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History repeats as Jim Thome leaves Cleveland Indians to sign with Philadelphia Phillies

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Despite being picked up by the Indians in August, reuniting the record-setting designated hitter with a team and city that adored him, Thome has agreed to a one-year contract with the Phillies,

jim thome.JPGView full sizeJim Thome is heading to Philadelphia to play for the Phillies, the same team he left the Indians for after the 2002 season.

PHILADELPHIA — Jim Thome took the stage at the City Club of Cleveland on Oct. 25, and spoke in generalities about staying in the game.

On Friday, he got a little more specific.

Despite being picked up by the Indians in August, reuniting the record-setting designated hitter with a team and city that adored him, Thome agreed to a one-year contract with the Phillies, according to a source familiar with the negotiations.

"I'll keep playing," Thome said last month. "I just need teams to call me. I can't go play in the backyard by myself. I don't know the demand for a 41-year-old DH, but my passion is I want to continue to play."

The Phillies, yet another team he's spent time with over his 21 seasons, granted him that wish for $1.25 million.

He will take a physical today, and if all goes well, he will bring his 604 career home runs to Citizens Bank Park next spring.

Philadelphia, eliminated in the division series by the St. Louis Cardinals, can certainly use his power from the left side, though where -- and if -- he'll play in the field, is a big question.

Thome, a Phillie from 2003 to '05, has not played defensively since 2007, and might be a little rusty at first base, should he be called on to play there as Ryan Howard recovers from surgery on his left Achilles.

While certainly interested in remaining an Indian, Thome set the stage for an exit in the way he answered questions at the City Club two weeks ago.

"In a year or two, this team can do some very special things," Thome said of the Indians, sounding like a player who had played his last game for them. "They have put the groundwork in, done things the right way."

Thome will reunite with Phillies manager Charlie Manuel. The two formed a bond from their days in Cleveland together, and almost did it sooner -- as in four months ago -- before the Indians sneaked in and acquired him from the Minnesota Twins with the Phillies lurking.

Thome is a lifetime .277 hitter with 1,674 RBI.

The Phillies cruised to the National League East title this season, only to be bounced by St. Louis in five games.


Dimitri Patterson injury puts rookie Buster Skrine into lineup as nickelback: Cleveland Browns Insider

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Browns nickelback Dimitri Patterson will sit out the Texans game and will be replaced by rookie Buster Skrine. Watch video

BEREA, Ohio — Time ran out on Browns nickelback Dimitri Patterson in his bid to return Sunday from a sprained knee. He's been ruled out and will be replaced by rookie Buster Skrine, the team's fifth-round pick.

"You don't want to miss a game, especially where we're at right now in the season," said Patterson. "It's a tough deal, especially when people depend on you to be available. But it comes with the territory."

Patterson has excelled in a position at which the Browns have struggled over the years.

"I want to keep that consistency coming," he said. "It's a frustrating thing because you try to get into a groove of playing, and once you've got a feel for what's going on, you hit a wall a little bit, and it's a tough deal."

Buster Skrine.JPGView full sizeBuster Skrine

But he has faith Skrine will play well.

"Buster competes," said Patterson. "He has the willingness to learn and get better every day. The more he plays, he'll do well. I've been telling him what I can tell him all week. But it's really just about him being comfortable and not thinking too much and playing as hard as he can play and see what happens."

Patterson knows how demanding the role can be.

"You don't know [how he'll do] until he's in, that's really what it comes down to," said Patterson. "[But] Sunday, he'll show up. He'll do well."

Said coach Pat Shurmur: "He's another young guy that's going to get a great opportunity filling in for Dimitri. I'm confident that whatever his role requires he'll do well. He's a guy that's challenged, he's really challenged himself to learn the scheme and when he's in there playing, he plays extremely hard. I anticipate that he'll show up well."

Skrine has worked overtime all week getting ready.

"You just know that the [receiver] can go both ways," he said. "The guy's a little bit quicker. In camp, I played it the whole time, so it won't be anything new. I'm definitely ready for this week."

Johnson won't play: The Texans will be without five-time Pro Bowl receiver Andre Johnson (hamstring) for the fifth straight week.

"We kind of had a little setback from our Monday workout," Johnson told reporters. "I have been sore for a couple days. I went out and ran today, so it felt pretty good. I just have to keep working hard and just stay positive. I still think we're heading in the right direction. On Monday, I just went pretty hard. I just went at it as if I was going to go out and play. It just got pretty sore on me, so I had to sit down for a few days."

He said if it hadn't happened on Monday, it would've happened later in the week when he tried to practice full-go.

Smith fined: 49ers defensive end Justin Smith was fined $15,000 for striking Browns quarterback Colt McCoy in the head in the fourth quarter. He was penalized 15 yards on the play for unnecessary roughness.

Shurmur, on Dawson: Shurmur praised Texas-native Phil Dawson, who's made a career-high four field goals of 50 yards-plus this season.

"He's a great kicker -- I knew that coming in to it," Shurmur said. "Obviously, because of the lockout, I didn't have an opportunity to talk to him. I think the thing I've gained an appreciation for is what a great person, what a great competitor, what a great pro he is. I think that's what I've learned about him. I knew going into this that he was an outstanding kicker, and I was counting on that. What I didn't know about him was all the other stuff I just mentioned."

Mentor's support: Shurmur, who's lost his top three running backs to injuries for all or parts of this season, got a welcome message this week.

"[Eagles coach] Andy Reid texted me this week," Shurmur said. " 'Just keeping plugging along,' and he's right. That's the way we did it, that's the way I've always learned to do it. You work hard, you get up in the morning and try and do the right thing, make good decisions, put your guys in the best position you can to help them make plays, and then you just throw it out there, and here you go."

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

On Twitter: @marykaycabot

Cleveland Browns RB Peyton Hillis downgraded to out for Texans game with pulled hamstring

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Browns running back Peyton Hillis has been ruled out for the Texans game with his pulled hamstring. He re-injured it Friday in practice and is expected to miss at least a couple of weeks.

peyton hillis.JPGThe Browns have ruled Peyton Hillis out of the Houston game with his pulled hamstring.

CLEVELAND -- Browns running back Peyton Hillis has been ruled out for Sunday's game in Houston with his pulled hamstring.

With Montario Hardesty already out with his torn calf muscle, it means Houston native  Chris Ogbonnaya will make his first NFL start against his former team. Newly-signed Thomas Clayton will serve as the third-down back.

Hillis, who's missed the past two games, re-injured the hamstring in practice on Friday when he ran off right guard. He came up limping, grabbed the back of his leg and whipped the football. Then he threw  his helmet in frustration.

An MRI later that afternoon showed a significant strain and Hillis is expected to miss at least a couple of weeks.

"It's terrible,'' said Hardesty of the injuries suffered by the running backs this season.

Neither Hillis nor Hardesty will make the trip to Houston. Last week, Hillis spent pre-game warmups launching footballs despite the injury, which irked his teammates.

Ogbonnaya was signed off the Texans practice on Oct. 18 and is looking forward to carrying the load against Houston's sixth-ranked run defense.

Buckeyes vs. Hoosiers: Live Twitter updates

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Get updates on Twitter from Doug Lesmerises @PDBuckeyes and Bill Livinigston @LivyPD live from the press box at Ohio Stadium in Columbus. Kickoff is at noon.

braxton.jpgOSU quarterback Braxton Miller

The Ohio State Buckeyes (5-3, 2-2) look for third win in a row this afternoon against the Indiana Hoosiers (1-8, 0-5) at the Horseshoe in Columbus. OSU is coming off a thrilling upset win over Wisconsin, while Indiana lost big to Northwestern 59-38 last Saturday.

Get updates on Twitter from Doug Lesmerises @PDBuckeyes and Bill Livinigston @LivyPD in the box below. Kickoff is at noon.

College football scoreboard

Ohio State escapes Indiana's upset bid, 34-20

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The victory was the third in a row for the Buckeyes, but it didn't come easy.

hyde-osu-indiana-td-vert-mf.jpgView full sizeA thankful Carlos Hyde celebrates his fourth-quarter touchdown that provided Ohio State with some breathing room against Indiana Saturday afternoon.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Braxton Miller ran for two scores including a record 81-yarder and Travis Howard ended Indiana's last chance at tying it with an interception, leading Ohio State to a 34-20 victory on Saturday.

The victory was the third in a row for the Buckeyes (6-3, 3-2 Big Ten), but it didn't come easy.

Not until Howard picked off Tre Roberson's pass at the Ohio State 28 with 4:07 left were the Buckeyes assured of the win.

Three Buckeyes topped 100 yards rushing: Dan Herron with 141 yards on 14 carries, Carlos Hyde with 105 on 15 and Miller with 105 on 14. Hyde added a clinching touchdown after the interception.

Roberson rushed for 84 yards and passed for 174 and a touchdown for the Hoosiers (1-9, 0-6), who lost their seventh in a row.

Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky charged with sexual abuse of minors; school's AD charged with perjury

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Sandusky, closely identified with the school's reputation as a defensive powerhouse and a program that produced top-quality linebackers, retired in 1999 but continued to work with at-risk children through the nonprofit Second Mile organization he founded in 1977.

psu-sandusky-arrest-ap.jpgView full sizeFormer Penn State football defensive coordinator Gerald "Jerry" Sandusky, center, arrives in handcuffs at the office of Centre County Magisterial District Judge Leslie A. Dutchcot while being escorted by Pennsylvania State Police and Attorney General's Office officials on Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011, in State College, Pa. Sandusky is charged with sexually abusing eight young men.

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- A former defensive coordinator who was integral for decades to Penn State's success in football was accused Saturday of sexually abusing eight boys, and the school's athletic director and an administrator were charged with perjury and failing to report what they knew about the allegations in a case that prosecutors said uncovered a years-long trail of a predator and those who protected him.

Former coach Jerry Sandusky, 67, of State College, was arrested Saturday and released on $100,000 bail after being arraigned on 40 criminal counts, the state attorney general's office said. Athletic director Tim Curley, 57, and Penn State vice president for finance and business Gary Schultz, 62, both of Boalsburg, were expected to turn themselves in Monday in Harrisburg. Schultz's position includes oversight of the university's police department.

Longtime head coach Joe Paterno, who has more victories than any coach in the history of Division I football, was not charged, authorities said, and the grand jury report did not appear to implicate him in wrongdoing. It said that when Paterno first learned of one report of abuse, he immediately reported it to Curley, but Sandusky was no longer coaching at the time and it's not clear whether Paterno followed up with Curley.

Sandusky, closely identified with the school's reputation as a defensive powerhouse and a program that produced top-quality linebackers, retired in 1999 but continued to work with at-risk children through the nonprofit Second Mile organization he founded in 1977. He was charged with multiple counts of involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, corruption of minors, endangering the welfare of a child, indecent assault and unlawful contact with a minor, as well as single counts of aggravated indecent assault and attempted indecent assault. A preliminary hearing for Sandusky is scheduled for Wednesday, but his lawyer told reporters it would likely be delayed.

"He's shaky, as you can expect," defense attorney Joe Amendola told WJAC-TV outside the arraignment hearing. "Being 67 years old, never having faced criminal charges in his life, and having the distinguished career that he's had, these are very serious allegations."

Amendola said Sandusky has been aware of the accusations for about three years and has maintained his innocence.

The allegations range from sexual touching to oral and anal sex, and victims testified they were in their early teens when some of the abuse occurred.

Attorney General Linda Kelly called Sandusky "a sexual predator who used his position within the university and community to repeatedly prey on young boys."

The grand jury said eight boys who were targets of sexual advances or assaults by Sandusky from 1994 to 2009. None were named, and in at least one case, the jury said the child's identity remains unknown to authorities.

One accuser, now 27, testified that Sandusky initiated contact with a "soap battle" in the shower that led to multiple instances of involuntary sexual intercourse and indecent assault at Sandusky's hands, the grand jury report said.

Victim 4, as he was identified in the jury report, said he traveled to charity functions and Penn State games with Sandusky, even being listed as a member of Sandusky's family's party for the 1998 Outback Bowl and 1999 Alamo Bowl.

"Sandusky did threaten to send him home from the Alamo Bowl in Texas when Victim 4 resisted his advances," the report said, and Sandusky gave him clothes, shoes, a snowboard, golf clubs, hockey gear and football jerseys.

"Sandusky even guaranteed Victim 4 that he could be a walk-on player at Penn State," and the boy appeared with Sandusky in a photo in Sports Illustrated, the jury said. He testified that Sandusky once gave him $50 to buy marijuana, drove him to purchase it, and then drove him home as the boy smoked the drug, according to the report.

"This was when Victim 4 was trying to distance himself from Sandusky because he wanted no more sexual contact with him," the jurors said.

Another child, Victim 8, as jurors named him, is known only as a boy, about 11 to 13, who was seen pinned against a wall, by a janitor who observed Sandusky performing oral sex on him in fall 2000, the jury said.

No one answered a knock at the door Saturday at Sandusky's modest, two-story brick home at the end of a dead-end road in State College. A man who answered the door at The Second Mile office in State College who declined to give his name said the organization had no comment.

As stunning as the charges were the names implicated at a school where the football program is known for its consistency as much as its success -- a big change this year was the removal of white trim from players' uniforms.

The report accuses Curley and Schultz of knowing some details of accusations of sex abuse against Sandusky but failing to tell authorities what they knew.

"It is also a case about high-ranking university officials who allegedly failed to report the sexual assault of a young boy after the information was brought to their attention, and later made false statements to a grand jury," Kelly said.

Lawyers for both men issued statements saying they were innocent of all charges.

Prosecutors said all of the young men first encountered Sandusky through Second Mile.

The first to come to light was a boy who met Sandusky when he was 11 or 12, the grand jury said. The boy received expensive gifts and trips to sports events from Sandusky, and physical contact began during his overnight stays at Sandusky's home, jurors said. Eventually, the boy's mother reported the allegations of sexual assault to his high school, and Sandusky was banned from the child's school district in Clinton County in 2009. That triggered the state investigation that culminated in charges Saturday.

The report also alleges much earlier instances of abuse, and efforts by some who knew of it to stop it, to no avail.

Kelly said that in 2002, a graduate assistant saw Sandusky sexually assault a naked boy, estimated to be about 10 years old, in the locker room of the Lasch Football Building on campus. The grad student and his father reported what he saw to Paterno, who immediately told Curley, prosecutors said.

Curley and Schultz met with the graduate assistant about a week and a half later, Kelly said. Nothing happened.

"Despite a powerful eyewitness statement about the sexual assault of a child, this incident was not reported to any law enforcement or child protective agency, as required by Pennsylvania law," Kelly said.

There's no indication that anyone at school attempted to find the boy, or follow up with the witness, she said.

Curley denied that the assistant had reported anything of a sexual nature, calling it "merely 'horsing around,'" the 23-page grand jury report said.

But the jury said Curley was lying, Kelly said, adding that it also deemed portions of Schultz's testimony not to be credible.

Curley testified that he barred Sandusky from bringing children onto campus and that he advised Penn State president Graham Spanier of the matter.

Schultz told the jurors he also knew of a 1998 investigation involving sexually inappropriate behavior by Sandusky with a boy in the showers the football team used. But despite his job overseeing campus police, he never reported the 2002 allegations to any authorities, "never sought or received a police report on the 1998 incident and never attempted to learn the identity of the child in the show in 2002," the jurors wrote.

"No one from the university did so."

Spanier released a statement calling the allegations against Sandusky "troubling" and adding Curley and Schultz had his unconditional support.

He predicted they will be exonerated.

"I have known and worked daily with Tim and Gary for more than 16 years," he said. "I have complete confidence in how they handled the allegations about a former university employee."

Sandusky, once considered a potential successor to Paterno, drew up the defenses for the Nittany Lions' national-title teams in 1982 and 1986. The team is enjoying another successful run this season; at 8-1, Penn State is ranked No. 16 in the AP Top 25 and is the last undefeated squad in Big Ten play. The Nittany Lions were off Saturday.

Former heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier in hospice with liver cancer

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Business manager Leslie Wolff told The Associated Press that doctors have not yet told Frazier how long he has to live.

frazier-knicks-2011-vert-ap.jpgView full sizeIn this March 7, 2011, file photo, former heavyweight boxing champion Joe Frazier is introduced to the crowd at a New York Knicks NBA basketball game against the Utah Jazz at Madison Square Garden, in New York. Frazier is seriously ill with liver cancer.

PHILADELPHIA -- Former heavyweight champion Joe Frazier has liver cancer and is under hospice care.

The 67-year-old boxer was diagnosed four or five weeks ago, Frazier's personal and business manager said Saturday. Leslie Wolff told The Associated Press that doctors have not yet told Frazier how long he has to live.

"We have medical experts looking into the all the options that are out there," Wolff said. "There are very few. But that doesn't mean we're going to stop looking."

Wolff, who has been Frazier's manager for seven years, said the boxer had been in out and out of the hospital since early October and receiving hospice treatment the last week.

"We appreciate every prayer we can get," Wolff said. "I've got everybody praying for him. We'll just keep our fingers crossed and hope for a miracle."

Frazier's illness was first reported by the New York Post, citing an unidentified. source.

Frazier was the first man to beat Muhammad Ali, knocking him down and taking a decision in the so-called Fight of the Century in 1971. He would go on to lose two more fights to Ali, including the epic "Thrilla in Manila" bout.

Frazier was bitter for many years about the way Ali treated him then. More recently, he said he had forgiven Ali for repeatedly taunting him.

Smokin' Joe was a small yet ferocious fighter who smothered his opponents with punches, including a devastating left hook he used to end many of his fights early. It was the left hook that dropped Ali in the 15th round of their "Fight of the Century" at Madison Square Garden in 1971 to seal a win in a bout where each fighter earned an unheard of $2.5 million.

While that fight is celebrated in boxing lore, Ali and Frazier put on an even better show in their third fight, held in a sweltering arena in Manila as part of Ali's world tour of fights in 1975. Nearly blinded by Ali's punches, Frazier still wanted to go out for the 15th round of the fight but was held back by trainer Eddie Futch in a bout Ali would later say was the closest thing to death he could imagine.

Frazier won the heavyweight title in 1970 by stopping Jimmy Ellis in the fifth round of their fight at Madison Square Garden. He defended it successfully four times before George Foreman knocked him down six times in the first two rounds to take the title from him in 1973.

Frazier would never be heavyweight champion again.

In recent years, Frazier had been doing regular autograph appearances, including one in Las Vegas the weekend of a Floyd Mayweather Jr. fight in September.

Brunswick, St. Vincent-St. Mary earn girls team state cross country titles

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HEBRON, Ohio -- Northeast Ohio captured two team titles at the state cross country meet Saturday at National Trail Raceway in Hebron. Brunswick won its first girls team title in Division I and St. Vincent-St. Mary won its third consecutive championship in Division II.

HEBRON, Ohio -- Northeast Ohio captured two team titles at the state cross country meet Saturday at National Trail Raceway in Hebron.


Brunswick won its first girls team title in Division I and St. Vincent-St. Mary won its third consecutive championship in Division II.


Brunswick finished with 113 points to edge Beavercreek (118) for the title, as Loren McDaniel placed 23rd (18:47.66). Less than one minute separated the Blue Devils’ top five runners. Rocky River Magnificat, which had won the last three Division I team titles, finished sixth (195). Hudson was ninth (207), Brecksville-Broadview Heights placed 11th (230), Walsh Jesuit finished 15th (320) and Louisville was 16th (351).


Rocky River’s Elyse Bierut was second (18:08.46) individually in Division I. Also finishing among the top 15 were Medina’s Anna Boyert (fourth, 18:12.49) and Solon’s Therese Haiss (fifth, 18:18.27).


In Division II, St. Vincent-St. Mary finished with 89 points to defend its title. Marissa Rossetti was eighth (18:33.49) and Tessa Weigand placed 18th (19:13.91) to lead the way. CVCA finished fourth (114), Chagrin Falls was 12th (286) and Beaumont was 15th (341).


Individually, CVCA freshman Samantha Bockoven finished second (18:28.5) behind London’s Sarra Taylor (18:19.14). Bockoven was leading until the race’s final half mile. CVCA junior Mallory Myers was 20th (19:16.93) and senior teammate Sarah MacIntosh was 23rd (19:22.48) to also earn all-Ohio honors.


In Division III, Gilmour finished ninth (224) and Berkshire was 12th (238) behind champion Liberty Center (65).


Halle Merkel finished 24th (19:32.50) and Alexis Anton placed 31st (19:44.35) to lead Gilmour. Melissa Koziol was 36th (19:52.42) to lead Berkshire.


Northeast Ohio blanked in boys state cross country meet

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HEBRON, Ohio -- For the first time in six years, Northeast Ohio took a second to the rest of the state during the boys state cross country meet Saturday at National Trail Raceway. St. Ignatius (Division I), St. Vincent-St. Mary (Division II) and Independence (Division III) were team runners-up.

HEBRON, Ohio -- For the first time in six years, Northeast Ohio took a second to the rest of the state during the boys state cross country meet Saturday at National Trail Raceway.


St. Ignatius (Division I), St. Vincent-St. Mary (Division II) and Independence (Division III) were team runners-up.

Greater Cleveland and Akron teams combined to win nine boys state titles the previous five years, including five straight by Woodridge. SVSM's attempt to become the fourth team to sweep boys and girls titles fell short. The girls did their part, winning Division II, but the boys were 13 points behind winner Springfield Shawnee, 101-114. Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy (125 points) was third and Woodridge (133) fourth.


Dublin Coffman ran a nearly perfect race in Division I to defeat St. Ignatius, 101-120. Walsh Jesuit was (128) third and Solon fifth (160). St. Ignatius and SVSM were ranked No. 1 in the state coaches poll, and their second-place finishes were bittersweet.


Independence runners were elated to finish second in Division III. Heavily favored McDonald scored 78 points to run away with the title. Independence (116 points) finished well ahead of Cincinnati Mariemont (138) for the silver trophy.


On a sunny, crisp day, conditions were ideal, and personal-record times were the norm because the National Trail course, making its debut as the state meet site, is extremely flat.


But that didn't result in a local champion.


Independence senior Ryan Polman, the 2009 state champ, was the area's top finisher with a second-place finish in Division III. He crossed in 15:24, five seconds behind Versailles junior Samuel Prakel, whose 15:19 was the fastest time of the day. Polman's junior brother, Kyle, was ninth and Berkshire's Matt Pelletier placed seventh.


In Division II, Woodridge senior Drake Sulzer placed fourth, Buckeye's Ryan Gallagher was sixth, and SVSM's Patrick O'Brien eighth. Napoleon senior Steven Weaver won in 15:25.


Copley senior Nick Pupino was the top area Division I finisher, taking fourth, and Walsh Jesuit's Tony Howkins was eighth. Reynoldsburg champ Tsehaye Hiluf ran a 15:21 and won by three seconds.


To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: twarsinskey@plaind.com, 216-999-4661
On Twitter: @TimsTakePD

Tony Grossi's take on Week 9 of the NFL

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Saints look to bounce back while Packers look to remain undefeated.

brees-sacked-rams-horiz-ap.jpgView full sizeAfter a difficult game in St. Louis, Drew Brees may take some frustration out on the Buccaneers on Sunday.

HOUSTON, Texas -- Tony Grossi's take on Sunday's games:

Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 1 p.m.

TV: WJW Channel 8.

Early line: Saints by 71/2.

Tony's take: Drew Brees coming off bad game. Rarely has two in a row. Saints, 31-28.

Green Bay at San Diego, 4:15 p.m.

TV: WJW Channel 8.

Early line: Packers by 51/2.

Tony's take: It must be getting hard for Packers to maintain their focus. Packers, 38-21.

Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8:20 p.m.

TV: WKYC Channel 3.

Early line: Steelers by 3.

Tony's take: Steelers rounding into form while Ravens are not. Steelers, 23-17.

Seattle at Dallas, 1 p.m.

Early line: Cowboys by 121/2.

Tony's take: After game, Jerry Jones takes Rob Ryan to Best Cuts. Cowboys, 26-0.

Miami at Kansas City, 1 p.m.

Early line: Chiefs by 5.

Tony's take: Dolphins are getting closer to a win. Not yet. Chiefs, 20-13.

San Francisco at Washington, 1 p.m.

Early line: 49ers by 41/2.

Tony's take: 49ers turning into a punishing juggernaut on both sides of ball. 49ers, 17-10.

N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m.

Early line: Bills by 11/2.

Tony's take: Jets play so much better with backs against the wall. Jets, 23-20.

Atlanta at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.

Early line: Falcons by 8.

Tony's take: Colts fans should be rooting for many more losses. Falcons, 27-7.

Denver at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.

Early line: Raiders by 7.

Tony's take: Warming up in the bullpen is Brady Quinn. Raiders, 23-10.

Cincinnati at Tennessee, 4:05 p.m.

Early line: Titans by 3.

Tony's take: A very, very big game for Bengals to stay in playoff picture. Bengals, 24-23.

St. Louis at Arizona, 4:15 p.m.

Early line: Cardinals by 2.

Tony's take: Rams get caught looking ahead to Browns game. Cardinals, 24-17.

N.Y. Giants at New England, 4:15 p.m.

Early line: Patriots by 81/2.

Tony's take: Patriots' defense is a farce. Giants, 31-27.

GROSSI UPDATE:

Last week overall: 6-7 .462

Season overall: 80-36 .690

Last week vs. spread: 5-8 .385

Season vs. spread: 63-50-3 .556

In a game of mixed results, Ohio State comes out ahead: Bill Livingston

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A narrow victory over last-place Indiana raises questions about how good Ohio State really is. At the same time, the Buckeyes are good enough to be in the Big Ten title hunt this late, and few expected that.

miller-td-run-indiana-osu-horiz-mf.jpgView full sizeHis arm may not yet be reliable -- although occasionally sensational -- but Braxton Miller on the run is a glorious sight for Buckeyes fans in this most unusual season, says Bill Livingston.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Under a clear, blue sky -- the customary setting for unexpected events, Ohio State beat Indiana Saturday, 34-20. The result was expected, but the game's high level of dramatic tension was not.

The victory was not secured until Carlos Hyde's 2-yard run in the last three minutes created the final margin. Braxton Miller, the true freshman who has been forced to play quarterback before his time, completed only five passes for 55 yards, with 51 coming on two throws. He was sacked six times.

The starlight deliverance against Wisconsin came with Miller throwing on the run in the last 20 seconds, while thanking his lucky stars he did not wear a shoe a size larger when he let the ball go exactly at the line of scrimmage. But basically, the Buckeyes are ill-equipped to throw, both by Miller's youth and that of his receivers, at least until DeVier Posey returns from suspension for the Penn State game two weeks hence.

The Buckeyes won Saturday because they had three 100-yard rushers in Miller, fifth-year senior Boom Herron and Hyde, a sophomore. Miller deserves special comment. He continues to turn would-be tacklers into unwilling participants in a game of Twister.

Wisconsin defensive end Brendan Kelly was happy to come away with his support garments still in place last Saturday when faced up with Miller in the red zone on a fourth-down touchdown run. Indiana's secondary was groping awkwardly for him on 81- and 20-yard scoring runs Saturday. The former was the longest in Ohio State history by a quarterback; the latter came on third-and-goal from the 20 with the score tied at 20.

The effect of the victory was to wonder where the Buckeyes would be without Miller? The Mid-American Conference?

It was also to wonder whether Ohio State, after struggling against 1-and-9 Indiana, is really very good. Not to mention asking the same question of the whole Big Ten.

Comparative scores can be played at a mounting level of embarrassment. Iowa beat Michigan, and Minnesota beat Iowa, and everybody, including teams from the whatzit states (North Dakota State and New Mexico State), beat Minnesota. Eventually, you reach a level of nihilism in which the only thing left to do is to vacate the inaugural Big Ten Championship Game in December on grounds of mass unworthiness.

That is a serious disservice to the Buckeyes, though. Had many key players and former coach Jim Tressel been here for the whole season, no Big Ten team would be on the lead lap with them. But the absence of those people is due to their casual disregard of NCAA rules, and nothing else.

In a tumultuous year, the players who are left have coped with suspensions, disruptions, spin-off scandals and injuries. They weathered a second-half collapse against Nebraska, an empty afternoon of abject futility against Michigan State, and a barely better effort against Miami. They have made do with duct tape, improvisation and a new coach in Luke Fickell. He is learning on the job, while managing a roster that at times has the look of names picked out of a hat.

They are good enough to beat anybody between now and the Big Ten's shiny new title game in Indianapolis. Maybe they are bad enough to lose to anybody, too, especially if they begin with a first quarter like Saturday, which recalled a typical Browns game.

OSU's defense is habitually overworked, facing 70 snaps Saturday because it could not get Indiana and its breakneck offense off the field on third down. Fickell seems to have an iron-man core of players he trusts, and their stamina falls like the leaves by the fourth quarter. You would shudder to think of Ohio State's chances without defensive end John Simon and defensive tackle Johnathan Hankins.

Their kicker, Drew Basil, has made 12 field goals after missing his first two. Accuracy stops there, for he tends to kick off out of bounds at unwise moments, giving Wisconsin the ball at its own 40 in the last desperate seconds a week ago and setting up the Hooisers for an opening field goal after only a 42-yard drive.

Indiana also was superbly prepared, breaking on top, 10-0. True freshman quarterback Tre Roberson committed only one turnover while carrying a heavy play-making load as a dual threat. He and Miller will bear watching in their matchups in the Leaders Division in the future.

The Hoosiers openly admit they are playing for the future by giving so many freshmen experience.

The Buckeyes, using the kids out of necessity, not choice, are playing to seize the day. Their grip on Saturday was shaky, but a championship is still within their grasp almost a week into November.

When the dominoes began to fall in the NCAA investigation, not many expected that.

On Twitter: @LivyPD

49ers, Lions and Bills earn top grades in season's first half: NFL Insider

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Our look at NFL trends at the halfway point of the 2011 season.

gore-49ers-cutback-ap.jpgView full sizeFrank Gore's hard-core running style has symbolized the resurgent 49ers, who are cruising to the playoffs in the NFC West.

HOUSTON, Texas -- The NFL season reaches the halfway point this weekend with only four new teams heading the eight divisions. But there have been plenty of surprises.

Here's our midterm report:

Biggest team surprise

1. San Francisco, 6-1: Nothing fluky about this punishing team under first-year coach Jim Harbaugh. They've won at Cincinnati, Philadelphia and Detroit.

2. Buffalo, 5-2: The Bills' plus-64 scoring differential is second-best in the AFC.

3. Detroit, 6-2: Jointly under coach Jim Schwartz and quarterback Matthew Stafford, the Lions improved by two wins their first year, by four their second year and already have equaled their 2010 win total in their third year.

Biggest team disappointment

1. Philadelphia, 3-4: There is still hope for the erstwhile Dream Team. The Eagles are 79-35-1 after their bye in 12 seasons under coach Andy Reid. But they've got to do better than that to get to 10-6 and have hope for a wild card.

2. St. Louis, 1-6: Since starting out 6-0 with Denver, Josh McDaniels has seen his teams lose 23 of 29 games as head coach or offensive coordinator.

Wrong, wrong and wrong

Here's what the draft experts said about Cam Newton leading up to the 2011 draft:

ESPN's Mel Kiper Jr., March 9: "There's still some concerns about Newton and if he can deal with adversity of performance. It's come easy to Newton. He's dominated at every level. He's never been around losing. How effective is he moving forward dealing with negativity about performance? Other quarterbacks have had to struggle at times. He's never struggled. This guy, it's been lights-out. When it's not easy, can he adjust and improve? How will he deal with that? Is he going to work hard enough to do that?"

NFL Network's Mike Mayock, April 20: "To me, there are two questions to Cam Newton. He comes out of a very simple pass offense at Auburn. Basically, one look and either the ball comes out or he comes out. Can he process and assimilate from a football IQ perspective a complicated NFL pass offense? And No. 2, there's some baggage to the kid. You've got to figure that out."

Pro Football Weekly's Nolan Nawrocki, March 29: "Very disingenuous. Has a fake smile, comes off as very scripted and has a selfish, me-first makeup. Always knows where the cameras are and plays to them. Has an enormous ego with a sense of entitlement that continually invites trouble and makes him believe he is above the law. Does not command respect from teammates and will always struggle to win a locker room. Lacks accountability, focus and trustworthiness. Is not punctual, seeks shortcuts and sets a bad example. Immature and has had issues with authority. Not dependable."

Newton through his first eight NFL games: 174-of-287 for 2,393 yards, 11 touchdowns, nine interceptions, 87.1 passer rating.

Seven points to ponder

1. Is rookie running back Kendall Hunter durable enough to carry the load for the 49ers when franchise back Frank Gore inevitably goes down with an injury?

2. Will prospective coaches shy away from the Miami Dolphins if they don't secure Andrew Luck with the No. 1 pick in the draft?

3. The Colts were renowned tankers when they wrapped up the playoffs in Decembers past. Will they take the football flop to even lower levels to secure the first pick and Luck?

4. Is it fair for Colts vice chairman Bill Polian to be in position to draft Jim Kelly, Peyton Manning and Luck in the same distinguished career?

5. If the Patriots reach the Super Bowl with the 32nd-ranked defense, will Bill Belichick be hailed as a trendsetter?

6. If Luck is being called the next Peyton Manning, why wasn't Newton called the next John Elway?

7. At which point will the 1972 Miami Dolphins start sweating out the Green Bay Packers' run at their perfect record?

North nuggets

In their past five meetings, the Ravens and Steelers have combined for 13 unnecessary roughness or personal-foul penalties. ... The Ravens are allowing a 35.0-yard average on kickoff returns, last in the NFL, and have yielded two touchdowns. ...

After leading the Bengals to 4-0 in October, rookie quarterback Andy Dalton was named offensive rookie of the month. He completed 65 percent of his passers for 909 yards, six touchdowns and five interceptions, with a rating of 83.1. Good enough to beat out Cam Newton for the award, ... The last time the Bengals had an unbeaten October they finished 11-3 and made the playoffs. It was 1975, Paul Brown's last year as coach. ...

There's a perception the Steelers are an old team, yet the starting offense they fielded last week had an average age of 25.5 -- second-youngest in the league behind Denver. ... Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger seemed agitated by a comment made by coach Mike Tomlin. When asked if Roethlisberger can beat the Ravens throwing 50 times, as he did against the Patriots last week, Tomlin replied no because "you're going to get sacked, fumbled and intercepted." To which Roethlisberger responded, "That's not a lot of confidence from your head coach, I guess."

Stat of the week

The San Francisco 49ers have scored a rushing touchdown and not allowed a rushing touchdown in each of their first seven games. The 49ers are the first team to accomplish the feat since the 1920 Buffalo All-Americans.

Mount Union withstands Baldwin-Wallace's comeback, claims 20th straight OAC football title, 25-20

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Chris Denton might not be a household name at Mount Union yet, but it probably won't be long before he is.

ALLIANCE, Ohio -- Chris Denton might not be a household name at Mount Union yet, but it probably won't be long before he is.

Because of Denton's efforts, the Purple Raiders continued their dominance in the Ohio Athletic Conference with a 25-20 win over Baldwin-Wallace on Saturday. Denton -- a transfer to Mount Union from Norwich University, much like current NFL wideout Pierre Garcon -- clinched the Purple Raiders' 20th straight OAC title with some late-game heroics.

Facing fourth-and-11 at the Yellow Jackets' 29 and with his team trailing 20-19, Matt Piloto dropped in the pocket and saw Denton on a slant pattern. With Baldwin-Wallace safeties Zach Barley and Ryan Dugan draped all over him, the 5-foot-10, 195-pound Denton outjumped the competition for the game-winner with 2:14 remaining.

"The play was designed for me to go deep," Denton said. "But once I saw the safety bump down, I went to the middle and jumped for it.

"Being a transfer, I didn't expect to be in this situation. It feels great. I feel like I'm part of the team."

With starting quarterback Neal Seaman and wideout Jasper Collins out due to injury, Piloto (18-of-32, 231 yards, two TDs) and Denton (seven catches, 111 yards, two TDs) were able to write another chapter in the Mount Union history book in what was a fitting end to an incredible game.

With the win, the Purple Raiders (9-0, 8-0) clinched their 23rd league crown and assured themselves of their 23rd Division III playoff appearance as well.

But Mount Union had to sweat to do it.

Facing a 19-0 deficit, the Yellow Jackets (7-2, 6-2) scored 20 straight points, taking the lead with 5:53 remaining when Andrew Dziak (14 carries, 41 yards rushing, two TDs) went in from a yard out. It was the first time the Purple Raiders trailed in the fourth quarter of a regular-season game since Oct. 10, 2009 (28-21 win at Capital).

But Mount Union bounced back with a 10-play, 68-yard drive for the game-winner.

"It was a good game," B-W coach John Snell said. "Obviously, I'm a little disappointed in the way it finished.

"We said if we could be in the game in the fourth quarter, we had a chance. We felt we were in it, but it just didn't happen."

The win puts B-W's chances of a playoff appearance in peril -- the last 8-2 team to make the postseason was Capital in 2007. What it does for the Purple Raiders is make a road game with Muskingum next week a tune-up for the playoffs.

Oh, and as for Denton, he might get a couple more looks his way. "He probably has forced us to play him more," Mount Union coach Larry Kehres joked. "It cemented him as the new guy on the team. Now, it makes him feel like he belongs."

Brad Bournival is a freelance writer based in North Royalton.

Cleveland Browns spell their running game 'Ogbonnaya' vs. Houston

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With Hillis ruled out Saturday with his pulled hamstring and Hardesty officially ruled out Friday with his torn calf muscle, Ogbonnaya will make his first NFL start against his hometown team.

ogbonnaya-run-seattle-squ-ap.jpgView full sizeWhen Chris Ogbonnaya joined the Browns last month, a spot as the team's "featured" running back seemed highly unlikely --- only to become reality Sunday against the Texans.

HOUSTON, Texas -- Amid all the controversy surrounding Peyton Hillis, in the face of injuries to Hillis and Montario Hardesty, Houston native Chris Ogbonnaya will strap a dysfunctional running game on his back Sunday and try to carry the Browns to victory against his former team.

With Hillis ruled out Saturday with his pulled hamstring and Hardesty officially ruled out Friday with his torn calf muscle, Ogbonnaya will make his first NFL start against his hometown team -- one that had him on its practice squad less than three weeks ago.

"I look at this league and crazy things happen for a reason," he said. "Crazy things happen all the time and so that next person in line just has to be prepared, ready to step up and be ready to go when that opportunity presents itself."

For his part, nothing fazes coach Pat Shurmur anymore. He's watched all three of his top running backs go down for all or parts of this season and is matter-of-fact about starting Ogbonnaya and playing Thomas Clayton, who was signed as a free agent on Tuesday.

"Let me say this, I love my job," said Shurmur. "I love the profession and I really do enjoy the challenges of trying to put together a team that's going to win a game on Sunday. I think that's the part that stimulates me.

"Nothing is surprising in this business and I've kind of made the promise to myself that nothing will surprise me. You put it together the best you can with the guys and they've had three great days of practice. ... I hope we can go out and put together an effort where the results are winning."

With both Hillis and Hardesty expected to miss at least a couple of weeks, Ogbonnaya will be relied upon to try to rejuvenate the league's 29th-ranked running game, one that's averaging 87.6 yards per game.

"It's terrible and tough with guys going down, but it's part of football and I'm just going to work as hard as I can to get back," said Hardesty, who injured the calf early in last Sunday's game in San Francisco. "I didn't know the calf was that important. I thought it would be maybe a couple of days. I honestly thought it was going to be a little less than what it was."

On the bright side, Ogbonnaya and Clayton have come in with great attitudes and work ethics and are hungry to prove they belong in this league.

"I think they've displayed a sense of professionalism that's good," said Shurmur. "That's what you need when you bring in guys and try and get them up to speed quickly. I appreciate that and again, I hope they can go out and perform well."

The two newcomers have been a breath of fresh air for players who have grown weary of Hillis' erratic behavior. The captains group -- of which Hillis is a part -- talked to Hillis on Wednesday to try to get him to re-focus on football. In addition to confronting him about things like getting married on a Tuesday instead of getting treatment and launching football from midfield to the crossbar despite being inactive with a hamstring injury, they wanted to extend a lifeline to a "player who was drowning," as one described it.

"It's been tough, but I think the two running backs we've got, they do a great job, and I'm excited to see Obi get some more carries and to see what he can do when he's the featured back for a full couple of games," said left tackle Joe Thomas. "We had Thomas a little bit last year and I think the guys respected him and thought he did a pretty good job when he had his opportunity. I think overall everybody's really excited to see what he does on Sundays in front of the bright lights."

Ogbonnaya, who also spent 2010 on the Texans' practice squad, will face a stout Texans defense ranked sixth against the run, allowing an average of just 97.4 yards per game.

"I think there is a little irony [in starting against the Texans], but it's part of this league and you've just got to be ready to play," he said. "They've got a great front seven and we've really got to be on top of our game, make sure we're making the right reads as runners and our O-line is blocking about as well as they can."

Ogbonnya, who rushed for 37 yards on 11 carries last week in relief of Hardesty, keeps in touch with many of his former teammates.

"I've got good memories. Great people. Great teammates. Great coaches," he said. "A lot of my good friends are there. I spent nearly two seasons there and so it's gonna be fun to go against them. A lot of great friends on defense like and it'll be a good opportunity for us to get better as a team and hopefully come out with a win."

One of Ogbonnaya's good friends, defensive end Antonio Smith, promises to show no mercy. He's tied for seventh in the AFC with 4.5 sacks this season and leads the team with six tackles for a loss.

"No, no slack at all," said Smith. "He might get a little bit extra, just because he is my boy."

Smith hopes his buddy excels with the Browns, but not this Sunday. "I'm happy for him," he said. "I'm an underdog fan, so if he makes his claim for the Browns, I'm more happy for him. He's my boy, but we've got to hit him. I think he'd understand though. Don't you think?"

Clayton, who spent two games on the Browns' active roster last season, is also looking forward to playing time. He'll spell Ogbonnaya, play some on third down and also play on special teams.

"This is what you play the game for," he said. "I'm a downhill runner. I'll go between the tackles or take it outside, whatever they ask me to do."

Quarterback Colt McCoy, who spent four years with Ogbonnaya at Texas, is looking forward to him having some help this week from Clayton.

"At halftime [Ogbonnaya was] gassed -- and he's on special teams, he's the personal protector in punt. So the guy played almost every play. By the end of the third, fourth quarter when we started to making a run, he's gassed.

"I think getting Thomas caught up to speed where he can come in and protect a little bit, run the ball, I think that'll help us this week."

Things can't really get much worse at the position. Or can they?

On Twitter: @marykaycabot

Matt Foldesy's OT goal propels St. Ignatius to Division I boys soccer regional title

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ROCKY RIVER, Ohio -- In a game filled with heroes, it had to come down to one. St. Ignatius senior Matt Foldesy took it upon himself to fill that role as he put together a classic game-ending overtime goal to give the Wildcats a 2-1 victory against Mayfield on Saturday afternoon in a boys Division I regional final. The...

St. Ignatius' Matt Foldesy (left) and teamate Nate Fahey begin their celebration after Foldesy's goal in overtime finally topped Mayfield in the Division I boys soccer regional final Saturday. - (John Kuntz, The Plain Dealer)

ROCKY RIVER, Ohio -- In a game filled with heroes, it had to come down to one.

St. Ignatius senior Matt Foldesy took it upon himself to fill that role as he put together a classic game-ending overtime goal to give the Wildcats a 2-1 victory against Mayfield on Saturday afternoon in a boys Division I regional final. The defending state champion Wildcats (19-1) will play Copley (15-2-4) at Rocky River on Tuesday night for the right to return to Columbus.

With each team keeping its fans on edge through numerous offense threats and defensive stops, Foldesy ended matters 2:15 into the extra session as he went one-on-one against the Mayfield defense. Besting two defenders, he put the ball into the net from 10 yards past goalkeeper Drew Teller to set off a wild celebration on the winning sideline.

"I got behind the one kid and went to the right, then cut back at the mouth of the goal to tuck it away," said Foldesy, an Akron recruit. "I think Mayfield challenged us the most of any team. The defense won this for us."

Despair ruled on the opposite side, especially because Mayfield, just as St. Ignatius, had so many chances to win. Coach Sean McNamara's club nearly pulled it off inside the final 30 seconds, but a shot by senior Nick Kane rolled just wide left.

"Fair play to St. Ignatius," said McNamara, whose club finished a school-best 16-2-3. "If they played a better team than Mayfield, I'd be bloody surprised. You can ask them."

St. Ignatius, which has not lost to an Ohio team since the 2009 state final, would admit it had its fill of the other Wildcats, who were in their first regional.

"We were definitely rattled," said senior St. Ignatius senior defender Zach Martin, an Indiana recruit. "The good thing is we have been in tough situations all playoffs. Luckily, the offense came through for us."

St. Ignatius broke through six minutes before halftime by using its heads. Off a corner kick by Foldesy, senior David Mog headed the ball to his left and junior Nate Fahey was ready to keep the ball off the turf as he head-butted it into the net past Teller.

Mayfield nearly answered just before the break as Kane got off a strong shot from 15 yards that St. Ignatius goalkeeper Brendan Cash managed to block with a big effort.

Mayfield senior Joey Wise nearly opened the second half with the equalizer just 20 seconds in, but his attempt rolled just wide of the far post. All Wise could do was put his head in hands after the near miss. However, Wise made amends as he finally solved Cash by, what else, using his head to score with 18:39 remaining.

Both teams had opportunities after that.

"We keep passing the test," said St. Ignatius coach Mike McLaughlin, whose club has won its last three playoff games in overtime. "Mayfield is a team that got things done all season. They came alive in the second half and it showed. They put us under pressure we haven't seen all year."

St. Ignatius moves on to play in its ninth final four on Tuesday.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jmaxse@plaind.com, 216-999-5168

On Twitter:@JoeMaxse

 


Indiana Hoosiers' lament: 'We had Buckeyes where we wanted them'

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The Hoosiers arrived Saturday at the Horseshoe with a sense of confidence that belied their 1-8 record and long history of futility against the Buckeyes.

indiana-roberson-osu-mct.jpgView full sizeBuckeyes defenders Michael Bennett (63), Etienne Sabino (6) and John Simon (54) had their hands full chasing down Indiana quarterback Tre Roberson during Saturday's contest at Ohio Stadium. Roberson ran for 73 yards and threw for 173 in the 34-20 OSU victory.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- The Indiana football team knew nobody from Columbus to Las Vegas gave it a chance to upset Ohio State. In the past 15 meetings, it had been a hammer-versus-nail type of rivalry, with only a 1990 tie keeping the Hoosiers out of the loss column.

But they arrived Saturday at the Horseshoe with a sense of confidence that belied their 1-8 record and long history of futility against the Buckeyes.

"I thought if we played up to our capability, we'd be toe-to-toe in the fourth quarter," Indiana coach Kevin Wilson said. "I thought it Monday. I thought it Tuesday. I thought it last night. I thought it going into the fourth quarter."

The Buckeyes ultimately won, 34-20, but the Hoosiers were driving for the tying score in the final five minutes until freshman quarterback Tre Robertson threw an interception at the OSU 28.

Not a bad showing for a 27-point underdog.

The Hoosiers' faith was rooted in the Buckeyes' inability to pass with consistency and hold leads late in recent games. Ohio State had been outscored, 53-47, in fourth quarters heading into Saturday's Big Ten matchup.

"We felt if we could have got it to the fourth quarter [tied] it was ours for the taking," said Indiana defensive tackle Larry Black. "We had opportunities. We just couldn't take advantage of it."

The Hoosiers came within nine seconds of their objective, but OSU freshman Braxton Miller scored on a 20-yard quarterback draw on a third-and-goal to make it 27-20 in the dying seconds of the third quarter.

Indiana allowed 346 yards rushing, including Miller's 81-yard, first-quarter TD run. It was the inability of the Hoosiers' defense to get off the field in two critical third-and-long situations that proved costly.

They were impressed by Miller's elusiveness -- he had Indiana defenders grabbing at air all afternoon in the open field -- but showed little respect for his arm. The Buckeyes' quarterback was 5-of-11 for 55 yards, was sacked six times and committed two turnovers.

"He was not going to beat us passing, but the dude is mobile, though," Indiana linebacker Jeff Thomas said. "He's got a long way to go to be Terrelle Pryor -- he's not as big or as fast -- but he's pretty good for a true freshman.

"We had them where we wanted them. We just couldn't make the big plays defensively."

In the previous four games, the Hoosiers had been shredded for an average of 51 points and 529 yards per game. But Wilson didn't expect OSU coach Luke Fickell to be daring offensively.

"With the young quarterback and the great defense, they don't stretch themselves out," Wilson said. "So there are going to be some third-and-11 quarterback draws. We've just got to make those tackles."

The Hoosiers, who jumped to a 10-0 lead, don't believe the Buckeyes took them lightly coming off the emotional last-minute win against Wisconsin.

Several players, however, said they were motivated by an Ohio newspaper article that equated a date with Indiana to a bye week. They scored more than 17 points against the Buckeyes for the first time since the 27-27 tie in 1990.

Walsh Jesuit tops Massillon Jackson in regional volleyball final

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HUDSON, Ohio -- New league, new division. Same goal. Walsh Jesuit, a North Coast League Blue Division rookie this season after moving up a division, never won a state volleyball championship in Division II but now has a chance to do so in Division I.

HUDSON, Ohio -- New league, new division. Same goal.

Walsh Jesuit, a North Coast League Blue Division rookie this season after moving up a division, never won a state volleyball championship in Division II but now has a chance to do so in Division I.

The Warriors earned a berth into next week's state semifinals thanks to Saturday's 25-15, 20-25, 28-18, 25-17 regional final victory over Massillon Jackson. Their reward is a 2 p.m. state semifinal match against top-ranked and defending champ Toledo St. Ursula (27-0) on Friday at Wright State.

"Never would have imagined this because, with the injuries we've had, this team has been through so much," said Warriors coach Missy Sturm, who directed the program to state runner-up finishes in 2005 and '06. "Every player stepped up during this tournament run."

Walsh Jesuit (20-7), ranked 13th in the final state coaches poll, prevailed by limiting its errors. Thirty of the Warriors' points came on Jackson errors while Walsh totaled 21 miscues.

"When you play from behind, the other team can play aggressively," said Polar Bears coach Jeff Walck, once the head coach at Tallmadge and an assistant coach at Walsh Jesuit. "Our serve reception wasn't crisp, and it was tough for [setter] Kristen [Cardwell] to deliver the ball."

Cardwell finished with 34 assists for Jackson (27-1), and Katie Zito and 6-1 junior Paige Hill combined for 36 kills. Hill also chipped in with three blocks.

"Our net play really had to be on," said Sturm. "We wanted to focus on hitting deep corners and make them move on defense, especially when Hill was in the back row.

"That's as balanced as we've been all season, and our back row play was phenomenal."

Mary Grace Kelly, Brittany Zmyslinski and Annie Osterfeld accounted for 30 of the Warriors' kills. Courtney Grdina, Kelly and Zmyslinski had 21, 17 and 14 digs, respectively, while sophomore setter Kyra Coundourides finished with 33 assists.

"Our goal was to hit seams, mix it up, serve aggressive and make the block move," said Coundourides, who added her team was "fired up" because Jackson was unbeaten and ranked third in the state.

"It inspired us," she said. "We thought, 'Yeah, they may be undefeated, and, yeah, they're ranked high in the state,' but we wanted to make them prove they deserved to be here.

"When Annie [Osterfeld] got the kill to put us ahead, [23-16], in the fourth set and Mary Grace Kelly was serving, I finally felt this match could be ours."

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: bfortuna@plaind.com, 216-999-4665

On Twitter:@BobFortuna

OHSAA field hockey: Hathaway Brown loses state final in overtime to Thomas Worthington

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Columbus -- Half the width of a ball. That was the difference between a state field hockey title and a disappointing overtime loss on Saturday for the Hathaway Brown Blazers, who were defeated by Thomas Worthington at Upper Arlington. Thomas Worthington sophomore Nina Devine scored with 2 minutes, 25 seconds remaining in the first 10-minute overtime as the Cardinals...

Hathaway Brown field hockey coach Sydney Van Der Merwe led the Blazers to a state runner-up finish Saturday. The Blazers won it all in 2002 and 2008, Van Der Merwe's first season. - (Allison Carey, The Plain Dealer)

Columbus -- Half the width of a ball. That was the difference between a state field hockey title and a disappointing overtime loss on Saturday for the Hathaway Brown Blazers, who were defeated by Thomas Worthington at Upper Arlington.

Thomas Worthington sophomore Nina Devine scored with 2 minutes, 25 seconds remaining in the first 10-minute overtime as the Cardinals beat the Blazers, 1-0, to earn their third state championship.

"It was a perfect setup because Lauren [Geiser] got the ball to Sophie [Tikson] and she was able to get the ball to me and I just had to hit it in," Devine said. "It's the most exciting thing ever that has happened to me."

Hathaway Brown (15-3-2), which was making its ninth consecutive appearance at state, appeared to have taken a 1-0 lead with 4:25 remaining in regulation. Emily Weinberg put one past Thomas Worthington goalkeeper Ellen Westfall, but it was determined that she was just outside of the blue line.

"I thought that was a goal because I thought she was inside the blue line," Hathaway Brown coach Sydney Van Der Merwe said. "The umpires called a meeting and decided she was outside. They came over and told me she was outside by [the distance] a half of a ball, which is so close, how could they tell?"

Hathaway Brown played without junior left back Elizabeth Warner, who broke her collarbone during the Blazers' 2-1 overtime win in Friday's semifinal against Columbus Academy.

"Although we had people fill in for her and do a good job, it did have an impact," Van Der Merwe said. "The team was bummed that she was out because she has started every game and she's a key player back there. She has played well and made big plays for us all season."

The Cardinals (20-0-1) also won state titles in 2007 and 1988. Last season they lost to Cincinnati St. Ursula Academy, 1-0. They won the rematch, 1-0, in a semifinal Friday.

"When you play a team like St. Ursula Academy, the defending champion, in a semifinal and play the best game of your life and then less than 24 hours later you turn around and play a state final, that's tough emotionally," said Thomas Worthington coach Terri Simonetti-Frost, who was named National Coach of the Year by the National Federation of State High School Associations. "I knew my girls were good enough to win it, I just didn't know if we had the legs or mentality to do it."

The Cardinals had 14 penalty corners and the Blazers had just five.

"I thought there were some calls made that I didn't think were penalties and our girls played wonderful defense to hold them on that many corners," said Van Der Merwe. "It was a tough game with two awesome teams. It is what it is. It's a game and at the end of the day, Thomas Worthington won and we congratulate them."

The Blazers had six seniors and will attempt to win their third state title next season. They won it all in 2002 and again in 2008, Van Der Merwe's first season as coach.

Strongsville's girls soccer team defeats Massillon Jackson in Division I regional final

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ROCKY RIVER, Ohio - If you showed up late, you missed the lone successful offensive burst. But if defense is your pursuit, there was plenty of it to peruse in Strongsville's 1-0 victory against Massillon Jackson. The Mustangs (19-2), scoring with less than four minutes gone, made the goal stand up as they stymied the previously unbeaten Polar Bears...

Strongsville senior Megan Waskowski. - (Allison Carey, The Plain Dealer )

ROCKY RIVER, Ohio - If you showed up late, you missed the lone successful offensive burst. But if defense is your pursuit, there was plenty of it to peruse in Strongsville's 1-0 victory against Massillon Jackson.

The Mustangs (19-2), scoring with less than four minutes gone, made the goal stand up as they stymied the previously unbeaten Polar Bears (14-1-5) at every turn in winning the girls Division I soccer regional championship Saturday at Rocky River High. They will return to Rocky River on Wednesday for a state semifinal game against Sylvania Northview.

The Strongsville goal came off a corner kick by junior Alexis Manoa that senior Erin Peskura corralled at the top of the box before letting fly with a drive. Jackson senior goalkeeper Taylor Stano blocked that shot from 18 yards, but could not control the ball and sophomore Emily Ogle put the rebound into the net with little trouble.

"Manoa had a great corner and I was there at the end of it," said Ogle, whose club has won 15 straight. "It was definitely nerve-racking after that."

It was that, but more about the goal.

"We practice that [corner] every day," said Manoa, daughter of former Browns player Tim Manoa, who was in the stands. "We work on it until we get it right. We wanted to get more goals. But our defense played amazing. Phenomenal."

Actually, both teams did their best on the defensive side. But the Polar Bears, limited to two shots in the first half, could not solve Strongsville after the break to produce any chances.

Give credit to Strongsville senior defender Allie Sender, who seemed to ward off every Jackson attempt before it got started.

"I've got a senior class that has been through a lot," said Strongsville coach John Felton, whose club reached the state semifinals a year ago. "Their [Jackson] defense was stingy all day. Emily put that one away with a lot of feistiness up front.

"[Senior] Ashley Meier up front and Allie Sender in the back did a job."

The Mustangs produced several good chances in the second half. Ogle nearly scored again from in front with 33 minutes left and senior Megan Waskowski had a header that went high with 26 minutes to go.

But it was all defense after that.

"We were a little more direct during the course of the season," said Jackson coach Frank Gagliardi. "We were not as much today. It was tough. The direct game didn't work for us."

The Mustangs outshot the Polar Bears, 14-2. Strongsville sophomore goalkeeper Samantha Ortenzie made both saves, with Stano credited with five stops.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter: jmaxse@plaind.com, 216-999-5168 On Twitter: @JoeMaxse

Paul Hoynes' best and worst trades by the Cleveland Indians

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Here are my top five and bottom five trades for the Tribe in terms of impact on forming a consistent winner.

lofton-1995-series-atlanta-gc.jpgView full sizeKenny Lofton arrived in Cleveland for the price of baseball baubles and became the jewel atop the Tribe's lineup.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- I've covered the Indians since 1983. Here are my top five and bottom five trades for the Tribe in terms of impact on forming a consistent winner.

Top five

1. Dec. 6, 1989: Indians acquired Sandy Alomar Jr., Carlos Baerga and Chris James from San Diego for Joe Carter. Comment: The deal that started it all.

2. Dec. 10, 1991: Indians acquire Kenny Lofton and Dave Rohde from Houston for Willie Blair and Ed Taubensee. Comment: There is still a warrant for John Hart's arrest for grand larceny in Houston.

3. Dec. 10, 1993: Indians acquire Omar Vizquel from Seattle for Felix Fermin and Reggie Jefferson. Comment: Why do the Mariners keep trading with the Tribe?

4. June 27, 2002: Indians acquire Brandon Phillips, Grady Sizemore, Cliff Lee and Lee Stevens for Bartolo Colon and Tim Drew. Comment: Indians hit the trifecta.

5. July 26, 2006: Indians acquire Shin-Soo Choo and Scott Nottingham from Seattle for Ben Broussard and cash. Comment: When in doubt, call the Mariners.

Bottom five

1. April 17, 2006: Indians send Brandon Phillips to Cincinnati for Jeff Stevens. Comment: Franchise changer.

2. July 7, 2008: Indians trade CC Sabathia to Milwaukee for Matt LaPorta, Michael Brantley, Rob Bryson and Zach Jackson. Comment: Needed more. Sabathia 70-25 since trade.

3. Nov. 18, 1998: Indians send Brian Giles to Pittsburgh for Ricardo Rincon. Comment: Never trade a power-hitting everyday outfielder for a situational lefty, a bad one at that.

4. March 25, 1989: Indians send Jay Bell to Pittsburgh for Felix Fermin and Denny Gonzalez. Comment: They didn't think Bell could play shortstop. Wrong.

5. July 29, 2009: Indians send Cliff Lee and Ben Francisco to Philadelphia for Jason Knapp, Carlos Carrasco, Jason Donald and Lou Marson. Comment: The longer you look at this trade, the worse it gets.

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