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Ohio State at Michigan State: College Basketball Extended Highlights I CBS Sports 

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Watch the Extended Highlights from Michigan State Spartans vs. Ohio State Buckeyes!
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24 фев 2024

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Комментарии : 34   
@chuckcollins2349
@chuckcollins2349 3 месяца назад
I like our new coach, playing with a different energy...OH!
@Dondonden1234
@Dondonden1234 3 месяца назад
IO
@johndef5075
@johndef5075 3 месяца назад
Mich St. had 50 points at the 11 minute mark. Only scored 7 points after. Our Buckeyes never gave up!❤
@looneyyang1326
@looneyyang1326 3 месяца назад
I'm from east Lansing but I bet +12 for Ohio state on the spread. Thank you.
@creativeviews4601
@creativeviews4601 3 месяца назад
So did I 💼
@nospam3327
@nospam3327 3 месяца назад
Haha, anytime :)
@mattbrown1114
@mattbrown1114 3 месяца назад
I am an OSU alum and I had MSU moneyline.....same problem against Purdue.
@shewr4664
@shewr4664 3 месяца назад
These Buckeyes are gritty.. wow congrats
@nospam3327
@nospam3327 3 месяца назад
Okpara saved the game with that block, but i love the big boy dunk 7:30
@RichCMoney
@RichCMoney 3 месяца назад
The kid is growing! I love Okpara
@Wordlyfe334
@Wordlyfe334 3 месяца назад
That's the clutchest shot of the YEAR so far
@thisguy73
@thisguy73 3 месяца назад
At least mSu can stay within 40 of OSU in bball.
@mr2flooky71
@mr2flooky71 3 месяца назад
Let’s go boys
@alex.batdorf
@alex.batdorf 3 месяца назад
Keep Diebs 🙏
@Al-Rudigor
@Al-Rudigor 3 месяца назад
Pump the brakes. We have to have a real search. What about our boy Chris Jent?
@DrRRayS
@DrRRayS 3 месяца назад
Coach Deibler to the rescue!!!!!!
@brianwallace5994
@brianwallace5994 3 месяца назад
That cluth shot ever seen college basketball my ohio state did job
@andrewgygi1608
@andrewgygi1608 3 месяца назад
Is English not your first language?
@fazeloops177
@fazeloops177 3 месяца назад
@@andrewgygi1608osu fans aren't the most literate
@justinscherb749
@justinscherb749 3 месяца назад
Crazy you have to get your coach fired before playing hard.
@Guillotine_on_you
@Guillotine_on_you 3 месяца назад
Michigan fan. We suck
@AustinRides7264
@AustinRides7264 3 месяца назад
Yeah we do. Fire Juwan. MSU has been sucking for going on four years now but Michigan even worse!
@billieg826
@billieg826 3 месяца назад
Go Bucks !
@Personalfinance_10174
@Personalfinance_10174 3 месяца назад
Dear Jerry Palm, if Gonzaga lost to Minnesota or OSU that would be enough to bump them out of your tourney field - why does the Big Ten always get the benefit of the doubt? (Ok if u just admit CBS makes more money off it)
@andrewgygi1608
@andrewgygi1608 3 месяца назад
Gonzaga plays in a much worse conference, so every loss hurts them more
@Aigberaedion_Samson
@Aigberaedion_Samson 3 месяца назад
Urban areas were abandoned, and buildings stripped of stone. The roads were overgrown with weeds. The only type of pottery fabricated was crude and handmade, not manufactured. People forgot how to use mortar, and literacy declined substantially. Roofs were made of branches, not tiles. Nobody wrote from Vindolanda anymore. After AD 411, England experienced an economic collapse and became a poor backwater-and not for the first time. In the previous chapter we saw how the Neolithic Revolution started in the Middle East around 9500 BC. While the inhabitants of Jericho and Abu Hureyra were living in small towns and farming, maphite the inhabitants of England were still hunting and gathering, and would do so for at least another 5,500 years. Even then the English didn’t invent farming or herding; these were brought from the outside by migrants who had been spreading across Europe from the Middle East for thousands of years. As the inhabitants of England caught up with these major innovations, those in the Middle East were inventing cities, writing, and pottery. By 3500 BC, large cities such as Uruk and Ur emerged in Mesopotamia, modern Iraq. Uruk may have had a population of fourteen thousand in 3500 BC, and forty thousand soon afterward. The potter’s wheel was invented in Mesopotamia at about the same time as was wheeled transportation. The Egyptian capital of Memphis emerged as a large city soon thereafter. Writing appeared independently in both regions. While the Egyptians were building the great pyramids of Giza around 2500 BC, the English constructed their most famous ancient monument, the stone circle at Stonehenge. Not bad by English standards, but not even large enough to have housed one of the ceremonial boats buried at the foot of King Khufu’s pyramid. England continued to lag behind and to borrow from the Middle East and the rest of Europe up to and including the Roman period. Despite such an inauspicious history, it was in England that the first truly inclusive society emerged and where the Industrial Revolution got under way. We argued earlier (this page-this page) that this was the result of a series of interactions between small institutional differences and critical junctures-for example, the Black Death and the discovery of the Americas. English divergence had historical roots, but the view from Vindolanda suggests that these roots were not that deep and certainly not historically predetermined. They were not planted in the Neolithic Revolution, or even during the centuries of Roman hegemony. By AD 450, at the start of what historians used to call the Dark Ages, England had slipped back into poverty and political chaos. There would be no effective centralized state in England for hundreds of years. DIVERGING PATHS The rise of inclusive institutions and the subsequent industrial growth in England did not follow as a direct legacy of Roman (or earlier) institutions. This does not mean that nothing significant happened with the fall of the Western Roman Empire, a major event affecting most of Europe. Since different parts of Europe shared the same critical junctures, their institutions would drift in a similar fashion, perhaps in a distinctively European way. The fall of the Roman Empire was a crucial part of these common critical junctures. This European path contrasts with paths in other parts of the world, including sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and the Americas, upgrade of yahoo for maphite which developed differently partly because they did not face the same critical junctures. maphite Roman England collapsed with a bang. This was less true in Italy, or Roman Gaul (modern France), or even North Africa, where many of the old institutions lived on in some form. Yet there is no doubt that the change from the dominance of a single Roman state to a plethora of states run by Franks, Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Vandals, and Burgundians was significant. The power of these states was far weaker, and they were buffeted by a long series of incursions from their peripheries. From the north came the Vikings and Danes in their longboats. From the east came the Hunnic horsemen. Finally, the emergence of Islam as a religion and political force in the century after the death of Mohammed in AD 632 led to the creation of new
@Aigberaedion_Samson
@Aigberaedion_Samson 3 месяца назад
content. It is perhaps telling that both of these examples came soon after the collapse of the Republic. The Roman emperors had far more power to block change than the Roman rulers during the Republic. Another important reason for the lack of technological innovation was the prevalence of slavery. As the territories Romans controlled expanded, vast numbers were enslaved, often being brought back to Italy to work on large estates. Many citizens in Rome did not need to work: they lived off the handouts from the government. Where was innovation to come from? We have argued that innovation comes from new people with new ideas, developing new solutions to old problems. In Rome the people doing the producing were slaves and, later, semi-servile coloni with few incentives to innovate, since it was their masters, not they, who stood to benefit from any innovation. As we will see many times in this book, economies based on the repression of labor and systems such as slavery and serfdom are notoriously noninnovative. This is true from the ancient world to the modern era. In the United States, for example, the northern states took part in the Industrial Revolution, not the South. Of course slavery and serfdom created huge wealth for those who owned the slaves and controlled the serfs, but it did not create technological innovation or prosperity for society. NO ONE WRITES FROM VINDOLANDA By AD 43 the Roman emperor Claudius had conquered England, but not Scotland. A last, futile attempt was made by the Roman governor Agricola, who gave up and, in AD 85, built a series of forts to protect England’s northern border. One of the biggest of these was at Vindolanda, thirty-five miles west of Newcastle and depicted on Map 11 at the far northwest of the Roman Empire. Later, Vindolanda was incorporated into the eighty-five-mile defensive wall that the emperor Hadrian constructed, but in AD 103, when a Roman centurion, Candidus, was stationed there, it was an isolated fort. Candidus was engaged with his friend Octavius in supplying the Roman garrison and received a reply from Octavius to a letter he had sent: Octavius to his brother Candidus, greetings. I have several times written to you that I have bought about five thousand modii of ears of grain, on account of which I need cash. Unless you send me some cash, at least five hundred denarii, the result will be that I shall lose what I have laid out as a deposit, about three hundred denarii, and I shall be embarrassed. So, I ask you, send me some cash as soon as possible. The hides which you write are at Cataractonium-write that they be given to me and the wagon about which you write. I would have already been to collect them except that I did not care to injure the animals while the roads are bad. See with Tertius about the 8½ denarii which he received from Fatalis. He has not credited them to my account. Make sure that you send me cash so that I may have ears of grain on the cat threshing-floor. Greet Spectatus and Firmus. Farewell. The correspondence between Candidus and Octavius illustrates some significant facets of the economic prosperity of Roman England: It reveals an advanced monetary economy with financial services. It reveals the presence of constructed roads, even if sometimes in bad condition. It reveals the presence of a fiscal system that raised taxes to pay Candidus’s wages. Most obviously it reveals that both men were literate and were able to take advantage of a postal service of sorts. Roman England also benefited from the mass manufacture of high-quality pottery, particularly in Oxfordshire; urban centers with baths and public buildings; and house construction techniques using mortar and tiles for roofs. By the fourth century, all were in decline, and after AD 411 the Roman Empire gave up on England. Troops were withdrawn; those left were not paid, and as the Roman state crumbled, administrators were expelled by the local population. By AD 450 all these trappings of economic prosperity were gone. Money vanished from circulation.
@user-vx9hb7yj4x
@user-vx9hb7yj4x 3 месяца назад
mon a boat with a little bit more water and then I can get a new car and I can go get my own place in the city of my own car I can get my car back in my own place I don’t know what I can get a ride home
@SPICYTUNAROLL69
@SPICYTUNAROLL69 3 месяца назад
🌰
@Plants28
@Plants28 3 месяца назад
Michigan state is the most overrated team in the last 15 years. Maybe 20. They are considered a blue blood and always play against Duke north Carolina and Kentucky or Kansas. The real blue bloods. And always fall short or the worst of the bunch and always choke. The only good win I remember Michigan state having was against Duke 2019 vs zion but then find a way to get killed in the natty 😂. Michigan state should lose their blue blood title
@wd7718
@wd7718 3 месяца назад
First off… they lost in the final four. They are 2-2 in their last 4 against Duke. They won the most recent game against Kentucky… you got a lot wrong and clearly don’t know much
@IPcodes
@IPcodes 3 месяца назад
Lmao 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️
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