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LGHL Hangout in the Holy Land: Carnell Tate shines as Ohio State takes down Northwestern at Wrigley Field

Hangout in the Holy Land: Carnell Tate shines as Ohio State takes down Northwestern at Wrigley Field
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Northwestern slowed the game down, but the Buckeyes scored on four of their first five possessions to pull away

The latest episode of Land-Grant Holy Land’s flagship podcast is here! Join LGHL’s Josh Dooley and Justin Golba as they discuss Ohio State football, basketball, recruiting, and much more! Come for the hot takes. Stay for the warm ones.



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On this recap episode of Hangout in the Holy Land, Josh and Justin are back to talk about the No. 2 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes’ win at Wrigley Field over the Northwestern Wildcats. The Buckeyes won 31-7 to move to 9-1 and set up a showdown next week against Indiana.

For starters, we talk about the defense coming out slow again and allowing Northwestern to drive down the field. The drive ended in a fumble, but the Wildcats are the 131st-ranked offense in the country, so how were they able to move the ball so well?

However, the Ohio State locked in and ended up running away from Northwestern and winning comfortably. We talk about the MVP’s on both sides of the ball and how the Buckeyes were able to separate.

To close, we briefly discuss Indiana as the Buckeyes prepare for a huge matchup in Columbus next week against the unranked Hoosiers.

Make sure to like and subscribe to the podcast. As always, Go Bucks!



Connect with the pod:

Twitter:
@HolyLandPod

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Twitter:
@jdooleybuckeye

Connect with Justin Golba:

Twitter:
@justin_golba

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LGHL Stock Market Report: Carnell Tate shoots to the moon back in his home town

Stock Market Report: Carnell Tate shoots to the moon back in his home town
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Carnell Tate and Sonny Styles were the stars as the Buckeyes move to 9-1 and set up a showdown with Indiana

The No. 2 ranked Ohio State Buckeyes comfortably defeated the Northwestern Wildcats 31-7 at Wrigley Field to move to 9-1, behind strong performances from Carnell Tate, Sonny Styles, Quinshon Judkins, and a host of others.

Here is who and what we are high and low on after the tenth game of the season for this week’s Stock Market Report.


Blue Chip


Carnell Tate

I don’t have to go into too much detail about why this was a great day for the Chicago native because Ryan Day said it best during and after the game. The Sophomore receiver finished with four catches for 52 yards and two touchdowns and it was impossible not to feel how meaningful that was for him after all he has been through.


Solid Investments


Sonny Styles

In my opinion, this was Sonny Styles’ best game as a linebacker. He was all over the field, registering six total tackles, five solo tackles, two sacks, and two tackles for loss. Arvell Reese was great, too, and it really feels like this is a linebacker unit that is finding its stride and the perfect time.

Third quarter efficiency

Ohio State is the best third-quarter team in the country, and that is a positive sign for fans who have defended the coaching staff. That statistic means that the halftime adjustments have been quick and effective all season with the coaching staff, and that is a great advantage to have in your back pocket moving forward.


Junk Bond


The Will Howard deep-ball narrative

After this one, we can start to put to bed the narrative that Will Howard cannot throw the deep ball. He has been one of the best intermediate passers in college football, but the deep pass has not always been there.

I don’t think it is an arm issue; I think he has been aiming the deep ball instead of just letting it go. However, after three good deep balls Saturday, Howard seems to be more settled and ready to let it rip with more confidence moving forward.


Buy/Sell


Buy: Strong running

TreVeyon Henderson and Quinshon Judkins are talented backs, but they are also strong and determined. The offensive line’s run blocking wasn’t great on Saturday, but the two backs kept multiple drives alive by breaking tackles and running over Northwestern defenders. Northwestern has a good run defense, and the Buckeyes ran for over five yards a carry at Wrigley. They will have to continue that against a strong Indiana front seven.

Buy: Meaningful games

In an ideal world, Ohio State has six games left in the season: Indiana, Michigan, and the Big Ten Championship. With a win in the Big Ten Championship, they would have three playoff games to earn the national championship.

Five of these games will be against five of the top 12 teams in the country, and the other one is The Team Up North, and I don’t have to explain how meaningful that game is. This is going to be a fun end to the season and hopefully, it isn’t close to being over.

Sell: Playing at Wrigley Field

I gave it a fair shake, and I did not have a problem with it because I enjoyed the idea, but after the game, I don’t think I liked it. The camera angles were weird, and it did not have the atmosphere I thought it might. I did like the “seventh inning” stretch and the fact that no one got hurt running into the ivy. I am happy for the fans that went as I am sure it was cool, but I am glad it was a one-time thing.

Sell: Finishing sacks

Ohio State has done a good job getting pressure on the quarterback, and they have a high win rate, but guys like Jack Sawyer, C.J. Hicks, and others have to do a better job getting them on the ground. The top quarterbacks in the playoff will make you pay for that.

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LGHL If This Were a Movie: Buckeyes’ trip to Wrigley Field looked a lot like ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’

If This Were a Movie: Buckeyes’ trip to Wrigley Field looked a lot like ‘Ferris Bueller’s Day Off’
Jami Jurich
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Ohio State v Northwestern

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The only thing missing was a red Ferrari.

Each week, we’ll analyze the Ohio State game (and occasionally other games as well) through the lens of a sports movie. If this game were the next “Remember the Titans,” “Space Jam” or “The Sandlot,” what storylines would keep us talking? What would make us laugh, reach for the box of tissues, or have us on the edge of our seats? Grab your popcorn and get ready for pop culture references, a hint of snark, and a trip back in time to the Blockbuster Video days.



It wasn’t exactly a day off for the Buckeyes, but much like the titular character in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” they certainly wreaked some havoc in the city of Chicago yesterday in their 31-7 routing of Northwestern at Wrigley Field, the home of baseball’s (and my) Chicago Cubs.

In the classic John Hughes film from the 80s starring Matthew Broderick, Ferris wakes up on a perfect spring day in Chicago (the kind that is a welcome reprieve from the city’s miserable winters) and decides to play hooky, crafting an elaborate plan to cut class so he and his friends can go on adventures throughout the city.

The Buckeyes seemed to take a page out of Ferris’ book in the first quarter, in that they didn’t look quite like themselves (faking sick, some might say). They got off to a slow start against a 4-6 Wildcats team they should have been beating handily. The game remained scoreless through the first quarter before the Wildcats took a 7-0 lead, enough to convince even the most wary of parents, sisters, and principals that in fact, something might actually be off with the Buckeyes.

It was all an act.

After the Wildcats put up that touchdown, they wouldn’t score again all day. The Buckeyes, on the other hand, were just getting started, scoring touchdowns on four straight drives. It was the football equivalent of borrowing your best friend’s dad’s 1961 Ferrari and taking it out for a joy ride—only for the Buckeyes, it was more of a joy run (or a joy catch-and-run).

Ferris kicked off his day off with a little fine dining and a trip to the Art Institute of Chicago; the Buckeyes kicked off theirs with two consecutive 1-yard touchdown runs from Quinshon Judkins.

Ferris headed to Wrigley Field to take in a Cubs game. Buckeye wide receiver Carnell Tate headed to Wrigley Field to take the ball into the endzone – twice. Tate, a Chicago native, had a spectacular game in his hometown, with a 25-yard touchdown reception from quarterback Will Howard in the final minute of the first half, followed by an 8-yard touchdown early in the third quarter.

In one of the film’s most famous scenes, Ferris jumps on a float in the Von Steuben Day Parade and lip-syncs to “Twist and Shout” by the Beatles to cap his day of shenanigans. The Buckeyes topped it all off with a 28-yard field goal from Jayden Fielding at the end of the third, which was followed by a nice moment in which fans sang “Take Me Out to the Ballgame”—traditionally sung halfway through the seventh inning in baseball games—between the third and fourth quarters.

In the end, the Buckeyes didn’t look so sick after all. Once the offense got going, they did as much damage as Ferris, and in about half the time. Judkins had the two aforementioned touchdown runs. Howard threw for 247 yards and those two touchdown passes to Tate. Wide receiver Jeremiah Smith averaged 25 yards a reception with 4 catches for 100 yards.

The only real difference between Ferris and the Buckeyes is that Ferris’ principal comes much closer to catching him than the Wildcats did to Ohio State.

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LGHL Uncut: McGuff talks narrow victory; McMahon discusses no nights off

Uncut: McGuff talks narrow victory; McMahon discusses no nights off
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


belmontsecondhalf_02.0.jpg

Ohio State University Athletic Department

After the close win over Belmont, coach, Cotie McMahon and Jaloni Cambridge break down the victory

Throughout the year, Land-Grant Holy Land will be bringing you uncut audio primarily from Ohio State press conferences, but also from individual interview sessions.

Listen to the episode and subscribe:


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Sunday afternoon, Ohio State women’s basketball was in Tennessee, facing the Belmont Bruins in the Buckeyes’ first away trip of the season. The 40 minutes on the court ended with a Scarlet and Gray 67-63 win, but it required a late comeback against the mid-major.

Following the win, head coach Kevin McGuff, Cotie McMahon and Jaloni Cambridge spoke with the media.

McGuff talked about how even with a young team, he doesn’t expect there to be outings like there was against Belmont, the strong play of McMahon and the Buckeyes facing adversity.

McMahon and Cambridge talked about their performances, with McMahon specifically sharing how she won’t have nights off. Cambridge also talked about her final shot that won the Buckeyes the game.

All that and more on the latest “Uncut.”



Connect with Thomas:
Bluesky: @ThomasCostello

Theme music provided by www.bensound.com


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LGHL Ohio State’s path to the College Football Playoff; How many Big Ten teams make CFP?

Ohio State’s path to the College Football Playoff; How many Big Ten teams make CFP?
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Ohio State v Northwestern

Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images

The Buckeyes can get one step closer to a spot in the Big Ten title game with a win over Indiana on Saturday.

Ohio State enters the week at 9-1 overall and 6-1 in Big Ten play, with its only loss of the season coming in a 32-31 road contest against now-No. 1 Oregon. Despite the one blemish on the record, all of the Buckeyes’ major goals still remain ahead of them, including a spot in the B1G title game and a trip to the College Football Playoff.

In order for Ohio State to make it to Indianapolis, they will have to defeat Indiana this coming Saturday. The Hoosiers remain unbeaten, with a 10-0 record overall and a 7-0 mark in-conference. Curt Cignetti’s group managed to avoid both Oregon and Penn State on this year’s schedule, and have dominated everyone else in their path aside from Michigan, who played Indiana close but ultimately fell short in a 20-15 battle in Week 11.

Now, the Hoosiers head to Columbus, with the winner sitting in a favorable spot to play in the Big Ten title game against Oregon.

Should Ohio State emerge victorious, the two programs would have equal conference records of 7-1, and the Buckeyes would get the nod in a tie-breaker based on the head-to-head win. Ryan Day’s group would still need to defeat Michigan in the season finale to officially clinch their spot, whereas Indiana would be virtually locked in for the B1G title game with a victory over Ohio State, barring a catastrophic loss to a 1-9 Purdue team to end the year.

In the incredibly unlikely scenario that Indiana beats Ohio State but then loses to the Boilermakers, it would actually be Penn State that plays in the title game based on tiebreakers.

The Buckeyes would be out at 7-2 in-conference, whereas the Hoosiers and Nittany Lions would own equal 8-1 B1G records, also with identical records against common opponents (3-1 against Ohio State, Purdue, UCLA and Washington). It would then come down to the best cumulative conference winning percentage of all conference opponents, which favors Penn State and gets James Franklin's group to Indy.

You got all that?

Moving on to the College Football Playoff...

The only guaranteed lock at this point to make the CFP from the Big Ten is Oregon. In the unlikely event the Ducks were to lose their final game of the regular season against Washington, they have already clinched a spot in the B1G title game. Even if they were to also lose to any one of Ohio State, Indiana or Penn State — who would all be top-five teams should they meet at Lucas Oil Stadium — Oregon would not be left out of the field of 12 at 11-2 having banked impressive wins against the Buckeyes and a top-15 Boise State team.

There are three other Big Ten teams that remain in contention for a spot in the College Football Playoff: Ohio State, Indiana and Penn State.

Ohio State’s path to the CFP is pretty obvious: win at least one of its last two games. If the Buckeyes defeat both Indiana and Michigan, they are in regardless of whether or not they get revenge against Oregon in the B1G title game. If they lose to Indiana but beat Michigan, they still get in at 10-2 with their only losses to No. 1 and No. 5 and a win over then-No. 3 Penn State. The same is true if they defeat the Hoosiers but lose to the Wolverines, as wins over No. 3 and No. 5 would be good enough even without a trip to Indy.

There is a small chance Ohio State could even make the College Football Playoff if it lost its last two games, although its resume at 9-3 with one quality win over Penn State would probably not be enough unless things broke the Buckeyes’ way elsewhere in the rankings.

Indiana’s path is a bit more precarious. Fair or not, it is clear that the selection committee is weary of the Hoosiers’ strength of schedule, currently sitting behind three one-loss teams despite being unbeaten. If Indiana beats Ohio State, it is almost certainly going to go undefeated in the regular season, and would be in with or without a win against Oregon in Indy. If the Hoosiers lose to the Buckeyes, thereby missing the B1G title game, it would be a little murky whether or not the committee would put them in even at 10-2 without a single ranked win on its ledger.

Personally, I think this Indiana team is a lot better than most of the two and three-loss slop the SEC has provided this season, and the Hoosiers would still be deserving of a CFP bid if they lose a close game to Ohio State. If Indiana gets blown out in Columbus — which seems unlikely — then it becomes a bit of a different story.

Penn State, meanwhile, is likely going to earn an at-large bid as long as it wins its final two regular season games against Minnesota and Maryland. The Nittany Lions’ resume is not that much better than Indiana’s, but considering their brand recognition and the fact that they’re already ranked ahead of the Hoosiers shows the committee’s feelings towards them.

Penn State’s only ‘ranked’ win is a victory over then-No. 19 Illinois, and their wins would be against Big Ten opponents with a combined conference record of 22-37, compared to Indiana’s opponents with a 17-41 record (factoring in both teams’ remaining games should IU lose to Ohio State).

The only real difference in the resumes between Penn State and Indiana, aside from recruiting rankings and the logos on the helmets influencing peoples’ perception of both programs, are their non-conference slates. The Nittany Lions at least played a P4 opponent in West Virginia — albeit one that is currently 5-5 — alongside a pair of MAC teams in Bowling Green and Kent State. The Hoosiers, meanwhile, played a now 3-8 FCS team in Western Illinois, as well as Florida International (C-USA) and Charlotte (American), both of whom are now 3-7.

The best case scenario for the Big Ten is to get four teams into the College Football Playoff. Oregon can be written in Sharpie, and Ohio State will likely be there as well barring a complete collapse. Penn State will be in if it can win its final two games, and Indiana should be rewarded with a spot whether it beats the Buckeyes or not.

The SEC will probably get four teams in (unless they undeservingly get five or six based on nothing but conference perception, which is incorrect), the ACC and Big 12 will each get one plus one Group of Five team and Notre Dame. That leaves one or two spaces open for the Hoosiers, who are certainly among the nation’s best 12 teams this season.

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LGHL All the news, analysis from Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern

All the news, analysis from Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern
Matt Tamanini
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch

Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

All the Buckeye news thats fit to re-print.

Look, we get it. Your days are busy and you don’t have time to read all of the stories and tweets from the three dozen websites dedicated to covering Ohio State athletics, or the 237 Buckeye beat writers churning out hot takes and #content on a daily basis. But that’s ok, that’s what your friends at Land-Grant Holy Land are here for.

Monday through Friday, we’ll be collecting all of the articles, tweets, features, interviews, videos, podcasts, memes, photos, and whatever else we stumble across on the interwebz and putting them in our daily “Why is this News?” article. That way, you’ll have a one-stop shop for all of the most important Buckeye news, jokes, and analysis.

You’re welcome!


For your Earholes...


Subscribe to the Land-Grant Podcast Network for all of your Ohio State needs
Matt Tamanini, Land-Grant Holy Land


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Recapping Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern


Using baseball terminology to wrap up Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern
Brett Ludwiczak, Land-Grant Holy Land

Tate Scores Twice in Hometown, No. 2 Ohio State Beats Northwestern 31-7 in Chicago
Ohio State Athletics

OSU overcomes slow start to roll over Northwestern 31-7 at Wrigley
Bill Rabinowitz, The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State Pulls Away from Northwestern for 31-7 Win at Wrigley Field
Dan Hope, Eleven Warriors

Chicago Hope: Tate’s two touchdowns help Buckeyes down Northwestern at Wrigley
Steve Helwagen, Bucknuts

No. 2 Ohio State cruises past Northwestern 31-7 at Wrigley Field
Noah Weiskopf, The Lantern


News From Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern


Presser Bullets: Ryan Day Knew Ohio State Would Get Northwestern’s “Best Shot” Coming Off a Bye, Expects the Same From Indiana Next Weekend
Chase Brown, Eleven Warriors

Northwestern Coach David Braun: Ohio State Has “One of The Best Wide Receiving Corps You’re Gonna See, or May Ever See”
Josh Poloha, Eleven Warriors

ESPN’s ‘College GameDay’ heading to Columbus for Ohio State-Indiana game in Week 13
Ehsan Kassim, USA Today Network


Analyzing Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern



The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern
Gene Ross, Land-Grant Holy Land

Snap Judgments: Buckeyes batter Northwestern at Wrigley
Austin Ward, Dotting The Eyes

Three Key Stats: Ohio State’s Defense Flourishes Again in the Red Zone, Jeremiah Smith Notches 100 Yards and Carnell Tate Scores Two Touchdowns Back in Chicago
Josh Poloha, Eleven Warriors

Quick Takes: Ohio State’s defense settles in, Buckeyes establish run in Northwestern win
Patrick Murphy, Bucknuts

Report Card: Grading Buckeyes road win over Northwestern
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row


Looking at the Performances From Ohio State’s 31-7 win over Northwestern


REC: 4
YDS: 52
TD: 2

Carnell Tate posted his first career multi-TD game in his return home to Chicago #B1GFootball x @OhioStateFB pic.twitter.com/QN9Kjmkyxc

— Big Ten Network (@BigTenNetwork) November 16, 2024

Moment of the Game: Ohio State bows but doesn’t break, forcing red zone turnover
Matt Tamanini, Land-Grant Holy Land

OSU WR Carnell Tate catches two TDs in emotional Chicago homecoming
Joey Kaufman, The Columbus Dispatch

Sonny Styles Showing He Can Be a Weapon At Linebacker for Ohio State With Two-Sack, Two-PBU Performance vs. Northwestern
Andy Anders, Eleven Warriors

Buckeye Leaves: Ohio State beats Northwestern in final road game of season
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row

Instant opinions: Ohio State’s Will Howard hits long ball bull’s-eye
Rob Oller, The Columbus Dispatch

Photos: Ohio State vs. Northwestern
Ohio State Athletics

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LGHL No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball escape Belmont 67-63

No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball escape Belmont 67-63
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Belmont v Ohio State

Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images

The Buckeyes survive a hardly fought battle in Nashville Sunday

Ohio State women’s basketball played two games fitting of a top 25 team playing a mid-major side to start the season. After rolling in wins over the Cleveland State Vikings and Charlotte 49ers, the No. 12 Buckeyes traveled to Nashville to face the Belmont Bruins. The ranking didn’t matter to the Missouri Valley Conference side, and Belmont kept the game close for 40 minutes in a 67-63 Buckeyes win.

Before Sunday’s game, questions surrounded freshman guard Jaloni Cambridge. Specifically, would she be available after having a big fall to start the second half against Charlotte on Tuesday?

Cambridge started for the Buckeyes, with a large cheering section in the Cambridge’s home town of Nashville, Tennessee. The guard didn’t miss a step, hitting her first shot of the game, a three-point attempt.

Last season, the two sides played a close first half before the Buckeyes pulled away. Sunday, it was the Bruins starting hot, going up 15-13, which caused head coach Kevin McGuff to increase the pressure.

Ohio State put their havoc press into place and slowed down Bruins shooting. The Buckeyes allowed only four shots in the last five minutes of the first quarter for Belmont, hitting one.

That was good for the Buckeyes because the visitors missed seven shots in a row to start the defensive stand. Plus, a hard fall for Cotie McMahon that sent the forward out of the game. McMahon had contact by forward Kendal Cheesman on a layup attempt.

The Buckeye hit a free throw but went to the bench favoring her leg. McMahon didn’t stay on the bench long and came back in to break up the bad shooting spell to score the last four points of the quarter. Ohio State ended the quarter up four points, even on 2-of-13 shooting in the second half of the first period.

Defense continued in the second quarter. Ohio State kept limiting shots for Belmont, and when they did take shots they were under half court pressure. The Buckeyes forced 10 first half turnovers.

Offensively, the Scarlet and Gray had a 13-point run from midway through the first Into the second quarter. Of that run, McMahon accounted for nine of the points. By halftime, McMahon already scored 15 points, eclipsing her season average of 14.0 points per game entering Sunday.

Following the Bruins scoring drought, Belmont upped their intensity. The home side forced four turnovers in just over four minutes and went on a 16-2 run to get back on top with 2:37 remaining in the half. Ohio State hit two shots to end the half to go into the locker room up four points, but the Buckeyes needed to adjust if they wanted to avoid an upset.

The second half picked ups here the first half left off, with Belmont continuing aggressive offensive play but were also aggressive in the paint defensively. With 4:51 remaining in the quarter, the Bruins put the Buckeyes in the bonus, which wasn’t necessarily a saving grace after Ohio State shot 5-of-11 from the line before hitting the bonus.

Belmont fouls and Ohio State rebounding kept the Bruins at a distance. The Buckeyes out rebounded the Bruins 20-10 on offensive boards and 36-29 overall through three quarters. It helped shooting for Ohio State that wasn’t coming from half court offense, shooting 2-of-15 in the quarter.

Even so, without shots falling, Belmont kept the game close and went ahead late in the quarter with a six-point run. Ohio State ended the quarter outscored 18-11, entering the final 10 minutes down three points.

Ohio State probably expected things to swing back in their direction, but the fourth quarter didn’t bring any relief. Following a layup by Taylor Thierry, the Bruins went on a seven-point run to extend their lead further.

Out of nowhere though, the Buckeyes found the composure to bring the game back into Ohio State’s favor. For the first time in the game, the Buckeyes hit four shots in a row, going on a 10-point run to go ahead a point with 3:00 remaining.

From there, Belmont guard Jailyn Banks fouled out, the key defender with three steals on the day and one of the reasons why the Buckeyes struggled to hit shots on the perimeter. Ohio State extended their run to 13 points before Belmont cut the game to a single possession.

Bruins’ guard Emily La Chappell had a chance to put Belmont ahead with a three but missed. On the next possession, the Buckeyes lost the ball and La Chappell was fouled on an attempted layup. The guard tied the game at 63-63 with 35.8 seconds remaining.

Cambridge, who only had one shot on 1-of-9 shooting up until that point, took the ball with the game tied and went to the basket. The freshman hit a runner and was fouled on the play, which Cambridge made from the foul line. With 13.8 seconds remaining, the Bruins had a chance to tie the game but Kendall Holmes pushed Cambridge before a shot, giving the Buckeyes the ball and the win.

McMahon led the way for Ohio State in the win, scoring 21 points with five rebounds. Taylor Thierry scores 11 points with seven rebounds.

What’s Next

Ohio State stays on the road this week, taking the short bus ride to Athens, Ohio to face the Ohio Bobcats. The MAC side is the last team from Ohio to defeat the Buckeyes when the Bobcats defeated the Scarlet and Gray in Columbus on Nov. 17, 2019.

Since then, Ohio State is 2-0 against Ohio. In Athens, two years ago, coach McGuff’s side beat the Bobcats 86-56 and then again last season in Columbus 85-45.

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LGHL Game Preview: No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball travels to Belmont

Game Preview: No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball travels to Belmont
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Belmont v Ohio State

Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images

The Buckeyes face the Bruins in the away edition of a home-and-home series

For the first time in the young 2024-25 Ohio State women’s basketball season, the Buckeyes are on the road. The Scarlet and Gray head to Nashville, Tennessee to face the Belmont Bruins for the second time in two seasons.

While there’s no longer a family connection between the two sides with head coach Kevin McGuff’s daughter Kilyn McGuff transferring in the offseason, the Bruins have attributes the new-look Buckeyes haven’t seen yet this season.


Preview


Ohio State’s made a living off mid-major teams so far this season. While only two games have been played, Sunday’s trip to Belmont is the third against a non-Power Five school and part of the 10 of 11 non-conference games not playing a team from one of the heavy-hitting conferences.

Before the season, coach McGuff admitted it’s part who’s available when it comes to scheduling but also getting the opportunity to play sides who are sneaky good, and can challenge the Buckeyes. So far that hasn’t happened, but with Belmont, things could get interesting, at least in stints.

Belmont’s been to the NCAA Tournament four times in the last seven seasons. In that run, they weren’t all one-and-done appearances. Take the 2022 tournament as the best example. In the Bruins’ final season in the Ohio Valley Conference, Belmont shocked not one but two teams in March.

Head coach Bart Brooks led his Bruins side to a double overtime win over the Oregon Ducks and narrowly lost to the Tennessee Volunteers 67-70 in the second round. Belmont is successful because they’re well-balanced.

In the second year of Missouri Valley Conference play, Belmont ended the campaign second behind the Drake Bulldogs, but with their man coverage defense allowed the least amount of points per game in the conference (62.3). They hold onto the ball well, giving up less than 15 turnovers per game and offensively take a lot of shots from deep.

Last season, Belmont was second to Drake with eight three-point shots made per game, and anyone can score them for Brooks’ side. Like forward Kendal Cheesman. The 6-foot-2 senior, who Brooks took out of the lineup to come off the bench this week in a win against Kennesaw State, scored 19 points including five shots from outside.

Belmont v Ohio State
Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images

The Bruins will challenge a Buckeyes team that allowed nine three-point shots against Cleveland State to start the season. Belmont will bring a similar challenge defensively, making Ohio State think twice about putting more of a presence in the paint.

Also, with a big like Cheesman who can score anywhere, it potentially takes Ohio State’s Ajae Petty out of the box or allows a shorter guard to post up against the forward. If Belmont is successful at drawing Petty out to the perimeter, it could mean trouble on the boards for the Scarlet and Gray, with Petty averaging five rebounds per game in the early season.

However, the biggest question for the Buckeyes isn’t in Xs and Os — it’s the status of Jaloni Cambridge.

The freshman phenom started her NCAA career strong, scoring 31 points against the CSU Vikings, but fell hard against the Charlotte 49ers to start the second half. McGuff said there was no way they’d put Cambridge back in with the game out of reach for Charlotte, which means if needed the point guard could have gotten into the game. Cambridge sat on the bench, and stood near it for a good chunk of the second half, after a brief trip to the medical room.

Will an abundance of caution have McGuff hold Cambridge back from starting in a game in her hometown?

If Cambridge doesn’t start, Madison Greene is already a starting-caliber point guard. While the scoring won’t be as explosive, giving Cambridge another game to rest wouldn’t be the end of the world. Based on McGuff’s starting habits though, it seems likely that Cambridge is in from the jump.

Should Cambridge not play, it means the injury to the guard might be more than was initially known following Tuesday’s home win.

Ohio State will still also have Cotie McMahon, Taylor Thierry, and Chance Gray to provide consistent offense. McMahon’s scoring numbers are down but are giving the ball away less and playing a more mature small-forward role for McGuff as players like Cambridge and Gray shine.

Against Charlotte, Gray had a program record trying nine three-pointers made in a game in only her second game as a Buckeye. It was Gray’s career-best scoring game ever after starting two years with the Oregon Ducks. That experience and shooting ability will be hard for the Bruins to stop if it carries over to the road trip.

It’s hard to compare Sunday’s game in Nashville to last season because both teams have different rosters. Each side has a vastly different starting lineup than last year when Ohio State 84-55. Cheesman returns from last year, along with fellow Preseason All-MVC picks Tuti Jones and Jailyn Banks. Last year, the three combined for 23 points against the Buckeyes, with Cheesman leading the way with 13. Expect the Bruins to fare better at home.

Joining them are Emily La Chappell and Kendall Holmes, both newer names to the program and averaging a combined 21 points per game.


Ohio State


G- Jaloni Cambridge
G- Chance Gray
G- Taylor Thierry
F- Cotie McMahon
F- Ajae Petty

Lineup Notes

  • Taylor Thierry is 47 points away from scoring 1,000 as a Buckeye
  • Elsa Lemmilä leads the team in rebounds per game with 6.5
  • Chance Gray tied Jaloni Cambridge scoring 19.5 points per game with her historic shooting night against Charlotte

Belmont


G- Jailyn Banks
G- Emily La Chappell
G- Kendall Holmes
G- Tuti Jones
F- Kendal Cheesman

Lineup Notes

  • Kendal Cheesman started 36 straight games for Belmont until coming off the bench in the Bruins’ last game, against Kennesaw State.
  • Kendall Holmes and Emily La Chappell are both transfers into Belmont. Holmes joined this season from South Dakota State and La Chappell joined from Marquette last season, but didn’t play against the Buckeyes.
  • The Bruins are the winningest WBB team in Tennessee in the past ten years, winning 236 games, the Tennessee Volunteers have 224

Prediction


Cambridge will start, not missing a chance to play in front of her home crowd alongside her sister Kennedy Cambridge. Belmont will play stronger than last season, but the gap of talent is large enough that Ohio State will respond after a strong start from the Bruins.

Expect a first quarter where Belmont may even outscore the Buckeyes, but timeout and between-quarter adjustments will favor the Buckeyes. Taylor Thierry will have a more productive game with Belmont trying more outside play on offense. Thierry will be a strong outlet when Petty gets defensive attention, and defensively be able to post up against Cheesman should she move to the perimeter and shoot from deep.


How to Watch


Date: Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024
Time: 3 p.m. ET
Where: Curb Event Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Stream: ESPN+


LGHL Score Prediction: 85-67, Ohio State Buckeyes


Sisters Celebrated


The Cambridge family has a strong footprint in Nashville basketball. At Ensworth High School, the Cambridge sisters led them to multiple state titles, and the younger Cambridge, Jaloni, won Girls Basketball Player of the Year three times with the Tennessean and once as Gatorade’s Tennessee Player of the Year.

That’s in addition to older sister Jordyn Cambridge playing at Vanderbilt for four seasons, including three inclusions in the SEC All-Defensive Team.

To celebrate, the Cambridge sisters had a giveaway for tickets. It wasn’t anything in conjunction with Ohio State University or NIL, and it gives their home fans a chance to see them live against the Bruins in what should be a strong pro-Cambridge crowd in Nashville.


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Week 13 Games Discussion

Week 13​

Tuesday, Nov. 19

7 p.m. | Akron at Kent State | CBSSN
7:30 p.m. | Western Michigan at Central Michigan | ESPN2
8 p.m. | Northern Illinois at Miami (Ohio) | ESPN

Wednesday, Nov. 20

7 p.m. | Buffalo at Eastern Michigan | ESPNU
7 p.m. | Ohio at Toledo | ESPN2

Thursday, Nov. 21

7 p.m. | SE Louisiana at Nicholls | ESPN+
7:30 p.m. | NC State at Georgia Tech | ESPN

Friday, Nov. 22

7 p.m. | Temple at UTSA | ESPN2
8 p.m. | Purdue at Michigan State | FOX
10 p.m. | UNLV at San Jose State | FS1

Saturday, Nov. 23

12 p.m. | Indiana at Ohio State | FOX
12 p.m. | Wake Forest at Miami (Fla.) | ESPN
12 p.m. | Ole Miss at Florida | ABC/ESPN+
12 p.m. | SMU at Virginia | ESPN2
12 p.m. | Iowa at Maryland | Big Ten Network
12 p.m. | UConn at Syracuse | ACC Network
12 p.m. | North Carolina at Boston College | CW Network
12 p.m. | Sam Houston at Jacksonville State | CBSSN
12 p.m. | Illinois at Rutgers | Peacock
12 p.m. | William & Mary at Richmond | FloSports
12 p.m. | East Tennessee State at VMI | ESPN+
12 p.m. | Yale at Harvard | ESPNU
12 p.m. | Brown at Dartmouth | ESPN+
12 p.m. | Cornell at Columbia | ESPN+
12 p.m. | Lafayette at Lehigh | ESPN+

12:30 p.m. | Holy Cross at Georgetown | ESPN+
12:30 p.m. | UCF at West Virginia | ESPNU
12:45 p.m. | UMass at Georgia | SEC Network
1 p.m. | UTEP at Tennessee | ESPN+/SECN+
1 p.m. | Western Kentucky at Liberty | ESPN+
1 p.m. | New Hampshire at Maine | FloSports
1 p.m. | Delaware at Villanova | FloSports
1 p.m. | Elon at North Carolina A&T | FloSports
1 p.m. | Monmouth at Stony Brook | FloSports
1 p.m. | Hampton at UAlbany | FloSports
1 p.m. | Rhode Island at Bryant | FloSports
1 p.m. | Eastern Illinois at Tennessee Tech | ESPN+
1 p.m. | North Dakota at Illinois State | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Murray State at Southern Illinois | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Butler at Presbyterian | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Drake at Stetson | ESPN+
1 p.m. | San Diego at Morehead State | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Penn at Princeton | ESPN+
1 p.m. | North Carolina Central at Delaware State | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Howard at Morgan State | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Merrimack at Fordham | ESPN+
1 p.m. | Colgate at Bucknell | ESPN+
1:30 p.m. | Charleston Southern at Florida State | ESPN+/ACCNX
1:30 p.m. | Norfolk State at South Carolina State | ESPN+

2 p.m. | Bowling Green at Ball State | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Rice at UAB | ESPN+
2 p.m. | North Alabama at Eastern Kentucky | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Chattanooga at Austin Peay | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Gardner-Webb at Western Illinois | ESPN+
2 p.m. | UIW at East Texas A&M | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Montana at Montana State | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Indiana State at UNI | ESPN+
2 p.m. | North Dakota State at South Dakota | ESPN+
2 p.m. | Davidson at Valparaiso | ESPN+
2:30 p.m. | New Mexico State at Middle Tennessee | ESPN+
2:30 p.m. | James Madison at Appalachian State | ESPN+

3 p.m. | Florida International at Kennesaw State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | UL Monroe at Arkansas State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | South Alabama at Southern Miss | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Charlotte at Florida Atlantic | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Central Arkansas at Tarleton State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Utah Tech at Southern Utah | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Lindenwood at UT Martin | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Northwestern State at Houston Christian | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Cal Poly at Weber State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Eastern Washington at Northern Arizona | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Furman at Mercer | ESPN+
3 p.m. | South Dakota State at Missouri State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Prairie View A&M at Alabama State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Jackson State at Alcorn State | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Western Carolina at Samford | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Abilene Christian at Stephen F. Austin | ESPN+
3 p.m. | Arizona at TCU | ESPN+

3:30 p.m. | Florida A&M vs. Bethune-Cookman (at Camping World Stadium in Orlando) | ESPN+
3:30 p.m. | Kentucky at Texas | ABC
3:30 p.m. | BYU at Arizona State | ESPN
3:30 p.m. | Colorado vs. Kansas (at Arrowhead Stadium in KC) | FOX
3:30 p.m. | The Citadel at Clemson | CW Network
3:30 p.m. | Northwestern at Michigan | FS1
3:30 p.m. | Stanford at Cal | ACC Network
3:30 p.m. | San Diego State at Utah State | CBSSN
3:30 p.m. | Georgia Southern at Coastal Carolina
3:30 p.m. | Wisconsin at Nebraska | BTN
3:30 p.m. | East Carolina at North Texas | ESPN+
3:30 p.m. | Tulsa at South Florida | ESPN+
3:30 p.m. | Penn State at Minnesota | CBSSN
3:30 p.m. | Texas Tech at Oklahoma State | ESPN+

4 p.m. | Wofford at South Carolina | ESPN+/SECN+
4 p.m. | Louisiana Tech at Arkansas | ESPN+/SECN+
4 p.m. | Northern Colorado at Portland State | ESPN+
4 p.m. | Pitt at Louisville | ESPN2
4:15 p.m. | Missouri at Mississippi State | SEC Network
4:30 p.m. | Southeast Missouri State at Tennessee State | ESPN+
5 p.m. | Troy at Louisiana | ESPN+
5 p.m. | UC Davis at Sacramento State | ESPN+
6 p.m. | Idaho at Idaho State | ESPN+

7 p.m. | Army vs. Notre Dame (Yankee Stadium) | NBC
7 p.m. | Boise State at Wyoming | CBSSN
7 p.m. | Washington State at Oregon State | CW Network
7 p.m. | Georgia State at Texas State | ESPN+
7 p.m. | Baylor at Houston | FS1

7:30 p.m. | Alabama at Oklahoma | ABC/ESPN+
7:30 p.m. | Texas A&M at Auburn | ESPN
7:30 p.m. | Marshall at Old Dominion | ESPNU
7:30 p.m. | Iowa State at Utah | FOX
7:45 p.m. | Vanderbilt at LSU | SEC Network
8 p.m. | Virginia Tech at Duke | ACC Network
8 p.m. | Lamar at McNeese | ESPN+
8 p.m. | Cincinnati at Kansas State | ESPN2

10:30 p.m. | Air Force at Nevada | FS1
10:30 p.m. | Colorado State at Fresno State | CBSSN
10:30 p.m. | USC at UCLA | NBC

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