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LGHL Head coach Kevin McGuff on 10 years leading Ohio State women’s basketball

Head coach Kevin McGuff on 10 years leading Ohio State women’s basketball
1ThomasCostello
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

Barbara J. Perenic/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK

Weeks after his deepest Buckeyes postseason run, coach McGuff talks transfer portal, NIL and the future of the Scarlet & Gray

Time, as we know it, lives in cell phones, watches and revolutions around the sun. Its measured in seconds, minutes and up to centuries and millenniums. Outside of the measurable, data-measured version, time is often times stark and hits the hardest looking into the past.

It sends shockwaves the most when looking into the past. When a glance at an old pet or now-teenage child sends you back to the moments from years past. The mundane seconds that tick behind the scenes of life add up quickly.

Milestones like when your child becomes a teenager. Looking at them and your brain rushes back to the day they were born, took their first steps or talked back to you the first time.

On April 16, 2013, the Ohio State women’s basketball team took a moment in time to announce the hiring of then University of Washington head coach Kevin McGuff to lead the Buckeyes’ program.

Coach McGuff admits he’s not the nostalgic type, thinking back on his 10-year anniversary with the Scarlet & Gray. However, he has a good way of measuring his time with the Buckeyes. Back in April 2013, the McGuff family wasn’t celebrating the move to Ohio State. They were a little busy raising a newborn.

“Our youngest son, Leks, was born on April 3, 10 years ago,” said McGuff. “I had a week old and I had to hop on a plane to come out here. Not only a week old but the youngest of six, so I was leaving a whole bunch of people back in Seattle to come start this job.”

Leaving his family in Washington with wife Letitia, whose grace knows no bounds, McGuff arrived in Columbus to begin a trek that’s now at the double-digit mark.

In the decade that followed, Ohio State’s seen the highs of deep tournament runs and the lows of sanctioned seasons. Also, the transfer portal and name, image and likeness, which didn’t exist in 2013, now dominate off-the-court conversation.

Suffice to say a lot’s changed in the past 10 years. Here are coach McGuff’s thoughts on all of it.

McGuff on the Transfer Portal


Back in 2023, on April 10, the WNBA held its annual draft, bringing the best of college basketball players to the top domestic league in the United States. McGuff was in attendance in New York, watching former Ohio State guard Taylor Mikesell wait for her name to be called.

With the first pick of the second round, the sharpshooter from Massillon, Ohio went to the Indiana Fever. Coach McGuff shared the moment across social media, showing support and excitement for the Ohio kid who became the Buckeyes’ first WNBA draft pick since Kelsey Mitchell and Stepahnie Mavunga each went to the Fever in 2018.

Let’s go ⁦@TMikesell23⁩ ! Super happy for you ! Go crush it ! pic.twitter.com/NfH8we9zqS

— Coach McGuff (@CoachMcGuff) April 11, 2023

Mikesell wasn’t the only player McGuff was supporting that night. It took only three picks for another McGuff-recruited player to hear their name: UConn forward Dorka Juhász. Mikesell and Juhász are perfect representations of the NCAA transfer portal.

On one side of the conversation is Juhász. Coming to the United States from Hungary, McGuff recruited the big who played three seasons in Columbus, leading the team in rebounding and sitting second in scoring when her third season was said and done in 20-21.

McGuff and Juhász alike featured a barrage of questions in Seattle, Washington before the Buckeyes and Huskies battled in the Sweet Sixteen. The Buckeyes coach and UConn graduate senior had brief moments to chat in the weekend. As much as fans of universities go after players who enter into the portal, thinking of it as a perceived slight against the school and its supporters, its a different story behind the scenes.

“She (Juhász) was here three years, she graduated, she did a good job for us. She moved on to a program in Connecticut. It wasn’t very contentious at all,” said McGuff. “I saw her in New York and she gave me a big hug and I was happy for her.”

2023 WNBA Draft
Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images
Dorka Juhász drafted in the 2023 WNBA Draft

On the other side is Mikesell. Unlike Juhász, McGuff recruited Mikesell but couldn’t land the star shooting guard from Jackson High School. Instead, after two seasons with the Maryland Terrapins, and one with the Oregon Ducks, McGuff landed the guard he’d hope to get in 2018.

The results of Mikesell’s arrival in Columbus for the 21-22 season are clear. In two seasons, the Buckeyes won a regular season conference championship in 2022 and made it to the Elite Eight of the 2023 NCAA Tournament for the first time in 30 years.

In that stretch, Mikesell started all 68 games for Ohio State, leading the team with 17.9 points per game across the two seasons. When teammates went down with injury, Mikesell continued the form that made her such a prized recruit five years prior.

“Taylor Mikesell is a great example of, man, she came in and she impacted us in such a positive way,” said McGuff. “And I think we provided a great environment for her to grow and get drafted.”

Even with the transfer portal, and the success of stories like Mikesell and Juhász, McGuff sees the portal as situational. In today’s game, high school recruiting doesn’t go out the window.

The portal’s garnered a lot of attention since it rolled out in 2018, but this season especially put more eyes on its effectiveness with the LSU Tigers. Head coach Kim Mulkey’s side added nine players from the transfer portal on their way to an NCAA Championship, led by the biggest transfer of them all in forward Angel Reese who moved from Maryland to Louisiana.

McGuff credits coach Mulkey for the expert transfer portal work, but also knows that selecting nine athletes was a means to fill holes in her second season leading the Tigers. The focus for the Buckeyes, even with the addition of more talent from the portal, is clear.

“The core of our recruiting will always be high school kids,” said McGuff. “I enjoy the development part of it, to get kids in and have a plan for them to reach their potential and grow and develop in our program.”

McGuff on Ohio State’s Post-Sanctions Growth


The Scarlet & Gray’s proven their acumen with recruiting names like Kelsey Mitchell, Jacy Sheldon and Cotie McMahon but it was recruiting that also led to problems within the Buckeyes program.

In August 2019, former associate coach Patrick Klein resigned from the Buckeyes program. Within his resignation were confessions of breaking recruiting rules by offering to pay for non-scholarship player’s books, loaning money for rental cars and more. That led to vacated victories, a playoff ban and the basketball program on probation with the NCAA.

After the playoff ban ended at the end of the 20-21 season, the Buckeyes won their 21-22 regular season Big Ten title, made it to the Sweet Sixteen, 2023 Big Ten Tournament title game and Elite Eight. That’s good for the best two-year stretch of non-vacated games.

Coach McGuff doesn’t credit himself for changes within the program that turned the ship around. It goes back to the players.

“It’s because the character of the kids we have in the program right now,” said McGuff.

For much of McGuff’s time with the Buckeyes, the focus has been on getting the most talented recruits and build the strongest teams. Ohio State’s still building strong teams but now instead of going constantly for the top tier, its about finding the players that fit the program the best and putting together a group of coaches and support staff who are all on the same page.

“I know I’m really confident and comfortable in how we’re doing things and I think that’s helped attract the right kids,” said McGuff. “And maybe we haven’t gotten certain kids who don’t feel comfortable here, but I also think we’ve got great alignment with the staff.”

That’s what the Scarlet & Gray have right now, building a team of coaches who each help raise the level of the Buckeyes on and off the court.

McGuff on Buckeyes’ Coaching Staff


In the five years before McGuff became head coach of the Washington Huskies, he was taking the Xavier Musketeers deep in the NCAA Tournament. Part of his staff in Cincinnati, Ohio was former Tulsa star Carla Morrow. Following a stint as Director of Basketball Operations, McGuff hired Morrow to the Xavier staff as an assistant coach.

Following three years in the WNBA, as an assistant coach with the Chicago Sky, Morrow returned to coach McGuff’s staff, this time with the Buckeyes.

“It’s one thing for assistant coaches to say ‘I have a great relationship with a player,’” said McGuff. “I always look at it like “can you influence their behavior or can you steer them in the right direction of where we want them to go?’ She does that and I think its really important.”

On top of the trust of building relationships, Morrow is the mind behind game plans for Ohio State. McGuff credits her vast knowledge of the Xs and Os of the game, often getting game plans close to complete before even getting together with McGuff.

That’s only one example. Coach Wes Brooks, who’s an important piece of the Buckeyes’ recruiting, is on the road more than most coaches but also with the team game-in and game-out. “The kids like him, he’s easy to like.”

Ben Cole - Land-Grant Holy Land
Jalen Powell, Wes Brooks and Carla Morrow on the sideline alongside coach McGuff and the Buckeyes

Also, former Arkansas and Florida A&M assistant, now Buckeye assistant coach, Jalen Powell. Someone who’s like a big sister to the team but also brings a strong basketball mind.

Former managers for McGuff, Ryan Murray and Reid Guzdanski, handle pieces of scouting and recruiting and Director of Operations Beth Howe makes sure everything within the team is taken care of. That includes travel and everything that goes along with playing in a Power Five conference.

Lining all the shining recommendations from McGuff are his coach’s ability to build relationships with players. Help players learn the game and grow in all facets of basketball and life. With results like Ohio State’s 73-61 win over the UConn Huskies and 24-point comeback against the Indiana Hoosiers in the Big Ten Tournament, some coaches won’t be assistants for long.

“If you’re doing it right and you’re hiring good people, then they’re going to be looked at for head coaching jobs and I look at that certainly as part of my role,” said McGuff. “I think Wes and Carla will both be looked at this year, next year, in the coming years for head coaching jobs and they’re worthy of it.”

McGuff on the Buckeyes’ NIL Work


The work of the coaching staff, and mission of developing players, also reaches into name, image and likeness, another thing McGuff and the world of NCAA basketball wasn’t working with in 2013.

For the Scarlet & Gray, different players have different levels of participation and success within the NIL space. Individually, players like forward Cotie McMahon are building far-reaching relationships with companies to financially benefit off the hard work they put on the court and in the classroom.

When it comes to the team as a whole, the Buckeyes went a different direction than other teams with their NIL relationship, opting to work with the LandOn A Cure.

Ohio State works with the non-profit that works on funding research and treatment for rare genetic diseases. Named after Landon, a boy with a genetic disorder called TBCD, has had his story in the news, in the sea of signs at ESPN’s College Gameday and across the internet but this basketball season they teamed up with the Ohio State women’s basketball team.

On Sunday, we will get to honor Landon McChesney, a six year old with a rare genetic disorder. Our team has loved getting involved this year with the McChesney’s foundation to find a cure for TBCD and other genetic disorders. We can’t wait to recognize this awesome family! pic.twitter.com/MZM0ZpjU5G

— Ohio State WBB (@OhioStateWBB) January 6, 2023

“There’s a lot of pressure at Ohio State to win and win big and that’s why I came here to try to do that and have a program that can compete at a high level,” said McGuff. “But if that’s the only thing we did I think we’d be short changing what we’re capable of accomplishing and I love that our kids embraced the idea of having an impact in the community.”

Landon was honored at halftime this season on Jan. 8, in a second half 17-point comeback by the Buckeyes against the Illinois Fighting Illini. Also, he’s made multiple appearances at Buckeyes practices throughout the season.

“It’s so funny because people are like ‘oh, you’re making an impact.” I don’t know, I think we get more out of it than anybody. Our kids absolutely love it when we have a chance to do things with LandOn A Cure and we love Landon. They get so much joy out of it, it’s really awesome. I want them to understand the power of our program and how we can impact the community. I think its a big part of helping them grow as young women and us maximizing what this program can be really about.”

McGuff on the Future of Ohio State Basketball


All season, Big Ten women’s basketball, and the sport as a whole, saw popularity skyrocket. Teams across the conference saw unprecedented success. In Columbus, Ohio State saw an attendance increase of 2,674 fans per game, the largest increase in all of NCAA women’s basketball.

In the Sweet Sixteen, Ohio State vs. UConn was the most viewed Sweet Sixteen game in tournament history with over 2.4 million people watching the historic Buckeyes win in Seattle.

Each are off court reasons to brag about the state of the program, but what’s happening on the court is matching the added attention. Ohio State’s 19-0 start to the season was the best start for the Scarlet & Gray in team history. For McGuff and the Buckeyes, it’s only the beginning.

“I don’t look too far into the future but I really like where we are and we have some great stuff coming,” said McGuff.



In the Sweet Sixteen, at the NCAA Seattle Regional, coach McGuff joked about trying to match UConn coach Geno Auriemma’s 29-straight Sweet Sixteen, saying “that’s going to be the next coach at Ohio State’s job.”

It wasn’t a sly way of saying McGuff is on his way out of the Scarlet & Gray’s program. Coach McGuff doesn’t get nostalgic for the past and doesn’t look too far ahead. A basketball coach, especially in a highly competitive Big Ten conference, doesn’t have a lot of time for retrospection.

All of that time is spent either finding the next players in high school or the portal, getting that next future head coach in his group of assistant coaches or in-season making sure that the Scarlet & Gray are prepared for the next game on the schedule.

However, in those 10 years, McGuff’s kids are reminders. His oldest daughter, Kilyn, just finished her sophomore season at Belmont University. His second oldest daughter, Keiryn, is about to finish high school at Dublin Coffman High School before heading to Bowling Green to continue her basketball journey. On April 3, the McGuff family celebrated Leks’ 10th birthday.

“It’s really gone very quickly. It’s been a great high: Some extreme highs, some lows, but its been a great ride,” said McGuff. “But seeing my family grow has been the biggest measuring stick.”

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LGHL Which former Ohio State basketball players made the NBA playoffs?

Which former Ohio State basketball players made the NBA playoffs?
Brett Ludwiczak
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


2023 Play-In Tournament - Minnesota Timberwolves v Los Angeles Lakers

Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

There are three former Buckeyes on postseason rosters, but you’ll likely only see two on the court.

Most of the attention of those around the Buckeye State on Saturday was on Ohio State’s spring game. Now that the annual exhibition has passed, we can focus on games that actually matter and count.

Following the “play-in tournament” this week, the NBA playoffs kicked off on Saturday. There are three former Buckeyes on the rosters of teams in this year’s playoffs. Two of those Ohio State alums were on the court during this week during the “play-in tournament”, with one of those games featuring a couple of the best guards in Ohio State history going head-to-head.


Mike Conley - Minnesota Timberwolves


After being traded by the Utah Jazz before the NBA’s trade deadline, Mike Conley played a big role in Minnesota earning a spot in the playoffs for the second year in a row. Even though the Timberwolves will meet top-seeded Denver in the first round of the playoffs, it definitely wasn’t easy for Conley and company.

Minnesota took on the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday night, with the winner earning the seventh-seed in the Western Conference. The former Ohio State point guard had a great game, hitting six three-pointers and finishing with 23 points, which was just a point behind Karl-Anthony Towns, who scored a team-high 24 points. Unfortunately, LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and the rest of the Lakers were a little too much, as Los Angeles won 108-102 in overtime to secure their spot in the playoffs.

The loss meant that Minnesota would return home to host the Oklahoma City Thunder, who beat New Orleans on Wednesday night. The Timberwolves received a boost with the return of Rudy Gobert, who was suspended for Tuesday’s game after an altercation during the regular season finale with teammate Kyle Anderson. Towns, Gobert, and Anthony Edwards were too much for the Thunder to handle, with Minnesota routing Oklahoma City 120-95. Conley finished with 14 points and was a +24 when he was on the court.

2023 Play-In Tournament - Minnesota Timberwolves v Los Angeles Lakers
Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

Now Minnesota will take on the Denver Nuggets in the best-of-seven first round series. The teams split their four meetings this year, but none of those meetings came with Conley on the roster. Conley did square off with the Nuggets twice this year, with both meetings coming before November. In the first game of the season, Conley scored 13 points and dished out eight assists in a 123-102. Less than two weeks later, Conley notched 14 points and was credited with five assists, but Denver was able to top Utah 117-101.


D’Angelo Russell - Los Angeles Lakers


While Mike Conley had a strong game for Minnesota on Tuesday night, D’Angelo Russell struggled against his former team. Russell was just 1-9 from the field, scoring two points. Even though his shots weren’t falling, Russell stayed involved in the offense, handing out eight assists in Los Angeles’ 108-102 victory in overtime.

Russell will now try and regain the form that he showed in the final three games of the regular season, when he was 21-40 from the field and 11-23 from three-point range. With their win on Tuesday night, Los Angeles clinched their spot in the playoffs, with their first game being this afternoon against the Memphis Grizzlies.

The Lakers won the season series 2-1, but this series will be different from what we saw during the regular season since LeBron James and Ja Morant missed the final meeting between the teams in the regular season early last month. James also missed a February matchup between the teams, and Anthony Davis was out in January when the teams first matched up.

The Grizzlies will be a familiar matchup for Russell, who battled Memphis last year in the first round of the playoffs when he was still with the Minnesota Timberwolves. Russell also saw the Grizzlies three times this season before he was traded to Los Angeles. The best performance against Memphis for Russell came in late January when he scored 19 points, grabbed eight rebounds, and registered seven assists in a 111-100 win over the Grizzlies.


Duane Washington Jr. - New York Knicks


Even though Duane Washington Jr. is still on New York’s playoff roster, it will likely take a miracle for the former Buckeye to see the court against the Cleveland Cavaliers. Washington signed a two-way contract with the Knicks on the final day of February, but he has yet to appear in a game with New York since signing with the team.

If Washington has been unable to get on the court with the Knicks as the season wound down and the team played in a few meaningless games, it’s hard to imagine the guard getting on the court when the pressure is ratcheted up in the playoffs.

It is unfortunate Washington likely won’t see any playing time in the series since the Knicks will be playing at least two games in Ohio. If only Washington had a bigger role with New York, as it would have been interesting to see how Cavaliers and Ohio State fans would react to Washington making some plays in the series.

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LGHL Huge recruiting weekend for Ohio State results in two commitments, No. 2 overall class

Huge recruiting weekend for Ohio State results in two commitments, No. 2 overall class
Gene Ross
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


11290734.0.jpg

Three-star athlete Sam Williams-Dixon | Tom Loy, 247Sports

It was a BOOOMing weekend for the Buckeyes.

This was a big weekend for Ohio State both on and off the field, and it did not disappoint. The Buckeyes partook in the annual spring game, where we got to see a small glimpse at what the 2023 team is going to offer. However, the big names of the day took place away from the glorified scrimmage, as Ryan Day and his crew were able to reel in a pair of new commits amid the festivities.

The first BOOOOM of the day came from 2024 tight end Max LeBlanc. No relation, of course, to Matt Leblanc — AKA Joey from Friends — the four-star Tennessee prospect currently ranks as the No. 13 tight end and the No. 6 player from his home state. With over 30 offers to his name, the 6-foot-5 LeBlanc chose Ohio State over some big names among the likes of Alabama, Michigan, Oklahoma, Penn State, Tennessee and many more. The Buckeyes, Vols and Wolverines were included in his top four alongside UNC.

COMMITTED TO THE ️ #GoBucks pic.twitter.com/iexMfZ8qLJ

— Max LeBlanc (@MaxenceLeblanc5) April 15, 2023

LeBlanc is coming off a recent visit to Ohio State at the end of March, and must have liked what he saw enough to pull the trigger at this stage in the game. The Buckeyes actually only offered LeBlanc a few months ago in January, but he has been growing a relationship with position coach Keenan Bailey ever since. Bailey made the trip to Chattanooga to visit the tight end, and things have been trending positively ever since.

“I like coach Bailey,” LeBlanc told Bill Kurelic of Bucknuts. “I’ve liked Ohio State since I was younger. I was an Ohio State fan. I’m from Canada, Montreal, so Ohio State is not too far from there.”

LeBlanc is coming off an impressive junior season for Baylor School down in the Volunteer State. The Red Raiders are coming of an 11-2 campaign wherein they took home a state championship, and the Ohio State commit played a big role in that. LeBlanc caught 39 passes for 695 yards — and average of 17.8 yards per catch — and three touchdowns.

The second BOOOM came courtesy of in-state running back Sam Williams-Dixon. Ohio State had been the heavy favorite in the Ohio native’s recruitment for quite a long time now, but Williams-Dixon made it official this weekend shortly after the end of the spring game.


Williams-Dixon’s rankings don’t jump off the page, coming in as the No. 24 player in Ohio and the No. 79 athlete in the 247Sports Composite, but that could be changing soon as he transfers from the small Millersburg West Holmes to the much larger Pickerington North. The Buckeyes really like what they see in the 5-foot-11, 203-pound prospect, and while he is likely an underrecruited player, he still garnered offers from the likes of Cincinnati, Penn State, Tennessee, Wisconsin and others, so there is definitely something there.

Williams-Dixon becomes the second running back for Ohio State in this class alongside James Peoples, but he is more than happy to join the cycle with Peoples as the two have very different styles. Williams-Dixon is more of an Evan Pryor type; someone adept at catching the ball out of the backfield. Still, he is a more than capable runner, and Tony Alford and Co. are ecstatic to add him to the fold.

“There were a lot of reasons,” Williams-Dixon told Bucknuts as to why he picked Ohio State. “I have a great relationship with my position coach, coach [Tony] Alford. He’s really high on me. He’s like another father to me. He’s a black male in my life I need.”

Quick Hits

  • In addition to the pair of commits, Ohio State got even more good news this weekend when they found out they are one of the few schools still in the running for five-star cornerback Charles Lester III. The 6-foot-1 Florida native has cut down his list of nearly 30 offers down to four schools, with Ohio State in the mix alongside Alabama, Georgia and Florida State. Lester is the No. 3 CB and No. 18 overall player in the 247Sports Composite.
5-star CB Charles Lester III is down to four schools ⭐

Read (On3+): https://t.co/NSIcuXYxPM pic.twitter.com/mvPEaTTymm

— On3 Recruits (@On3Recruits) April 16, 2023

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