AROUND THE HORN
Hamilton to lead new league
The new Northeast Senate League will be led by a 1988 West Branch High School graduate.
The league named Curt Hamilton its league commissioner on Wednesday.
The league consisting of Carrollton, Claymont, Fairless, Marlington, Minerva, Sandy Valley, Tuscarawas Valley and Tuslaw will begin play in 2028-29.
Hamilton is a veteran educator, coach and administrator with over three decades of experience in Ohio high school athletics. Since 2020, he has served as the assistant commissioner of the Eastern Buckeye Conference where he gained experience in league operations and official assigning.
His deep ties to the region are rooted in a 30-year career at Marlington High School where he has served as an history teacher and social studies department chair. On the athletic front, Hamilton spent over 20 years as a head wrestling coach and currently serves as a site coordinator for athletic events.
He also is a registered official with OHSAA in volleyball, wrestling and track. Hamilton was inducted into the Stark County Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2018 and the Top Gun Wrestling Tournament Hall of Fame in 2024.
McKinnon to lead Madonna
WEIRTON, W.Va. — Lisbon High School graduate Shawn McKinnon was named the Weirton Madonna head football coach on Tuesday.
McKinnon is a former assistant coach with Wellsville and East Liverpool.
Madonna is trying to rebuild its football program after not fielding a team last year.
One perfect bracket left
The only perfect bracket left after the opening weekend of the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments — from more than 40 million entries across all the major contests — was produced not by some college basketball expert or betting guru but an eighth grader from suburban Pittsburgh.
His name is Otto Schellhammer. He is 14 years old.
And despite his perfect-so-far women’s bracket, he admits to knowing nothing about hoops.
“I know people say this a lot about March Madness,” Schellhammer told The Associated Press, sitting beside his mom, Amy, between school and lacrosse practice on Wednesday, “but it was 100% luck. I know basically nothing about any type of basketball.
“I play with my friends,” he added, “but I don’t really watch it.”
Oh, he’ll be watching now. Schellhammer has correctly picked the first 48 women’s games in ESPN’s Tournament Challenge, leaving him just 15 away from perfection. He has Texas cutting down the nets on April 5 in Phoenix.
While it’s impossible to know whether there are any other perfect brackets in millions of smaller pools all across the country, the NCAA has tracked seven of the largest contests for years, said Mike Benzie, the senior director of content for NCAA Digital. This year they totaled about 36 million men’s entries and 5.2 on the women’s side, which means Schellhammer’s is better than one-in-a-million.
He’s one in 41.2 million.
“I think it’s absolutely hilarious,” said Amy Schellhammer, who actually did play high school ball. “It’s just so fun to see. It’s exciting. I’m excited he’s into women’s basketball now. He’s been watching and it’s making him more excited about it.”
Most people have heard that picking a perfect bracket is harder than winning the lottery, but exactly how hard is it? The late DePaul mathematics professor Jeffrey Bergen calculated the odds at 1 in 9.2 quintillion, assuming every game is a 50-50 proposition, or about 46 million times the number of stars in our galaxy.
But unlike Schellhamer, most people have some basketball knowledge. Factor that into the equation, Bergen wrote in 2013, and the odds of going 63-0 drop to about 1 in 28 billion — or, roughly 96 times harder than winning the Powerball jackpot.
