Ohio State head coach Ryan Day told reporters Monday that his team will visit the White House on April 14 to be honored for their national college football championship.
“It’s an honor to be invited. We were formally invited and it’s customary,” Day said. “I remember growing up and watching the national championship teams go to the White House. I always looked at that, like, ‘Man, what an honor that would be.’ So, it’s part of the celebration of our team … Looking forward to getting that all planned out.”
The Buckeyes will be the second team to celebrate a championship at the White House since President Donald Trump was inaugurated for his second term. The Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers were the first, back on Feb. 3. The Philadelphia Eagles plan to visit the White House on April 28 in recognition of their Super Bowl LIX title.
The Buckeyes won four straight games in the first-ever 12-team College Football Playoff to capture the title. They defeated Notre Dame 34-23 in the championship game after first defeating Tennessee, top-seeded Oregon and Texas.
It was the program’s first national title since 2014.
Vice President JD Vance graduated from Ohio State and was a senator from the state before joining Trump’s ticket.
–Field Level Media
Stanford fired Troy Taylor on Tuesday, less than one week after an ESPN report outlined instances in which he had allegedly bullied and belittled female athletic staffers during his two…
The Las Vegas Raiders signed unrestricted free agent defensive tackle Leki Fotu and tight end Ian Thomas to contracts on Tuesday. Terms of the deals were not announced by the…
Rutgers transfer Jett Elad is challenging the NCAA’s eligibility rules and hoping to cash in on a lucrative NIL deal. The Canadian-born safety filed a lawsuit last week in federal…
NFL transactions: Raiders sign DT Fotu, TE Thomas
Report: Rutgers transfer seeking NIL deal suing NCAA
Seahawks sign veteran TE Eric Saubert
Ohio State to visit White House on April 14