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LGHL All the news, analysis from Ohio State’s 28-14 Cotton Bowl win over Texas

All the news, analysis from Ohio State’s 28-14 Cotton Bowl win over Texas
Matt Tamanini
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: Cotton Bowl-Ohio State at Texas

Jerome Miron-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!


Recapping Ohio State’s 28-14 win over Texas


It looked different vs. Texas, but the Big Play Buckeyes didn’t disappoint
Matt Tamanini, Land-Grant Holy Land

No. 6 Buckeyes Battled Back and Forth for Three Quarters, Finished by Making Plays on Key Downs in 28-14 Win Over No. 3 Texas
Ohio State Athletics

Takeaways: Buckeyes top Texas to face Notre Dame in CFP championship
Bill Rabinowitz, The Columbus Dispatch

Buckeyes make the plays at the end to down Texas 28-14 in Cotton, move on to national title game
Steve Helwagen, Bucknuts

Ohio State Wins Fourth Quarter to Defeat Texas in College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Cotton Bowl, 28-14
Dan Hope, Eleven Warriors

Ohio State escapes Texas 28-14 behind Jack Sawyer return touchdown, advances to National Championship
Samuel Cipriani, The Lantern

Ohio State clinches national championship berth as Ryan Day makes statement, Jack Sawyer shines against Texas
Carter Bahns, 247Sports

Ohio State outlasts Texas in Cotton Bowl to reach national title game
Blake Toppmeyer, USA Today Network


News From Ohio State’s 28-14 win over Texas


Presser Bullets: Ryan Day “Couldn’t Be Prouder” of Jack Sawyer, Says the Buckeyes “Want to Be Able to Tell the Story of This Team” with National Championship
Chase Brown, Eleven Warriors

Cotton Bowl Press Conference: Ohio State’s Ryan Day, Jack Sawyer, Will Howard recap dramatic win over Texas
Steve Helwagen, Bucknuts

J.T. Tuimoloau injury: Ohio State star defensive lineman hurts ankle, returns in second half of Cotton Bowl
Carter Bahns, 247Sports

Texas Quarterback Quinn Ewers Praises Former Ohio State Roommate Jack Sawyer, Head Coach Steve Sarkisian Credits Buckeyes in Wake of 28-14 Defeat
George Eisner, Eleven Warriors


Analyzing Ohio State’s 28-14 win over Texas



The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Ohio State’s 28-14 win vs. Texas
Gene Ross, Land-Grant Holy Land

Snap Judgments: Buckeyes knock out Texas in thrilling semifinal
Austin Ward, Dotting The Eyes

5 things we learned from Ohio State’s win over Texas
Joey Kaufman, The Columbus Dispatch

Ryan Day, Jack Sawyer and a collision course that lead Ohio State to the doorstep of greatness
Ari Wasserman, On3

First thoughts: Buckeyes advance to national title game with fourth-quarter heroics
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row


Looking at the Performances from Ohio State’s


Paul Keels with the call of Jack Sawyer's legendary touchdown on The Fan (courtesy of Learfield) pic.twitter.com/YPmlC73BAg

— 97.1 The Fan (@971thefan) January 11, 2025

Inside Sawyer’s play that lifted the Buckeyes past Texas
Joey Kaufman, The Columbus Dispatch

Photos: Ohio State vs. Texas
Ohio State Athletics

“A Drop-Your-Nuts Moment”: Ohio State’s Offense Steps Up with Game on the Line in Fourth Quarter Against Texas
Dan Hope, Eleven Warriors

Helmet Stickers: Jack Sawyer saves day as Ohio State wins in Texas
Jeremy Birmingham, Dotting The Eyes

Hurt all game by penalties, OSU offense redeems itself when it counted
Bill Rabinowitz, The Columbus Dispatch

Jack Sawyer, Who Led the Return of Ohio State’s Seniors, Gets Full-Circle Moment on CFP Stage with Game-Winning Touchdown in Cotton Bowl
Andy Anders, Eleven Warriors

Inside the epic fourth quarter that sent Buckeyes to national title game
Spencer Holbrook, Lettermen Row

A Goal-Line Stand for the Ages: An Anatomy of Ohio State’s Game-Clinching Defensive Stop to Secure the Win Over Texas in the CFP Semifinal
Josh Poloha, Eleven Warriors


And Here It Is, Your Moment of Zen


One of the greatest Ryan Day moments of all time.

pic.twitter.com/YAs0X8ekYP

— Adam King (@AdamKing10TV) January 11, 2025

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LGHL Taylor Thierry No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball second quarter surge, beat Oregon 69-60

Taylor Thierry No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball second quarter surge, beat Oregon 69-60
ThomasCostello
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


COLLEGE BASKETBALL: JAN 12 Women’s - Oregon at Ohio State

Photo by Jason Mowry/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Oregon battles back late but its not enough to make up for second quarter slump

For the first time in program histories, No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball (16-0, 5-0) welcomed the Oregon Ducks (12-5, 3-3) to Columbus, Ohio. The Buckeyes sent the Ducks back West with a 69-60 loss. Ohio State senior Taylor Thierry’s 15-point second quarter led a 27-point run to continue the unbeaten start of the 2024-25 season for the Scarlet and Gray.

The end weekend-ending Big Ten matchup between the Bucks and Ducks looked similar to Ohio State’s first quarter against the Michigan Wolverines on Wednesday. Head coach Kevin McGuff’s side struggled shooting from the floor, going 4-of-21 with freshman Jaloni Cambridge going 1-of-8 from the floor.

It was a better quarter for older sister Kennedy Cambridge. The sophomore guard came off the bench like a bolt of lighting for the struggling Ohio State offense. Kennedy Cambridge came into the game and stopped two straight possessions from turning back to Oregon, grabbing offensive rebounds while taking contact. On the second, Kennedy Cambridge grabbed the board and dove to the ground to knock the loose ball off an Oregon player to retain possession.

Oregon took a three-point lead into the second quarter, a lead that didn’t last too long with the Scarlet and Gray going on a 27-point run in 4:58 of the period. A highlight of the run was another big play by Kennedy Cambridge. The guard fell to the ground on a layup attempt, tripped up without a whistle going her way, and nailed an acrobatic circus layup.

On the in-bound pass that followed, Kennedy Cambridge stole the ball in the Buckeye press, ending in another two points for the Buckeyes. During the run, senior guard/forward Taylor Thierry went perfect from beyond the arc, hitting all three attempts and leading Ohio State with 15 points in the quarter. On the last three-point shot, Thierry crossed over her defender, hit the shot and showed a rare moment of emotion when she stuck her tongue out.

Ohio State turned their three-point deficit at the end of the first into a 17-point lead at halftime. Absent from much of the run was junior forward Cotie McMahon, who played eight minutes due to foul trouble. McMahon went to the bench in the first with two fouls and when she tried coming back in during the third quarter, picked up a charge almost immediately, ending a brief moment of respite for Thierry.

In the third quarter, Oregon showed fight and went on a seven-point run, cutting the Ohio State lead down to 13 points. The Buckeyes responded to get it back to a 17-point lead at the end of the quarter. Jaloni Cambridge led the way, showing another second half shooting improvement, like the freshman did against Michigan. The freshman went 4-of-4 from the floor in five minutes, with graduate senior Madison Greene getting substantial minutes.

A big difference between the two sides was the rebounding of Ohio State. The Buckeyes out-rebounded Oregon 40-38, leading to the Scarlet and Gray scoring seven more second chance points than the Ducks. It is the first game this season where the Buckeyes out rebounded a Big Ten opponent. The third quarter was good representation of the hustle of the Buckeyes in the paint, grabbing seven and holding Oregon to three in the quarter.

However, in the fourth quarter Oregon mounted a comeback. The Ducks scored 13 of the first 17 points to cut the lead down to eight points. Inversely, Ohio State went cold shooting in the first seven minutes, going 2-of-9 from the floor. Forward Ajae Petty scored timely baskets in the period and grabbed five rebounds on her way to a fourth double-double on the season.

Thierry led Ohio State with a season high 20 points for the senior, with Petty adding 13 points and 14 rebounds. Jaloni Cambridge added 13 points.

Amina Muhammed and Nani Falatea scored 11 each for the Ducks, with leading scorers Deja Kelly and Lynchburg, Ohio native Peyton Scott scoring a combined 17 points.

What’s Next


The Buckeyes are off until Thursday, then it’s a two-game road trip starting in Wisconsin. Ohio State takes on the Wisconsin Badgers (10-7, 1-5), who come into the game after falling to the Maryland Terrapins 83-68.

Even though it looks like a comfortable Terrapins win, the Badgers were down two points at the start of the fourth quarter. Forward Sarah Williams leads the team with 18.5 points and 11.2 rebounds per game, one of three players in the Big Ten averaging a double-double on the season.

Ohio State has three wins in a row against the Badgers, last falling 75-70 on Feb. 10, 2021. Overall, the Buckeyes have a 21-4 record against Wisconsin.

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LGHL Grumpy Old Buckeye: Nitpicking Ohio State’s 28-14 win over Texas

Grumpy Old Buckeye: Nitpicking Ohio State’s 28-14 win over Texas
Michael Citro
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


NCAA Football: Cotton Bowl-Ohio State at Texas

Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

Some of the moments that gave me Cotton Bowl mouth while the Buckeyes battled the Longhorns.

Ohio State went deep when it came to ripping out the hearts of Texas Friday night with a hard-fought 28-14 win over the Longhorns in the Cotton Bowl. While the Buckeyes hurt themselves at times, it would be wrong not to give Texas credit for a good game plan, especially against Jeremiah Smith, but ultimately Ohio State did enough to get past the Longhorns and into the national championship game against Notre Dame.

Here are the things that gave me a Texas-sized ulcer during the Cotton Bowl.

Sloopy Hang On!​


After a good defensive stand to start the game, Ohio State took over on offense and drove down the field. Will Howard delivered a strike to a wide-open Carnell Tate at the goal line for an easy touchdown. The problem was that Tate dropped the ball.

These things happen sometimes, and Quinshon Judkins picked up his teammate with a touchdown run on the next play anyway, but that could have been a costly early mistake.

Be Smart​


It was uncharacteristic of TreVeyon Henderson to take the bait of whatever verbal extracurriculars the Longhorns were throwing at him, but the running back’s unsportsmanlike conduct penalty derailed the second OSU drive — a promising one that had started at the OSU 8-yard line.

Henderson, who had just brilliantly executed a 22-yard run to get into plus territory, was stuffed after a short gain and took exception to something, smacking defensive lineman Alex January upside the head, costing the Buckeyes 15 yards, and moving the ball from the Texas 37-yard line back into OSU territory.

The drive stalled as a result, prevented the Buckeyes from jumping on the Longhorns as they had pounced early on Tennessee and Oregon. Henderson atoned for it later in the game, but it always felt like putting Texas behind and making the Longhorn offense one dimensional could have made the proceedings a bit easier.

Stupid Pointy Ball​


Caden Curry made a huge play after Ohio State’s drive stalled, sticking out a huge paw and knocking the ball out of Silas Bolden’s hands on the ensuing punt return. However, the Longhorns caught a huge break when the ball bounced perfectly back up into Bolden’s hands. A potentially monster turnover deep in Longhorn territory never materialized.

That stupid pointy ball again bounced in favor of Texas a few plays later, when Sonny Styles knocked the ball out of Quinn Ewers’ hands on a sack. Offensive lineman DJ Campbell got the benefit of the bounce, falling on the football to retain possession and allowing Texas to punt rather than Ohio State having the ball inside the Longhorns’ 15-yard line.

Of course, the stupid pointy ball evened things out in the second half, as Howard fell on his own fumble in the third quarter on a sack, and Jack Sawyer turned a strip sack into one of the most iconic plays in Ohio State history late in the game.

Flag Day​


There isn’t a good time to commit a lot of penalties, but the College Football Playoff semifinals is an especially poor moment to draw a lot of flags. It was perhaps the only thing stopping the OSU offense in the first half.

In addition to Henderson’s undisciplined gaffe on the second drive, the third drive stalled due in large part to a holding penalty on Emeka Egbuka on a short pass to Smith. The wide receiver compounded a poor block by grabbing his man, knocking the offense off schedule and leading to a punt. The very next drive was undone by a holding penalty on Josh Fryar and a false start two plays later.

Critical infractions continued. Davison Igbinosun got a defensive holding penalty to help Texas move into Hail Mary territory late in the first half. Austin Siereveld got dinged for a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty after the whistle on a first down by Tate at the OSU 40 late in the third quarter. I’ll give Siereveld a break on this one because Tate was being driven backward and the whistle was late. By the time it was blown, the offensive lineman had already committed himself to trying to help his receiver out downfield.

A Fryar false start put the eventual go-ahead touchdown drive in jeopardy in the fourth quarter. Two pass interference penalties — one of them completely unnecessary due to double coverage — set up the final Texas goal-line opportunity.

The penalty parade ended with nine total enforced flags on Ohio State for 75 yards. Giving up almost an entire football field against any opponent, let alone a Top 5 team like Texas, is not a good idea. If the Buckeyes do that against Notre Dame, it may be a long night on Jan. 20.

Unimaginative​


Chip Kelly got a bit conservative in the middle section of the game and it put an OSU offense that had been only stopping itself to that point in bad spots, forcing obvious passing downs that allowed Texas to bring pressure on Howard.

With 8:07 to play in the first half, Henderson ran up the middle for no gain on first down. Ohio State went three-and-out. With 3:23 remaining, it was Quinshon Judkins running straight up the middle for no gain. Again, three-and-out, but this time setting up a tying drive by Texas.

The next two drives began with passes, with Henderson taking a screen pass to the house from 75 yards away on the first, and the second moving the ball until Howard threw an interception (more on that below). Then Ohio State began with an Egbuka end around that went nowhere (three-and-out).

It just felt like the play calling was helping set up the Texas pass rush in the middle part of the game. Ohio State came out of that and eventually started moving the ball again.

The Pick​


Howard made only a few mistakes in the game, but one was a critical one. Leading 14-7 and riding momentum, the Buckeyes got the ball to start the second half, and immediately started moving down the field. A 13-yard pass to Egbuka picked up a quick first down and a pair of 7-yard runs by Henderson earned another.

But then Howard got greedy on a play-action pass and tried to force a ball to Smith downfield. Locking in on Smith, he didn’t see linebacker David Gbenda drop underneath. Howard’s pass was low enough for Gbenda to leap up and snatch it, turning over the Buckeyes on a drive that could have pushed Texas to the brink.

Making matters worse were that there were open receivers on the play, including his check down man, Henderson, who almost certainly would have picked up another first down.

No Dancing​


Ohio State’s defense bailed Howard out by forcing a three-and-out after the interception. The Buckeyes turned around and went three-and-out on their next possession as well, but they didn’t have to. On third-and-1, Howard handed to Judkins on the left. Texas had good pursuit, but Judkins only needed one yard.

Rather than plowing straight ahead between defenders, where getting the one yard was likely, Judkins began juking and jiving in the backfield, eventually being stopped for no gain after bouncing wide. Fast defenses kill plays like that. Sometimes lowing your head and getting what you can get is the best play, especially on third down.

Texas took advantage of the stop and scored a tying touchdown on the ensuing possession.



That’s what burnt my bacon when the Buckeyes played the Longhorns on Friday. There were more things I could point to (I was convinced Howard tackling himself in space after picking up that fourth down conversion was going to be costly, for example), but we’re already over a thousand words here. Besides, I don’t want to grumble. I want to celebrate.

And there were plenty of things to celebrate.

Aside from Sawyer’s legendary play and a goal-line stand that will be remembered forever, Donovan Jackson played brilliantly at left tackle in pass protection, Henderson averaged nearly 17 yards per touch. Howard mostly took what the defense gave him, fitting the ball into small windows in the middle of the field to Tate, Egbuka, and Gee Scott.

Next up: the Buckeyes will have to beat Marcus Freeman’s brand of Tresselball when they face Notre Dame on Jan. 20 for the national title.

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LGHL Stock Market Report: Defense holds strong as Ohio State punches its ticket to Atlanta

Stock Market Report: Defense holds strong as Ohio State punches its ticket to Atlanta
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

Jack Sawyer, Caleb Downs and Jim Knowles stepped up when it mattered most, and now Ohio State has one game left.

For the ninth time in school history, Ohio State will face off against Notre Dame. This time, there is a national championship on the line — the first one of the 12-team College Football Playoff era.

Ohio State defeated Texas 28-14, and Notre Dame defeated Penn State 27-24 to set up the matchup. Ohio State is 6-2 all-time against Notre Dame, and has won the last six matchups.

Here is who and what we are high and low on heading into the national championship.


Blue Chip

Syndication: USA TODAY
Adam Cairns / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Jack Sawyer

I really don’t think I have to explain this one. He was one of the leaders who convinced the senior class to run it back for one more year, and now he will forever live in the history of Ohio State Football. He should have had his moment against Michigan, but instead it comes in the College Football Playoff semifinal against Texas.

Thank you, 33.


Solid Investments


Timely turnovers

Early in this game, it felt like all of the 50/50 balls went to Texas. The fumble by Arch Manning wasn’t one of the two actual fumbles that Texas recovered, the first down by Quinn Ewers where his knee was a millimeter from the ground, etc.

But when it mattered, the ball fell right into Jack Sawyer’s hands on the strip sack, and Caleb Downs (more on him below) recorded the game-sealing interception. All you need is one or two, and the Buckeyes got them when it mattered most.

Syndication: The Columbus Dispatch
Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Caleb Downs

It is becoming impossible to describe Caleb Downs’ impact on games. He saved a touchdown early in the game with a tackle on Ryan Wingo, blew up the pitch play that caused Texas to throw the ball on fourth and goal, and then recorded the game-sealing interception.

He processes the game like a computer, and his instincts are unlike any other.


Junk Bond


Penalties

The Buckeyes had nine penalties and 75 yards. In the Tennessee and Oregon games combined, they had five penalties for 39 yards — two for 14 yards against Oregon, and three for 25 yards against Tennessee.

At least four of these penalties stalled drives, and the unsportsmanlike conduct against TreVeyon Henderson probably took points off the board. It was one game, and for the most part this has been a disciplined team, but they have to win the penalty game against Notre Dame.


Buy/Sell


Buy: Bend don’t break

The Ohio State defense has been bend-but-don’t-break all season. They may allow some yards and some chunk plays, but they have been incredible in the red zone all season. As defensive coordinator Jim Knowles says, “You give us an inch, and we will defend it.”

This is how they won the game against Penn State and against Texas. It will be key against Notre Dame with the dynamic run game they implement.

NCAA Football: Cotton Bowl-Ohio State at Texas
Tim Heitman-Imagn Images

Buy: Carnell Tate

On 90 percent of college football teams, Carnell Tate is WR1. However, on the Buckeyes, he is WR3 (more like WR1C, maybe), and he has been content with playing his role all season, being a great blocker and taking his production when it comes.

This was a game they needed Tate with the way Texas covered Jeremiah Smith, and Tate delivered with seven catches for 87 yards. He also dropped a touchdown pass that would have made that stat line look even better. He caught multiple huge first downs that kept drives alive.

Sell: Absolutely nothing

Was it a perfect game by the Buckeyes? Of course not. But the College Football Playoff is do or die, win or go home, and the Buckeyes found a way to win and punch their ticket to Atlanta.

That’s all that matters. Beat Notre Dame, and that is all that matters.

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LGHL Game preview: No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball vs Oregon

Game preview: No. 9 Ohio State women’s basketball vs Oregon
Connor Lemons
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Screenshot_2025_01_11_at_8.32.00_PM.0.png

Photo courtesy of OhioStateBuckeyes.com

The Buckeyes will look to continue their undefeated season as they welcome Oregon for the first time as Big Ten foes.

The Ohio State women’s basketball team (15-0, 4-0) are back home this afternoon to take on the Oregon Ducks (12-4, 3-2), breaking up a stretch where the Buckeyes are playing three out of four games on the road.

Sunday’s game is Ohio State’s first home game since a 30-point win over Northwestern last Sunday, and the Buckeyes won’t be home again until Thursday, January 23rd, when they take on the 8th-ranked Maryland Terrapins.

Kevin McGuff’s squad has opened the season with 15 consecutive wins, including a dramatic come from behind win over the Michigan Wolverines in Ann Arbor on Wednesday night. Ohio State trailed by 16 points in the first half at one point and by single-digits in the fourth quarter, but rallied to pick up a win over their rivals up north, 84-77.


DEFENSE TO OFFENSE ️ pic.twitter.com/64CgNya7rE

— Ohio State Women’s Basketball (@OhioStateWBB) January 9, 2025

Ohio State’s 15-game winning streak is the longest since the program opened the 2022-2023 season with 19 wins, on the way to an eventual Elite Eight appearance. The program record is 20 consecutive wins.


Preview


This is an Oregon program that’s missed the NCAA Tournament each of the past two seasons, but has started out 3-2 in the Big Ten in its first season in the league. As of Sunday morning, ESPN “bracketologist” Charlie Creme has the Ducks by a pretty safe margin — they’re a 10-seed and avoiding the First Four play-in games.

Head coach Kelly Graves is now in year 11 in Eugene, and his Ducks are fresh off of a 63-61 win over Penn State Thursday night. After the Nittany Lions tied things up at 61 with 1:40 remaining in the game, Deja Kelly — a transfer guard who left North Carolina as the program’s seventh-leading scorer all-time — dribbled over a screen and knocked down the game-winner with four seconds remaining in Happy Valley.


DK called game #GoDucks x @dejakelly25 pic.twitter.com/T2W64wHrub

— Oregon Women’s Basketball (@OregonWBB) January 10, 2025

The win improved Oregon’s road record to 2-1 this season. They’ll be looking to improve that to 3-1 Sunday afternoon in Columbus.

Oregon’s leading scorer Peyton Scott is not expected to play, as she’s been out with a knee injury suffered during the Ducks’ win over Northwestern on New Year’s Eve. Scott has Ohio ties — she is from Lynchburg, Ohio and played her first three collegiate seasons at Miami of Ohio. Scott transferred to Oregon in 2023 after scoring 1,871 points in Oxford and leaving as the fourth-leading scorer in program history. Sadly, it’s not looking like she will be able to suit up Sunday afternoon in her home state.

Like Scott, Kelly averages 10.9 points per game this season and has scored in double-digits in three of her last four games. She’s also averaging 4.8 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game.

Junior forward Amina Muhammad, a transfer from Texas, is averaging 8.6 points, 4.1 rebounds, and is shooting a career-best 57.8% overall.

The Ducks have a daunting presence below the basket in the form of 6-foot-8 center Phillipina Kyei. The senior is averaging 10.7 points and seven rebounds over her last three games, and is taller than anyone on Ohio State’s roster.

Oregon is one of the worst three-point shooting teams in the Big Ten at 29.1%, and that is with one of their better shooters — Scott — playing in 14 of their 16 games. They were 3-for-17 from beyond the arc against Penn State.

The Ducks take roughly 28% of their shots from beyond the arc, but were much more successful pounding the rock in the painted area against the Nittany Lions, outscoring Penn State 20-12 in the paint. Oregon has shot much better from two-point range this season, hitting those shots at an even 52%.

These two teams most recently met in the San Diego Invitational on Dec. 21, 2022 when the Buckeyes earned an 84-67 win. Today’s game is the second meeting between the two teams during Kevin McGuff’s tenure, but he is very familiar with the Ducks from his two seasons at the University of Washington.

Ohio State leads the all-time series with Oregon, 3-1. This is the first meeting between these teams in Columbus, and the first time they’ve played as conference opponents.

Like Ohio State, Oregon is one of the more sure-handed teams in the conference, averaging 13.9 turnovers per game — the fourth-lowest in the Big Ten. The Buckeyes are nearly identical in that category, averaging 13.3 turnovers per game.

If McGuff’s squad isn’t able to generate a ton of turnovers against the Ducks (they’ve forced a combined 69 turnovers against their last three opponents), look for the Buckeyes to try and create mismatches on the perimeter Sunday afternoon.

While Oregon having a 6-foot-8 center presents its challenges, Ohio State could potentially turn that into an advantage depending on which personnel McGuff uses. Against Michigan, he leaned heavily on his starters, not subbing at all in the second half.

Keep an eye out for possible ball screen actions on the perimeter by the Buckeyes — McGuff would be wise to try and use screens to isolate Kyei on the perimeter against McMahon and Thierry. While neither are knock-down shooters, they both present some length (both are taller than six-foot), and are also serviceable shooters. Kyei won’t want to chase either around or try to defend the perimeter. If Ohio State can effectively switch the assignment using screens, it could put Kyei and the Ducks in a bind defensively.


How to Watch


Date: Sunday, Jan. 12, 2025
Time: 1:00 p.m. ET
Where: The Schottenstein Center, Columbus, Ohio
Stream: B1G+


LGHL Score Prediction: No. 9 Ohio State 88, Oregon 71


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LGHL Hangout in the Holy Land: Jack Sawyer is a Buckeye legend

Hangout in the Holy Land: Jack Sawyer is a Buckeye legend
justingolba
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


COLLEGE FOOTBALL: JAN 10 CFP Semifinal Cotton Bowl Classic - Ohio State vs Texas

Photo by Austin McAfee/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The defense stepped up when it mattered most, and we breakdown the full game, plus some thoughts on Steve Sarkisian, Quinn Ewers, and Notre Dame

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



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



On this recap episode of Hangout in the Holy Land, Justin and Land-Grant Holy Land’s managing editor Gene Ross discuss Ohio State punching its ticket to the national title game.

Ohio State defeated Texas 28-14 in the Cotton Bowl to set up a date with Notre Dame in the national championship game next Monday.

What did the defense do to make life hard on the Texas offense? What did they do to confuse Quinn Ewers? What are our thoughts on Sark as Texas comes up just short? Plus, Jack Sawyer and Caleb Downs are aliens, and the offense made plays when they needed to.

We break down and recap the full game, and end the episode with a quick preview of Notre Dame and how they defeated Penn State.

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



Connect with the pod:

Twitter:
@HolyLandPod

Connect with Justin Golba:

Twitter:
@justin_golba

Connect with Gene Ross:

Twitter:
Gene_Ross23

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Google Three Key Stats: Ohio State Forces Its First Turnover of the College Football Playoff, Three OSU Receivers Catch At Least Five Passes Each and Buckeye

Three Key Stats: Ohio State Forces Its First Turnover of the College Football Playoff, Three OSU Receivers Catch At Least Five Passes Each and Buckeyes' Defense Records 24th Pass Breakup of CFP Run - Eleven Warriors
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".

Three Key Stats: Ohio State Forces Its First Turnover of the College Football Playoff, Three OSU Receivers Catch At Least Five Passes Each and Buckeyes' Defense Records 24th Pass Breakup of CFP Run Eleven Warriors

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