OHIO STATE 87 | GARDNER-WEBB 58
Buckeyes dial up the defense
Players take coach’s criticism to heart, respond with intensity
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
</IMG> RENEE SAUER | DISPATCH Ohio State’s Terence Dials, who scored a game-high 23 points, grabs a rebound away from Gardner-Webb’s Mike Jones.
Coach Thad Matta wondered about the whereabouts of Ohio State’s defense after a lackluster victory over Tennessee State last week.
Evidently, it was just under wraps before the holiday.
A renewed effort and awareness on that end of the floor last night might have been a belated Christmas gift to Matta from the Buckeyes men’s basketball team.
Ohio State started unwrapping it by holding Gardner-Webb without a shot on its first possession. Je’Kel Foster and Jamar Butler tore into it more with floor-burning dives for attempted steals in the first 10 minutes. The end result was an 87-58 runaway in Value City Arena against a team that this season lost by three points at North Carolina on a last-second shot and won by one point at Minnesota.
"The Tennessee State game, we didn’t have the intensity we had shown in previous games. Coach wanted us to come out with great intensity and not let an upset happen on our home court," center Terence Dials said.
"We knew their resume coming in, beating Minnesota and taking North Carolina to the buzzer. So we knew we had a quality opponent and we just tried to come out and play our hardest. Good things happen when you play hard."
Dials led Ohio State with 23 points and nine rebounds in only 22 minutes on the floor.
"This is one of the few games I’ll ever have where I’ll be quicker than the guy guarding me," Dials said with a smile. "I tried to use that to my advantage."
Foster and Ron Lewis added 14 points apiece for the No. 21-ranked Buckeyes (9-0), who remained one of 10 undefeated teams in NCAA Division I.
But the more impressive numbers for the Buckeyes were these: 19 assists against a season-low five turnovers for the home team vs. 20 turnovers and 36.1 percent shooting for the Runnin’ Bulldogs, who despite their pedigree were outscored 18-2 in transition and 19-4 off turnovers.
Foster had six steals, tying the third-highest total in a game in school history.
"It’s hard to evaluate a tape when you’re not playing hard," Matta said, "and that’s what I told them after Christmas, (that) we didn’t play hard enough against Tennessee State.
"I think they’re coming to grips (with the fact that) we’re not a good enough basketball team if we don’t come out and play with the intelligence and the intensity we have to. It’s going to be long nights for us (if we don’t)."
Ohio State opened up a 33-12 lead with 6:24 left in the first half with a 24-4 run during which Gardner-Webb had six turnovers and the Buckeyes scored eight points in transition.
A 21-10 run to open the second half, in which Ohio State scored on 10 of its first 13 possessions, put the Buckeyes ahead 62-35 with 13:20 left.
After that, it was a matter of watching the seconds expire off the clock.
Center Simon Conn led Gardner-Webb (5-4) with 14 points and 13 rebounds before fouling out with six minutes left.
"The first question y’all probably got is how did we beat Minnesota and how did we play Carolina so close?" Gardner-Webb coach Rick Scruggs said.
"We played great against those teams, but Ohio State just took it to us tonight. We just didn’t have an answer, and a lot of it had to do with Ohio State and not us.
"Minnesota and Carolina, we matched up well and could stay with them and be competitive. We thought it would be the same way tonight. We thought we would have a good chance to match up. But from the very start . . . we just did not compete. We could not get going the way we did against some of the other big schools. Ohio State took us out of everything we wanted to do."
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