Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
(19) OHIO ST 67, MINNESOTA 53
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Je'Kel Foster made a career-high seven 3-pointers in eight attempts and scored 25 points to lead No. 20 Ohio State to a 67-53 victory over Minnesota on Saturday.
Foster's only miss behind the arc came on the Buckeyes' first shot after winning the opening tip.
He was 8-of-10 from the field, made both of his free throws and had three assists and two steals in 37 minutes.
Terence Dials had 15 points and nine rebounds for the Buckeyes (16-3, 5-3 Big Ten), with Jamar Butler added 10 points.
The Buckeyes finished 9-of-20 on 3-pointers and shot 59 percent from the field in the second half to pull away.
Freshman Jamal Abu-Shamala had a career-best 16 points and Adam Boone added 10 for the Gophers (10-9, 1-7).
Minnesota, which had a 30-24 rebound advantage, stayed in contact with the Buckeyes until J.J. Sullinger scored on a follow midway through the second half and Foster made a 3-pointer in front of Ohio State's bench off an inbounds play.
That made it 52-42 with 9½ minutes remaining and the Golden Gophers never got closer than seven points again.
Vincent Grier, who had 22 points and 12 rebounds as Minnesota won at Value City Arena a year ago, was limited to nine points and seven rebounds on Saturday.
Ohio State led 33-28 after a sloppy, physical first half. Over one 2½-minute span, the teams traded seven turnovers.
Foster was clearly the difference, hitting four consecutive 3-pointers after the early miss. He had half of the Buckeyes' points as they took a 24-17 lead by the 7:30 mark.
Butler hit both of his 3-point attempts in the opening half, including his second with 30 seconds remaining to put the Buckeyes ahead by five.
Ohio State was 6-of-10 behind the arc in the opening 20 minutes.
Big win today for the Bucks!
What I liked:
- Foster gets out of his slump in the best way possible!
- Butler's entire game: Shooting %, defense, assists
- Shut down Minny's best player Grier
What I didn't like:
- Sloppy playing down the stretch by JJ and Syl
- Unforced turnovers in the first half
Good analysis, Dow. I'll add a couple of observations/opinions:
Notice the clever defensive adjustments, especially when Matta would throw a press at Minnesota? It certainly made a difference, most notably late in the second half.
Speaking defensively, I thought we were solid for the most part on the perimeter. That's how Minnesota beat Indiana last week, by scoring from the outside. We alternately fought through (and around) screens and/or switched assignments.
Minnesota likes to play a physical game and today's officials allowed a rough game. We were able to play through all that and win (something that gave us problems last year).
It was nice to see us run the offense and score in the last seven minutes to put the game away. If only we had done some of that in our three losses.
Rebounding is still a major concern.
We will go through too many consecutive possessions without allowing Dials to touch the ball.
Michigan got steamrolled today. I hope we're ready for them Thursday night.
Going back to our three losses, and the circumstances down the stretch, isn't it scary just how close we are to being undefeated?
NO. 20 OHIO STATE 67 | MINNESOTA 53
Buckeyes able to handle grind-it-out Gophers
Sunday, February 05, 2006
Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
</IMG> NEAL C . LAURON | DISPATCH Minnesota’s Adam Boone, right, finds Ohio State’s Jamar Butler in his face during the second half.![]()
Regardless of what the bottom line says, nothing comes easy against the Minnesota men’s basketball team.
The Gophers run the shot clock down to the nub on seemingly every possession, trying to lull opponents into a mental breakdown. When they miss their shots — which they do more often than any other Big Ten team — the Gophers crash the glass for the rebounds. They bump. They grind.
"They’re not a great offensive team," Ohio State center Terence Dials said. "They need those types of games where they outhustle you, get all the loose balls. That’s how they get their wins (because) sometimes you’re not used to playing that type of game."
Ohio State did not handle it well last season, losing twice to Minnesota by a total of six points in games in which neither team scored more than 60. The Buckeyes shot 37 percent from the field in the two games and had 19 turnovers in one of them.
Their 67-53 victory over the Gophers yesterday in Value City Arena was a measure of how much they have grown in a year, coach Thad Matta said.
"That game was a carbon copy of the two games we played last year, and I thought that, for whatever reason, we’ve grown in some areas to make plays, to guard a little bit better in tough situations," Matta said. "They brought the shot clock (into play) a lot, and I thought for the most part we did a nice job of keeping our composure defensively. Offensively, once we eliminated the — ridiculous would be an understatement — turnovers, we were getting great shots."
Guard Je’Kel Foster, whose three-point shooting stroke had left him for two weeks in January, was in old form, making 7 of 8 shots from behind the arc and scoring 25 points to lead No. 20-ranked Ohio State (16-3, 5-3), which shot 54.3 percent from the field. Dials added 15 points for the Buckeyes, who made nine threes in the game compared with seven in their two losses to Minnesota last season.
Freshman Jamal Abu-Shamala led Minnesota (10-9, 1-7) with 16 points but scored only three in the second half, when Foster paid closer attention to him. J.J. Sullinger and Ron Lewis, meanwhile, took turns limiting the Gophers’ best player, guard Vincent Grier, to nine points.
"The bottom line is the area we said we had to control to win, we didn’t, and that was taking away the three from them," Minnesota coach Dan Monson said.
"They’re a very tough team to guard when they get in their offensive flow, and we let them get in their offensive flow. We felt this game needed to be in the 50s for us to have a chance and we just didn’t keep it there."
The Gophers also hurt their cause by turning the ball over almost as many times as they put it in the basket. They had 18 turnovers and 20 field goals.
"A sign of toughness is how you value the ball," Monson said. "Our 18 turnovers, a lot of them were just not being very tough mentally."
Ohio State had problems of its own with turnovers, however, and consequently was never able to get a comfortable margin until it led 60-49 with less than three minutes remaining.
At that point, though, Minnesota applied full-court pressure, forced turnovers on back-to-back possessions and cut its deficit to 60-53 with 2:16 left. But the Buckeyes burned the press twice in a row after that, Dials with a dunk and Foster a three, and the matter was settled.
The win kept Ohio State among six teams atop the Big Ten standings that are separated by one game in the loss column. The Buckeyes’ next two games are against teams in that group, Michigan and Illinois.
"There’s a lot more basketball left," Sullinger said. "We just want to get better. We have yet to play our best basketball."
[email protected]
Sunday, February 05, 2006
![]()