,216-999-4670


Donovan McNabb is set to start for the Washington Redskins, but will he finish?

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By Ashley Fox The Philadelphia Inquirer ASHBURN, Va. -- In front of Donovan McNabb's locker, near three pairs of cleats and four empty plastic food containers, sat two boxes, one on top of the other, with stickers warning this in big, bold letters: "GLASS Please handle with care." That is anything but the way coach Mike Shanahan has handled...

By Ashley Fox

The Philadelphia Inquirer

ASHBURN, Va. -- In front of Donovan McNabb's locker, near three pairs of cleats and four empty plastic food containers, sat two boxes, one on top of the other, with stickers warning this in big, bold letters:

"GLASS Please handle with care."

That is anything but the way coach Mike Shanahan has handled the franchise quarterback he hand-picked to run the Redskins' offense in his first season in Washington. During the past two weeks, Shanahan hasn't been gentle. He's been blunt, outspoken and all over the map with his reasons for benching McNabb in the final two minutes of a game against Detroit on Oct. 31.

Shanahan's answers have been so far-reaching that John Feinstein, a best-selling author who writes for the Washington Post, said on the radio this week in Washington that Shanahan used racial coding to defend benching McNabb, and he called that a firable offense.

"It's been quite entertaining," McNabb said before practice Thursday.

That's one way to look at it. Another is that the Redskins' franchise quarterback might not be the franchise quarterback much longer and that the contract extension McNabb said he wanted probably will not happen. When the book is closed on 2010, it very well could prove to be a one-year stay in Washington for McNabb. Unless he and the Redskins vastly improve, free agency appears upon him.

In the meantime, the Redskins and McNabb are 4-4 and preparing to host the 5-3 Eagles on Monday night at FedEx Field in a rematch of a game this season that Washington won after its defense knocked out the Eagles' starting quarterback, Michael Vick.

As he did that day, McNabb will start this game. He has no assurances that he will finish it.

"This is football. We've talked about the whole issues," McNabb said, referring to Shanahan. "We've hashed out a lot of things. . . . I've been in this situation before. The whole deal about it is I'm going to treat it as such and focus on my job and do it at a high level."

That has been part of the problem. The Redskins have a bunch of issues on offense. Their line has struggled in protection. Their running backs have been banged up. The receiver corps is not great.

For Washington to have success, McNabb has had to play exceptionally well. Instead, he has struggled in a new system with weapons at his disposal.

In eight games, McNabb has completed 57.4 percent of his passes. He has thrown seven touchdowns, but eight interceptions, too. With a 76.0 passer rating, he is below 24 other quarterbacks, including Michael Vick (who ranks first with a 105.3 rating), Kevin Kolb (85.3), and the man he replaced in Washington, Jason Campbell (81.3).

McNabb's rating drops in the fourth quarter to 64.4, a partial reflection of four fourth-quarter picks and just two touchdowns. In another revealing statistic, third-down passer rating, McNabb's rating drops even more, to 62.8.

He has taken a beating, too. Green Bay sacked him five times. Detroit sacked him six.

That, Shanahan at one point said, was part of the impetus for benching McNabb with 1 minute, 45 seconds to play against Detroit and the team trailing by six points. Another, Shanahan said after the game, was that backup quarterback Rex Grossman was with Redskins offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan, Mike Shanahan's son, last year in Houston and has a firmer grip on Washington's two-minute offense.

On Grossman's first play under center, the Lions sacked him, stripped the ball and scored a touchdown. Game over.

The next day, Shanahan said that McNabb had been dealing with multiple injuries, including problems with both hamstrings.

ESPN "Monday Night Football" analyst Ron Jaworski has studied every game McNabb has played, dating from his college days at Syracuse. Jaworski said Thursday that during his career, McNabb has been "inconsistent" running the two-minute offense, but nevertheless he deemed Shanahan's decision to yank McNabb at a crucial part of a game with an opportunity to improve to 5-3 "a head-scratcher."

Former players lament the lost art of setting a pick: NBA Insider

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Setting picks is a lost art in today's NBA.

Not to nit-pick, but they sure don't set picks like they used to in the NBA.

"The art of setting a pick is lost," said Hall of Famer Wayne Embry.

"They're trying," said Cavs broadcaster Jim Chones, who played for the Cavs and Lakers. "Now they call it a high-dribble screen.

"The officials have made their minds up that you can't set a crushing pick. If a guy runs into you hard, 90 percent of the time they call it against the person setting the pick."

Though the Cavaliers have been using the pick-and-roll effectively to win games lately, coach Byron Scott admits, "A lot of people, when we talk about the pick-and-roll game, they forget about the pick and they just do the roll."

Embry was nicknamed "The Wall" by famed Boston Celtics announcer Johnny Most because of the width and force of the picks he set. He made life difficult for opponents like Wilt Chamberlain and even teammates like Bill Russell. Russell often didn't practice because he blocked so many shots that his teammates couldn't get into a rhythm. He also needed to save himself physically, and running into picks from Embry during practice didn't help.

But those days are over.

"It's not taught any more," Embry said. "Kids come up through AAU or running a motion offense in high school or college."

Asked to name current players who set a mean pick, Embry can't come up with a single one. Neither can broadcaster Austin Carr, who is second on the Cavs all-time scoring list after a career of coming off picks.

"That's all I did," Carr said with his trademark cackle.

Scott names two of his players -- Anderson Varejao and Ryan Hollins -- but acknowledges, "You can count the guys on a couple of hands who set good screens every single time."

Chones agrees that Varejao sets "a beautiful pick, especially on the elbow," and also likes those set by the Lakers Pau Gasol and ex-Cav Shaquille O'Neal, now with the Celtics.

"By the time you get around Shaq, if you try to go over the pick, oh my goodness," Chones said. "You could eat a sandwich and take a drink of juice because he's so huge."

Scott actually considered himself a good screener back in his days with the Lakers. Those were the glory days of the pick-and-roll as employed by Cleveland's Brad Daugherty and Mark Price and Utah's Karl Malone and John Stockton.

Surprisingly, when asked who set the best screens during his playing days, Scott picked Stockton over Malone.

"When I played, there were a lot of guards," the coach said. "I was relied on in L.A. to set a lot of screens, which I enjoyed. It was easy for me to set screens on big guys. John Stockton was great at setting screens. Karl was good, but Stockton was great.

"Kareem [Abdul-Jabbar] was great. Kurt Rambis was great. James Donaldson, who was 7-2, 260. Artis Gilmore. Lonnie Shelton. Buck Williams. Brad Daugherty. Jeff Ruland. Rick Mahorn. Bill Laimbeer. All those guys were great at setting screens because they had bad intentions in mind when they set screens -- that was to make sure they knocked your head off."

Cavs fans don't have to be reminded of the elbow thrown by Mahorn that nearly decapitated Price who was fighting his way around a pick during a game in 1989.

The whole purpose of a legitimate pick in the pick-and-roll is to separate a defender from his man to create an open shot or to create a mismatch if the defenders switch assignments. The key is to hold still long enough to actually make contact with the defender -- which many players shy away from -- and to prevent getting called for a moving screen.

"The perfect pick is getting your chest right into that guy's shoulder or into his chest or whatever part of his body is open," Scott said. "We've got two guys who do it extremely well -- Ryan Hollins and Andy. They make sure they get a piece of you. That's why they call it pick-and-roll. You've got to set the screen first, and then you get to the basket. You've got to open it up a little bit for that guard to have an opportunity to turn the corner against a big."

Carr said that as a result of players not knowing how to set picks any more, players don't know how to come off of them, either.

"If the guy using the pick doesn't know how to use it, I don't care how good a pick you set, it's not going to work," he said. "I was always taught, before I used the pick, to count, 'one thousand one.' You give him a chance to set."

Embry said Oscar Robertson was the one who taught him how to set a pick correctly. Hollins, who is trying to pick up tips from Varejao, said he learned how to set a pick from Don Grant, his high school coach at John Muir High School in Pasadena, Calif., but his college coach, Ben Howland at UCLA, perfected it.

"Ben Howland would go without rest if his bigs weren't setting picks," Hollins said. "He's just a fanatic on hitting a guy and getting your body on him and rolling quick. I've got to give all praise to Ben Howland. He just loves the pick almost more than the shot."

Given the paucity of good, hard picks these days, it's not surprising everybody remembers one certain pick. Embry remembers sending Philadelphia's Gerry Ward flying -- and Ward cussing out his teammates for not calling out the pick. Chones remembers Foots Walker getting similar results setting one against Nate Thurmond before Thurmond joined the Cavs. Varejao thinks Boston's Kendrick Perkins sets a good one. Hollins remembers setting one against Washington State that allowed teammate Cedric Bozeman to get to the rim.

Not surprisingly for a former Laker, Scott remembers a pick he set against the Celtics.

"I remember playing against Boston and setting a screen on Robert Parish and Kareem came across the lane and got a dunk," Scott said, smiling at the memory. "Magic wanted to run the same play. So I went across and set a screen, and you could see Parish loading up. He just tried to run me over. As soon as he hit me, they called a foul on him and I just looked at him and smiled, because I knew I'd gotten to him."

Chones misses those days -- although he doesn't miss running into the picks set by Alvan Adams or Bob Rule.

"If you find me a center who can set a good pick, that is the most beautiful play in basketball," he said. "When a pick-and-roll is performed the right way, where you can roll and get a layup or step back and get a jumper, there's something poetic about it."

 

 

THE TIPOFF

An NBA season is 82 games long. It lasts from October to April.

So why is everybody climbing the walls after eight or nine games?

We are not one-eighth of the way through, and everybody wants to jump to conclusions.

Is Chris Paul the MVP? What's wrong with Miami? Should the Cavs trade a) Mo Williams b) Anderson Varejao or c) Antawn Jamison?

Frankly, it's impossible to tell anything at this point. Paul has looked great, but there are more than 70 games to go. Miami has not looked great -- no doubt delighting Cavs fans _ but that doesn't mean the Heat won't be a factor later this season and in the playoffs.

Cavs fans don't know what to make of their team, and I can't blame them. Injuries have made a mess of coach Byron Scott's planned starting lineup and rotations. Just when it looks like they've turned a corner and have all their pieces in place, someone else gets hurt _ like Williams on Wednesday.

That drives all the chatter about making moves to get younger or older, bigger or smaller, stronger or quicker, but that's exactly why the team is unlikely to do so. General Manager Chris Grant can't be sure exactly what kind of team he has yet, so how can he make changes or even know if he should?

The fact of the matter is that there's a long way to go. Usually 20 games is more of a benchmark. For the Cavs, that would be Dec. 5 at Detroit, which is three weeks away.

Let's see how Paul, Miami and Cleveland are doing then.

ROOKIE WATCH

The Cavaliers got their first look at New Jersey rookie Derrick Favors this week. Favors, a 6-10, 246-pound forward who turned 19 in July, is the youngest player in the league, and New Jersey coach Avery Johnson is bringing him along slowly after his one season at Georgia Tech.

Johnson would like him to play 20 or 24 minutes a game, with very specific assignments.

"Rebound and defend and every now and then coach will run a play for you. ... Then maybe he'll get two," Johnson said before the Cavs played the Nets in New Jersey last Tuesday. "But he knows what we need him to do. We're trying to keep it simple for him. We all know where he is. We're not trying to overwhelm him at all. We just want this early NBA season to be a positive for him."

Asked whether coming off the bench was part of keeping it simple for Favors, Johnson said: "Yeah. So now you don't have to ask me that again for the next three weeks or 60 days. Now if something changes I'll tell you. But right now, that's kind of where we like it.

"When you're looking at a guy who's 19 years old -- he's not even 19 going on 20, he doesn't turn 20 until next year -- we just want to keep him confident. His spirit is good. He's really confident in everything he's doing on the floor, for the most part. When he gets the ball, he makes pretty decisive moves for a kid his age. Somewhere around the halfway point of the season, or maybe if it's sooner if something really good comes along faster, then we'll take a look at maybe starting him or growing his minutes. But right now we really like his minutes."

Through eight games, Favors was averaging 21.4 minutes, 8.8 points and 7.3 rebounds while shooting 59.3 percent (27 of 51.) In two games against the Cavs last week, he had 13 points, 14 rebounds, 3 blocked shots, 6 fouls and 3 turnovers. In Wednesday's game at Cleveland, he made just 2 of 10 field goals.

COAST TO COAST

Timing is everything: TNT's announcers have taken Carmelo Anthony to task for the on-going controversy about whether _ and where _ he'll be traded. Anthony declined to sign the extension the Nuggets offered over the summer.

Said Chris Webber of Anthony continuing to talk about wanting to be traded, "It is singling him out in a team sport. I think right now he should just be quiet about it. There is nothing that anyone can do. The best thing to do right now is just to be quiet and hopefully his team wins"

Added Kevin McHale, "All this talk about Carmelo and all that stuff takes a toll on a team. It's very hard to concentrate when you have every city you go to wondering if Carmelo will be here next week. They can implode with what is going on."

Of course, Charles Barkley weighed in.

"I bet you Carmelo Anthony is packing up his stuff as we speak," Barkley said. "He's not there. He's a terrific player. He's going to get his points. It takes its toll on the locker room at some point.... You are either all the way in or you're out. Clearly he is not going to re-sign there....He's going to get a lot of points because he is a terrific player, but he is not putting his imprint on the game."

Of course, all that was before Anthony's 32 points and 13 rebounds helped Denver hand the Los Angeles Lakers their first loss of the season, 118-112, on Thursday.

The hard way

The Utah Jazz beat the Miami Heat and the Orlando Magic last week, but they had to come back from 22 down at Miami and 18 down at Orlando to do so. Coming on the heels of a double-overtime win against the Clippers in which the Jazz rallied from an 18-point deficit, Utah became the first team in the shot-clock era to win three consecutive games after trailing by double digits at halftime.

"It says we have a lot of fight in us, but we can't keep relying on getting down and coming back, especially on the road," point guard Deron Williams told reporters after the wins in Florida. "It happened for us two nights in a row, but consider us lucky."

THE LAST WORD

"It's been a pleasure to bring my talents to South Beach now on to Memphis."

From Paul Pierce, in a Tweet after the Boston Celtics won at Miami on Thursday.

 


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