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LGHL Three things to watch when Ohio State travels to Nebraska

Three things to watch when Ohio State travels to Nebraska
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Nebraska v Iowa

Photo by Matthew Holst/Getty Images

Buckeye and Cornhusker freshmen, battle of the bigs and a bounce back performance.

The No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball team is back on the road, heading to Lincoln, Nebraska to face the Nebraska Cornhuskers. After losing away from Columbus last Sunday against Penn State, the Scarlet and Gray were back in form in the second half of Thursday’s game against No. 8 Maryland.

Now, it’s scarlet versus red, in a matchup that features two outstanding freshmen on the perimeter, size in the paint and a chance for one Ohio State player to bounce back against a tough Nebraska team.

Here are three things to watch in a matchup against two teams in the top five of the Big Ten standings:


Cambridge and Prince


On Monday, the Big Ten announced its weekly award winners. For Freshman of the Week, two players had to share the honor, and those two play against each other Sunday when point guard Jaloni Cambridge goes up against guard Britt Prince.

Last week, Prince made five three-point shots in Iowa City, Iowa, including a game-tying three in the final minute to bring the Cornhuskers back from an 11-point deficit. Plus, Prince added the two free throws at the death of regulation to send the game into overtime.

Prince scored 22 points in the overtime win, plus seven rebounds, six steals and five assists. It not only earned Prince a share of the Big Ten Freshman of the Week award, but the U.S. Basketball Writers Association (USBWA) bestowed its national freshman of the week honor for the Nebraska native.

The Nebraska freshman is also building a strong rapport with forward Alexis Markowski, similar to the duo of Jaz Shelley and Markowski that the Buckeyes have faced over the past three season.


cannot get enough of this duo ‼️ pic.twitter.com/OSO4cfIIk3

— Nebraska Women's Basketball (@HuskerWBB) January 21, 2025

Cambridge had an outstanding week in her own right, scoring 19 first half points against the Wisconsin Badgers and leading the Buckeyes with 27 points and eight rebounds. On Thursday, Cambridge led the team in scoring for the fifth time this season, scoring 20 points with another career high eight rebounds, plus two assists and two steals.

Since the start of the new year, Prince and Cambridge are hitting new levels in the freshman maturation process. Prince averages 15.5 points and six rebounds per game so far in 2025, with Cambridge averaging 21.4 points and 6.4 rebounds in five games of the 2025 calendar.

That means Sunday has the chance for an explosive game on the perimeter, the first of many should both stay in the Big Ten for the duration of their careers.

Both freshmen can attack inside the paint or sit back and hit shots from deep. Cambridge has the speed advantage, but Ohio State faces the concern of Prince getting open shots from long range. The shooting guard Prince can make it a long afternoon in Lincoln if Nebraska effectively puts her on an island through the Scarlet and Gray press.


Paint Work


When the Buckeyes beat Maryland Thursday, forward Ajae Petty played seven minutes. In that time, the starting forward scored nine points on 3-of-3 shooting and grabbed one rebound. Head coach Kevin McGuff put Petty on the bench, and oddly enough didn’t bring her back into the game much.

It wasn’t because of foul trouble or injury either. After the game, McGuff assured that Petty was fine but he was letting freshman center Elsa Lemmilä stay on the court, playing 23 minutes for the Buckeyes. Lemmilä had five points, five rebounds and four blocks. What’s also impressive is the 6-foot-6 center didn’t turn the ball over once.

McGuff had the trust in the freshman to keep her in against a stout inside game from the Terrapins instead of the graduate senior Petty who has started every game for Ohio State this season.

Is it a means to get his future starting big more comfort in conference? Was it simply based on matchup, despite Maryland coach Brenda Frese employing three starting forwards? Time will tell but McGuff will need both of them against senior forward Alexis Markowski.

The career Cornhusker Markowski leads the team in points (14.5) and rebounds (8.2), which is nothing new. Markowski has been dominant since joining the program for the 20-21 season and especially against Ohio State. In three games against the Buckeyes, Markowski averages a 15.7-point, 13-rebound, double-double, regularly making life difficult for whoever is matched against her inside.

COLLEGE BASKETBALL: FEB 10 Womens - Nebraska at Ohio State
Photo by Graham Stokes/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Petty has the speed to play step-by-step with Markowski, but McGuff leverages Lemmilä’s wingspan to stop inside shots. Lemmilä’s 35 blocks on the season is already higher than any single Buckeye in the past four seasons and is likely to surpass the 40 blocks mark, which hasn’t been hit in the program since the 18-19 season.

Can the duo keep Markowski at bay? This season, Nebraska doesn’t have the reinforcements of Natalie Potts. The Big Ten Freshman of the Year suffered an ACL injury on Nov. 19, taking her out for the remainder of the season. Even so, Markowski alone is enough to cause issues for most teams.


Chance Gray Comeback


An anomaly on the scoresheet Thursday night was shooting guard Chance Gray. In 21 minutes, Gray had one assists, one turnover and two fouls on 0-of-7 shooting, with four of those missed shots coming from deep.

It’s the first time in Gray’s college career that she scored no points in a game. Gray also hasn’t scored less than five points in a game since her 22-23 freshman season.

That makes the Ohio State win more improbable than it already was with the Scarlet and Gray down 15 points in the second quarter. This season, Gray has been a spark for the Buckeyes offense. Since the start of the new year, Gray averaged 15.2 points per game with at least three shots made each game from beyond the arc.

Part of that Thursday performance was the outstanding play of Kennedy Cambridge, who was the spark that helped propel the Buckeyes comeback. Now, against Nebraska, Gray can have her own comeback. The likelihood that Gray has a repeat performance like Thursday is drastically low.

Gray hasn’t scored less than 10 points in consecutive games since the 2023 Pac-12 conference tournament, when Gray was a freshman for the Oregon Ducks.

Now a Buckeye guard, Gray is a coach’s kid and a competitor. Odds are, Gray makes a return against the Cornhuskers, giving the visiting Scarlet and Gray a dynamic the team needs if they hope to stay near the top of the Big Ten.

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JackSaw’s legendary play: the Scoop ‘n Sawyer, aka The Texas JackSaw Massacre

I think we should let this thread be open for a few days to discuss it, and then I’ll create a poll next week.

These are some suggestions that I’ve seen. Feel free to add others, and indicate which choices are good and which aren’t.

“Pickerington-6“, a play on his hometown and the common name for an interception for a TD, although this was a fumble return.

”Scoop ‘n Sawyer”, mentioned by @BuckeyeNation27 a while ago.

”83 yards deep in the heart of Texas” or “83 yards through the heart of Texas”, evoking Zeke’s epic run in a similar game situation.

LGHL You’re Nuts: Was Ohio State’s win over Purdue a one-off, or are the Buckeyes back on track?

You’re Nuts: Was Ohio State’s win over Purdue a one-off, or are the Buckeyes back on track?
Connor Lemons
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: Journal-Courier

Alex Martin/Journal and Courier / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Tuesday night’s win has improved the vibes tenfold, but Ohio State is still just 3-5 in conference play.

As we all expected, Ohio State split their two games over the past week, although it didn’t shake out exactly how we thought it would. After dropping a very winnable game at home to Indiana on Friday night, the Buckeyes traveled to West Lafayette, Indiana on Tuesday night.

Against all odds, Ohio State upset the 11th-ranked Boilermakers, 73-70, to avoid sinking to 2-6 in Big Ten play.

Instead, the Buckeyes are 3-5 in conference, putting them in a five-way tie for 11th-place. The Big Ten is doing that clogged up thing that it loves to do every year, as there’s a two-way tie for fourth-place between Oregon and Wisconsin at 5-3. That means that 12 of the Big Ten’s 18 teams are somewhere between 3-5 and 5-3.

Michigan State is the frontrunner to win the conference right now, but pretty much every other team could realistically talk themselves into a scenario where they earn a double-bye in the Big Ten Tournament. That includes Ohio State.

Last week, Connor and Justin debated what the Buckeyes needed to do against Indiana to snap its losing streak against the Hoosiers. Connor said get to the basket/don’t settle for jumpers, and Justin said to get Bruce cooking early. The readers were split 50-50, so we have our sixth tie ever.

After 188 weeks:

Connor- 84
Justin- 79
Other- 19

(There have been six ties)


Ohio State looks to be headed in the right direction after that big win against the ‘Boilers, but at 3-5 there’s still not a ton of room for error moving forward. Does thin win mean the Buckeyes are back, or do you still need convinced?

This week’s question: Was Ohio State’s win over Purdue a one-off, or are the Buckeyes back on track?


Connor: It was a one-off

NCAA Basketball: Ohio State at Purdue
Marc Lebryk-Imagn Images

At 3-5, I think Ohio State is still in a precarious position. They’ve got four tough games coming up, starting with an Iowa team that leads the Big Ten in scoring at 87.3 points per game. They’ve got four guys averaging 14 points per game or more, and all it takes is one day where Ohio State isn’t hitting open shots for them to get out-ran and out-gunned by the Hawkeyes.

Then they go on the road to Penn State and Illinois back-to-back after that. Two of their three Big Ten wins this season have been on the road, but this is a team that’s not too far removed from losing 17 consecutive road games. Because of that recent history, I’m hesitant to call road games at Penn State or Illinois easy, or even a toss-up. Those are games we should expect Ohio State to most likely lose.

After those two road games, the Maryland Terrapins come to Columbus, and we’ve already seen how Kevin Willard’s team treated the Buckeyes the first time they met.

I don’t think Ohio State will submarine over these next four games, but even splitting them 2-2 will put the Buckeyes at 5-7 in the Big Ten, which means they’re still swimming upstream trying to get their heads above water and make the NCAA Tournament.

Aside from the challenging schedule, Ohio State still second-worst in the conference in non-steal turnover percentage at 10.4%. The only team worse is Michigan, which is turning it over on their own accord 10.6% of their possessions.

The Buckeyes turned the ball over 18 times against Purdue, and still found a way to win. But it’s hard not to wonder if they would’ve won any of the Oregon, Wisconsin, or Indiana games if there was one fewer dribble off their own foot, silly travel, or moving screen call.

We’re three months into the season, and I don’t know if those issues will ever get fixed. Because of that, I think Ohio State could still tack on another few super tight losses, that they can only pin on those self-inflicted mistakes.

They may have turned a corner with the Purdue win, but I’m not totally convinced yet.


Justin: Back on track


I genuinely believe a win like this can completely change a season. That is why it was so important for the Buckeyes to finish that game against Purdue and actually win.

The Buckeye’s next couple of games are very winnable. They play Iowa at home, who have lost three-straight games, then travel to Penn State for a road game, and they have been inconsistent. If they can win those two games, that will be three wins in a row and two conference road wins. They will move to 13-8 overall and 5-5 in conference.

Being .500 in conference is incredibly important, because as long as they finish 10-10 in conference play and win one Big Ten Tournament game, they will make the tournament. That is a fact.

So, beating Purdue changes everything. When the goal is .500 in conference play, 2-6 is very different than 3-5, especially when the Buckeyes have to travel to Illinois in three games, which will likely be a loss. However, we have seen that anything is possible after the win at Mackey.

I think this win put them back on track, but it can all be undone next week.



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