Tag: college sports

  • ‘It’s become a tradition’ for Coates and Miami RedHawks

    ‘It’s become a tradition’ for Coates and Miami RedHawks

    Rodney Coates, right, talks with members of the Miami University football program on Wednesday, Dec. 11, during a luncheon at the Gross Student-Athlete Development Center organized by Coates to celebrate Miami’s bowl berth. The luncheon has become an annual tradition.

    Oxford, Ohio/Miami University – As members of the Miami University football team filed into – and later out of – the Gross Student-Athlete Development Center on Wednesday afternoon, many offered handshakes and words of appreciation to Rodney Coates.

    The thanks weren’t only for the meal provided, an annual tradition Coates first organized about a decade ago to celebrate when the RedHawks earn a bowl bid, but also for the role Coates plays each year.

    Coates, professor of Global and Intercultural Studies, teaches as part of the Summer Bridge Program, which helps many student-athletes prepare for the academic experience.

    “It’s above and beyond to feed us for a bowl game, but really more so than that what we appreciate is Dr. Coates’ relationship,” said Chuck Martin, head coach of Miami football. “It’s very unique. He’s helped our kids so many different ways. He really helps our kids get ready for college.

    “I couldn’t put a price tag on what he does for our kids.”

    A former Miami football player inspired the initial lunch. The player had a long-term spinal injury, and that resonated with Coates.

    “I said, ‘We need to celebrate it. Not wait for things to happen,’” Coates said. “Let’s make it something really special where Miami comes together to say thank you for what you’ve done. That’s how it started.”

    Coates has taught at Miami since 1990. He received the Distinguished Educator Award from the College of Arts and Science in 2021, as well as the President’s Medal that year.

    Coates has worked with the Summer Bridge Program for more than a decade.

    “Professor Coates is incredibly supportive of our outstanding student-athletes here at Miami,” Miami President Gregory Crawford said. “He works tirelessly with our student-athletes both in and outside the classroom. His December football luncheon is a cherished tradition, celebrating their success and showing our gratitude for all they contribute to Miami and our community.”

    After winning eight games this season and advancing to the Mid-American Conference championship game, the RedHawks will play Colorado State in the Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl presented by Gin & Juice By Dre and Snoop on Dec. 28 in Tucson, Arizona.

    Kickoff is 4:30 PM at Arizona Stadium. The game will be broadcast on The CW Network.

    This is the fifth straight bowl appearance for the RedHawks and eighth in the last nine years, which has meant several Coates luncheons for many players.

    “As soon as I hear about it, it’s circled on the calendar,” said John Young, a senior offensive lineman.

    “It’s a way for all of us at the end of the year to get together for a couple of last meals,” added senior offensive lineman Reid Holskey. “It’s kind of good to have these moments with the guys who are here right now.”

    David Sayler, Miami’s director of athletics, called the luncheon “a bonding moment.”

    “It’s really nice for the football student-athletes to see deans, the President’s Office, and everybody else who supports it helping provide food for them,” Sayler said. “It’s really a nice gesture and doesn’t go unappreciated by the players.”

    Dec. 28 marks the 16th overall bowl appearance for Miami, beginning with the 1948 Sun Bowl (a 13-12 victory over Texas Tech).

    The last five years have included stops in the LendingTree Bowl (2020), the Frisco Football Classic (2021), the HomeTown Lenders Bahamas Bowl (2022), and the Avocados from Mexico Cure Bowl (2023).

    During that stretch, Martin became Miami’s all-time winningest coach.

    “We’ve done this a few times now,” Coates said. “It’s become a tradition amongst them (the team) too.”

    Established in 1809, Miami University is located in Oxford, Ohio, with regional campuses in Hamilton and Middletown, a learning center in West Chester, and a European study center in Luxembourg.

  • Ohio House approves transgender sports ban for women’s athletics

    Ohio House approves transgender sports ban for women’s athletics

    By Tyler Buchanan and Ohio Capital Journal

    Ohio lawmakers approved a bill Thursday to allow college athletes to profit off their name, image and likeness, with Republicans adding an unrelated provision to ban transgender girls from competing in women’s high school and college sports.

    The last-minute addition of a provision dealing with the transgender sports ban set off a chaotic debate on the Ohio House of Representatives floor. Republican lawmakers defended the amendment as necessary to preserve the integrity and fairness of women’s athletics. Democrats condemned the effort as anti-LGBTQ+ and as being rushed through without a full legislative process.

    Gov. Mike DeWine too criticized the proposal.

    “This issue is best addressed outside of government, through individual sports leagues and athletic associations, including the Ohio High School Athletic Association, who can tailor policies to meet the needs of their member athletes and member institutions,” the governor said in a statement.

    The House provision was added to an otherwise bipartisan bill about college athletics which recently passed the Ohio Senate in a unanimous vote. 

    The House vote was 57-36, with one Republican joining the full Democratic caucus in voting against.

    Within hours, the Senate rejected the changes and worked to again pass legislation dealing with athletes benefiting from their personal “name, image and likeness” — without the transgender athletes amendment. Senators added this “NIL” language to an unrelated bill and included in a section dealing with the legalization of sports gambling. 

    The ball, so to speak, is back in the House’s court.

    Legislation to let college athletes benefit from their personal “name, image and likeness” — without losing their sports eligibility — has gained momentum in states throughout the country.

    Under the Ohio Statehouse proposals, college athletes would be able to sign endorsement deals with brands so long as the sponsorships do not conflict with deals already in place at their collegiate programs.

    “The example I would give is, if the school is a Nike school and the student gets an Adidas contract, they should be able to have that,” state Sen. Niraj Antani, R-Miamisburg, who first introduced the legislation, explained last week. “But they’re not going to be able to wear Adidas during a practice or during a media session that is an official team activity on or off campus.”

    With some states having already passed NIL bills, figures such as Ohio State University athletic director Gene Smith and head football coach Ryan Day have urged lawmakers to act quicklyso that programs like the Buckeyes would not face a competitive disadvantage with recruiting.

    As lawmakers consider the issue on a state-by-state basis, the National Collegiate Athletic Association is considering its own sweeping changes at the national level.

    The House amendment was introduced by state Rep. Jena Powell, R-Arcanum, who has repeatedly argued for the need to ban transgender girls from playing women’s  sports. She and fellow Rep. Reggie Stoltzfus, R-Paris Twp., are sponsors of the “Save Women’s Sports Act” which calls for the same ban as in Thursday’s amendment.

    Powell earlier criticized President Biden for selecting a Dr. Rachel Levine, who is transgender, to be the nation’s assistant health secretary.

    The Ohio Capital Journal previously reported there were five transgender girls who competed in women’s sports out of around 400,000 high school athletes in Ohio.

    A string of House Democrats spoke out against the amendment, including Minority Leader Emilia Strong Sykes, D-Akron, who called it a “poison pill” added to an otherwise agreeable bill.

    “This awful, terrible, disgusting, vile, worse-than-the-sticky-stuff-on-the-bottom-of-my-shoe amendment is in a bill that could have helped so many,” Sykes complained, noting it comes during Pride Month celebrating LGBTQ+ Ohioans.

    This story has been updated to include a statement from the governor.

  • A Primer: Loveland’s Quarterback Drew Plitt in Arizona Bowl today at 2 PM on CBS (Ch 12 – WKRC)

    A Primer: Loveland’s Quarterback Drew Plitt in Arizona Bowl today at 2 PM on CBS (Ch 12 – WKRC)

    News from BallState Sports.com

    Quarterback Drew Plitt leads the Ball State Cardinals on CBS New Years Eve December 31 | 12pm MST/2pm EST

    Drew Plitt played football at Loveland High School and led the 2013 Tigers to a Division II state title.

    Offerpad Arizona Bowl
    Ball State (6-1, 5-1 MAC) vs. No. 19 San Jose State (7-0, 6-0 MWC)
    Thursday, Dec. 31 (12:12 p.m. MT/2:12 ET kickoff)
    Arizona Stadium (Tucson, Ariz.)
    Watch: CBS | Listen:104.1 WLBC/1430 WXNT (Indy)
    Social: @BallStateFB@BallStateSports, #ChirpChirp, #WeFly, #DOB, #MACtion
    Bowl Notes:Ball State (PDF) | San Jose State (PDF)
    Bowl Week Media:Neu | Martin



    The Ball State football team’s historical checklist for 2020 is nearly complete.

    Win the MAC West Division for the first time since 2008? Check.

    Win the overall MAC championship for the first time since 1996? Check.

    It had been a while, but both of those things has been accomplished before. This last one, the final box, has not. A bowl victory.

    For a team that has already achieved so much in this unique year, a win over No. 19 San Jose State in Thursday’s Offerpad Arizona Bowl would further cement its legacy in Ball State annals.

    “It’s monumental for us,” senior cornerback Antonio Phillips said. “But we’ve been preparing for every game like it’s a championship game all year.”

    All this in a season that looked like it might not happen. The MAC was the first FBS conference to postpone its football season because of concerns surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic and the last to announce its return.

    When the Cardinals finally took the field on Nov. 4, they were dealt an early blow, falling in the final seconds at rival Miami (Ohio). But the loss only galvanized the veteran team more. The Cardinals were undeterred and kept their sights fixed on the goal of a MAC championship.

    Doing it on the ground at times and through the air at times all while getting tougher and tougher on defense each week, Ball State rattled off one win after another — six in all — culminating with their 38-28 victory over undefeated No. 23 Buffalo in the MAC Championship Game. Now, on the final day of 2020, BSU will look to check that final box.

    “We were on a mission to get ourselves to Detroit, and that was such a great feeling when that clock hit zero,” head coach Mike Neu said. “To have that celebration with our team in the locker room was special. We’ve worked hard for this … Our next goal that lies ahead is to win the first bowl game in the history of our program.”

    Ball State isn’t hiding from that fact or from being an underdog again this week against the ranked Spartans. It’s a role the team has embraced all season long since it was picked to finish fourth of six teams in the MAC West Division.

    Fueled by that, by how close they were last year and by a brotherhood of togetherness, the 2020 Cardinals are champions and are still looking for more. This bowl trip to Arizona is both a reward and an opportunity, and they are not taking it for granted.

    “Last year we were at home watching people play bowl games, we were at home watching conference championships,” running back Tye Evans said. “This was the year of, ‘Hey, we’re not doing that anymore. We don’t want to go home early and sit and watch people play football. We want to continue to play football as long as we can.’”

    As long as they can is New Year’s Eve, one way or another. Might as well write a little more history.


    More Background: Loveland’s Drew Plitt: MAC Champion



    Prep for the 2 p.m. ET / Noon MST kickoff by checking out some of the best stories of the year about the Ball State Cardinals.

    LATEST STORIES ABOUT BALL STATE FOOTBALL:

    Nick Lawler explores the rise of Drew Plitt and his ability to take care of business down the stretch. (Ball State Sports Link)

    As Chris Vannini writes in The Athletic, the lesson learned in Ball State’s success is patience. (For subscribers)

    This Arizona Bowl matchup is a historic one, says Bud Geracie of the Mercury News.

    ‘He finds a way.’ Jordan Guskey of the Muncie Star-Press tells us about the man with the plan for Ball State.

    USA Today says the Arizona Bowl with Ball State will be the 5th-best bowl to watch

    Here’s a one-stop shop for the Arizona Bowl from College Football News.

    Donnie Harmon of Ball State Sports Link breaks down how Plitt’s performance has Cardinals headed to Arizona.

    Ian Hansen of the Ball State Daily News talks about the resilience of the Cardinals.

    Jordan Guskey has a primer on how the Cardinals got to Arizona.

  • Loveland High School’s Spring Athletes Commit to Collegiate Play!

    Loveland High School’s Spring Athletes Commit to Collegiate Play!

    by Cassie Mattia

    Loveland, Ohio – Although time seems to be slowly dragging due to the COVID-19 Stay At Home Order, for LHS Seniors time is still flying by as graduation is right around the corner! With graduation just a few weeks away, LHS Senior Athletes are also preparing for collegiate sports opportunities. We would like to take the time to give a big shout out to the LHS Senior Athletes that have committed to playing their sport at the collegiate level! Congratulations to the following LHS Student-Athletes:

    Katlyn Kramer-Softball
    Otterbein University

    Jake Cotsonas-Wrestling
    University of Mount Union

    Connor Patton-Soccer
    Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology

    Nathan Holman-Football
    Heidelberg University

    Andrew Gwynn-Football
    Thomas More University

    (No Photograph Available)
    Iyon Davis-Football
    Hocking College

    A Note from the Publisher to these athletes – their teachers, coaches, and parents

    Over the past, five or so years Loveland Magazine TV was at the annual Spring, Fall, and Winter signing events at LHS to record the ceremonies so the whole community could hear the athletic director brag about your accomplishments on and off the playing fields, courts, pools, and alleys.

    It was also a time I could see the athletes alongside their parents with those proud smiles and their own well deserved sense of accomplishment.

    It was always a wonderful afternoon seeing the representatives of the Athletic Department, the Principals, teachers, and coaches deservedly proud of their own unwavering work.

    It is darned sad that the event couldn’t be held this Spring because it was something you all deserved due to your outstanding work as an athlete, in your classroom, and at home. Being there has always been a real treat for me, however, I also know you didn’t accomplish so much just to get a few moments of fame and applause. Hard work is its own reward.

    Your continued success is guaranteed because you have been scholars of merit, good sports, and good representatives of your school and the entire community. I have enjoyed every single moment watching you compete.

    Best regards as you take these next steps,

    David Miller


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