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Tag: COLUMBUS

  • Capitals take down Blue Jackets 7-2

    Capitals take down Blue Jackets 7-2

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    WASHINGTON (AP) — Connor McMichael struck twice, Alex Ovechkin scored his 859th career goal and two assists and the Washington Capitals continued their dominant start to the season with a 7-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Saturday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Ovechkin is 36 goals away from breaking Wayne Gretzky’s record
    • Daniil Tarasov stopped 15 of 22 shots for Columbus
    • Columbus outshot Washington, but the defense struggled in front of Tarasov as the team gave up six goals for the second consecutive game. The Blue Jackets were outscored 12-4 in this back-to-back series
    • The Blue Jackets head out west to face the Sharks on Tuesday

    McMichael and Ovechkin both have goals in three straight games for Washington, which advances to 8-2 on the season.

    Ovechkin is 36 goals away from breaking Wayne Gretzky’s record. He’s currently on pace to finish with 49 goals, which would set him up to hit 895 later this season.

    Both Ovechkin and McMichael helped ignite Washington’s offense as the team managed a five-goal first period, where all four lines got on the scoresheet. Damon Severson and Kevin Labanc scored for the Blue Jackets, who dropped both games of their back-to-back.

    Logan Thompson made 34 saves and remains undefeated so far in his Capitals’ tenure. Daniil Tarasov stopped 15 of 22 shots for Columbus.

    Takeaways

    Blue Jackets: Columbus outshot Washington, but the defense struggled in front of Tarasov as the team gave up six goals for the second consecutive game. The Blue Jackets were outscored 12-4 in this back-to-back series.

    Capitals: Offense continues to come easily for the surging Caps, which wasn’t the story last season. They’ve scored at least five goals in five of the last seven games.

    Key moment

    Aliaksei Protas got the scoring started just 56 seconds in on a 2-on-0 break with Dylan Strome, who also had a three-point night, for his third goal in as many games.

    Key stat

    Ovechkin is up to six goals in 10 games to open the 2024-25 season. Last year, it took him 30 games to hit that number, which also came against the Blue Jackets.

    Up Next

    The Capitals visit the Hurricanes on Sunday, and The Blue Jackets head out west to face the Sharks on Tuesday.

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    Associated Press

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  • Ehlers scores 3 goals to lead Jets to 6-2 win over Blue Jackets

    Ehlers scores 3 goals to lead Jets to 6-2 win over Blue Jackets

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Nikolaj Ehlers scored three goals for his fifth career hat trick and the Winnipeg Jets beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 6-2 Friday night to stay perfect on the road.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Winnipeg Jets beat the Columbus Blue Jackets 6-2 Friday night
    • Sean Kuraly scored and Sean Monahan had a power-play goal for the Blue Jackets
    • Elvis Merzlikins made 37 saves
    • The Blue Jackets visit Washington on Saturday

    Mason Appleton and Gabriel Vilardi also scored, Josh Morrissey had a power-play goal and an assist, and Ehlers added an assist for Winnipeg, which has won 10 of its first 11 games. Eric Comrie had 20 saves as the Jets improved to 6-0-0 on the road for the best such start in franchise history.

    Sean Kuraly scored and Sean Monahan had a power-play goal for the Blue Jackets. Elvis Merzlikins made 37 saves.

    Takeaways

    Jets: Scott Arniel returned to Nationwide Arena for the first time as a head coach since being fired by the Blue Jackets in January 2012. His Jets showed Columbus how it’s done, dominating from the opening puck drop and demonstrating why they are atop the NHL standings.

    Blue Jackets: Columbus could not answer the faster, nimbler Jets and spent most of the game protecting their zone with limited success, getting outshot in every period and ending up with a 21-shot deficit.

    Key moment

    Columbus found momentum when Monahan scored with 3:30 left in the second period, seven seconds into a power-play, cutting the Jets’ lead to 3-2. Ehlers then scored his third goal of the night 2:20 later, and Winnipeg never looked back.

    Key stat

    Winnipeg kept its power-play streak alive, scoring with a man advantage in each of its past four games. The Jets have gone a league-best 14 for 31 this season.

    Up Next

    The Jets host Tampa Bay Sunday, and the Blue Jackets visit Washington on Saturday.

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    Associated Press

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  • State officials celebrate SR 161 widening

    State officials celebrate SR 161 widening

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — If you travel on State Route 161 from I-270 to U.S. 62, you’ll notice some more wiggle room this week.


    What You Need To Know

    • Officials are celebrating the lane expansion on State Route 161 from I-270 to U.S. 62
    • There are now three lanes each direction, as opposed to two
    • This project was prioritized due to “large-scale economic development projects in the area”

    What was previously a four-lane road is now six, three each direction. Members of the Ohio Department of Transportation were joined by Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine to celebrate Friday.

    “This roadway expansion is part of our commitment to addressing the transportation needs in Central Ohio,” DeWine said in a press release. “As this region continues to grow, we are working to ensure that our infrastructure evolves to meet current and future transportation demands in a manner that focuses on keeping drivers and passengers safe.”

    This project, the release states, was prioritized due to “large-scale economic development projects in the area.”

    (Courtesy ODOT)

    Intel’s massive chip-manufacturing facility is being built in nearby New Albany, in Licking County.

    ODOT says that the widened portion of SR-161 sees around 83,000 vehicles every day, compared to only 66,000 10 years ago. They also expect the rate of accidents to decrease with the wider road.

    The ramp off SR-161 west onto I-270 north was also widened as part of this project. Final paving of all lanes will occur in spring, according to the release, and noise walls will also be installed in some areas at a future date.

    “Today marks a pivotal achievement in enhancing the safety and efficiency of this highway,” said ODOT Director Pamela Boratyn. “The addition of these lanes will not only alleviate congestion for the many commuters on this route but will also contribute to safer travel for all the tens of thousands of people who use this vital corridor each day.”

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    Cody Thompson

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  • Man searches for living kidney donor for second transplant

    Man searches for living kidney donor for second transplant

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — The National Kidney Foundation calls kidney disease the under-recognized public health crisis. The organization finds kidney disease ranks as the eighth leading cause of death in the United States and claims more lives each year than breast or prostate cancer.


    What You Need To Know

    • Brandon Talley is spreading awareness about kidney disease while searching for a living donor to share the gift of life with him
    • Talley received a kidney transplant from a deceased donor last year, but is now battling a rare kidney disease called focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) that damages the organ’s function, which can lead to kidney failure
    • Talley, who taught for more than 20 years at a Columbus elementary school, was forced to leave his position after his diagnosis. He now educates the community about kidney disease

    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than one in seven adults is living with chronic kidney disease, but 90% of them do not even realize they have it, since symptoms often do not appear until advanced stages.

    Since learning about his own diagnosis, Brandon Talley works to educate others to help them avoid following in his footsteps, while searching for someone willing to help him as a living kidney donor.

    Building muscle is one way the man known in his south Columbus community as “Mr. Talley” keeps us his image.

    “It’s like taking that movie star Hollywood thing and then adapting it to your personal life,” he said.

    Something he said is not accomplished by glitz and glamour, but grit and a grind.

    “I don’t look sick,” Talley said. “I don’t look like I need a transplant. I don’t look like I need help.”

    Talley gains strength to fight for his health inside the Schiller Community Center weight room.

    “I went into dialysis in shape, left dialysis in shape,” he said. “So it was a lot easier for me to get my numbers, get my labs, maintain a steady number of kidney function.”

    His hard work paid off. After three years on dialysis, he received a kidney transplant from a deceased donor last October. But the 45-year-old is now battling a rare kidney disease called focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) that damages the organ’s function, which can lead to kidney failure.

    “Where now the search is looking for a living donor, which will take care of some of those issues that the rejection is having,” Talley said.

    He takes his search outside, walking two laps around Schiller Park. He said he wears several layers to prevent an infection in the second-degree burns he received from shingles. The top layer is always a sweatshirt with a silent plea printed on front and back: Mr. Talley Needs a Kidney. Can You Help? Call (614) 293-6724.

    “This is the number to the actual kidney transplant center here at Ohio State,” he said.

    Steps he takes every day armed with a dozen fliers.

    “I spend all the loose change in my car and in the couch and in my house getting prints of these every day,” he said. “So I try to at least pass out 12 a day.”

    He shares his story in hopes of saving a life.

    “Approaching people, you have to have a certain look about yourself and that’s eye contact and confidence,” Talley said. “Not disappointment. Because some people can say, ‘No.’”

    The father of three shows no signs of stopping. He knows his kids are counting on him regaining his health.

    “My son is kind of like, ‘Dad will be okay,’” Talley said. “He always pulls through. So that’s one of the inspirations and strengths that gets me to keep going.”

    After teaching for more than two decades at Siebert Elementary, Talley’s health forced him to leave. He now spends most of his time raising kidney awareness.

    Some of his family helped set the scene for a recent event.

    “If I can give my cousin a kidney, I’ll give him a kidney,” said Talley’s first cousin Tiquilia McCauley while smoothing out a plastic tablecloth.

    Talley invited his neighbors in the community for some food and education about dialysis and kidney disease from people living through the experience.

    “The physical, the mental, and the spiritual breaking it does to your body,” Talley said about dialysis.

    He introduced one of his former students who at age 22 is now facing a similar struggle.

    “Nobody woulda knew unless I told them,” Tianna Jobe said. “Still today, you probably don’t think I have it, because I look pretty normal.”

    But Jobe said she is in search of a living kidney donor for a transplant. A fate Rebekah Heidell, 16, said is also in her future after inheriting her father’s kidney issues.

    “For me, it’s not very much a daily, like, oh my kidneys hurt, or something,” she said. “It’s more just like living and anticipating. Like, I’m probably gonna have a kidney transplant.”

    Sharing their personal pain in hopes someone will share a piece of themselves and give the gift of life.

    “You never know who you motivate,” Talley said. “Who you meet just by, you know, the journey. The journey is rough and it’s hard, but I’ve come to the agreement with myself to enjoy this journey.”

    To be a living kidney donor, you must be older than 18 and in good health. You can direct your organ to a specific person or help someone you don’t know who’s on the transplant waiting list.

    The process is completely voluntary and you can learn more on the National Kidney Foundation’s website, kidney.org.

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    Jenna Jordan

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  • Blue Jackets beat Maple Leafs 6-2

    Blue Jackets beat Maple Leafs 6-2

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Mathieu Olivier scored twice and Daniil Tarasov stopped 25 shots as the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 6-2 Tuesday night.

    Justin Danforth had a goal and two assists, Sean Monahan added a goal and an assist, and James van Riemsdyk and Kirill Marchenko also scored for Columbus Zach Werenski had two assists.

    Matthew Knies and Nicholas Robertson scored for Toronto, which has lost two of three. Dennis Hildeby finished with 32 saves.

    Takeaways

    Maple Leafs: Toronto, which traveled to Columbus early this morning after their home win over Tampa Bay on Monday, came out flat with just six shots in the first period and could never find its offensive flow.

    Blue Jackets: Columbus scored three goals in a period twice this season, the previous time Oct. 12 at Colorado.

    Key moment

    The Blue Jackets shook up their lines to spread the offensive output, and it worked as they scored three goals n the first period. The reshuffled fourth line brought home the first score from van Riemsdyk at 5:29. The third line padded the lead 52 seconds later with Danforth’s first of the season and added Olivier’s score with 7:18 left. The first line finally got in on the action with Monahan’s goal at 5:35 of the second.

    Key stat

    The Maple Leafs seem to bring out the best in Danforth, who has three goals and four assists in seven career games against Toronto.

    Up next

    The Maple Leafs host St. Louis on Thursday, while the Blue Jackets visit Nashville on Saturday.

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Six people in Ohio indicted for illegal voting

    Six people in Ohio indicted for illegal voting

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio’s Attorney General, Dave Yost, announced that grand juries have indicted six people on charges of illegal voting, a fourth-degree felony, in previous elections.


    What You Need To Know

    • Six Ohioans have been indicted by grand juries on charges of illegal voting
    • That is a fourth-degree felony
    • The individuals allegedly voted without having U.S. citizenship
    • A grand jury in Lorain County declined to charge a seventh person

    Yost called the right to vote sacred.

    “If you’re not a U.S. citizen, it’s illegal to vote – whether you thought you were allowed to or not – you will be held accountable,” he said in a press release.

    The grand juries indicted the following people for allegedly voting without having U.S. citizenship, according to the release:

    • Ramesh Patel, 68, of North Royalton
    • Lorinda Miller, 78, of Hudson
    • Nicholas Fontaine, 32, of Kent
    • Ahmed Aden, 35, of Columbus
    • Van Thuy Cooper, 53, of Hilliard
    • Maria Dearaujo, 62, of Columbus

    While the release states that many of these individuals were legal residents, it alleges they did not have U.S. citizenship when they voted.

    A Lorain County grand jury declined to charge a seventh person, an Oberlin College student.

    The release states that the cases were investigated by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and that their investigations into voter fraud continue.

    “Irregularities like this are rare, and this is a small number of cases,” Yost said in the release. “We should all be confident in the upcoming election, knowing that the laws are being enforced and will continue to be enforced.”

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    Cody Thompson

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  • Former Ohio officer stands trial in the 2020 shooting death of Andre Hill

    Former Ohio officer stands trial in the 2020 shooting death of Andre Hill

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — A white former Ohio police officer has gone on trial Monday in the killing of Andre Hill, a Black man who was shot as he emerged from a garage holding a cellphone nearly four years ago.


    What You Need To Know

    • Coy was fired after the shooting
    • He has pleaded not guilty to the charges
    • Jury selection begins Monday

    Officer Adam Coy, a 17-year veteran of the Columbus police force, fatally shot Hill while responding to a neighbor’s noise complaint. Coy, who was fired after the Dec. 22, 2020, shooting, has pleaded not guilty to murder, reckless homicide and related offenses. Coy’s attorney, Mark Collins, has said the officer thought he saw Hill with a silver revolver in his right hand.

    Jury selection in his trial began Monday.

    Coy had gone to the neighborhood to investigate a resident’s complaint about noise from a running car when he encountered Hill.

    Police body camera footage showed Hill emerging from the garage of a friend’s house holding up a cellphone in his left hand, his right hand not visible, seconds before he was fatally shot by Coy. About 10 minutes passed before officers at the scene began coming to the aid of Hill, who lay bleeding on the garage floor. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

    Weeks after the shooting, the mayor forced out the police chief amid a series of high-profile fatal police shootings of Black men and children. Columbus later reached a $10 million settlement with Hill’s family, the largest in city history. Columbus City Council also passed Andre’s Law, which requires police officers to render immediate medical attention to an injured suspect.

    Coy had a lengthy history of complaints from residents, with more than three dozen filed against him since he joined the department in 2002, according to his personnel file. A dozen of the complaints were for use of force. All but a few were marked “unfounded” or “not sustained.”

    Coy’s legal team tried unsuccessfully to have the case moved out of Columbus, citing heavy publicity. A message was left for Collins, the defense lawyer, ahead of the trial.

    Hill, a father and grandfather, was remembered for his devotion to family and as a skilled chef and restaurant manager who dreamed of owning his own eatery.

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • 57th All American Quarter Horse Congress gets underway

    57th All American Quarter Horse Congress gets underway

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — The All American Quarter Horse Congress is well underway at the Ohio State Fair grounds. 

    It’s known as the largest single-breed horse show in the world, attracting hundreds of thousands of people every year to Columbus and generating hundreds of millions of dollars for the economy, but one man in particular is known to dominate the track. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The All American Quarter Horse Congress is known as the largest single-breed horse show in the world
    • The event runs for an entire month, attracting hundreds of thousands of people every year to Columbus and generating hundreds of millions of dollars for the economy
    • Reigning champion Shawn Flarida competed again this year

    The dream started when he was young. 

    “My dad brought me here when I was a youth kid,” Flarida said, “and started showing horses at the Quarter Horses Congress. I’ve been a professional horse trainer since 1988, so that’s all I’ve ever really done. It’s all I really know.”

    He’s getting ready to compete in The All American Quarter Horse Congress again this year, but as trainers like Flarida keep their eyes on the prize, CEO of the Ohio Quarter Horse Association Justin Billings is the man pulling it altogether. 

    “This is the Super Bowl of Quarter Horse Competition right here in Columbus, Ohio. There’s 200 staff that help pull it off,” Billings said. 

    The All American Quarter Horse Congress started back in 1967 as a three-day event. Fifty-seven years later, it runs for an entire month.

    “as we’ve grown into a 30-day event with over a half a million visitors, 4,000 horses, that turns into a huge economic impact for the central Ohio area, just shy of $430 million generated for our local area,” he said. “And that’s hotels, that’s restaurants, that’s trucks, that’s trailers. That’s the 200 vendors here for the trade show generating over $400 million for the central Ohio area.”

    Competition may be fierce this year, but Flarida still has a reputation to uphold, crediting that to none other than his horse. 

    “You’re only as good as the horse that you’re riding,” Flarida said, “and, you know, the owners and the people that support me and get me up and down the road and get me there. They’ve been tremendous to me.”

    But no matter, win or lose, Flarida’s doing what he loves where he first fell in love with the sport many years ago. 

    “It’s an honor to be here at the Congress. I’m probably one of the few people that can do something that I love to do every day. There’s not a day that that I don’t wake up looking forward to go do my job,” he said.

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    Aliah Keller

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  • Lionel Messi, Inter Miami win MLS Supporters Shield with 3-2 win at Crew

    Lionel Messi, Inter Miami win MLS Supporters Shield with 3-2 win at Crew

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Lionel Messi and Inter Miami have another trophy, along with home-field advantage throughout the Major League Soccer playoffs.


    What You Need To Know

    • Messi scored twice in the final minutes of the first half, goalie Drake Callender stopped a penalty kick in the 84th minute and Inter Miami beat the defending MLS Cup champion Columbus Crew 3-2 on Wednesday night, wrapping up the Supporters Shield given annually to the team with the best regular-season record
    • It was Messi’s 46th major trophy won for club or country, extending his record for the most by any men’s soccer player in history
    • Inter Miami, in MLS play this season, is now 10-1-6 with Messi in the lineup.

    Messi scored twice in the final minutes of the first half, goalie Drake Callender stopped a penalty kick in the 84th minute and Inter Miami beat the defending MLS Cup champion Columbus Crew 3-2 on Wednesday night, wrapping up the Supporters Shield given annually to the team with the best regular-season record.

    It was Messi’s 46th major trophy won for club or country, extending his record for the most by any men’s soccer player in history. And it is the second he has won with Inter Miami, this Supporters Shield being added to the Leagues Cup trophy the Herons claimed shortly after Messi joined the club in 2023.

    “We knew this was a group that could fight for this,” Messi said.

    Luis Suarez also scored for Inter Miami, which will open a best-of-three first-round playoff series in the final weekend of October. If the team wins that series, it would have the right to host every match it plays the rest of the season — an Eastern Conference semifinal (scheduled for Nov. 23 or 24), the East final (Nov. 30 or Dec. 1) and the MLS Cup final on Dec. 7.

    “We have a nice opportunity to go down in history … and now we think about what is coming,” Messi told Apple TV after the match. “We have a great advantage in that we play all the games at home, which was what we were looking for. I think that we are very, very strong at home.”

    Also still within reach for Inter Miami: the best MLS regular-season mark ever. Wednesday’s win pushed Inter Miami’s record to 20-4-8 this season, giving it 68 points. If the club wins its final two matches — Saturday at Toronto and Oct. 19 at home against New England — it would finish with 74 points.

    New England has the single-season points record, finishing with 73 in 2021.

    Messi opened the scoring in the 45th minute, taking a long pass from Jordi Alba — his longtime teammate at Barcelona, the club with which Messi won 35 of his trophies — and splitting two defenders before somehow getting the ball past Columbus goalkeeper Patrick Schulte for a 1-0 lead.

    And about five minutes into first-half stoppage time, Messi struck again on a free kick from about 30 yards out. Schulte seemed fooled, and Messi squeezed the ball between the goalie and the near post for a 2-0 lead.

    “Dominant,” Inter Miami coach Gerardo “Tata” Martino said.

    Diego Rossi scored in the first minute of the second half for Columbus to cut the lead in half, but it didn’t take long for Inter Miami to restore the two-goal cushion. Almost immediately after play resumed, Schulte was upended by one of his own defenders and Suarez sent a header into an empty net for a 3-1 edge.

    Juan “Cucho” Hernández’s penalty kick in the 61st minute got Columbus within 3-2. But once again, the momentum didn’t last for long. Rudy Camacho was sent off for his second yellow card in the 63rd minute, meaning the Crew had to play with 10 men the rest of the way.

    Didn’t matter. Columbus still created some big chances down the stretch.

    A deflected ball in the 76th minute got across the box and onto the right foot of Mohamed Farsi — but his shot was blocked by Callender, who was perfectly positioned to protect the lead.

    Then came more drama, when Inter Miami was called for its second handball inside the box — an automatic penalty kick — of the second half. Hernández picked the left side of the net, but Callender made the save look almost easy.

    That save helped finish what Messi started.

    It was the fifth two-goal game of the MLS season for Messi, who now has 17 goals in 17 league matches this season. He’s missed 15 of Inter Miami’s MLS matches in 2024, either because of commitments to Argentina’s national team or the two-month absence that he needed to recover from a badly injured ankle — an injury that happened during his nation’s run to the Copa America title in July.

    Inter Miami, in MLS play this season, is now 10-1-6 with Messi in the lineup.

    “Throughout the year we had many, many injuries, where we couldn’t all be together … but the group was getting the most out of every tough game,” Messi said.

    The Crew and the LA Galaxy entered Wednesday still with a mathematical hope of passing Inter Miami in the race for the Supporters Shield, and Cincinnati was nine points back with nine points still possible.

    But now, they’re all playing for second.

    “Dec. 7 is what we want,” Martino said, referring to the date of the MLS Cup final. “But this is not insignificant today.”

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Hilliard closes schools after student stabbed at bus stop

    Hilliard closes schools after student stabbed at bus stop

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    HILLIARD, Ohio — The Hilliard City School District canceled classes for four schools Monday after a student reportedly stabbed another student at a bus stop, according to the district.


    Crossing, Scioto Darby, Beacon, and JW Reason Schools were closed Monday.

    All other schools were placed on a “Level One Lockdown” as a precaution.

    All after-school activities, including community events, will continue as planned.

    No other information has been released at this time.

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    Nathan Sharman

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  • Buckeyes, Bearcats to play exhibition game in support of mental health

    Buckeyes, Bearcats to play exhibition game in support of mental health

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    OHIO — The Ohio State University Buckeyes will travel to the University of Cincinnati this fall to play a charity exhibition game in support of mental health. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The OSU vs. UC CareSource Exhibition Game for Mental Health is among ongoing efforts from college basketball programs to raise awareness and provide resources to those struggling
    • The exhibition game is part of a contest with The University of Dayton and Xavier University, which will play their own separate game also this fall
    • All net proceeds from ticket sales will go toward mental health providers and charities within each school’s footprint
    • Funds will also go toward Jay’s Light, which is an organization created by Dayton Head Coach Anthony Grant and his wife, Chris, after their daughter, Jay, died in 2022 from mental illness

    The OSU vs. UC CareSource Exhibition Game for Mental Health is among ongoing efforts from college basketball programs to raise awareness and provide resources to those struggling. The exhibition game is part of a contest with The University of Dayton and Xavier University, which will play their own separate game also this fall. All net proceeds from ticket sales will go toward mental health providers and charities within each school’s footprint. 

    Funds will also go toward Jay’s Light, which is an organization created by Dayton Head Coach Anthony Grant and his wife, Chris, after their daughter, Jay, died in 2022 from mental illness. The organization helps mothers, fathers, teens and young adults find mental health resources. 

    “We’re excited to partner with Cincinnati and CareSource this preseason for such a tremendous cause,” Ohio State head coach Jake Diebler said in a statement. “The opportunity to raise awareness, specifically in our great state, was important to our program and university. The overall wellness and mental health of our student-athletes has long been a priority for our athletic department, and we are blessed to have incredible resources here at Ohio State. Being able to join Coach Grant, along with Coach Miller and his program, is important for our state as we continue to work to have a real impact in our communities.”

    The OSU and UC game is set for Friday, Oct. 18 inside Fifth Third Arena in Cincinnati, and the Dayton and Xavier game will be played on Sunday, Oct. 20 in Dayton. Ticket information will be announced later this month. 

    “We are thrilled to participate in this exhibition with Ohio State and raise awareness for mental health initiatives,” Cincinnati Head Coach Wes Miller said in a release. “This game will be a great showcase for Fifth Third Arena and serve as a preview for our fans for what’s in store for our 2024-25 team.”

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    Lydia Taylor

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  • Blue Jackets fans remember Johnny, Matthew Gaudreau

    Blue Jackets fans remember Johnny, Matthew Gaudreau

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    The brothers died Thursday night after being struck on bikes by a suspected drunk driver in New Jersey.

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • ‘Get Up and Win’ event empowers women

    ‘Get Up and Win’ event empowers women

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Life is usually easier when your finances and health are in order, and one event coming up is hoping to give women a better chance to accomplish that.

    Shaletha Sanders always gets done up for walks. 


    What You Need To Know

    • “Get Up and Win” is an event that’s meant to empower women in their finances, mental health, and wellness
    • Shaletha Sanders put the event together after facing adversity in her life
    • “Get Up and Win” is Sept. 21
    • Some proceeds from the event help feed kids in Ghana

    “I love my heels,” she said. “Everywhere I go, I always wear them.” 

    But she never imagined she’d be on her feet again after facing adversity several years ago. 

    “I was working out, going to the gym, and I thought I had a muscle spasm,” she said. “So, it was like 19 inches in diameter, and it was really, really big, like the size of somebody’s waist.” 

    The doctor said birth control pills caused a blood clot in Sanders’ leg. She said she was told she’d never walk properly again. 

    “This leg was like an ostrich for a month and a half. I had a cane.” 

    But the pain went away one day.

     “My leg… I literally saw it just straighten up. And for me, I was like, ‘Oh my God’.” 

    She recovered well, but hit a few more curveballs throughout her life. 

    “During that time, I was depressed, full of anxiety,” said Sanders. 

    But in the end, it was those struggles that made her resilient, pushing her to make a change for herself and others. 

    She became Outreach Program Director at Faith Empowerment Center, helping women and girls through support groups, coaching and different giveaways throughout the year. Her team has a big event coming up called “Get Up and Win.”

     “The goal of the event is for individuals to be empowered, help boost mental health and help health and wellness,” said Sanders. “We’re going to talk about financial literacy, how to get your credit together, what it means to save and invest, what it means to be resilient, being able to bounce back after a difficult situation.”

    She says the event empowers women for a reason. 

    “It’s all about allowing for women to walk in freedom because I know what it feels like to suffer in silence and to feel like no one cares and be isolated from the world,” she said.

    “Get Up and Win” is Sept. 21. Some proceeds from the event feed kids in Ghana, and Sanders says this year, they have enough to feed over 10,000 kids. 

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    Aliah Keller

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  • The importance of sustainability for Ohio’s state parks

    The importance of sustainability for Ohio’s state parks

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — State park sustainability is crucial for our environment’s overall health and well-being.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Ohio State Parks Foundation is a nonprofit organization that supports Ohio’s state parks by funding special projects to promote sustainability and enhance visitor experience
    • The Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ “ConServe Ohio” initiative is a call to action plan that includes implementing sustainability practices 
    • Some sustainability practices you can do next time you visit a park is to pick up your trash, don’t bother the wildlife and to not leave anything you bring to the park at the park

    “Ohio has such beautiful places, but they’re not going to last unless we all join together and become stewards of those places and take care of them,” said the Executive Director of the Ohio State Parks Foundation, Lisa Daris.

    Daris has been the executive director of the Ohio State Parks Foundation for three years. She’s had a passion for nature her whole life. 

    “I grew up in northeast Ohio on the banks of the Cuyahoga River, and so the waterways were a big part of my life. And with waterways, cleaning them up, connect to nature is just the next step,” said Daris.

    The foundation works on special projects for Ohio’s state parks to enhance visitor experience and promote sustainability. One of the projects is the pollinator plot at the Alum Creek State Park Howard Road boat ramp. According to Daris, pollinator plots add to sustainability by contributing to park’s plant life. 

    “It promotes pollinators. So those are the little bees and bugs and insects that pollinate and distribute the plants around the state parks and just in general in nature,” said Daris. 

    Sustainability is also top of mind for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Its initiative called “ConServe Ohio” is a call to action plan for state park staff and visitors to implement sustainability practices in the parks. 

    “It’s all about using the natural resources that we have today in a way that makes sure that we have plenty of natural resources for people to use in the future as well,” said the Sustainability Coordinator for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Heather Bokman.  

    Bokman said some of the best sustainability practices are to always pick up your trash, don’t leave anything you bring to a state park behind, leave the wildlife alone and if you really want to help, you can become a volunteer. Bokman said sustainability is all about preserving for the future. 

    “We want to make sure that we can help keep our environment beautiful, especially in parks where people really are connected to nature. And we want to make sure that people always have that space to go where they can connect with nature and enjoy the beauty of nature and make sure they always have what they need,” said Bokman. 

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    Kennedy Chase

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  • Sudden death of ‘Johnny Hockey’ means more hard times for Columbus Blue Jackets

    Sudden death of ‘Johnny Hockey’ means more hard times for Columbus Blue Jackets

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Columbus Blue Jackets officials could hardly believe their luck when they persuaded superstar Johnny Gaudreau to pass up larger markets and sign here two years ago.


    What You Need To Know

    • Blue Jackets officials and fans were ecstatic two years ago when Johnny Gaudreau was persuaded to pass up larger markets to sign with Columbus
    • Like other players who have come and gone, “Johnny Hockey” said he wanted to be a part of the Blue Jackets and raise his family in Columbus
    • Gaudreau’s death was the second off-ice tragedy in three years for a franchise struggling to get back on its feet
    • Twenty-four-year-old goaltender Matiss Kivlenieks was killed in a freak fireworks accident in July 2021

    Ecstatic fans looked to “Johnny Hockey” to score goals and jump-start the fortunes of a struggling team that had reached the playoffs just six times in the previous 21 seasons and advanced beyond the opening round only twice.

    A few other big stars had spent time with the Blue Jackets, but for one reason or another they didn’t work out or didn’t care to hang around. Goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky and forward Artemi Panarin were beloved by fans and led Columbus to a playoff sweep of the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2019. But they couldn’t get out of town fast enough when their contracts expired.

    Gaudreau, one of the sport’s top players who spent his first eight years in the NHL with Calgary, certainly seemed different. He was excited to play for Columbus and be closer to his family in New Jersey, which for Blue Jackets fans makes his sudden death along with that of his brother Thursday night a shattering tragedy even harder to take. He was just 31.

    “Johnny Gaudreau coming here, actually choosing Columbus was literally our validation. Like we are a hockey town, this is a hockey market. People want to play here. Johnny Gaudreau was literally the embodiment of that,” said Nick Shannon, who came to Nationwide Arena in Columbus on Friday to pay his respects.

    Gaudreau and his younger brother died after they were struck by a suspected drunken driver while they were riding bicycles in Oldmans Township, close to their southern New Jersey hometown. Their sister’s wedding, scheduled for Friday, was called off.

    “When he first signed, his famous words were, ‘It’s a great place to raise a family.’ And we were his family,” said Ninell Baker, a Blue Jackets season-ticket holder who also showed up at the downtown arena. “The players loved him. We all loved him. It breaks my heart. I don’t even know how to act.”

    Fans who made their way to the front of the arena left behind flowers, caps, shirts and lots of hockey sticks. A bagpiper in a kilt and a Blue Jackets’ No. 13 Gaudreau sweater played as he walked up and down a sidewalk.

    Gaudreau’s shocking death was the second off-ice tragedy in three years for a franchise struggling to get back on its feet. The organization was rocked when goaltender Matiss Kivlenieks was killed in a fireworks accident in July 2021 while attending the wedding of then-Blue Jackets goaltending coach Manny Legace’s daughter in Michigan. Kivlenieks was just 24.

    Injuries, bad luck and mismanagement have knocked the Blue Jackets off track in the past few seasons, despite Gaudreau’s 74- and 60-point efforts in 2022-23 and 2023-24, respectively.

    Coach John Tortorella led Columbus to the playoffs for four straight seasons but was fired after missing the postseason in 2021. A protege, Brad Larsen, lasted two seasons before he was let go.

    The Blue Jackets made Mike Babcock the highest-paid coach in team history when he was hired in the summer of 2023. Babcock didn’t even make it to the season, fired just before training camp amid complaints that his requests to see photos on players’ phones were too invasive.

    Pascal Vincent, who had been hired as an associate head coach, was elevated to the top job on the eve of training camp. Columbus finished last season as one of the worst teams in the NHL and out of the playoffs for the fourth straight season.

    General manager Jarmo Kekalainen was fired in the middle of last season. Longtime NHL executive Don Waddell was hired as GM in May, and he fired Vincent in June. Waddell hired former Minnesota Wild coach Dean Evason to replace Vincent.

    Now Evason will be without Gaudreau, who would have been his best player. He will also be without Patrik Laine, the talented forward acquired in a 2021 trade who the team hoped would complement Gaudreau on the top line.

    The 26-year-old Laine played 18 games last season before entering the NHL Player Assistance Program last January. Telling Blue Jackets management he needed “a change of scenery,” Laine was traded to Montreal last month.

    “We really don’t have a choice but to keep going,” Shannon said. “To be a Blue Jackets fan, or any sports fan in Ohio, you need to be resilient.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew Gaudreau die, NHL says

    Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew Gaudreau die, NHL says

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    Johnny Gaudreau, a forward for the Columbus Blue Jackets, has died at the age of 31, the NHL says in a statement. The league also announced the death of Gaudreau’s brother, Matthew, 29, in the same statement. The brothers were struck by a vehicle while riding bikes in Salem, New Jersey. The Carneys Point, New Jersey, natives were in the area for their sister Katie’s wedding scheduled for Friday in Philadelphia.According to police, the Gaudreau brothers were cycling on a road when a man driving in the same direction attempted to pass two other vehicles and struck them from behind. They were pronounced dead at the scene.Police said the driver, Sean M. Higgins, was suspected of being under the influence of alcohol and charged with two counts of death by auto and jailed.”While Johnny’s infectious spirit for the game and show-stopping skills on the ice earned him the nickname ‘Johnny Hockey,’ he was more than just a dazzling hockey player; he was a doting father and beloved husband, son, brother and teammate who endeared himself to every person fortunate enough to have crossed his path,” the statement went on to say.Johnny Gaudreau spent his first nine NHL seasons with the Calgary flames. The brothers attended Boston College and were teammates the year Johnny won the Hobey Baker Award during the 2013-14 season. Matthew Gaudreau was a hockey player with the minor league Reading Royals. “We send our most heartfelt condolences to wife Meredith; their children, Noa and Johnny; his parents, Guy and Jane; and sisters Kristen and Katie,” the NHL said. “And we grieve alongside his teammates, members of the Blue Jackets and Flames organizations, his many friends in hockey and countless fans around the world for whom he created indelible memories on and off the ice.”The Associated Press contributed to this report

    Johnny Gaudreau, a forward for the Columbus Blue Jackets, has died at the age of 31, the NHL says in a statement.

    The league also announced the death of Gaudreau’s brother, Matthew, 29, in the same statement. The brothers were struck by a vehicle while riding bikes in Salem, New Jersey.

    The Carneys Point, New Jersey, natives were in the area for their sister Katie’s wedding scheduled for Friday in Philadelphia.

    According to police, the Gaudreau brothers were cycling on a road when a man driving in the same direction attempted to pass two other vehicles and struck them from behind. They were pronounced dead at the scene.

    Police said the driver, Sean M. Higgins, was suspected of being under the influence of alcohol and charged with two counts of death by auto and jailed.

    “While Johnny’s infectious spirit for the game and show-stopping skills on the ice earned him the nickname ‘Johnny Hockey,’ he was more than just a dazzling hockey player; he was a doting father and beloved husband, son, brother and teammate who endeared himself to every person fortunate enough to have crossed his path,” the statement went on to say.

    Johnny Gaudreau spent his first nine NHL seasons with the Calgary flames. The brothers attended Boston College and were teammates the year Johnny won the Hobey Baker Award during the 2013-14 season.

    Matthew Gaudreau was a hockey player with the minor league Reading Royals.

    “We send our most heartfelt condolences to [Johnny’s] wife Meredith; their children, Noa and Johnny; his parents, Guy and Jane; and sisters Kristen and Katie,” the NHL said. “And we grieve alongside his teammates, members of the Blue Jackets and Flames organizations, his many friends in hockey and countless fans around the world for whom he created indelible memories on and off the ice.”

    The Associated Press contributed to this report

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  • Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew Gaudreau die, NHL says

    Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew Gaudreau die, NHL says

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    Blue Jackets forward Johnny Gaudreau, brother Matthew Gaudreau die, NHL says

    Johnny Gaudreau, a forward for the Columbus Blue Jackets, has died at the age of 31, the NHL says in a statement. The league also announced the death of Gaudreau’s brother, Matthew, in the same statement. WPVI reports the brothers were struck by a vehicle while riding bikes in Salem, New Jersey. “While Johnny’s infectious spirit for the game and show-stopping skills on the ice earned him the nickname ‘Johnny Hockey,’ he was more than just a dazzling hockey player; he was a doting father and beloved husband, son, brother and teammate who endeared himself to every person fortunate enough to have crossed his path,” the statement went on to say.Johnny Gaudreau spent his first nine NHL seasons with the Calgary flames. The brothers attended Boston College and were teammates the year Johnny won the Hobey Baker Award during the 2013-14 season. Matthew Gaudreau was a hockey player with the minor league Reading Royals. “We send our most heartfelt condolences to wife Meredith; their children, Noa and Johnny; his parents, Guy and Jane; and sisters Kristen and Katie,” the NHL said. “And we grieve alongside his teammates, members of the Blue Jackets and Flames organizations, his many friends in hockey and countless fans around the world for whom he created indelible memories on and off the ice.”

    Johnny Gaudreau, a forward for the Columbus Blue Jackets, has died at the age of 31, the NHL says in a statement.

    The league also announced the death of Gaudreau’s brother, Matthew, in the same statement. WPVI reports the brothers were struck by a vehicle while riding bikes in Salem, New Jersey.

    “While Johnny’s infectious spirit for the game and show-stopping skills on the ice earned him the nickname ‘Johnny Hockey,’ he was more than just a dazzling hockey player; he was a doting father and beloved husband, son, brother and teammate who endeared himself to every person fortunate enough to have crossed his path,” the statement went on to say.

    Johnny Gaudreau spent his first nine NHL seasons with the Calgary flames. The brothers attended Boston College and were teammates the year Johnny won the Hobey Baker Award during the 2013-14 season.

    Matthew Gaudreau was a hockey player with the minor league Reading Royals.

    “We send our most heartfelt condolences to [Johnny’s] wife Meredith; their children, Noa and Johnny; his parents, Guy and Jane; and sisters Kristen and Katie,” the NHL said. “And we grieve alongside his teammates, members of the Blue Jackets and Flames organizations, his many friends in hockey and countless fans around the world for whom he created indelible memories on and off the ice.”

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  • Downs leads 4 Ohio State players selected to AP preseason All-America first team

    Downs leads 4 Ohio State players selected to AP preseason All-America first team

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    Ohio State safety Caleb Downs, one of the second-ranked Buckeyes’ high-profile transfers, and three of his new teammates were selected for the preseason Associated Press All-America team announced Monday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Downs, who was a second-team All-American as a freshman for Alabama last season, was joined by guard Donovan Jackson, receiver Emeka Egbuka and cornerback Denzel Burke
    • No. 1 Georgia and No. 9 Michigan each had three players picked for the first team
    • The defending national champion Wolverines are represented by tight end Colston Loveland, defensive tackle Mason Graham and cornerback Will Johnson

    Downs, who was a second-team All-American as a freshman for Alabama last season, was joined by guard Donovan Jackson, receiver Emeka Egbuka and cornerback Denzel Burke to give Ohio State the most first-team selections. Running back TreVeyon Henderson and defensive lineman Tyleik Williams made the second team to give the Buckeyes six total selections, also the most of any team.

    No. 1 Georgia and No. 9 Michigan each had three players picked for the first team. Quarterback Carson Beck was joined by fellow Bulldogs guard Tate Ratledge and defensive back Malaki Starks, a first-team All-American last year.

    The defending national champion Wolverines are represented by tight end Colston Loveland, defensive tackle Mason Graham and cornerback Will Johnson.

    No. 5 Alabama put two transfers on the first team in center Parker Brailsford (Washington) and kicker Graham Nicholson (Miami, Ohio).

    No. 7 Notre Dame and No. 13 LSU also had two first-team selections.

    The Fighting Irish had defensive tackle Howard Cross III and safety Xavier Watts selected. Watts was an All-American last season and Cross made the second team. The Tigers were represented by tackle Will Campbell and linebacker Harold Perkins Jr. on the first team.

    No. 3 Oregon placed three players on the second team, including quarterback Dillon Gabriel, a sixth-year player who transferred from Oklahoma after starting his career at UCF.

    First-team by conference

    SEC – 10.

    Big Ten – 8.

    ACC – 4

    Big 12 – 3

    Independent – 2.

    First team (offense)

    Quarterback — Carson Beck, fifth year, Georgia.

    Running backs — Ollie Gordon II, third year, Oklahoma State; Omarion Hampton, third year, North Carolina.

    Tackles — Will Campbell, third year, LSU; Kelvin Banks Jr., third year, Texas.

    Guards — Donovan Jackson, fourth year, Ohio State; Tate Ratledge, fifth year, Georgia.

    Center — Parker Brailsford, third year, Alabama.

    Tight end — Colston Loveland, third year, Michigan.

    Wide receivers — Luther Burden III, third year, Missouri; Tetairoa McMillan, third year, Arizona; Emeka Egbuka, fourth year, Ohio State.

    All-purpose player — Travis Hunter, third year, Colorado.

    Kicker — Graham Nicholson, fourth year, Alabama.

    First team (defense)

    Edge — James Pearce Jr., third year, Tennessee; Ashton Gillotte, fourth year, Louisville.

    Tackles — Mason Graham, third year, Michigan; Howard Cross III, sixth year, Notre Dame.

    Linebackers — Harold Perkins Jr., third year, LSU; Jay Higgins, fifth year, Iowa; Barrett Carter, fourth year, Clemson.

    Cornerbacks — Will Johnson, third year, Michigan; Denzel Burke, fourth year, Ohio State.

    Safeties — Malaki Starks, third year, Georgia; Caleb Downs, second year, Ohio State.

    Defensive back — Xavier Watts, fifth year, Notre Dame.

    Punter — Alex Mastromanno, fifth year, Florida State.

    Second team (offense)

    Quarterback — Dillon Gabriel, sixth year, Oregon.

    Running backs — TreVeyon Henderson, fourth year, Ohio State; Ashton Jeanty, third year, Boise State

    Tackles — Ajani Cornelius, fifth year, Oregon; Aireontae Ersery, fifth year, Minnesota.

    Guards — Tyler Booker, third year, Alabama; Dylan Fairchild, fourth year, Georgia.

    Center — Cooper Mays, fifth year, Tennessee.

    Tight end — Mitchell Evans, fourth year, Notre Dame.

    Wide receivers — Tez Johnson, fifth year, Oregon; Tre Harris, fifth year, Mississippi; Ricky White III, fifth year, UNLV.

    All-purpose player — Zachariah Branch, second year, Southern California.

    Kicker — Andres Borregales, fourth year, Miami.

    Second team (defense)

    Edge — Nic Scourton, third year, Texas A&M; Abdul Carter, third year, Penn State.

    Tackles — Tyleik Williams, fourth year, Ohio State; Deone Walker, third year, Kentucky.

    Linebackers — Danny Stutsman, fourth year, Oklahoma; Jason Henderson, fourth year, Old Dominion; Nick Martin, fourth year, Oklahoma State.

    Cornerbacks — Benjamin Morrison, third year, Notre Dame; Sebastian Castro, sixth year, Iowa.

    Safeties — Dillon Thieneman, second year, Purdue; Billy Bowman, fourth year, Oklahoma.

    Defensive back — Ricardo Hallman, fourth year, Wisconsin.


    Punter — James Ferguson-Reynolds, third year, Boise State.Related Stories


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    Associated Press

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  • Study identifies ‘stealth’ foods contributing to saturated fat, sugar intake

    Study identifies ‘stealth’ foods contributing to saturated fat, sugar intake

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — A new study may have identified why many U.S. adults unintentionally go over the recommended daily limit for saturated fat and added sugar.


    What You Need To Know

    • A new study may have identified why many U.S. adults unintentionally go over the recommended daily limit for saturated fat and added sugar
    • The study identified “a longer list of popular sources that helps explain why it’s so hard to limit fat and sugar to the recommended 10% of daily calories.”
    • The study suggests that over-consuming certain foods—including chicken and ketchup—can risk health complications like cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer
    • Through their analysis, researchers found that saturated fat represented at least 12% of daily calorie intake and sugar anywhere from 14-16%

    An Ohio State University press release said the study, which was published in the journal “Nutrients,” identified “a longer list of popular sources that helps explain why it’s so hard to limit fat and sugar to the recommended 10% of daily calories.”

    “Chicken breast is promoted as a lower saturated fat food, but it still has a little bit of saturated fat. But it is helpful to know how foods with smaller amounts also slowly add saturated fat in a stealthy way into the diet,” said first author Christopher Taylor, professor and director of medical dietetics in the School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences at OSU, in a news release.

    The study suggests that over-consuming certain foods—including chicken and ketchup—can risk health complications like cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer.

    Researchers looked at data on 36,378 adults for the purpose of creating a research tool, but they also recognize the value of this information to the regular consumer.

    “Being able to meet less than 10% is to identify the big contributors, but also to be able to see where saturated fat and added sugar may still exist in other food choices,” Taylor said in the release. “It doesn’t make them poor choices – it’s about being aware of how the morning latte may be contributing.”

    Here were the top sources of saturated fat:

    • Cheese
    • Pizza
    • Ice cream
    • Eggs

    Top sources of added sugar:

    • Soft drinks
    • Tea
    • Fruit drinks
    • Cakes and pies

    “Based on the USDA ‘What We Eat in America’ food list, other categories contributing to saturated fat intake include cold cuts, cream substitutes, fried potatoes and whole milk,” the release reads. “Categories with added sugar include tomato-based condiments, cereal bars, energy drinks and yeast breads.”

    The study’s lead author and associate professor of oncology at Georgetown University, Susan Schembre, expressed that levels of added sugar in our food highlights a public health policy concern.

    “It’s everywhere,” she said in the release. “It’s in so many unexpected foods, and often in surprising amounts.”

    Through their analysis, researchers found that saturated fat represented at least 12% of daily calorie intake and added sugar anywhere from 14-16%.

    Taylor said dietary recommendations typically recommend cutting out the big contributors such as pizza and ice cream, and that’s why this more inclusive list could be “eye-opening.”

    “There are the foods that are higher in saturated fat and added sugar that are consumed frequently, and they get targeted, but there’s also that smaller cumulative effect of things that are generally perceived as healthy, but they’re all contributing just a little bit,” he said in the release. “And then when you top it off with some of those higher sources, it ends up taking you over the threshold for that 10% of the day’s calories.”

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    Cody Thompson

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  • Mayor of Columbus, Ohio, says ransomware attackers stole corrupted, unusable data

    Mayor of Columbus, Ohio, says ransomware attackers stole corrupted, unusable data

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Hackers recently stole data from Ohio’s largest city, but what they got was not usable and no personal information about city workers was made available online, the mayor said.

    Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther confirmed the data breach and noted Tuesday that the city never received a ransom request. The city learned Friday that most of the data published to the dark web by the ransomware group Rhysida was corrupted or encrypted, he said.

    The group initially claimed to have 6.5 terabytes of stolen data — including log-in information, emergency service files and city camera access — that it unsuccessfully put up for auction. But Ginther said the city’s forensics indicated the group had far less data than that, and that its screenshots posted to the dark web were “the most compelling asset” it had.

    After the breach, city workers, including police and fire, had said their personal information had been compromised. Ginther, though, said that while employees’ personal information was not uploaded to the dark web, someone temporarily accessed it during the attack.

    The city’s payroll system was accessed long enough to view files, but there is no evidence files were downloaded or posted to the dark web, city officials said. There also is no evidence that data belonging to the general public was exposed.

    The city is now focusing on increasing digital security and technology training to prevent another breach, Ginther said.

    “I think when this is all said and done, we will have spent several million dollars dealing with the attack,” Ginther said.

    Other major cities in Ohio have also dealt with cyberattacks. Cleveland’s city hall was closed to the public for several days in June following a ransomware attack that forced the city to shut down most of its systems, and Akron had to shut down some city functions after a digital attack in 2019.

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