Keyshawn Davis in studio, Dominick Cruz, Bruce Buffer, Song Yadong, Youssef Zalal and more
Ariel Helwani is BACK ... IN ... YOUR ... LIFE!
Catch "The Ariel Helwani Show" live on Uncrowned and YouTube at 1 p.m. ET/10 a.m. PT/6 p.m. UK time as Ariel and The Boys In The Back break down the latest in the combat sports world.
Monday's lineup can be seen below.
1 p.m. ET: Ariel and the gang react to the busy weekend.
1:40 p.m. ET: Youssef Zalal stops by after his big UFC Vegas 102 win over Calvin Kattar.
2 p.m. ET: Bruce Buffer, the UFC's legendary "Voice of the Octagon," joins the program.
2:30 p.m. ET: Keyshawn Davis joins us in-studio following his WBO lightweight title win over Denys Berinchyk.
3:45 p.m. ET: Song Yadong previews his UFC Seattle main event against Henry Cejudo.
4:15 p.m. ET: Dominick Cruz returns following his official MMA retirement.
Catch all new episodes of "The Ariel Helwani Show" live every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET on Uncrowned and The Ariel Helwani Show's YouTube page.
To listen to every episode, subscribe on Spotify or iTunes.
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WWE's First Crossover With AAA Locks Down 4.1M Viewers In 24 Hours As Company's First Full In-Ring YouTube Broadcast
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UFC legend Mark Coleman opens up on horrific experiences as alleged victim in Ohio State sexual abuse scandal
Content warning: This story contains graphic details about alleged sexual assault that may be difficult to read and emotionally upsetting. Mark Coleman and Michael DiSabato continue to shed light on former Ohio State University physician Richard Strauss' alleged 20-year pattern of sexual abuse. Advertisement The upcoming documentary "Surviving Ohio State" premieres on HBO on June 17. Among many other former Ohio State alumni featured in the film are UFC Hall of Famer Coleman and DiSabato, both of whom first spoke out in 2018 about Strauss, who's been accused of abusing hundreds — potentially thousands — of students during his time at Ohio State from 1978 to 1998. Appearing in-studio on Monday's edition of "The Ariel Helwani Show," Coleman and DiSabato opened up, recounting some of their experiences ahead of the documentary's debut at the Tribeca Film Festival. 'It was a joke within our community, within the locker room, that Strauss performed unnecessary genital exams on all of us, all the time,' DiSabato said. 'At the time, this is 1986, we didn't know what we know now to be grooming and sexual abuse. We just thought it was some dude who was not right and enjoyed something that was not cool. But he was the doctor, and he was the guy that cleared us to wrestle. If you had injuries, you had to go to him. 'Very much like Larry Nassar, he was a friend. It's a complicated thing when you look back at it. He earned our trust. And when you got that Ohio State logo on the side of your chest, and you're a medical doctor, well, we were taught to follow the rules and do what they say you're going to do.' Coleman, 60, recalled first meeting Strauss in 1986 when he went in for a physical. Having transferred from Miami University, the MMA legend had never experienced anything like what allegedly became a regularity at Ohio State. Advertisement 'People were saying to me, 'Have fun in there,' and it was an eye-opener,' Coleman said of his first visit with Strauss. 'I didn't understand it either, but I kind of knew Dr. Strauss was very hands-on, as they would say. 'Look, man — you needed this guy to compete. This guy's got to sign you off. It's that simple for me. I wanted to be a national champion. I wasn't going to cause problems.' Strauss' alleged actions were considered an "open secret," as described by DiSabato. He and Coleman would both ask other students and athletes what was up with Strauss always checking their genitals in exams. There was always some sort of reason given by Strauss, DiSabato claimed, whether it was looking for hernias or just being "thorough." DiSabato had heard rumors about Strauss before meeting him at age 14, but no one knew what to think — or even believed harassment of that nature existed. Yet when the sexual abuse cases of Michigan's Larry Nassar came to light, and led to a lifetime prison sentence for Nassar a 2017, DiSabato put it all together in relation to what allegedly happened with him, Coleman and so many of their teammates. Advertisement 'We're sitting around in December of 2017, and [Coleman] is reading the newspaper, and he's talking about Larry Nassar to me because his daughter was a gymnast," DiSabato said. "He's reading the details, and it just hit me. I didn't follow the Nassar case — I knew about it, but I didn't know the details. When he went into the details and what Nassar was doing, [it was] very similar. Unnecessary genital exams. It just hit me like a ton of bricks. 'That's us, Mark.'' For Coleman and DiSabato, the trauma and aftermath of their realizations have been difficult to process in real-time. Nassar's case was widespread global news that dominated headlines. Strauss' case, however, is still gaining exposure since the first bombshell accusations surfaced in 2018. DiSabato believes that reaction is due to the difficult nature of male-on-male sexual abuse and the fact that it pertained to elite-level combat athletes. Even for Coleman, he struggled to pull the trigger. Advertisement "You've got to sometimes get uncomfortable to become comfortable," Coleman said. "... I was very nervous that day and I remember telling [Ohio State coach] Russ [Hellickson] that, 'I'm pretty nervous. I don't know if I should do this.' He just looked at me and said, 'Just tell the truth and everything will be OK.' Something happened from there. Russ, when that video came out, it exploded. ... Me, [DiSabato] and Russ talking in detail about what happened. It took a lot of courage, man, but I just did it." Ohio State University remains in active court proceedings with nearly 250 survivors of Strauss' alleged abuse speaking out thus far. But Strauss' exams weren't exclusive to just wrestling — he saw athletes of all varieties daily. DiSabato believes the number of total victims of Strauss likely totals in the thousands. DiSabato essentially labeled the Ohio State facilities a bathhouse because of the pervasiveness of Strauss' alleged presence, claiming that Strauss never worked out with the athletes but took showers with them regularly. DiSabato claimed that Strauss sometimes allegedly would take multiple showers a day with the Ohio State student athletes, depending on who entered when he was around. Although Coleman and DiSabato's coach Hellickson later retracted his statements after allegedly urging Coleman to speak out in the case's initial stages, the pair saw him as one of the good ones on staff. There were times when Coleman would get angry before his matches, specifically recalling instances when he got ready in bathroom stalls and next to him were allegedly other people watching through peepholes. Advertisement 'Russ Hellickson, to his credit, went to university officials on multiple occasions and said, 'This is not right. Strauss is doing stuff he shouldn't be doing, and this environment at [our campus] is toxic.' It's hard for people to wrap their minds around it unless you were there," DiSabato said. 'Just imagine you're coming down from practice, you've got to go take a shower, and it's the gauntlet of sexual deviancy. You're walking into a shower, into a sauna, and you know every day there's going to be multiple dudes there that are there to watch you take a shower, to watch you take a sauna. And they're performing, on multiple situations, sex acts. You've got dudes masturbating. At one point, in a testimony, Russ tells the story of a guy in a toilet stall that was adjacent to the shower, and Hellickson walks in, and this dude is literally peeping over the top, masturbating. Hellickson pulls the door open, grabs the guy by his wrist, pulls him out, and his testimony says he almost took his hand off, basically, squeezing it so hard. The anger of having to deal with this every day, rage of having to be in this kind of environment, of having a doctor every time you went down to see him wants to see your genitals. Every time. Advertisement 'I busted my knuckle one time in the middle of practice, and I went downstairs and had someone pop it in place," DiSabato continued. "[Strauss] wanted to see my genitals. I'm like, 'Dude, enough.' I went back up. But if you had a sore throat, whatever it was, he had a reason, and it was always 'thorough evaluation.'' As bad as things were claimed to be with Strauss, both DiSabato and Coleman said the community enabled the abuse as well. One of Coleman's most memorable experiences, he said, came from an encounter with a student who threatened his life after he stood up for himself. 'I remember one day, it's a Saturday in the offseason, so I was in there by myself training," Coleman said. "I was taking a shower afterward, and I turn around and there's a pretty big guy standing across there — 6-foot-2, 225 [pounds], and he's just staring right at me, playing with himself, staring at me. Finally I said, 'What the f*** you looking at, dude? Just take your shower and get the f*** out of here.' He said, 'I'm going to take my shower and get my gun, come back and shoot your ass.' Whoa. I got the hell out of there. This was just a student, probably.' Strauss ultimately committed suicide in 2005. Advertisement For Coleman and DiSabato, after all they've gone through, it's now about spreading awareness to protect young athletes in sports. That starts with "Surviving Ohio State" and continuing to fight back with the Strauss lawsuit. "I just learn to deal with things," Coleman said. "I'm dealing with it. 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USA Today
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'I always expect to be in the NCAA Tournament': Texas A&M coach previews season ahead
'I always expect to be in the NCAA Tournament': Texas A&M coach previews season ahead After a tremendous kickstart to the Bucky McMillan era at Texas A&M, the first-year head coach sat down with college basketball insider Jon Rothstein to talk some ball this afternoon. McMillan comes to Bryan-College Station, Texas, after leading Samford to historic success over the last few years, including the program's first NCAA Tournament appearance since 2000. Now, he is looking to lead the Aggies' men's basketball program to new heights with no signs of slowing down his preparations anytime soon. Here is everything McMillan said on Rothstein's podcast on the CBS Sports College Basketball YouTube channel: Q: How did Henry Ward McMillan III become Bucky? "I was called that since birth, my dad's name was Bucky. I don't know why it's not on my birth certificate because they knew they were going to call me that. My dad was called that so I don't know. If it wasn't so hard to get a name change, I might do it. My dad was named after a baseball player named Bucky Harris back in the day so there you go." Q: Does life feel like a movie right now for Bucky McMillan? "It's gone so fast, I haven't had time to really think, but I mean, basketball is basketball. Someone asked me that the other day. Coaching at Texas A&M is awesome, but still the same feeling I had coaching JV basketball in terms of treating every job like that's your group, that's your team and let's go. I know when I coach JV basketball, this is the world I live in and this is the most important thing in my sports world. Now, the SEC is the most important thing in my world and Texas A&M being my focus." Q: If your life were a movie, who would play Bucky McMillan? "The guy from Punk'D. Ashton Kutcher that guy." Q: What was it like connecting being the Samford head coach, to then getting offered the job at Texas A&M? "There's a lot of similarities in Texas to the Alabama people, like real chill, down-to-earth people. I love College Station. It's just an easy town to kind of acclamate to. People are welcoming and it's great being undefeated. When you're undefeated everybody loves you. I haven't had to pay for a dinner yet so I need to push this season back as long as possible. It's a great place and I think it's got everything it takes to win in every sport here and have success in every sport. The new era of college athletics, I don't think every university is going to be able to do that. They're going to have to pick and choose. This place can compete for championships in every sport in the SEC I believe." Q: When the job opened, did you say to yourself I think this is one I am going to have a chance at? "You never know. In the South, you never know how the dominoes will fall. I know it's one that I would have to take and I'd want. I talked to our athletic director, obviously the coaching carousel moves and there's opportunities you're involved with. My athletic director at Samford, a guy named Martin Newton, who's a big guy in my life. There's been jobs I've asked him about he said besides the money, I don't know about that one for you. When we talked about Texas A&M, he was like, I don't want to see you go, but man... that's a place you could go and I think you'd be really, really successful there. When he kind of gave me the go-ahead that would be a place where I'd fit and it fit me, I was all-in to being out here." Q: What exactly is "Bucky Ball"? "When I was coaching high school basketball in Alabama back in the day, all the coaches in the suburban schools they played in the 30s and 40s. Really slow, ran the flex, no shot clock, shoot it after a minute and I was committed to, if I coached, I would never do that. We were going to trap until they shot the ball, shoot as quickly as possible, take a lot of threes and so a lot of old-school coaches in the area use to say that as a negative. Like it wasn't disciplined if you played fast and shoot threes. We started winning a lot and it became known as a positive in the community where I lived in. Basically, up-tempo basketball and shoot a lot of threes. You see more and more of it today, but 15 years ago some people thought a three-point shot would be a bad shot. We've always been a high-volume three-point shooting team, up-tempo team. Q: What coaches did Bucky McMillan study to learn his own offensive system? "I played for a great college coach in Duane Reboul who was the coach of Birmingham-Southern, they were in the Big South at the time. He won two NAI National Championships before that. He was kind of the same way, early three-point shooting before that was popular, spacing the floor and so I studied him a lot. There's some college coaches now that are my competitors, I can't say too much about. I can't hurt myself in the recruiting game, but there's some guys that I'm friends with in the business, one of them had a similar route to me. Nate (Oats) at Alabama, I'll go ahead and say it. I've watched them analytically and we're kind of into the anayltics before the analytics were the analytics." Q: What are the impressions of the roster you've put together at Texas A&M? "We did as good as we could possibly do when we got hired. Our staff, when we got everybody in place, supporting us and the way we had to go about this. I am not saying that this will be the best team we will ever assemble, but I will say is I am very proud of what we were able to do based on when you're looking at the supply and demand chain at the time we got hired." Q: What most excites you about the talent you've assembled in College Station? "That we're a good shooting team. That's what I see when I watch them. We have a lot of good shooting and when you have that you're capable of beating anybody. You want more than that obviously or you're capable of losing to anybody, but I certaintly think it's a team you'll see make 20-plus threes in some games this year. If it became between one or the other, like a team that could lose to some teams but also a team that could knock off some the best team in the country, give me that team because we all know to make a run to the tournament you're going to have to pull that. We know the goal of what this is. Basketball is a postseason sport, a tournament sport. If we can do our job getting to the tournament, it's your path. You just got to have one of those two games where you shoot it extremely well and these guys we have their capable. We have multiple guys that I think could shoot over 40% from three-point land." Q: What are your feelings knowing that you're a couple of months away from being a head coach and competing in the SEC? "It's a great league to be in because of what you said. You're goal is to get in the NCAA Tournament and you're goal is to win the NCAA Tournament. If you can compete at a high level in the SEC, which was the best league in college basketball last year and arguably the best league ever assembled, you got a chance certaintly when the majority of the teams are making it to the tournament. If you're in this league, iron sharpens iron. If you can compete at a high level in this league it's special, but if you get in the tournament after being in this league, you're going to be tournament ready." Q: What crumbs can Buck McMillan share on Texas A&M's non-conference schedule for the 2025-2026 season? "We're going with the 8-5 model, so we will play five Power Five teams total and eight non-power fives." Q: Based on the personnel that you've assembled after one shooting workout, is making the NCAA Tournament a realistic goal for the Aggies coming up here in 2026? "Yeah I certaintly think it is. People forget sometimes, A&M was playing for an SEC Championship and in the championship game. Like you said 14 of the 16 teams got in, and this year it's just going to be about this team coming together. I always expect to be in the NCAA Tournament. When I was in mid-major I was expecting to be in the NCAA Tournament. I dang sure to be in it at Texas A&M and I expect when we get there, to win there. I think all these guys we recruited expect the same way." The finishing touches on the Texas A&M men's basketball schedule are yet to be implemented, but the newly transformed roster is geared up and raring to hit the court in Reed Arena. Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Dylan on X: @dylanmflippo.