Dayton Daily News

HOROSCOPES BY HOLIDAY:

- BY HOLIDAY MATHIS

ARIES (March 21-April 19). People only take risks in hopes of achieving goals they think are possible. You’ll paint a picture of your vision with well-chosen words and provide the inspiratio­n others need to move forward.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Are glamour and authentici­ty at odds? Of course. Don’t let that stop you from moving forward with both at the same time. The best things in life are mixed bags.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Both sides of the argument can’t be right, but there is a rightness in each stance. It will bring you good fortune to look for it. Do it quietly, gingerly and with great respect.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). If you don’t have an “elevator pitch,” then this is the perfect time to come up with one. It’s not for the influentia­l people you might meet; rather, it’s your clarity of purpose.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’re efficient and impressive­ly productive, appearing to balance many things at once, when really you are balancing one thing at a time, giving your full attention to each.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Too-good-tobe-true almost always is, but sometimes the karma of one situation pays for the karma of another. Be a little open-minded on the matter today.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). People fear their vulnerabil­ity and imagine far worse outcomes than would typically occur. Opening yourself to vulnerabil­ity is the most admirable, attractive and relaxing response to the day’s challenges.

Others don’t know what they want, so how are you supposed

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21).

to? You’ll either have to help them find out what they want or create a new appetite from scratch.

SAGITTARIU­S (Nov. 22-Dec. 21).

The sky is a masterpiec­e we take for granted because it’s always over us. But you won’t make that mistake today. You’ll choose your moments for appreciati­ng the sky outside as well as a reflective appreciati­on of the sky inside you.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re influentia­l. Maybe you won’t detect it, but you can be certain that people believe something different after they’ve interacted with you than what they believed before they encountere­d you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). It’s all about thinking ahead today. You’ll anticipate potential pitfalls and either avoid them or, if they are unavoidabl­e, deal with them as quickly as possible.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The foundation of friendship is important, and you’ll lay it well. It takes several more months and years to build the rest, especially the shelter that you can live inside that will weather the storms of life. Be patient and keep building.

IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY:

Your creativity soars high. This year, you’ll follow a wild idea to full realizatio­n. The golden question is this: Which one? You have so many! The criteria your idea must meet to be successful: It helps others, is needed and doesn’t exist in the world already, and there’s a clear vision to the first dollar you’ll make to sustain it. Libra and Leo adore you. Your lucky numbers are 8, 18, 44, 17 and 30.

Hosted by: Jhene Aiko When: 3 p.m. Sunday (awards will be presented in more than 70 of the 84 Grammy categories)

Where: Online only at grammy.com

approximat­ely 2 p.m. today, seeking to avenge a two-game regular season series sweep as well as their first tournament appearance with multiple wins since 2014.

Ohio State also avenged its 17-point loss to the Gophers in the only matchup between the teams this season. A couple thousand spectators watched this matchup, in the first game the Buckeyes have played in front of fans this season.

It helped the Buckeyes exorcise some demons and channel those two weeks’ worth of frustratio­n into the opening minutes of this game. Washington scored on a physical drive to the right block on the opening possession of the game, and not even six minutes later he threw a no-look lob to a cutting Kyle Young for an alleyoop, two-handed slam that put the Buckeyes ahead 13-0. They wouldn’t allow a point until Both Gach scored on a layup with 13:05 remaining in the half as the Gophers missed their first eight shots and had committed three turnovers until that point.

Ohio State would stall, though, and turn it over on four straight possession­s and six of nine as Minnesota slowly crept closer. A controvers­ial Flagrant 1 foul call on Musa Jallow led to a four-point possession for the Gophers and a 6-0 run that pulled them within 21-17 with 5:05 to play in the half.

After the teams traded 3s, Washington threw another lob to Justice Sueing, who slammed it home for a 26-20 lead. A moment later, Jallow laid in a Walker lob to make it 35-22. And on the final Ohio State possession of the half, Jallow nabbed a pass from Minnesota’s Marcus Carr, sprinted up the court and jammed it home.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States