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Men's Basketball Buckeye Tidbits 2006-2007 Season

CPD

OSU MEN'S BASKETBALL



OSU must rebound from Oden's absence



Tuesday, October 10, 2006 Doug Lesmerises

Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus- We interrupt this Ohio State football season, for a second, for the start of basketball season.
Thad Matta's reigning Big Ten champions open practice with the rest of the country on Friday, though the coach's disdain for "Midnight Madness" means no big kickoff for one of the top two recruiting classes in the country. With a 10-man roster that includes one walk-on and four freshmen, the Buckeyes will be short-handed again, especially while big-time big man Greg Oden recovers from right wrist surgery. Matta doesn't want to set a firm return date for the 7-foot freshman, but plans for early January and possible hopes for a bit earlier is a reasonable expectation.
Matta sat down last week for a quick look ahead.
How are you going to manage a small roster and all these young guys?
"I think if you crawl inside my mind right now, there's a huge question mark. There are so many unknowns with one starter returning, that I honestly don't know. And with Greg's situation, I don't have a road map, where last year I felt like I knew the guys well, I knew what they were capable of. This year, it's going to hopefully be trial and success, not trial and error, but in my mind going into this I know that there's a lot of areas that we need to be tested on early to sort of gauge where this team can go and how we can get there."
What's the latest with Greg?
"He is doing well. The doctors are very pleased with his progress. As far as a timetable, there really isn't one. He's getting better, he's getting more movement, but we still don't know. I told Greg this - we're never going to put him at risk. But it's more of wait and see."
He's been on the court, just not using his right hand, is that correct?
"No contact. He can't get it pinned, he can't fall on it, but he's running and jumping. He put on 15 pounds of muscle this summer. He's up to 277."
What will it do for the other guys while Oden is out?
"I think it's going to hold our feet to the fire a little bit more. Guys are going to have to rebound better, they're going to have to play better defense. And I like it from the standpoint of we've got to get better quickly. And I don't know how Greg is going to be when he comes back. How does he adjust to the college game and going against another 7-footer every night?"
Anything surprise you in the time you've had with them, working out two hours a week?
"I think we're athletic. The thing I like is we have a pretty decent feel on how to play offensively. But there are drastic times of, 'Boy, we're young.' And I think that's the biggest challenge we have to overcome."
Do you imagine Jamar Butler and Mike Conley Jr., both point guards, being on the floor together a lot?
"I think you could see that. Two of the better teams I ever coached, we played two point guards on the floor at all times. Watching Jamar progress from his freshman year to his sophomore year, when I think he was probably one of the most improved players in the country, you hope he continues to make that growth, whether it's playing a different position or whatever that may be."
 
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DDN

Buckeyes, 'Thad 5' will hit the court with great expectations

Highly regarded recruits have some thinking national title.


By Mark Gokavi
Staff Writer

Thursday, October 12, 2006

The only thing bigger in men's college basketball than 7-footer Greg Oden is the hype around Ohio State. Some preseason publications predict a national title for the Buckeyes.
Ohio State hosts Media Day today in Columbus.
Coach Thad Matta will show off the returners from the 2005-06 Big Ten champions and a recruiting class ranked among the greats.
The "Thad Five" will be available for photos but no interviews.
That's Matta's rule, despite the intense interest in Oden, 2006's consensus No. 1 high school player.
Oden, likely out with a wrist injury until December at the earliest, is mentioned in every college basketball magazine. He's being compared to the best center prospects in basketball history.
Never mind that neither Oden nor Dunbar's Daequan Cook, Michael Conley, David Lighty or junior-college transfer Othello Hunter have played an NCAA Division I game.
But with the new NBA draft rules, college is where last year's best high school players play.
Some nuggets from the mags:
? CBS SportsLine.com predicts Ohio State to win the national title over Arizona and Oden as an All-American.
? The Sporting News compares Oden to a 1965 version of Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and lists Cook as a preseason Big Ten second-teamer.
? Lindy's mentions Jamar Butler, Springfield's Ivan Harris and Troy's Matt Terwilliger as factors with the newcomers why Ohio State is a Final Four team.
 
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cstv.com

2006-07 Ohio State Men's Basketball Outlook

Buckeyes will enter season ranked among nation's best


Oct. 12, 2006
After back-to-back 20-win seasons, a No. 2 seed in the 2006 NCAA Tournament, a Big Ten regular-season outright championship and a top-rated recruiting class on campus for the 2006-07 season, prospects are understandably high for the Ohio State men's basketball team.
The outlook is so bright in Columbus that college basketball analysts across the country began to rate the Buckeyes among the nation's elite just days after the 2006 season concluded in Indianapolis in early April of 2006.
Ohio State, based on early projections, likely will be rated among the Top 10 and in the Top 5 by many when the 2006-07 season gets underway in the fall.
ESPN analysts Dick Vitale, Digger Phelps, Jay Bilas, Andy Katz and bracketologist Joe Lunardi have the Buckeyes pegged from No. 3 to 10 at various points following the 2005-06 season.
National media-affiliated web sites like FoxSports.com (No. 2), CBS Sportsline.com (No. 4), NBCSports.com (No. 5), yahoo.com (No. 5), SI.com (No. 6) and Sportingnews.com (No. 7) all have projected success for Ohio State this season.
Thad Matta, who has guided the Buckeyes each of the last two seasons to 20 or more victories in his first two years as head coach, returns one starter from a year ago and the team's sixth-man from a 26-6 squad that won the 2006 outright Big Ten regular-season title, advanced to the title game of the postseason conference tournament and moved on to the Second Round of the 2006 NCAA Tournament as a No. 2 seed.
Ron Lewis, who traveled to Australia during the summer as part of the Big Ten Foreign Tour, reported for his senior season. He is the top returning scorer for the Buckeyes with an average of 11.2 points a game. He was among five Buckeyes who averaged 10 or more points a season ago. Lewis, a 6-foot-3-inch guard from Columbus, Ohio, played in all 32 games as a junior, starting six. He would have been a leading candidate for the 2006 Big Ten's Sixth Man Award but started one too many games to be considered.
His ability to get to the foul line, score in traffic and hit the 3-point shot will be an asset to the Buckeyes in 2006-07. He is a veteran of 92 collegiate games after spending two seasons at Bowling Green before a transfer to Ohio State prior to the 2004-05 campaign.

Also back is starting point guard Jamar Butler, a third team All-Big Ten selection and an All-Big Tournament selection as a sophomore last season. He has been pegged by both Lindy's and the Sporting News as a 2006-07 preseason first team All-Big Ten selection.
Butler scored more than 300 points (314) and was credited with 100+ rebounds (101) and assists (144) a year ago. He is the first Buckeye since Brent Darby in 2002-03 to break 100 in those three categories in the same season. Darby scored 586 points, handed out 141 assists and grabbed 124 rebounds as a senior. Butler's assist total as a sophomore is the most since Scoonie Penn dished out 154 in 1998-99.
Butler, a Lima, Ohio, native, is one of 10 Buckeyes to hand out 140 or more assists in a season since 1974. He is just the second sophomore at Ohio State to record 140 or more assists in a season since assist records were first kept (1974). As a sophomore, he finished second among Big Ten guards with a +2.53 assist-to-turnover ratio, was fifth in 3-point field goal shooting percentage (.414), sixth in assists (4.65 apg.) and seventh in foul shooting pct. (.804).
When the 2006-07 season gets underway, Butler will be one of the premier point guards in the Big Ten with the ability to score, penetrate and distribute the ball. His experience will be an asset with a young roster and several newcomers.
The Buckeyes also will return another prominent senior member of the squad from last year. Ivan Harris of Springfield, Ohio, returns for his senior season. The former McDonald's All-American, one of four who will be on the Ohio State roster this season, is a 6-foot-8-inch 3-point shooting specialist with the ability to come off the bench to provide instant offense.
Matt Terwilliger played behind outgoing senior and 2006 Big Ten Player of the Year Terence Dials the last two seasons. A Troy, Ohio, native, Terwilliger made significant improvements between his freshman and sophomore seasons. He spelled Dials for most of his sophomore campaign until an appendectomy essentially ended his season just prior to the 2006 Big Ten Tournament.
At 6-8, he can guard the interior with an ability to draw defenders away from the lane with his 15-18 foot shooting range.
Sam Payne will be a sophomore in his second season as a walk-on guard for the Buckeyes. He provides the coaching staff with depth in the backcourt.
The Newcomers
Thad Matta recruited one of the best classes nationally for the 2006-07 season. Four of the top freshmen in the country along with a talented junior college forward joined the Buckeyes for fall quarter in Columbus.
The four incoming Ohio State freshmen all played for state championships during their senior high school seasons. Three won titles with the other finishing as runner-up. Greg Oden (a 7-0 center) and 6-1 guard Mike Conley, Jr., led Indiana's Lawrence North High School to its third-consecutive state championship March 25, 2006 with a victory over Muncie Central (80-56). Oden led all scorers with 26 points on 11-of-17 shooting from the field. He also was the game's top rebounder with 11. Conley added 21 points and seven boards in the win. Daequan Cook, a 6-5 guard, led Dayton (Ohio) Dunbar to its first state title in 19 years with a 73-46 victory over Triway in the Ohio Division II state championship game (3/25/06) at Value City Arena in Columbus. Cook scored 23 points in the victory. David Lighty, a 6-5 guard/forward, led his Villa Angela-St. Joseph (Cleveland, Ohio) squad to the Ohio Division III state title game as well. Lighty scored 20 points in a loss to North College Hill.
Four First Teamers
All four incoming freshmen were named to their state's first team all-state squads as seniors. Greg Oden and Mike Conley, Jr., where honored in Class 4A, the large school division in Indiana while Daequan Cook (Ohio Division II) and David Lighty (Ohio Division III) made their respective teams. Cook, the Division II Ohio Player of the Year, and Lighty both made the Associated Press all-state tournament teams as well in their respective divisions.
Three More McDonalds All-Americans
With the addition of Oden, Conley, Jr., and Cook, Ohio State will have four former McDonald's High School All-Americans on its squad in 2006-07. Senior Ivan Harris played in the annual game (first played in 1977) in 2003. Ohio State has had a total of 10 current or former students-athletes compete in the McDonald's game. Clark Kellogg (1979), Perry Carter (1987), Treg Lee (1987), Jim Jackson (1989), Charles Macon (1992) and Greg Simpson (1992) all played in the prestigious event. Ohio State has had multiple players play in the game twice previously with Carter and Lee in 1987 and Macon and Simpson in 1992. Ohio State and North Carolina had three players compete in the 2006 game.
Oden Claims Several National Awards
Greg Oden is one of the most recognized and honored high school student-athletes of all-time. His list of accomplishments grew when he was recognized in April 2006 as the Gatorade Boy's Basketball Player of the Year for the second-consecutive season, a rare feat accomplished just once before when LeBron James was so honored in 2001 and '02. The following is a partial list of awards and accomplishments for Oden during his high school career.
Associated Press First Team All-Indiana, 2004, '05, '06
Parade Magazine First Team All-American, 2005, '06
Parade Magazine Player of the Year, 2005, '06
Parade Magazine Third Team All-American, 2004
USA Today Player of the Year, 2005, '06
All-USA First Team, USA Today, 2005, '06
Gatorade Indiana Player of the Year, 2005, '06
Gatorade National Player of the Year, 2005, '06
National High School Coaches Association POY, 2006
Arthur L Trester Mental Attitude Award (Indiana)
Atlanta Tipoff Club Naismith Prep Player of the Year, 2006
McDonald's All-American, 2006
Morgan Wootten Award, 2006 McDonald's All-American Player of the Year
Indiana Class 4A Indiana State Champion, 2004, '05, '06
Nation's No. 1 ranked team (29-0) in 2006, USA Today and Sports Illustrated
Nation's No. 1 rated player by SI.com, 2006
Indiana 2006 Mr. Basketball, Indianapolis Star
Indiana record (tie) 45-consecutive wins, 2005-2006
Indiana record (tie) 3-consecutive state championships, 2004, '05, '06
Roundball Classic West Co-MVP (4/9/06)

U.S. National Team Invites Oden to Workouts
The only high school player invited to work out with the U.S. Senior National team July 19-26, 2006 in Las Vegas, Greg Oden was scheduled to practice against members from the national team who will be selected to represent the United State at the 2006 World Championships in Japan and ultimately the 2008 U.S. Olympic men's basketball team. Oden was unable to participate after right wrist surgery in June ended his summer competitive schedule.
Junior College Forward Completes 2006-07 Class
Othello Hunter, a 6-9 forward/center, was the final player to commit to the five-player incoming class of student-athletes in 2006-07. He averaged nine points and six rebounds a game for Hillsborough Community College in Tampa, Fla., as a freshman. He improved those numbers to 16.8 points and 11.4 rebounds a game as a sophomore. He had 15 games in 2005-06 with 10 or more rebounds with a season-high 20 boards vs. St. Petersburg College (1/21/06). For his career, he managed 10 or more rebounds 19 times and 10 or more points 32 times.
Hunter recorded 18 career double-doubles at HCC, including 14 during his sophomore season.
Hillsborough finished 24-6 in 2005-06 and 19-14 in 2004-05. The team lost in the 2006 Florida Community College Activities Association state tournament opening round to River Community College (75-68). Hunter scored 22 points, grabbed 17 rebounds and blocked six shots in the loss.
The Schedule
Ohio State will open the 2006-07 season as the host school for the 2006 SportsTime Ohio BCA Classic. Eight teams will play 12 games in Columbus Nov. 10-11 at Value City Arena. The field will be made up of Alabama A&M, IUPUI, Kent State, Loyola (Ill.), Princeton, South Dakota State and Virginia Military Institute. The Buckeyes also will take on two of the nation's top teams on the road in 2006. Ohio State travels to North Carolina as part of the Big Ten/ACC Challenge Nov. 29 and later takes on Florida, the defending NCAA champions, in Gainesville Dec. 23. A neutral-site game vs. Cincinnati in Indianapolis at the Wooden Classic renews a rivalry between the intrastate foes. Dec. 16. Tennessee also begins a home-and-home series with the Buckeyes with a clash in Columbus Jan. 13. The Big Ten season gets underway Jan. 2 with Indiana, an ESPN-televised game in Columbus. Ohio State will play Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and Minnesota once this season with home-and-home matches vs. the remaining league schools. Indiana and Iowa travel to Columbus while Illinois and Minnesota play host to the Buckeyes this season. Early Top 25 Rankings for 2006-07
No. 4 FoxSports.com (Jeff Goodman)
No. 2 San Jose Mercury News (Jon Wilner)
No. 3 Digger Phelps, ESPN
No. 4 Dick Vitale, ESPN
No. 4 CBS Sportsline.com (Gregg Doyel)
No. 5 Jay Bilas, ESPN
No. 5 Rick Bozich, Louisville-Courier-Journal
No. 6 Andy Katz, ESPN.com
Top 5 NBCSports.com (Ray Glier)
Top 5 Yahoo.com Sports (Dan Wetzel)
No. 6 SI.com (Luke Winn)
Top 7 Sportingnews.com (Kyle Veltrop)
Top 10 ESPN.com (Joe Lunardi)
 
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Some pics from today's media day......

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Ohio State basketball players line up for a team picture Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006 during the basketball media day in Columbus, Ohio.

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Ohio State freshman basketball players joke around as they prepare for a group picture Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006 during the basketball media day in Columbus, Ohio. Front row from left are Daequan Cook (31), Mike Conley (1) and David Lighty (23). Behind them are Othello Hunter, left, and Greg Oden.

capt.9602eb65885f45f6811a517b5d1c6158.ohio_st_media_day_basketball_ohks105.jpg

Ohio State freshman basketball pose for a group photo, Thursday, Oct. 12, 2006, during the basketball media day in Columbus, Ohio. From left are Daequan Cook, Mike Conley, David Lighty, Othello Hunter and Greg Oden.
 
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cnnsi.com

The ABCs of 2006-07

Answering the biggest questions for 20 elite teams


Ohio State: How good is Greg Oden?
It might be surprising to see anyone question a player with such unquestionable talent, but forgive me for being a mite skeptical that Oden, who will miss the start of the season as he recovers from wrist surgery, will step into the lineup in early January and lead the Buckeyes to the Final Four. He might be the best rebounder/shot-blocker in America, but he is still a freshman center in a sport that prizes experienced guards. If Oden were the final piece in an older puzzle, I might be more inclined to foretell a title, but this team will also depend heavily on at least two of his classmates, point guard Mike Conley and 6-5 swingman Daequan Cook.

Link

Buckeyes Open Practice on Oct. 13.


First exhibition game scheduled for Nov. 1.

mbb-freshman-100506.jpg

Members of the 2006-07 Ohio State men's basketball class of newcomers participated in a photo shoot Wednesday in the practice facility at Value City Arena in advance of the Buckeyes' first day of practice Oct. 13. Freshmen, left to right, David Lighty (23), Mike Conley Jr. (1) and Daequan Cook (31) along with junior transfer Othello Hunter (45) take to the court officially for the first time as Buckeyes Nov. 1 in the exhibition opener vs. Findlay (7 p.m.) at Value City Arena. Ohio State opens the regular season Nov. 10-12 in Columbus in the BCA Classic, a three-day, 12-team tournament at VCA.

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Freshman center Greg Oden works with a Sporting News photographer Wednesday for a preview on the Ohio State men's basketball team.
 
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Link

655059.jpeg


Ohio State Tabbed Ninth in Early Poll


Street and Smith's Selects Ohio State No. 9, Oden All-America


COLUMBUS, Ohio-When Ohio State opens the 2006-07 men's basketball season Nov. 10, it will be among the preseason Top 10 teams nationally, according to Street and Smith's College Basketball Yearbook.
Ohio State, fresh from its outright regular season Big Ten championship in 2006, is rated No. 9 by Street and Smith's in its annual preseason publication. The yearbook also selected the Buckeyes' freshman center, Greg Oden, as a preseason first-team All-America. The 7-foot center currently is rehabilitating a right wrist injury that will keep him sidelined for the early portion of Ohio State's 2006-07 schedule.
Thad Matta, the reigning Big Ten coach of the year, is in his third season on the Ohio State sidelines as head coach of the Buckeyes. He will direct the start of official practice Oct. 13 with a roster of 11 student-athletes, nine of which are available scholarship players.
With five returners and six newcomers, which includes a transfer who will sit out this season to satisfy NCAA rules, Matta will have his hands full early with scheduled road trips to North Carolina, No. 3 in the Street and Smith's poll, and No. 1 Florida. The Buckeyes also travel for a neutral-site game vs. Cincinnati in mid-December and take on Iowa State and Tennessee in Columbus. No. 7 Wisconsin will face Ohio State twice in Big Ten Conference play as well. Street & Smith's 2006-07 Preseason Top 25
1. Florida
2. Kansas
3. North Carolina
4. Pittsburgh
5. Duke
6. LSU
7. Wisconsin
8. Georgetown
9. Ohio State
10. UCLA
11. Alabama
12. Arizona
13. Texas A&M
14. Memphis
15. Boston College
16. Marquette
17. Creighton
18. Syracuse
19. Georgia Tech
20. Nevada
21. Gonzaga
22. Kentucky
23. Villanova
24. San Diego State
25. Southern California

All-America Teams
First team:
Ronald Steele, guard, Alabama
Chris Lofton, guard, Tennessee
Nick Fazekas, forward, Nevada
Joakim Noah, forward, Florida
Greg Oden, center, Ohio State


Second team:
Dominic James, guard, Marquette
Arron Afflalo, guard, UCLA
Tyler Hansbrough, forward, North Carolina
Glen Davis, forward, LSU
Aaron Gray, center, Pittsburgh
Third team:
Sean Singletary, guard, Virginia
Richard Roby, guard, Colorado
Jared Dudley, forward, Boston College
Al Horford, forward, Florida
Roy Hibbert, center, Georgetown
 
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SI

Ohio State will have to make do until Oden returns
Oct. 12, 2006
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Greg Oden, acclaimed by many as the best young big man in the country, won't play for Ohio State until January while he continues to recover from a wrist injury.
In the meantime, the Buckeyes - featuring five newcomers - will try to not let the season slip away.
"A coach once told me we're all a sprained ankle away from mediocrity," coach Thad Matta said Thursday at the team's media day. "We've got guys who know we're going to go through some ups and downs, but that's what makes you stronger in the end."
Oden, the 7-foot-1 freshman out of Lawrence North High School in Indianapolis, underwent surgery June 16 to repair a torn ligament in his right wrist. He will not participate in full practices with the Buckeyes until a screw used to stabilize the wrist is removed surgically and he has gone through rehabilitation.
Oden is running and staying in condition. His recovery is right on schedule, but that doesn't make his absence any easier to take.
"He's a freak athlete," backup center Matt Terwilliger said of the mobile, aggressive Oden.
Oden's loss is particularly keen for a team that went 26-6, won the Big Ten's regular season title and received a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament. The Buckeyes lost in the second round to Georgetown.
To help season a young but extremely talented team, Matta put together an ambitious schedule that includes several top teams before Big Ten play gets under way in January.
The Buckeyes play at North Carolina on Nov. 29, then match up with defending national champion Florida on Dec. 23. Matta said it's unlikely Oden will be available for either game, and that Terwilliger likely will be the Buckeyes' lone big man.
Terwilliger was a spot player behind Big Ten player of the year Terence Dials last season, averaging 2.3 points and 1.6 rebounds a game. He'll be asked to hold his own against a North Carolina team that stacks its lineup with Tyler Hansbrough and a Florida squad that can put big men Joakim Noah and Al Horford on the floor at the same time.
"I'm not going to lie, it worries me," point guard Jamar Butler said of the lack of depth under the basket.
In addition to Dials, the Buckeyes lost starters J.J. Sullinger, Je'Kel Foster and Matt Sylvester to graduation.
Butler (10.1 ppg, 4.1 apg) and Terwilliger will be joined in this year's rotation by sixth-man Ron Lewis (11.2 ppg). Filling in around the edges until Oden returns will be perimeter shooter Ivan Harris and four marquee first-year players.
Mike Conley, Oden's high school teammate, will share time at guard with two of the top players in Ohio, Daequan Cook and David Lighty. Expected to help out in the frontcourt is 6-9 Othello Hunter, a transfer from Hillsborough (Fla.) Community College.
A year ago, Ohio State played under the national radar for most of the season before rising as high as No. 6 in The Associated Press poll. That's not the case this year with the recruiting class dubbed "The Thad Five."
"The only microscope we're going to be under is our own," said Matta, 46-18 in two years at Ohio State. "That's the way we have to operate because with this team there are so many unknowns. We want to play our best basketball in February and March.
"Obviously we have some tremendous challenges ahead of us early on, but those things are going to do nothing but strengthen us later."[FONT=Arial, Helvetica]
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vrbryant;626178; said:
Why should football preclude the basketball season? Like, at all? This is precisely why we can't fill the Schott until late January--it's bullshit. The team rattles off eleven or so wins in a row to start the year in '05, and it was a treat if we could get 14,000 in an arena built to hold just under 20. Makes it that much more remarkable that Matta continues to convince kids to play here...

Excellent point. I've got my season tickets this year..........you bet your ass I'll be there for most of the games. It's kind of sad that the vibe around mens hoops is that most fair weather fans wait until they get out to a hot start before they start going to the games. Fuck em, I'd rather that those folks stay home.

Anyone remember the shitty crowd that showed up last season for the New Years Eve game against LSU? I do, I was there.........and was fortunate enough to witness one of the best games in recent memory (well.....I was at the Illinois game when Sylvester hit the game winner too). Regardless, it's fun to be a part of the early season stuff.........I enjoy watching a Matta coached team, they are very entertaining.
 
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daddyphatsacs;632275; said:
Excellent point. I've got my season tickets this year..........you bet your ass I'll be there for most of the games. It's kind of sad that the vibe around mens hoops is that most fair weather fans wait until they get out to a hot start before they start going to the games. Fuck em, I'd rather that those folks stay home.

Anyone remember the shitty crowd that showed up last season for the New Years Eve game against LSU? I do, I was there.........and was fortunate enough to witness one of the best games in recent memory (well.....I was at the Illinois game when Sylvester hit the game winner too). Regardless, it's fun to be a part of the early season stuff.........I enjoy watching a Matta coached team, they are very entertaining.

I understand where you are coming from to some extent, but isnt it the same everywhere. You build it, they will come. Also some people wait till the better games to spend their money, and weeknights are not always convient for everyone.

As for the jerseys I love em.
 
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DDN

Coach can only wait for Oden's wrist to heal

By Mark Gokavi
Staff Writer

Friday, October 13, 2006
COLUMBUS ? Ohio State men's basketball coach Thad Matta knows the basketball world is anxious to see super-recruit Greg Oden play.
So is Matta. But like everyone else, he must wait for the 7-footer's right wrist to heal.
"It seems like he's right on where they want him to be at this time" Matta said Thursday at Ohio State's Media Day. "The big thing is we don't want to rush anything and bring him back before he's 100 percent."
Matta said the target date for Oden's return is still Jan. 1, but that could change either way.
Oden, who had surgery June 16 for a torn ligament, still has a screw in his wrist that must be removed. Oden may end up playing while wearing a cast.
Seen, not heard from
Matta said his policy of not letting newcomers (Oden, Daequan Cook, Mike Conley, Othello Hunter, David Lighty and transfer Kyle Madsen) talk to the media until they've played is especially good for a young, highly-ranked team.
"You want them to get the feel of college basketball," Matta said. "One of the challenges we have is molding them and getting them to think along the lines that we want them to."
Buckeye men's notes
? OSU is ranked highly by many publications, but the coach said health and youth make predictions difficult.
"The only microscope we're going to be under is our own," Matta said. "That's the way we have to operate. This team, there's so many unknowns."
? Matta said the university is re-working his contract: "I'm hoping they'll have me here for a long time."
? Since the roster is small, there's an outside shot a walk-on could crack it. Matta said those tryouts are Monday.
? Matta said OSU has nearly sold out all Big Ten home games and that the school has never sold this many student tickets.
 
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DDN

OSU basketball preseason scouting report


By Staff reports

Friday, October 13, 2006

OHIO STATE
2005-06 record: 22-6, 12-4 Big Ten
Coach: Thad Matta (3rd year at OSU, 46-18; 7th year overall, 148-49)
Returning starter: G Jamar Butler (10.1 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 4.6 apg)
Key losses: C Terence Dials, G Je'Kel Foster, G J.J. Sullinger, G/F Matt Sylvester
Questions to answer: The big question is about the big man ? when will 7-footer Greg Oden fully recover from right wrist surgery? He is expected to be out until late December or January. ... Who will do the backcourt scoring? Jamar Butler and Dunbar High School standout Daequan Cook will be joined by guards Michael Conley and Ron Lewis (11.2 ppg). ... Who will man the middle until Oden's back? The candidates are junior college transfer Othello Hunter, Troy's Matt Terwilliger and Springfield's Ivan Harris.
Exhibition opener: Nov. 1, Findlay, 7 p.m., Schottenstein Center
Regular-season opener: Nov. 10, Virginia Military Institute, 8 p.m., Schottenstein Center
Best home game: Feb. 25 vs. Wisconsin ? This will be the second matchup between Big Ten contenders.
Best road game: Take your pick ? Nov. 29 at North Carolina, Dec. 16 against Cincinnati (in Indianapolis) or Dec. 23 at defending national champion Florida.
Quote: "We don't listen to (the national title hype). We know in our minds and hearts that we've still got a lot of work to do." ? Ohio State freshman Daequan Cook
 
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