College
Navy over Army 20-13
College
Navy over Army 20-13
However, that trip has kept me from watching the PBC pay-per-view and writing about the Ohio State loss to Indiana and the Browns loss to Tennessee.
I am deciding today (my last day off) on either deciding to write short posts on either or both games or doing one post with a few thoughts on both games.
Results
Isaac Cruz majority draw Lamont Roach for Cruz's WBC junior welterweight title.
O'Shaquie Foster Unanimous Decision Stephen Fulton, fight not for Foster's WBC junior lightweight title after Fulton missed weight.
Jesus Ramos Unanimous Decision Shane Mosley Jr/
Boxing Challenge
The main event is for a minor title in the junior welterweight division as Isaac "Pitbull" Cruz meets WBA junior lightweight champion Lamont Roach.
Both fighters made their names as the two fighters who pushed Gervonta Davis to the edge, Cruz losing a close unanimous decision in 2021, and Roach drawing with Davis earlier this year when a knockdown that wasn't scored as such cost Roach the win.
Roach, who hasn't defended his title since June 2024, will be making his first attempt at 140 pounds, while Cruz has won decisions over Angel Fierro and Omar Salcido since losing his WBA version of the title to Jose Valenzuela.
Roach could outbox Cruz, but standing and fighting off the aggressive Pitbull would be an exciting capper to the evening.
The co-feature will unify three-quarters of the middleweight titles as IBF and WBO champion Janibek Alimkhanuly faces WBA titleholder Erislandy Lara.
Alimkhanuly has yet to meet a top-quality opponent in his five title defenses, but I don't blame him, as the 160-pound division is very weak right now, and I think he would fight anyone placed in front of him.
Lara has been one of the most derided champions since winning a minor version of the WBA title and being promoted to the full version.
Since winning the minor title with a one-round KO of the lightly regarded "Cornflake" LaManna in 2021, Lara has defeated journeymen Spike O'Sullivan and Michael Zerafa before a battering of former junior welterweight and welterweight champion Danny Garcia, who was fighting for the first time in the division.
As the 42-year-old Lara has aged, he's used his legs less and fought in the pocket more, but that would surely spell doom against Alimkhanuly, yet if he tries to move for twelve rounds, he'll likely fade and be hunted down.
I think Alimkahnuly wins in the most lopsided fight on the card, but the chance for a three-title unification and the biggest name on his resume, make it interesting.
Editor's Note: Janibek Alimkhanuly failed a PED test and has been replaced by Johan Gonzalez.
Gonzalez's biggest win was over former junior middleweight champion Jarrett Hurd.
No word on the status of the IBF and WBO titles held by Alimkhanuly at this writing.
Another interesting fight is O'Shaquie Foster defending his WBC junior lightweight championship against Stephen Fulton, who holds the WBC featherweight title.
Foster regained his title last November from Robson Conceicao by split decision after losing the title to him by a very controversial split decision earlier in 2024.
Fulton held the WBC and WBO junior featherweight titles before a knockout loss to the Monster Naoya Inoue in 2023, and when his next fight saw him get a really bad split decision over Carlos Castro, Fulton looked like his best days were behind him.
Instead, Fulton beat Brandon Figueroa for a second time in February to take the WBC featherweight title and revitalize his career.
I like Foster in this one, but Fulton has surprised me before!
The opener is a middleweight eliminator between Jesus Ramos and Shane Mosley Jr.
Ramos has scored three knockouts in a row since his only loss, a controversial unanimous decision that I thought he deserved to Erickson Lubin in 2023.
Mosley Jr. has won five straight since his last loss and defeated the washed-up Daniel Jacobs in his last fight in July 2024, but is a cut below Ramos in my opinion.
Boxing Challenge
However, the second half was a different story as San Francisco shut the Browns out on their way to a 26-8 win in Cleveland.
Quinshon Judkins rushed for 91 yards and scored a two-point conversion while Shedeur Sanders threw a touchdown to Harold Fannin in the first start of Sanders' career.
Cleveland drops to 3-9 with the loss and will meet 1-11 Tennessee at home next week, with Sanders meeting fellow rookie quarterback Cam Ward for the first time in what appears to be the most likely chance to win in the Browns' final five games.
Brownie Bits
1) Two key plays destroyed the Browns in the second half.
The first came with the Browns still down only 10-8 in the third quarter.
It's fourth and one on their own 33.
I have no problem going for it here, you are 3-8, try some things.
2) I don't even have an issue with a gadget play, but considering the wind is blowing fiercely, the cold weather, and a little thought should go into that factor.
It's a direct snap to Harold Fannin, who is not a quarterback or running back and not accustomed to catching snaps, let alone in bad weather, so of course, Fannin fumbles.
Eight plays later, San Francisco scores on a Brock Purdy run.
3) Then in the fourth quarter, Cleveland forces a punt, still down only 17-8, but it's fumbled by Gage Larvadain at the Browns eighteen and recovered by San Francisco.
Six plays later- touchdown.
4) The coverage unit allowed a sixty-six-yard punt return to Skyy Moore, and Malachi Corley caught a kickoff at the ten while he fell out of bounds, rather than allow the ball to go out of bounds.
Yet, Bubba Ventrone still gets a pass on the constant mistakes from his units.
I don't believe firing him now would make a difference, but Ventrone cannot return next season.
5) Shedeur Sanders made his first start and threw a touchdown without an interception.
Sanders is handicapped by lousy receivers as Joe Flacco and Dillon Gabriel were but he managed to avoid the big mistake, even at the expense of only moving the ball on one occasion.
6) On that one occasion, Shedeur Sanders showed a glimpse of what he could be with an excellent throw to Harold Fannin, who dragged two defenders into the end zone.
It was the only throw of the day that made you think and hope of a possible future.
7) Sanders also overthrew an open Jerry Jeudy in the first quarter for what would have been a likely touchdown.
The two had a salty exchange on the sidelines during the game and there needs to be some work on the "chemistry" between the rookie and the veteran, both of whom have had their rocky points this season.
8) The Browns wasted another good effort from their defense as the three 49ers touchdowns came on drives of sixteen, eighteen, and thirty-two yards.
I don't care how good your defense is, when you have to defend the short field all day, scores are going to happen.
9) Cleveland's defense took a shot with the loss of defensive tackle Maliek Collins, who had been having an excellent season and the injury looked pretty serious.
Losing Collins and his play up the middle would be a major setback for a defense that has carried this team all season.
10) The Browns offensive line hasn't been great this season but I was surprised to see Kevin Stefanski rotate Wyatt Teller and Tevin Jenkins at guard from series to series.
Of the possible veterans that are able to leave next season (Jack Conklin, Ethan Pocic, Teller, and Joel Bitonio, who may retire), Teller would be my choice as the one to keep, if I had to choose one.
I'm wondering why the decision was made and could it hurt the chances of keeping Teller for 2026?
11) The Browns should beat an even worse Tennesssee team (one win) at home next week.
But what if they don't?
The Titans aren't as good as the Browns and should Cleveland somehow lose this game, this will be another three win season as I don't see them winning any of their final four games against three playoff contenders (Bears, Bills, Steelers) and on the road against the Bengals and the returning Joe Burrow.
In my opinion, if the Browns lose at home to the Titans, Andrew Berry and Kevin Stefanski will have sealed their eventual fate.
Julian Sayin threw three touchdown passes, including a fifty-yard strike to Carnell Tate, Bo Jackson rushed for 117 yards, and the Ohio State defense never allowed the Wolverines to reach the end zone, holding them to three field goals, all in the first half.
Ohio State caps an undefeated regular season at 12-0 (9-0 Big Ten) and will play the other unbeaten team in the conference and country in the Big Ten Championship game next Saturday, meeting Indiana in Indianapolis.
Olentangy Offerings
1) I must admit, I was a little concerned when Michigan scored three points on their first drive, and then picked off Julian Sayin shortly thereafter to give them the ball in Ohio State territory,
Ohio State's defense would hold Michigan to another field goal, and only another field goal would be allowed for the remainder of the game.
2) The play that worried me most was an early run by Jordan Marshall, the player who mouthed off most through the week with gems such as "we (Michigan) have the best coach in the country", "it's about the culture" (think about that over the last few years), and not wanting to "be around people who are all about themselves".
Marshall entered the game with an injured shoulder; his first run was for thirty-six yards, but he left the game shortly.
Marshall tried to return in the second half, but he was stopped for little gains and soon was through for the day, finishing with sixty-one yards on seven carries.
3) Ohio State benefited and was stung by two calls in the first half.
Ohio State benefited on a close call on a Julian Sayin to Jeremiah Smith touchdown pass that saw Smith possibly losing control as he passed the goal line.
Because the ball went through the back of the end zone as part of the dumbest rule in the sport (a fumble through the end zone is considered a touchback and gives possession to the defense), Ohio State would have seen a 10-6 lead turn into a 6-3 Michigan lead, returning the ball to the Wolverines.
4) The other controversy happened earlier in the first half.
Julian Sayin's QB sneak was initially called a touchdown and reversed by replay (I don't think Sayin scored, but I didn't see evidence on the replay through the pile of bodies), but C.J. Donaldson pretty clearly broke the plane of the goal line (The second dumbest rule in football), and it wasn't even replayed!
Ohio State settled for a field goal on the drive.
5) Much of the talk during the week was about the availability of Carnell Tate and Jeremiah Smith for the game, and in the case of Tate, if he would ever play for the Buckeyes again, with Tate's eligibility for the 2026 NFL Draft.
I thought both would, both did, and both scored on long passes, 50 yards for Tate and 35 for Smith.
I think the Buckeyes are OK here.
6) The Ohio State defense never seemed threatened after the first drive.
Ohio State stopped Michigan after Julian Sayin's interception and shut down their offense entirely in the second half.
7) Michigan's freshman quarterback, Bryce Underwood, is being paid a lot of money, and he is a true freshman, but it's fair to consider that Michigan has to have thought they deserve more for their dollars than sixty-three passing yards and an interception.
8) While the game was essentially ended by the Sayin to Tate strike in the third quarter, the true kill-shot was the field goal that ate the final five-plus minutes of the third quarter and the first six of the final period.
That drive slowly sapped Michigan's will and any chance of it forging a rally.
9) Ohio State's offensive line has been maligned through the years (not as much this season), but the numbers in this game- Zero sacks allowed, Zero pressures against Julian Sayin, and one hundred eighty-six yards rushing.
It is often about the trenches and physicality in this game, and in the recent losses, Michigan had the edge in that department- not on this day.
10) The defensive line did its share of bullying.
Kenyatta Jackson, Kayden McDonald, and Caden Curry are more than just pass rushers; they stuff the run as well.
Michigan finished with one hundred yards rushing as a team, but remember, thirty-six of those came on the first run by Jordan Marshall.
After that run, Michigan rushed for sixty-four yards on twenty-three rushes, an average of 2.78 per try.
11) The win (as we have heard so often) was the first over Michigan since 2019, but don't forget (although Michigan has) that in 2020, the Buckeyes reached the National Title game (before losing to Alabama), and a losing Michigan team ducked a certain defeat in that Covid season by meekly saying they didn't have enough players.
Combine that with the "Connor Stallion" losses, and you could say Michigan had a real two-game winning streak.
12) Give Ryan Day credit for class by telling his team not to plant the Ohio State flag at midfield.
Michigan stood at midfield to block any attempt and later said, "They weren't going to do that," but Day told Michigan coach Sherrone Moore at midfield that they wouldn't be planting any flags.
It defused a possible situation after last season's debacle in Columbus.
Perhaps if Michigan were so concerned about retribution, it shouldn't have started this practice.
Hopefully, we can get past this in the future from both schools.
It's a lighter PPM with the college game starts the bowl season and the NFL season hitting the final month. Last Week: 7-6 Overall: ...