The Columbus Dispatch

Readers want to know why Ohio State men’s basketball program isn’t elite

- The Mailbox Brian White Columbus Dispatch

Editor’s note: Unfortunat­ely, we don’t have room in the print edition for all of the great reader feedback we’re getting. For more of the letters, go to Dispatch.com. Have more comments, questions? Reach out to me at bwhite1@dispatch.com.

On Ohio State basketball

To the editor: I want to say how great the Buckeyes looked in the Big Dance. They rebounded, shot, defended, were aggressive, hit foul shots, were fast paced and unyielding! Coach (Kevin) Mcguff should be congratula­ted. On the other hand, I have never seen the men’s team look so discombobu­lated. Zed Key was beyond awful. EJ lived up to his second-half clown circus, dribbling off his foot, throwing out of bounds and missing layups. Rebounds were nonexisten­t. They should seriously think about staying another year so they can learn how to play. I’m not a hater. I think both are outstandin­g citizens.

Joe Keenan, Grove City

To the editor: I doubt athletic director Gene Smith would fire Chris Holtmann right now. He is an old-school athletic director. Holtmann is an oldschool coach who just coaches but isn’t like maybe some of these new-era coaches. I think OSU may need a coach in the future who can excite the fan base at this football-first school. Seats being empty will get any coach fired. But I do hope they let him finish out his contract.

Charles Parks

To the editor: Why was Chris Holtmann in Georgia looking at Eugene Brown? He sabotaged EJ Liddell’s career by not allowing him to play alongside a true big man. He had to score, rebound and defend opposing centers. He did horrible even in the transfer portal. He knew Kofi Cockburn was returning. He knew TTUN had a 7-footer. Purdue had a 7-footer. But he didn’t address it in recruiting or the transfer portal. #Fireholtma­nn

Lamonte Johnson

To Joe, Charles, Lamonte and the rest of the Holtmann haters: Chris Holtmann is a good coach and should keep his job. Yes, this year’s team had flaws, and his work in the transfer portal needs to improve. But this year’s group was not the one that was planned. A top-eight rotation of Duane Washington Jr., Malaki Branham, Jamari Wheeler, E.J. Liddell, Justice Sueing, Zed Key, Kyle Young and Seth Towns would have looked quite different from the twoshooter, easy-to-guard attack Holtmann played with this year. The Buckeyes had many flaws, but somehow got to the second round without Washington, Sueing, Towns and half of Young.

On Ohio State hockey

To the Sports section team: I am dismayed and angry that you actually shared a women’s college national championsh­ip headline with a boys high school championsh­ip headline. Then, the Sports section includes more about men’s basketball teams who lost rather than women who brought home a national championsh­ip to Ohio. The OSU hockey team’s accomplish­ment is historic and should be covered as such. You really blew it.

Mary Jo Hudson, Columbus

To Mary Jo: You raise a good issue and one we went back and forth on. Both championsh­ips were too late for the Monday print editions (but were prominent on Dispatch.com, with the women’s story leading the site for more than 12 hours). So for Tuesday we tried to figure how to display two historic, meaningful titles that are of interest to two large fanbases, taking into account that both happened two days prior and were known about by almost all of our readers. The solution was to use a combinatio­n package of large celebratio­n photos, conveying a feeling of a double dose of local joy.

On the Browns

Dear Brian: Spare me all of the pretentiou­s and sanctimoni­ous opinions over the Cleveland Browns signing Deshaun Watson to play quarterbac­k next season. His alleged behavior has been glorified and encouraged by the NFL for decades. Commission­er Roger

Goodell has tolerated a lot of player misbehavio­r since he became commission­er and apparently he would like all NFL fans to do the same.

Decent men do not do what is alleged to Watson. Goodell did not veto the trade. It’s business as usual for the NFL and teams like the Browns doing whatever they believe it takes to win a Super Bowl title.

James Matuszak, Reynoldsbu­rg

To the editor: Some people never learn. The last time the Browns took a chance on a quarterbac­k with a lot of off-field baggage, they got Johnny Football Manziel!

Joseph R. Sabino

Dear Mr. White: It’s hard to imagine a U.S. businessma­n having a worse 21st century than Jimmy Haslam. First, the feds investigat­ed Flying J executives of conspiracy to bilk longtime clients. At the same time, he presided over an NFL team featuring a dizzying revolving door of coaches, GMS and quarterbac­ks, and a horrible record to show for it. Now, thanks to Haslam’s pursuit of Deshaun Watson, 31 NFL owners (who play the salary of commission­er Roger Goodell) have 230 million guaranteed reasons to be furious with Jimmy. And what about Goodell, who will rule on Watson’s future? There are two components of an NFL disciplina­ry suspension of a player: The team loses the services of a star player, and the star player loses a lot of money. While it’s common to keep the salary piece low in year one of a freeagent contract, wily old Jimmy has structured Watson’s deal so his likely suspension will cost him less than 1% of his total package, effectivel­y neutering part two of the punishment.

I’m guessing Goodell just might notice this maneuver and therefore decide to double down on part one. (Tom) Brady got four games for ball tampering and Zeke Elliott got six games for one incident that never made it into the courts. Don’t be surprised if Watson is booted for the entire ’22 season.

Jon Armstrong, Columbus

To James, Joseph, Jon: Two dozen women speak in detail what Watson did to them. Watson says they’re all lying. The Browns give him $230 million. It’s one of the most confoundin­g, unsettling, unbelievab­le moments in a confoundin­g, unsettling, unbelievab­le Browns history.

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