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LGHL Bucketheads Podcast: Kevin Sweeney on where Ohio State men’s basketball goes from here?

Bucketheads Podcast: Kevin Sweeney on where Ohio State men’s basketball goes from here?
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Indiana v Ohio State

Photo by Kirk Irwin/Getty Images

Kevin Sweeney of Sports Illustrated joined us to discuss the Buckeye's current options after losing nine of its last ten

“Bucketheads” is LGHL’s men’s basketball podcast, hosted by Connor Lemons and Justin Golba. Every episode, they give you the latest scoop on the Ohio State Buckeyes and everything else happening in the college hoops world.



Subscribe: RSS | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio



On Episode 104 of the Bucketheads Podcast, Connor and Justin were joined by Kevin Sweeney of Sports Illustrated to talk about what is going on with the Ohio State men’s basketball team.

We talked about what kind of program Ohio State is, how attractive of a job it is, what we think of Bruce Thornton and Roddy Gayle, and how much of this slide is a mental block. Also, is there any way this season gets turned around?

Before that, we discussed the last seven years and what has changed over the last two years. Plus, we recapped the Iowa and Indiana losses.

Make sure to like, subscribe, comment, and leave a review on the show!



Connect with the Podcast:
Twitter:
@BucketheadsLGPN

Connect with Connor:
Twitter:
@lemons_connor

Connect with Justin:
Twitter:
@justin_golba

Connect with Kevin:
Twitter:
@CBB_Central

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Maryland at Ohio State, Saturday, February 10 @ 4 PM ET, FS1

Buckeyes Close The Week vs. Maryland Saturday Night​

Ohio State completes its two-game home stand on Saturday evening by hosting Maryland in the teams’ lone meeting this season. Tip-off is set for 4 p.m. and the game will be televised on FS1. Chris Vosters and Nate Bahe will call the action.
  • This will be just the 22nd all-time meeting between the two teams. Maryland leads the series 11-10 and also holds a 9-6 advantage since the Terrapins joined the Big Ten Conference prior to the 2014-15 season.
  • Last year, the teams met twice during the regular season, and each would hold serve on its home court. The Terrapins won 80-73 on Jan. 8 in College Park behind 30 points from Jahmir Young. Brice Sensabaugh led the Buckeyes with 22 points. In the meeting in Columbus on March 1, the Buckeye seniors celebrated Senior Day by combining to score 37 of the 73 points in a 73-62 victory. Justice Sueing led all Buckeye scorers with 16 points. The Buckeyes were also a program record 20-of-20 from the foul line in that win.
  • Tuesday night’s loss to Indiana was another tough setback in a string of tough games for the Buckeyes. Ohio State surrendered an 18-point lead and fell to the Hoosiers 76-73. Jamison Battle and Roddy Gayle Jr. each had 19 points in the game while Evan Mahaffey finished with eight points, a team-high six rebounds and also had two assists and two steals.
  • Despite recording his first game this season without an assist on Tuesday, Bruce Thornton continues to lead the country in assist-to-turnover ratio at 4.22. He has 97 assists and just 23 turnovers.
  • On top of leading the league in three-point shooting, Jamison Battle has also been sharp from the free throw line, having made his last 34 attempts. That is the best stretch of his career, and in fact, he attempted just 32 free throws in 29 games all of last season.
  • Roddy Gayle Jr. is right there with Battle, having made his last 30 free throw attempts. The Niagara Falls native has had his struggles shooting this season but is 22-of-44 (.500) over his last four games, while averaging 16.5 ppg.
  • Maryland enters Saturday’s game at 13-10 overall and 5-7 in the conference. Starting on January 2, the Terrapins have been on a little streak of two losses, followed by two wins, two losses, two wins and now two losses. The Buckeyes are hoping to buck that trend on Saturday. Jahmir Young leads the Terrapins and is second in the Big Ten at 20.6 ppg.

Ohio State vs. Maryland Predictions & Picks: Spread, Total - February 10​

Saturday's game between the Ohio State Buckeyes (13-10, 3-9 Big Ten) and Maryland Terrapins (13-10, 5-7 Big Ten) going head-to-head at Value City Arena has a projected final score of 71-67 (based on our computer prediction) in favor of Ohio State, who is listed as a small favorite by our model. The game will start at 4:00 PM ET ET on February 10.

Maryland Terrapins vs Ohio State Buckeyes Prediction, 2/10/2024 College Basketball Picks, Best Bets & Odds​

Who will win tonight's NCAA basketball game against the spread?
Tony Sink's Pick: Take Ohio State

Winners and Whiners: Prediction, Preview, and Odds​

You look at the talent that Ohio State possesses and it makes no sense that they are 3-9 in the Big 10. This is a team that beat Alabama in non-conference play on a neutral site and started the season out at 13-2. There is still time to turn things around and when you look at Maryland, they are not going to get much better. If you can slow down Jahmir Young and fatigue is hampering his game since he's playing over 35 minutes in every game. When you have no bench, there's only so much you can do on the road and the Buckeyes are the better team here. If they get a big lead this time, they will hold on.
Prediction: Ohio State -2.5
Entire article: https://winnersandwhiners.com/games/ncaab/2-10-2024/maryland-vs-ohio-state-prediction-7650/

LGHL Stroud, Heyward earn NFL Honors; Ohio State women blowout Minnesota

Stroud, Heyward earn NFL Honors; Ohio State women blowout Minnesota
Matt Tamanini
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


13th Annual NFL Honors

Photo by Perry Knotts/Getty 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: RSS | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio


On the Gridiron


Ryan Day aims to maximize reps for OSU quarterbacks in spring practice
Joey Kaufman, The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State Will Peruse Its Options for Where to Play Sonny Styles, Josh Fryar This Spring
Andy Anders, Eleven Warriors

Ohio State’s returning players set in motion the Buckeyes’ busy offseason: ‘That’s the real story’
Patrick Murphy, Bucknuts


In latest NCAA academic report, we were reminded which power programs at least make an effort with academics and which don't pretend.
Football Graduation Success Rate (% of players who earn degree within six years):
Clemson 99
Alabama 93
Michigan 89
Ohio State 87
...
Georgia 41 https://t.co/W03TiwKOu5

— Dave Briggs (@DBriggsBlade) February 8, 2024

Ryan Day Knows Ohio State Must Have a Quarterback “Who at Least Needs to Be Accounted for in the Run Game” for Offense to Reach Its Full Potential
Josh Poloha, Eleven Warriors

Buckeyes feel like addition of Julian Sayin can ‘really enhance’ quarterback room (paywall)
Andy Backstrom, Lettermen Row

Ohio State spring ball will feature hyper-focus on right side of OL (paywall)
Bill Landis, Dotting the Eyes

Former Ohio State LB Randy Gradishar makes Pro Football Hall of Fame
Colin Gay, The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State recruiting class grades as Ryan Day signs another top-five class (paywall)
Jeremy Birmingham, Dotting the Eyes

Former Ohio State QB C.J. Stroud named AP NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year
Patrick Murphy, Bucknuts


CJ Stroud wins NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year @OhioStateFB is well represented in the last 10 years in NFL Rookie of the Year winners pic.twitter.com/WFwv063ezl

— FOX College Football (@CFBONFOX) February 9, 2024

Cameron Heyward named NFL Walter Payton Man of the Year
Colin Gay, The Columbus Dispatch

Luke Fickell wants Mike Vrabel ‘around’ at Wisconsin in 2024
Joey Kaufman, The Columbus Dispatch


On the Hardwood


No. 5 Ohio State women’s basketball flies high in second half, defeat Minnesota 71-47
Thomas Costello, Land-Grant Holy Land


The Dub Chain looks good on you @CoachMcGuff pic.twitter.com/iYnMkp6jpZ

— Ohio State WBB (@OhioStateWBB) February 9, 2024

Kevin McGuff’s increased work with Celeste Taylor is paying off for Ohio State women’s basketball
Thomas Costello, Land-Grant Holy Land


Outside the Shoe and Schott


Ohio State wrestling splits pair of Big Ten road duals, eyes strong finish to regular season
Josh Dooley, Land-Grant Holy Land

Men’s Golf: Neal Shipley Named B1G Men’s Golfer of the Week
Ohio State Athletics


And now for something completely different...


A criminally underrated show:


I did write a story about the new #WynonnaEarp #Vengeance special, but probably you want to just watch the video with the cast & Emily being totally normal (i.e. SO DANG EXCITED) @Tubi @realtimrozon @DominiqueP_C @MelanieScrofano @KatBarrell @VanityFair https://t.co/ZoZoQsGnmU pic.twitter.com/X7IaRn1Y7I

— Mo Ryan (@moryan) February 8, 2024

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LGHL You’re Nuts: Will the Ohio State men’s basketball team play spoiler down the stretch?

You’re Nuts: Will the Ohio State men’s basketball team play spoiler down the stretch?
Connor Lemons
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Basketball: Indiana at Ohio State

Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports

The Buckeyes’ season is over. Will they win any games down the stretch that crush someone else’s tourney hopes?

As the season continues to spiral out of control, we have to continue adjusting our expectations for the Ohio State men’s basketball team. What began with hopes of a high seed in the NCAA Tournament quickly turned into optimism that this team would just make the tournament.

That optimism quickly turned into uneasiness about being on the NCAA bubble, and now we are just accepting that this season is over and Ohio State will have to play spoiler for other teams.

Last week, Connor and Justin debated whether there was any reason at all to think this team could still make the NCAA Tournament. Justin said yes, Connor said no.

A whopping 89% of the readers agreed with Connor, and two losses later, it looks like he was right — it’s over.

After 138 weeks:

Connor- 66
Justin- 53
Other- 15

(There have been four ties)


We’ve come to grips with the fact that for the second consecutive year, the Buckeyes will be at home while the best event in all of sports — the NCAA Tournament — is going on. That doesn’t mean we’re going to stop pulling for victories, however.

With at least nine games left in the season, the Buckeyes could throw a wrench into someone’s NCAA Tournament plans, or at the very least knock them down a rung or two.

Today’s Question: Will the Ohio State men’s basketball team play spoiler down the stretch?


Connor: No

NCAA Basketball: Illinois at Ohio State
Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports

I think Ohio State has a few wins in them, but I don’t think those wins will be consequential in any way to the NCAA Tournament picture.

This isn’t a team that’s been blown out the last few games. In fact, Ohio State had the ball with a chance to win the game with the final possession each of the last two games. Unfortunately, they turned the ball over both times, and didn’t even get a shot off.

Still, this team has played pretty close games recently and has put itself in the position you want to be at the end of games — you just want to give yourself a chance to win.

Ohio State plays four likely tournament teams (Wisconsin, Purdue, Michigan State, Nebraska) and four teams that aren’t going to make the tournament (Maryland, Minnesota, Michigan, Rutgers) to end the season. I think the Buckeyes are going to lose all four games against the likely tournment teams, so the Badgers, Boilermakers, Spartans, and Cornhuskers avoid a big speed bump on their NCAA Tournament resumes.

I think Ohio State will beat Minnesota, Michigan, and Rutgers during the stretch run. That includes two road wins at Minnesota and Rutgers, so yes, I think the Buckeyes will soon snap this impressive road losing streak they currently have going for them. The Michigan program is in freefall just like Ohio State, therefore I think the Buckeyes find a way to get it done on senior day against their rivals.

I think Ohio State is going to lose to Maryland this weekend, because I believe in Maryland’s scoring trio of Donta Scott, Jahmir Young, and Julian Reese, and I think the Terrapins have mostly underperformed this year compared to the talent on the roster. Kevin Willard & Co. have not done a great job maximizing what they have on the roster, but there’s some juice that’s yet to be squeezed out of that team.

To summarize: the Buckeyes are going to end the eternal misery at some point, and will win a couple games before the season ends. However, those wins will be irrelevant to the NCAA Tournament field, just like this team.


Justin: Yes


I said last week I had one more optimistic bone in my body and predicted Ohio State to beat Iowa and Indiana. Since then, they lost to both in tragic fashion.

My optimism is getting beat with a bat, but I am ready for the 12th round. So, I have a bold prediction: Ohio State beats Michigan State on Feb. 25 in East Lansing and tries to play spoiler for the Spartans.

There is obviously nothing to back up this claim, and it probably won’t happen, but this Ohio State team has shot the ball horribly over the last month, and I think they are due for a good shooting run. The averages eventually average out, and it is hard to believe that the Buckeyes will continue to struggle this much from the three-point range.

The Buckeyes have two weeks before they play the Spartans, and they have struggled with consistency this season. They have some games they can win down the stretch, but beating Michigan and Rutgers is not playing spoiler to anyone, and honestly, I think they will lose to Minnesota in the barn, which is a very underrated place for home-court advantage.

Michigan State is good but inconsistent. I think Ohio State gets hot and wins. Like last season in the Big Ten Tournament. And that could really hurt the Spartan's NCAA Tournament chances since they are on the bubble.



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LGHL Ohio State men’s basketball on track to earn 14-seed in Big Ten Tournament for the first time ever

Ohio State men’s basketball on track to earn 14-seed in Big Ten Tournament for the first time ever
Connor Lemons
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Basketball: Indiana at Ohio State

Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports

Buckeyes currently on pace to finish last in the Big Ten for the first time since 1998.

Ohio State’s disastrous, disappointing, but not-at-all-shocking-loss to Indiana on Tuesday night, paired with Michigan’s win over No. 11 Wisconsin on Wednesday night put the Buckeyes in a spot it has quite literally never been in before — 14th place in the Big Ten.

Since the Wolverines (8-15, 3-9) beat the Buckeyes last month (13-10, 3-9), they own the tiebreaker. That means that if the season ended today, Michigan would go into the Big Ten Tournament as the 13-seed, despite having won five fewer games this year overall to this point. Ohio State would be the 14th seed, which would be the first time it has ever finished in last place of the 14-team era.


Since the Big Ten Tournament’s inaugural year in 1998, Ohio State has only finished in last place once — 1998. That was the very first year for head coach Jim O’Brien, as the Buckeyes finished the year 8-22 overall and 1-15 in Big Ten play.

A lot has changed since 1998. The Big Ten expanded from 11 teams to 12 in 2011 with the addition of Nebraska, and then to 14 teams in 2014 with the additions of Maryland and Rutgers. Next year, the Big Ten will expand to 18 teams by adding four more modest midwestern institutions — UCLA, USC, Washington, and Oregon. The conference schedule changed, too, as it expanded from 16 games to 18 in 2008, and then from 18 to 20 in 2019.

That 1997-98 Ohio State men’s basketball team finished the year 1-15 in the Big Ten and endured a 17-game losing streak at one point. The team was led by Big Ten Rookie of the Year Michael Redd, who averaged 21.9 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 3 assists per game.

However, the circumstances surrounding the 1997-1998 team and the 2023-2024 team couldn’t be any more different. O’Brien took over an Ohio State program that had gone 54-85 over the previous five seasons, missed the NCAA Tournament each of those five years, and never finished better than seventh in the Big Ten. He was putting the pieces together from the ground up and had exactly one foundational piece to work with in Redd.

NCAA Basketball: Indiana at Ohio State
Joseph Maiorana-USA TODAY Sports

The 2023-24 Ohio State men’s basketball team had remarkably higher expectations. Chris Holtmann’s seventh team is buoyed by Bruce Thornton and Roddy Gayle, two former top-60 recruits and guards who are averaging double-digit points per game as sophomores. It added Jamison Battle, a fifth-year senior who never averaged fewer than 11.8 points per game in five seasons, and is a 37% career three-point shooter. It also brought back one of the conference’s best interior defenders and shot blockers in Felix Okpara, and brought in the No. 8 recruiting class in the country.

At the very least, this was a team that should’ve found themselves on the NCAA Tournament bubble by February, fighting for an opportunity to dance one year after losing 15 conference games. Instead, it has lost eight of its last nine and has once again played its way out of the NCAA Tournament picture.

For their efforts, these Buckeyes have currently put themselves in a position to do something no other Ohio State team has ever done — finish in 14th place in the Big Ten. Since the conference expanded to 14 teams in 2014, the lowest Ohio State has ever finished was 13th — which was last season. Before that, the lowest it had placed in the 14-team era was 11th, back in 2017, which was Thad Matta’s final season.

With eight games left on the schedule, Ohio State has time to win a few and try to climb above fellow Big Ten corpses Michigan and Rutgers. With sixth-place and 13th-place only separated by three games, there’s going to be some moving and shaking over the final four weeks of the season.

But this Ohio State team is armed with the worst defense of any OSU team since Chris Holtmann arrived in 2017. They’re not capable of getting consecutive stops and continue to find creative and innovative ways to beat themselves. Because of that, the Buckeyes have just as good a chance as anyone else at finishing last and earning that coveted 14-seed in the 2024 Big Ten Tournament for the first time in program history.

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LGHL Uncut: McGuff talks second half surge, Taylor on out rebounding Golden Gophers

Uncut: McGuff talks second half surge, Taylor on out rebounding Golden Gophers
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Womens Basketball: Ohio St. at Minnesota

Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports

Ohio State rolled past Minnesota in the second half, thanks to rebounding and improved team basketball

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.


The Ohio State women’s basketball team entered Thursday night’s halftime locker room up five points. A good spot to be in, but less than expected going up against a Minnesota Golden Gophers team without its star guard and reeling on a four-game losing streak. Head coach Kevin McGuff’s side responded in the second half, defeating Minnesota 71-47.

After the game, McGuff and guard Celeste Taylor sat down with the media to discuss the win. McGuff talks about new Minnesota head coach Dawn Plitzuweit and the team she’s building, how Minnesota kept up with the Buckeyes in the first half, and what helped Ohio State pull away in the second half.

Taylor discusses the on-court adjustments made against the Golden Gophers’ strong rebounding group and scoring points off turnovers being the key difference in the victory.

That and more on the latest Land-Grant Uncut.



Connect with Thomas:
Twitter: @1ThomasCostello
Threads: @1ThomasCostello
Bluesky: @thomascostello.bsky.social

Theme music provided by www.bensound.com

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LGHL Ohio State women’s basketball surprises with rebounding against Minnesota

Ohio State women’s basketball surprises with rebounding against Minnesota
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Womens Basketball: Ohio St. at Minnesota

Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports

Recent history couldn’t predict the Buckeyes’ Thursday night performance on the boards.

In the last three seasons, Ohio State women’s basketball’s been known for many things, and rebounding isn’t one of them. Entering Thursday night, all the signs were there that the way the Buckeyes would win leveraging more experience and offensive firepower. Instead, the deciding factor was the work on the boards.

Strong rebounding forwards litter the history of the Ohio State program history books. Before recruiting violations by the Buckeyes’ hit the program and the start of the pandemic, Ohio State was a top-four rebounding team in the Big Ten.

However, with prominent forwards Dorka Juhász and Aaliyah Patty transferring following the 20/21 season, head coach Kevin McGuff changed how the Buckeyes played. Instead of the traditional bigs in the paint grabbing missed shots, Ohio State became the fast, pressing, team ranked No. 5 in the country.

Rebounding-wise, the Buckeyes moved to the bottom half of the conference over the last three seasons, falling as low as 12th last season. Despite a negative rebounding margin, Ohio State still succeeded, making it to the Elite Eight with dangerous shooting from deep and a full court press that gave some teams nightmares.

Looking at Ohio State’s matchup Thursday night against the Minnesota Golden Gophers, the safe prediction wasn’t that the Buckeyes would have a successful day on the boards.

After all, Minnesota entered the game third in the conference, grabbing 40.3 rebounds per game. That’s thanks to forward Mallory Heyer and 6-foot-5 center Sophie Hart averaging 8.3 and 5.1 respectively. Not to mention two other starters with at least four per game.

Ohio State’s -.8 rebounding margin didn’t elicit much hope, neither did the Minnesota bigs and Golden Gophers +5 margin entering halftime of Thursday’s game at the Barn.

“We certainly made a point of emphasis because we were down at the half in terms of rebounding margin,” said head coach Kevin McGuff. “We needed to be a little more physical, just have a little more pursuit to the ball.”

In the first half, Hart and Heyer didn’t only slow rebounding but any kind of offense inside the paint. The Golden Gophers outscored the Buckeyes 12 to 6 in the first half in points in the post. That left players like forward Cotie McMahon to pull up and take midrange jumpers. McMahon and company hit enough of those shots to take a five-point lead before Coach McGuff delivered his halftime speech.

The Buckeyes didn’t bounce back because of its own size. Forward Rebeka Mikulášiková played deeper in the game to help give space to her teammates inside the paint, drawing out Hart. Instead, Ohio State leveraged its strengths.

“They’re kind of packing the paint a little bit,” said guard Celeste Taylor. “But I think us cutting through and moving around the people that were boxing us out kind of helped us on the offensive end rebounding and defensively. They’re trying to get back because they know we push it in transition. So we knew we had to take advantage of that in that way.”

Minnesota broke in the third quarter. Another Buckeyes halftime adjustment turned into a bad 10 minutes for the Gophers.

Even with Hart and Heyer on the court for nine and 10 minutes of the quarter, Ohio State’s increased intensity, and a Minnesota team trying to make up a deficit, turned into a 10-to-3 rebounding performance in the visitor’s favor.

With the Buckeyes’ lead growing, the paint opened up further, allowing Ohio State 18 points in the paint in the 10 minutes, compared to 15 points total for the Buckeyes in the second quarter.

By the end of the third quarter, the scarlet and gray’s five-point lead at halftime ballooned into a 25-point advantage.

“We were really lethargic in the first half,” said McGuff. “But we did a really good job with that in the second half. I thought our pace was better. Our ball movement was better. We got to the rim. We got open threes, and our defense stayed pretty consistent.”

Although the Buckeyes out rebounded the Golden Gophers by only a single rebound (33 to 32), five players had at least three rebounds for Ohio State. Leading the way was McMahon with nine and Taylor and forward Eboni Walker each grabbing five apiece.

It’s another game in a line of performances showing how the 23/24 edition of the Buckeyes can win in numerous different ways. It’s a chameleon-like ability that’s won Ohio State 20 games in eight of its last 11 years under Coach McGuff.

“It’s been it’s been a great ride so far,” said McGuff. “And really, we’ve been really fortunate to have great players in our program. “And, you know, as they say, ‘there are coaches with great players and ex-coaches.’”

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LGHL No. 5 Ohio State women’s basketball flies high in second half, defeat Minnesota 71-47

No. 5 Ohio State women’s basketball flies high in second half, defeat Minnesota 71-47
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Womens Basketball: Ohio St. at Minnesota

Matt Krohn-USA TODAY Sports

The Buckeyes made it a game in the first half, but pulled away quickly in the second half

Thursday night, Ohio State women’s basketball was in the Barn, facing the Minnesota Golden Gophers for the lone matchup of the season. The Buckeyes entered the game on a nine-game winning streak, while the Gophers welcomed the visitors on a four-game losing streak, including an injury to the team’s sophomore star halfway through the streak.

With Minnesota reeling, Ohio State had another impressive third quarter, overpowering the Gophers 71-47.

The first quarter started like most Ohio State away games this season. Shooting was slow to get started. In the first quarter, the Buckeyes were struggling not only from three-point range but across the board.

An opening 10 minutes featuring a lot of rushed and challenged shooting ended with the Buckeyes shooting 26.3% overall, shooting only slightly better from beyond the arc, going 3-for-11 with forward Rebeka Mikulášiková hitting two.

Defensively, Ohio State forced turnovers early, limiting Minnesota’s offense in the process. At the end of the first quarter, the Buckeyes led 14-13. Even with the presence of 6-foot-5 center Sophie Hart leading the home team with 4 rebounds in the first quarter, outrebounding the Buckeyes 14-10.

Ohio State’s second quarter started strong, making its first two shots attempted, followed by another lull of four missed baskets. However, the shots were better than the challenged attempts of the first quarter. The Buckeyes began moving off the ball, and getting open, turning into a seven-point run.

Firing up in the quarter was guard Jacy Sheldon. The graduate senior was five of the seven points of the run, putting Ohio State up nine points. A lead that shrunk, but mainly due to lack of offense for the visitors.

The Buckeyes held the Golden Gophers to six points in the final five minutes of the half, but ended the quarter going 2-for-5 from the floor. Ohio State took quick shots, early in the shot clock, and stopped passing like it did in the middle of the quarter when it amassed its almost double-digit lead.

Still, head coach Kevin McGuff’s side took a lead into halftime, up 29-24. Leading the way for the Buckeyes was Sheldon. The guard led the team with seven points but also added four assists and three rebounds. She wasn’t the only productive player, with guard Celeste Taylor scoring four, grabbing four rebounds and two assists. Plus a five-and-five half for forward Cotie McMahon in points and rebounds.

So far in 2024, the Buckeyes come out of the halftime locker room with an intensity that teams can’t handle. It came in the form of a record-tying 39 points against the Wisconsin Badgers, flipping a deficit to a lead against the Indiana Hoosiers and making up for multiple poor second-quarter performances.

The start of the third quarter looked like the Buckeyes would add another example. After three minutes, Ohio State outscored the Gophers 7-0 to start the half, forcing a timeout by the home team. Included in the seven-point run was a steal and quarterback touchdown throw by Sheldon to a wide-open Taylor. It was the point guard’s fifth assist of the game.

By the end of the third quarter, the Buckeyes increased its five-point halftime lead to 24 points. Defensively, turnovers were helping Ohio State big time. Entering Thursday, the Golden Gophers were the third-lowest turnover-creating team in the conference, with a high of 19 turnovers in its first game of the season. At the end of the third quarter, Minnesota reached 19 turnovers.

Of the Buckeyes 22 points off turnovers, to that point, 10 points came in the third quarter. Overall, McGuff’s side outscored the home team 27-6 out of the half, putting the game away with one quarter still to play.

Even with the lead, McGuff kept four of his starters in for the first three minutes of the quarter, leaving Taylor on the court. Taylor responded. The guard hit two jumpers in a row for the Buckeyes, plus added a block on the defensive side of the ball. She was the lone offense for over two minutes, keeping the lead at 24 points, taking away any inkling that the Gophers could mount a comeback.

Also, despite the size difference, and Minnesota’s rebounding margin sitting at +5.2, compared to -.8 for Ohio State, didn't show on Thursday. With four minutes remaining, the Buckeyes were hanging in with the Gophers in the rebounding department. Ohio State won the battle of the boards 33-32, a feat considering the size difference and rebounding efficiency entering Thursday.

The only thing standing between the scarlet and gray and its win was the clock. Ohio State held on to win 71-47.

Scoring-wise, four starters hit double-figures on the day but Taylor’s two final shots put her ahead of everyone on the Buckeyes in scoring. Behind Taylor’s 14 points was 13 for McMahon and 12 for Sheldon. McMahon led the Buckeyes in rebounding with nine, one shy of her fifth double-double of the season.

What’s Next


The Buckeyes have two games remaining before an eight-day break between opponents. Up first are the Michigan State Spartans, in East Lansing. On Jan. 14, Ohio State beat Sparty 70-65 in the Schottenstein Center.

Before the Scarlet and Gray tipped off, Michigan State took the Indiana Hoosiers to the brink, leading through most of the game, before falling in the final six minutes.

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