MEN’S BASKETBALL
Buckeyes certain they still can fill the basket
Ohio State looks to shake its shooting slump when team plays Wisconsin
Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
It can’t happen again, can it?
In a nutshell, that was the line of questioning the Ohio State men’s basketball team faced yesterday as coach Thad Matta and a few players talked about what happened Sunday against Michigan State in Value City Arena and what might happen there tonight against Wisconsin.
Ohio State shot 32.9 percent from the field and made only 24.1 percent of its three-point shots in a double-overtime loss to Michigan State. The Buckeyes came into the game as one of the best shooting teams in the country, making 50.6 percent of their attempts from the field overall and 43.5 percent behind the three-point arc. It was their most scattershot performance in the season and a half since Matta turned them loose on the perimeter.
"Who believed we were going to go the whole year and not have a game (like that)?" forward Matt Sylvester said. "That was our game."
Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said he had never seen the Buckeyes shoot threes as poorly as they did Sunday, "and that’s the scary part, because usually you don’t do it two times in a row when you shoot it as well as they do."
Hearing that, Matta smiled and said, "I hope he’s right."
Was it an aberration or an indication that the second half of the season is not going to be as hospitable to the Buckeyes’ three-point shooters as the first half was? Tonight’s game against the 15 th-ranked Badgers (14-2, 4-0) appears to be another litmus test.
Just two weeks into Big Ten play, the Badgers are the only unbeaten left in part because they have allowed four conference opponents — Iowa, Michigan State, Minnesota and Northwestern — to average a league-low 57.2 points and make a league-low 33.8 percent of their field-goal attempts, including 31.7 percent outside the arc.
Wisconsin isn’t Michigan State. It doesn’t have the quickness and athleticism at all five positions that the Spartans used to their advantage in defending the No. 19 Buckeyes (12-2, 2-2) on Sunday.
What the Badgers have is size — four starters and three other regulars are 6 feet 7 or taller — and a fundamentally sound system in which everyone helps each other by sagging inside to cut off gaps while still being able to recover to close out on perimeter shooters.
"Their size, their length, their positioning really makes them an effective defensive team. They’re a team that very rarely beats themselves with their defense," Matta said.
"Where Michigan State attempts to use their athleticism a little bit more, I think Wisconsin uses their size a little bit more."
Despite the credit Michigan State’s defense received after the game from not only Matta but Spartans coach Tom Izzo, Sylvester and guard Je’Kel Foster were of the opinion yesterday that the Buckeyes were more responsible for their afternoon going awry.
"We had great looks. They just didn’t go down," said Foster, who came into the game shooting 53.8 percent from three-point range and made 2 of 10.
Sylvester said that getting good shots against Big Ten teams is tougher than during the nonconference season.
"Everyone is bigger and stronger and quicker than they were in preseason. It doesn’t come as easy as it did," he said.
Regardless, he added, Sunday has not made the Buckeyes question their ability to shoot.
"No way it’s going to make us gun-shy," Sylvester said. "We have confidence in our shots. We’ve put up 8 million shots this season. We’re a good-shooting team. That’s what we do, and we’re going to go out and keep doing the same thing."
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