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LGHL Visiting Locker Room: Talking Illinois Fighting Illini with Illini Inquirer

Visiting Locker Room: Talking Illinois Fighting Illini with Illini Inquirer
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: NOV 22 Women’s - Oregon State at Illinois

Photo by Michael Allio/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Learn more about the Fighting Illini from someone on the Illinois women’s basketball beat.

Big Ten women’s basketball is back in the Schottenstein Center Sunday, when the No. 21 Illinois Fighting Illini visit No. 12 Ohio State women’s basketball. It’s a matchup that’s had its close outcomes over the last few seasons, but this year the Buckeyes bring a new look to the conference.

It’s a matchup between an established Illinois side, who has a tournament trophy from the 2024 WBIT and an Ohio State program that hasn’t shown what it can do yet against a ranked, power conference, opponent.

To learn more about the Illinois side of things, Land-Grant Holy Land spoke with Jeno Jo from the Illini Inquirer. Jo talks about that tournament run, how forward Kendall Bostic does against teams with stronger interior game and more.



Land-Grant Holy Land: Last season, Illinois came in as a potential contender in the Big Ten but struggled to start the season. The Illini really didn’t hit their rhythm until they made it into the WBIT. What did Illinois finally do to start meeting their potential?

Illini Inquirer: While it may not seem like it now with some injuries, one thing they did start the season with was a fully healthy squad. With guard Makira Cook starting the season, Shauna Green’s squad was able to start the season with the pace and attacking prowess that it wants to finish the season with. Last year’s WBIT run also saw most of their players healthy.

LGHL: The Illini started the season with an upset win over a ranked Florida State side. What have they done so well at the beginning of the season to give them their strong start?

II: It always goes back to health, but one of the key differences from last year’s squad is that it’s not quite as predictable. Mississippi State transfer guard Jasmine Brown-Hagger has shown an ability to go off once she hits a hot streak, and sophomore guard Gretchen Dolan has hit career-highs in every statistical category already. This is the most depth that a Shauna Green-led Illinois squad has had, and maybe even the most depth an Illinois squad has had in recent history.

LGHL: Illinois’ lone hiccup came against the Kentucky Wildcats. Their shooting had a rough night. Was it bad shooting night or did the Wildcats do something to make it difficult on the Illini?

II: One thing the Wildcats had over the Illini was size. On the perimeter, the length of players like Teonni Key (6-foot-4) and Clara Strack (6-foot-5) made for a tough shooting night. It’s not just that only one three-pointer was made, it’s also that only 16 were attempted at all. The pick-and-pop of Bostic has been a regular involvement in Illinois’ offense this year, and it just wasn’t a factor against Kentucky. Additionally, Illinois shot 12-of-30 on layups and Kentucky hit 15-of-20.

LGHL: Bostic’s done well against Ohio State, averaging a double-double with almost 17 rebounds per game. The Buckeyes bolstered their paint presence this offseason. How has Bostic done against some of the stronger bigs like Alexis Markowski and MacKenzie Holmes?

II: Illinois has struggled against teams with size and length in the past. Last year’s losses against Maryland and Michigan are big indicators of that. The guard duo of Genesis Bryant and Cook have trouble with entry passes and getting shots up over defenders, but the paint battle has also not been kind.

Last season, Bostic went 2-2 against Markowski and Holmes last season. Her size makes for a tough defensive matchup. Holmes scored 30 and 24 while shooting just over 71 percent, while Markowski totaled 28 points and 23 rebounds across two meetings. The approach to attacking larger players like Lemmila will be to drag them out to the perimeter and force them to open up driving lanes for guards like Adalia McKenzie.

Bostic’s bread and butter will be her 15-foot jumpsuit, which Green has described to be as consistent as her layup at times this year. Undercutting taller Big Ten players will be what Bostic will need to do against a team like Ohio State, at least for as long as center Hayven Smith is still finding her groove and forward Berry Wallace is hurt.


Ohio State and Illinois tip off at 4:00 p.m. ET, Sunday at the Schottenstein Center. For Buckeye fans who can’t make it to the arena, watch the first conference game of the season on the Big Ten Network.

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LGHL Devin Royal puts Buckeyes on his back, carries Ohio State past Rutgers 80-66

Devin Royal puts Buckeyes on his back, carries Ohio State past Rutgers 80-66
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: Rutgers at Ohio State

Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images

The sophomore from Pickerington scored a career-high 22 points Saturday, including 16 in the second half.

Saturday afternoon in Columbus, the Ohio State University men’s basketball team (6-3, 1-1) welcomed the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers (5-4, 0-1) to the Schott for the only scheduled meeting between the two teams this year. The Buckeyes swept the Scarlet Knights last year, squeaking out a four-point win at home and then popping RU by 22 at the RAC the following month.

This Rutgers team is different than the Scarlet Knights of years’ past. They’re led by two guys who are bound to be lottery picks next spring in the 2025 NBA Draft — Ace Bailey and Dylan Harper. Steve Pikiell is leaning on youth and an explosive offense rather than Rutgers’ typical gritty defend, rebound, and grind style.

Ohio State continues to play shorthanded, as sophomore big man Aaron Bradshaw is currently being investigated by the university for a possible “domestic incident” at his home last month.

With Bradshaw, Colin White, and Ques Glover still out, Jake Diebler stuck with the same lineup he’s used for the last two games — Bruce Thornton, Meechie Johnson, Micah Parrish, Sean Stewart, and Devin Royal.

Steve Pikiell started Bailey and Harper alongside Jeremiah Williams, Jordan Derkack, and Emmanuel Ogbole. The Scarlet Knights entered this game with a clean bill of health.

Stops were optional over the first several minutes, with the teams playing to a 13-13 tie by the first media timeout. The Buckeyes were getting the ball into the paint nearly every possession, and Royal scored six points within the first five minutes of the game. Ace Bailey looked smooth early, but the combination of Thornton and Parrish worked to keep Harper disconnected from the offense early on.

Ohio State continued to assault the painted area throughout the first half. Royal, Mahaffey, and Stewart all had big buckets and all three were cutting to the basket well and leaving open space for the others to operate near the basket. Despite not shooting it particularly well from deep in the first half (4-for-11) the Buckeyes went into the locker room at halftime with a 39-31 lead.


14-Point First Half

Bruce Thornton came out hot for @OhioStateHoops #B1GMBBall on FS1 pic.twitter.com/eQnGI1LFJX

— Big Ten Men's Basketball (@B1GMBBall) December 7, 2024

Thornton had 14 points in the first half, but the Buckeyes also outsourced Rutgers in the paint, 20-10. Stewart, Royal, and even Austin Parks had big-time buckets during the front 20, and Parks even grabbed a pair of offensive rebounds during his seven first-half minutes.

Rutgers cut the Ohio State lead to four for a moment, but Royal responded with an offensive rebound and basket over Derkack, and then Thornton jumped a passing lane and snagged a Derkack pass that was meant for Tyson Acuff and took it the other way, slamming the ball down at the other end to put Ohio State back up, 47-39, with 15:03 left in the game.

By the under-eight timeout the Ohio State lead had shrunk to 63-54. Rutgers was answering Ohio State baskets with their own, but the Scarlet Knights were having a hellish time guarding sophomore forward Devin Royal. Royal was limited in the first half because of foul trouble, but blew up in the second half, scoring 16 more points by the 7:53 mark to give him a career-high 22 (at the time).

However, Harper awoke from his slumber as well, crossing the 10-point plateau by knocking down a pair of long three-pointers. The Scarlet Knights hadn’t made a serious push at this point, but they weren’t going away, either.

With 5:24 remaining in the game Johnson dribbled from the corner up the baseline towards the basket, and was greeted by three RU defenders. He quickly dished it off to Parrish in the opposite corner, who nailed a corner three to put the Buckeyes up 10 points, 66-55. On the very next Ohio State possession, Johnson had the ball at the top of the key and could’ve hoisted a deep three. Instead, he saw that nobody was next to Parks below the basket, so he dumped it off to the big man, who slammed it home to make it 68-55 Ohio State with 4:38 to go.

That stretch from Johnson proved to be crucial, as the Buckeyes pushed their lead to a game-high 14. They didn’t ease off from there, closing out Rutgers at home and picking up their first Big Ten win of the year, 80-66.

If you weren’t able to make it to the Schott on Saturday afternoon to see Ohio State pick up its first Big Ten win of the season over Harper, Bailey, and the Scarlet Knights, here were a few key moments that made the difference in this one:


Buckeyes denying Harper the ball early


Harper entered Saturday’s game as the fourth-leading scorer in the nation at 23.8 points per game and was taking 16 shots per game. The combination of Parrish and Thornton were the primary defenders on Rutgers’ leading scorer, and they did a good job keeping the ball out of Harper’s hands in the first half.

Harper only took one shot through the first 14 minutes of the game, and finished the first 20 minutes with just four points on 1-3 shooting. The Scarlet Knights had other guys, like Derkack, hitting shots, but Ohio State was refusing to let the duo of Bailey and Harper both beat them.


Getting the ball to the paint


Sean. Stewart. Slam. #Team126 | #GoBucks pic.twitter.com/zZOXxomte7

— Ohio State Hoops (@OhioStateHoops) December 7, 2024

After Ohio State’s embarrassing loss to Maryland earlier this week, Royal said that he and his team did not get the ball to the paint enough — something that Diebler has stressed needs to happen nearly every possession. Even if the shot doesn’t happen below the basket, making sure the ball gets touched there can open up shots on the perimeter as well.

The Buckeyes got the ball to the paint on 17 of their 32 possessions in the first half, and finished the half with a 56.7% shooting percentage. Ohio State started the first half by forcing the ball low on the first four possessions of the game, but ended the half with back-to-back turnovers where Parrish and Mobley never even got the ball inside the three-point line.


Big play Bruce at it again


Thornton scored 14 points in the first half on 6-of-7 shooting in 19 minutes. He knocked down both of his three-point tries and dished out three assists while committing zero turnovers. Sounds post play from guys like Stewart and Royal opened up Thornton for easier looks away from the basket in the first half.


I was not familiar with your game, Mr. Thornton



With Ohio State up 45-39 and 15:10 left in the game, Derkack tried to pass the ball to Acuff, who was guarded by Thornton. However, Thornton saw it all the way and jumped the passing lane, snagging it and turning the steal into a dribble down the floor. He out-ran Acuff to the other end and elevated for an insane one-handed slam to put the Buckeyes back up, 47-39.


Royal, Thornton two-man game


After playing just six minutes in the first half due to foul trouble, Royal was able to take the floor in the second half and play with a little more freedom. He scored 11 points on 4-of-5 shooting over the first eight minutes of the second half. He and Thornton combined to score Ohio State’s first 15 points of the second half as Ohio State clung to a single-digit lead.


Smart plays from Meechie seal the deal​


Meechie Johnson has not played well this season, and he did not play well for the first 35 or so minutes of Saturday’s game, either. But the senior guard from Cleveland dominated the game on three consecutive possession late in the game, sealing the win for the Buckeyes.

With Ohio State up 63-55, Johnson dribbled towards the basket into a crowd, but instead of forcing up a layup in traffic he dished off to Parrish in the corner, who snapped off a three to put Ohio State up 66-55.

On the very next offensive possession, Johnson considered shooting a deep straightaway three, but instead noticed Parks below the basket and nobody covering him. He threw a line drive to Parks, who slammed it home to put the Buckeyes up 68-55.

On the next offensive possession, Johnson drove to the basket and scored a layup through contact, making it 70-56 with 3:58 left in the game.


What’s next?


Ohio State (6-3, 1-1) gets a full week off before traveling to Atlanta next weekend to face off with No. 2 Auburn (7-1) in the Holiday Hoopsgiving Event. The Tigers already have two top-five wins on their resume, having beaten No. 4 Houston and No. 5 Iowa State. They have another ranked win over No. 12 North Carolina as well, and were the winners of the Maui Invitational. Auburn is currently the No. 1 team in the country in the KenPom rankings.

The Buckeyes’ game against Bruce Pearl’s Tigers is set to tip off at 1:00 p.m. ET on ESPN2.

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