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Men's Basketball Buckeye Tidbits 2006-2007 Season

ABJ

A New Year's resolution

Matta says OSU won't rush 7-foot-1 Oden back from wrist injury

By Marla Ridenour

Beacon Journal sportswriter

COLUMBUS - Basketball coach Thad Matta is sticking to a Jan. 1 target date for 7-foot-1 freshman center Greg Oden to join the Ohio State lineup.
It will be an agonizing wait for Matta, the Buckeyes and the two-time national high school player of the year, the likely No. 1 pick in this spring's NBA Draft if not for a change in the league's eligibility rules in the summer of 2005. Oden, from Lawrence North High School in Indianapolis, underwent surgery to repair a torn ligament in his right wrist on June 15.
He still has a screw inserted and is supposed to keep the wrist immobilized, so Matta hoped Oden took off his brace merely for photos at OSU's media day Thursday at the Schottenstein Center. The defending Big Ten champions, winners of the school's first outright league title in 14 years, begin workouts tonight and open the season Nov. 1 against Findlay.
``He's doing well,'' Matta said of Oden. ``It seems like he's right where they want him to be. His conditioning, those types of things are in great shape. Obviously I'd take him if it was earlier. But I don't want to put a player in a position that could jeopardize his future.
``Like I told Greg, if he never scores a point at Ohio State, what he's done for our program has been tremendous. We'll bring him along slow and get him right.''
Matta did not allow freshmen to be interviewed, although Oden might be made available in a week or two. So it was left to Matta to explain Oden's level of frustration.
``He's tired of being injured right now,'' Matta said. ``We go through things and he can only do a few of them and he has to get off the court. We'll involve him as much as we can. When you get into the games, that's going to bother him a little bit more.
``I've been very impressed with his basketball intellect and how he sees things. I think he's going to have the capabilities of really picking it up quick.''
If the target date for Oden holds up, 6-foot-8, 230-pound junior Matt Terwilliger might be the starting center during a rugged nonconference schedule that includes a Nov. 29 game at North Carolina and a Dec. 23 game at Florida. That means Terwilliger would have to guard the Tar Heels' Tyler Hansbrough and the Gators' Joakim Noah.
Conference play begins Jan. 2 at home against Indiana.
``I don't want him to rush back and risk hurting his wrist again, but I've been working on my four skills for 10 months. I'm ready to go at that position,'' Terwilliger said of Oden. ``Usually 6-10, 6-11 guys have 20 or 30 pounds on me. I'll have to use my quickness to get around 'em.''
Oden heads a recruiting class that also includes his prep teammate Mike Conley, a 6-1 guard who is the son of Olympic triple jumper Mike Conley, David Lighty, a 6-5 guard/forward from Villa Angela-St. Joseph and Daequan Cook, a 6-5 guard from Dayton Dunbar. Another newcomer is Othello Hunter, a 6-9 forward from Hillsborough Community College.
But it is the presence of Oden that has put Ohio State on the cover of several national college basketball previews even though junior guard Jamar Butler is the Buckeyes' only returning starter.
The attention on Oden could be resented by some teammates, but that does not seem to be the case at OSU.
``They knew what was expected and they didn't come here with a big head,'' senior guard Ron Lewis said of the freshmen. ``They came here ready to learn.''
Asked his impression of Oden, Butler said, ``I think he's too nice. He needs to get a little meaner to me. He's a very nice, respectful kid.''
What impressed senior forward Ivan Harris about Oden is ``how humble he is. People see him, it's like, `Man, he's 7-foot and he's 28 years old.' Once you meet him, he's very down to earth and gets along with anybody.''
Those reactions do not surprise Matta.
``He's a special young man,'' he said of Oden. ``He's a caring kid. The humility he has, I don't know anybody who's ever walked his shoes who could be more humble than he is.
``He has a burning desire to be a great basketball player. The things that people have told him or have been written about him, he doesn't believe them. He wants to go out and do them himself.''
Buckeyes
Matta said he and the university are in the process of redoing Matta's contract and he hopes it will be finalized ``real quick.'' He said it was director of athletics Gene Smith who felt Matta deserved a raise after going 46-18 in his first two years. ``I'm hoping they'll have me here for a long time,'' Matta said.
Matta said Lighty will face no disciplinary action from a June 7 arrest at his high school. He and two friends were accused of firing a BB gun at a male jogging on the track.
No charges were filed in Cuyahoga County or Cleveland Municipal court, according to spokesmen for both departments.
 
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Canton

[FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Buckeyes basketball making do without Oden[/FONT]
Friday, October 13, 2006 [FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]By RUSTY MILLER AP Sports Writer[/FONT]
13osubb.jpg

Ohio State freshman basketball players (from left) Daequan Cook, Mike Conley, David Lighty, Othello Hunter and Greg Oden pose during the team?s picture day Thursday in Columbus.

COLUMBUS - 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."AP KICCHIRO SATO
SAY CHEESE Ohio State freshman basketball players (from left) Daequan Cook, Mike Conley, David Lighty, Othello Hunter and Greg Oden pose during the team's picture day Thursday in Columbus.
 
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CPD

Football helps Matta sell basketball

Game-day atmosphere, fans' passion impress recruits
Friday, October 13, 2006Doug Lesmerises
Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus- The Heisman front-runner and the future NBA No. 1 pick haven't met, not yet. But Troy Smith is already a Greg Oden fan.
"I've seen him around," Ohio State's quarterback said of the 7-footer. "He's huge. I know he's going to show that on the basketball court. I'm very, very, very excited for the upcoming basketball season. I think we have as good a chance as anybody in the nation to win a national championship."
Remember, Smith's talking about basketball. That's the status of Ohio State sports at the moment, where the No. 1 football team in the country will share at least a tiny piece of the spotlight with the most highly anticipated college basketball freshman in a decade. Oden and his new teammates start practice today as a national basketball curiosity in a football mecca.
The defending Big Ten hoops champs have created their own aura on campus with one of the top two recruiting class in the country. After speculation last season that coach Thad Matta might leave for a job at Indiana, where basketball is king, it's clear he's found a way to make a mark at a football school.
Matta's ready to enter the third year of an eight-year, $11 million contract, but is in negotiations with Athletic Director Gene Smith regarding a new deal to extend his stay.
"I think the goal is, number one, I'm hoping they'll have me here for a long time," Matta said. "Hopefully, that will be settled here real quick."
Football might help his cause. Having coached previously at Butler and Xavier, Matta is - for the first time - running a program alongside a top-flight football team. Like at many schools, football games are a popular recruiting tool for basketball.
On game days, Matta scrambles to keep tabs on potential future players and their families.
"I want kids to see how passionate Ohio State fans are," Matta said Thursday. "I know full well football has a much better tradition than we do, but I've always said these people love the Buckeyes. I think it's vitally important. They are number one in the country right now and Troy with the Heisman race, I think it does nothing but help us because it accentuates how powerful this place is."
Two years ago, Oden took in a win over Cincinnati. Last year, it was the Texas game. Junior center Matt Terwilliger said he went to several games during his recruitment.
"The atmosphere's amazing, and it's not even just inside the football game," Terwilliger said. "The city the whole day of the game is unlike anything I've ever seen anywhere else. It just kind of showed how much this city cares about its athletics."
So, when the basketball players had a free night this summer, they showed they cared, the four freshmen and junior point guard Jamar Butler sitting in the bleachers for the Buckeyes' night practice at Ohio Stadium.
"We were just sitting around and we heard the football team was good," Butler said, "So, I went down to the freshmen's room to see if they wanted to go and we went over."
Football coach Jim Tressel would have recognized the visitors had he seen them. He has met Oden.
"He's tall," Tressel said.
And Tressel understands the influence the Ohio State vibe can have across sports.
"I think Thad has told me many times he enjoys it when he brings his guys to our games," Tressel said. "Thad talks constantly about just that energy, that electricity that's in Ohio Stadium. Just like I love bringing those guys when the rafters are shaking [at the Schottenstein Center]. That tells you a little bit about the place you're considering."
Players on both teams are now considering the possibilities. Florida and Texas have already built elite programs in both sports. Last season, Ohio State won Big Ten titles in football, men's basketball and women's basketball. This year, the teams want more.
"We talk about it a lot," senior basketball guard Ron Lewis said. "Just thinking that, wow, what if they do win a national championship, if they came make it that far and then us coming right behind them . . . it puts a lot of talk in everybody's ears."
 
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Dispatch

COMMENTARY
If Matta knows what he?s got, he?s not telling

Friday, October 13, 2006


BOB HUNTER

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With people who didn?t even know Ohio State played men?s basketball until a few months ago suddenly talking about Final Fours and national championships for this freshman-heavy team, it might be a good idea to ask Thad Matta whether he has any idea just how good these guys could be.
(Memo to all you basketball newbies: Matta?s the coach.)
So, coach, do you have an idea?
"I don?t," Matta said, his voice barely above a whisper. "Honest ly, I don?t."
Hmmm. But would you really tell us if you did? mean, if you were thinking, boy, this team could go all the way, would you tell us if we asked?
Matta laughed.
"No," he said. "I wouldn?t tell you."
So there you have it, Matta thinks the Buckeyes are going all the way. Better start asking off work for Final Four weekend, start lining up hotel rooms in Atlanta, and ? oh, all right, I?m kidding.
Maybe Matta has an idea of how good the Buckeyes can be, but he really isn?t joshing when he says that all the "unknowns" make it difficult to get a good read on just what he has. Even if just about everyone else is aiming high because of an allworld five-man recruiting class led by 7-footer Greg Oden, Matta isn?t about to get caught up in the hype.
He will admit he?s excited, that his mind has been racing even faster than usual and he has had difficulty getting to sleep just thinking about how he?s going to coach these guys. That is as close as he gets to an admission that this is a special group.
"At the start of the season, I?m back to my mode where I don?t sleep at night," Matta said, "and I was hoping to change that this year. But we haven?t even got to the season and I?m already in that mode."
And that doesn?t usually happen to him before preseason practices.
"Not that I can remember," Matta said. "My wife asked me this morning what time did you come bed last night? And I was tired, and I couldn?t sleep. I think that will change, but there are so many unknowns, I sit and try to put different scenarios together? "
Matta isn?t like the hockey coach who lies in bed at night mixing and matching players on imaginary lines. He is thinking only about practice. It is one sign that he really isn?t letting his mind wander off to some imaginary net-cutting ceremony down the road.
"Right now it?s more along the lines of what?s the perfect drill to teach this," Matta said. "I?m not thinking of lineups yet because I haven?t seen them play enough. I?m really at the point of looking at practices and how long we can go because of the few numbers we?ve got."
That means he?s taking clich?s to a new level. Because of all the annoying unknowns, he?s taking them one practice at a time.
Four talented freshmen ? Oden, Mike Conley, Daequan Cook and David Lighty ? make any predictions iffy, because freshmen rarely dominate in the Big Ten. Even Michigan?s Fab Five didn?t win a conference title. Mix the freshmen with highly rated junior college transfer Othello Hunter, returning starters Jamar Butler and Ron Lewis and subs Matt Terwilliger and Ivan Harris and you have a group that could, could, be very, very good. It is that vision that has the Buckeyes ranked in many preseason top 10s.
Matta has coached only one other team with that status and it doesn?t help. That Xavier team was much, much different from this one.
"On that team you had David West," Matta said. "You knew if anything ever went wrong, you just stood up and said, ?Throw it to David,? and he either got fouled or got a great shot up. You had a team that had won the (Atlantic 10) and won 26 games before."
In other words, he knew that team was going to be great. And he still wouldn?t have told us.

Bob Hunter is a sports colum nist for The Dispatch
.
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

MEN
Bright lights on OSU
Great recruiting class, high expectations put national focus on young team

Friday, October 13, 2006

Scott Priestle
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

20061013-Pc-F4-0500.jpg

NEAL C . LAURON DISPATCH Greg Oden glances back during a photo shoot as he stands with the other members of Ohio State?s heralded recruiting class, from left: Othello Hunter, David Lighty, Mike Conley and Daequan Cook.


Ohio State guard Jamar Butler recently participated in a photo shoot for USA Today, and an action picture of Butler graces the cover of Lindy?s Sports college basketball preview issue.
"I walked into the store and saw myself staring at myself," he said with a laugh. "It was pretty nice to see."
It is one of the spoils of being a key returning player on a preseason top-10 team, which Butler is for the Buckeyes.
And one of the spoils of being Greg Oden?s teammate.
Oden, a two-time national player of the year in high school, is the main member of a five-player recruiting class that has turned a rare spotlight on the OSU men?s basketball program.
No longer can Butler and company say they get no respect ? a refrain they used to great effect last season in rising from unranked to undisputed Big Ten champion.
"It means something," Butler said yesterday, "but we?re trying not to let it mean anything."
The Buckeyes have been ranked as high as fourth by The Sporting News, and at least 14 of their 29 regularseason games will be on national television.
Oden is on the cover of Street & Smith?s and Athlon Sports preseason magazines, he sat for photo shoots with The Sporting News and Playboy, and he has an upcoming shoot with Sports Illustrated. ESPN the Magazine shot Oden along with fellow freshmen Mike Conley Jr., Daequan Cook and David Lighty.
Coach Thad Matta acknowledged that the attention could become a problem, particularly if so much of it is centered on the newcomers.
"But I hope the way we do things here. ? No word is used more around here than ?team,? " Matta said. "I hope that continues."
In an effort to shield the freshmen from some of the spotlight, Matta made them off-limits to the media yesterday. And in an effort to build team unity, Matta asked all of his players to live in the same dormitory on campus (in years? past, upperclassmen were allowed to live off-campus).
Butler and senior guard Ron Lewis said the living arrangement has had the desired effect.
"We hang out a lot together," Lewis said.
"These guys are all good guys," Butler said. "They just love to play the game of basketball."
Each praised the freshmen for being willing to be part of a group, not necessarily the focus of the group.
"Nobody has a big head," Lewis said. "Those guys have been in the limelight since they were in eighth grade. They know how to handle it, how to handle themselves."
No further punishment

Lighty and two of his high school teammates are still waiting to find out if they will be indicted on misdemeanor charges stemming from a pellet-gun incident early in the summer, but Matta said Lighty will not face punishment from the team "because he wasn?t with us."
The incident occurred June 7 in Cleveland. Lighty began classes at Ohio State 12 days later.
"That was an incident that was ? blown out of proportion," Matta said. "David is very regretful for being in that situation, and it was still two or three weeks before we ever got him. He was still in high school when it happened."
Lighty and two of his teammates at Villa Angela-St. Joseph were arrested on suspicion of assault, criminal trespassing and criminal activity after a Cleveland man said he was shot with a pellet gun while jogging at the school. The case has not yet gone to a grand jury.
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

RUMBLINGS
Friday, October 13, 2006


BOB HUNTER

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There s a good chance that most, if not all, of Ohio State?s men?s basketball home games will be sold out this winter.
The ticket office is still processing requests, but all of the Big Ten games are already close to being sold out. The office is determining how it will sell nonconference tickets to the general public for student seating that will be available when school is out of session.
"If those go, we will be back at capacity for almost every game," senior director of ticketing Bill Jones said.
The only seating change will be to put students at both ends of the court in Value City Arena, instead of one. More than 2,000 tickets have been allocated for those lower-bowl seats and are already gone. More than 4,000 student season tickets, for nine Big Ten games plus the Eastern Kentucky game, have been sold, which might represent a high point for the program. Last year, the school sold only 2,400 student split-season packages. This year, an undetermined number of splits was sold in addition to the full-season packages.
Early season sellouts will be tougher to achieve, but the public is at least likely to snap up those 2,000 seats behind the baskets.
"Our goal is to fill up those end zones and get ?em rocking," athletic director Gene Smith said.
He said coach Thad Matta and the players have attended events on campus this quarter to promote the team, which is ranked among the top 10 nationally and features one of the nation?s highest-rated recruiting classes. The Buckeyes begin practice tonight. The exhibition opener is Nov. 1 against Findlay in Value City Arena.
 
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Free Rivals

10/13/06

Ohio State to Survive until Oden's January return

Associated Press
Rivals.com College Basketball

COLUMBUS, Ohio -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."
 
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IndyStar

Buckeyes welcome LN stars

Former Butler player and coach Thad Matta hit the basketball lottery when he signed former Lawrence North standouts Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr., the core of an eagerly awaited Ohio State recruiting class.

The 7-foot Oden is recovering from June 16 surgery on his right wrist, so his debut might not come before January. But Conley, a nifty 6-1 point guard, figures to be in the rotation from the get-go along with fellow newcomers Daequan Cook, David Lighty and junior college transfer Othello Hunter.

The rebuilt Buckeyes were 26-6 last season. Their tests will come early and often, including a Nov. 29 game at North Carolina, a Dec. 23 trip to Florida and the Big Ten Conference opener Jan. 2 against IU.

The Buckeyes play twice in Indiana this season: Dec. 16 against Cincinnati in the Wooden Tradition at Conseco Fieldhouse, and Jan. 31 at Purdue.
 
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ABJ

Plenty of hype to go around at Ohio State

Only returning starter, Jamar Butler hopes to deliver on the court

By Marla Ridenour

Beacon Journal sportswriter

COLUMBUS - Jamar Butler is already starting to feel the hype that the Ohio State football team has been dealing with for months.
The junior point guard from Lima is the only returning starter for basketball coach Thad Matta's Buckeyes, who went 26-6 last season, captured their first outright Big Ten title in 14 years and reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
With the arrival of the top-rated ``Thad Five'' recruiting class that includes two-time national player of the year Greg Oden, OSU is being picked in the preseason top five by most national magazines and Internet sites even though wrist surgery could keep 7-foot-1 Oden out until Jan. 1.
On campus, the buzz surrounding the top-ranked Ohio State football team already has spilled over into basketball.
``It's very exciting,'' Butler said. ``You walk around campus and people are yelling at you saying they want two national championships. We're going to try to do it. I hope the football team gets their job done first, then we'll take care of ours.''
After exhibitions against Findlay and Walsh, Ohio State opens the basketball season Nov. 10 against Virginia Military Institute in the three-day SportsTime Ohio BCA Classic. The field also includes Kent State, Loyola (Ill.), Princeton, South Dakota State, IUPUI and Alabama A&M.
OSU's rugged nonconference schedule is highlighted by a Nov. 29 trip to North Carolina and a Dec. 23 game at Florida. Big Ten play starts Jan. 2 at home against Indiana.
``It's going to be a great learning experience for us,'' Matta said. ``One thing we'll be able to say is we played in two of the toughest environments in college basketball in North Carolina and Florida and we're not going to see anything different when we go on the road in the Big Ten.''
As junior center/forward Matt Terwilliger observed, ``Those are the games you sign up to play. In the Dean Dome, in the Swamp, it doesn't get much better than that.''
Senior forward Ivan Harris thinks that those games will be a great measuring stick.
``All this hype about our team and these freshmen, this will show us where we stand,'' Harris said.
But with only four returning players, the start could be rocky. OSU's top returning scorer is last year's sixth man Ron Lewis, a 6-4 senior guard, who averaged 11.2 points.
Butler, third team all-Big Ten, became the first OSU player since Brent Darby in 2002-03 to break 100 in points, rebounds and assists in a season. Butler totaled 314, 101 and 144, respectively. He finished second in the league in assist-to-turnover ratio (+2.53), fifth in 3-point shooting percentage (.414), sixth in assists (4.65) and seventh in foul-shooting percentage (.804).
``I've been saying he was the most improved player in the country last year,'' Matta said.
Butler will have added responsibility this season.
``I have to try to lead this young group,'' Butler said. ``But some of these guys played on ESPN in high school. I think they know what's coming.''
Matta isn't so sure.
``I don't know how this team's going to be,'' Matta said. ``It would be foolish to speculate on what they're going to be able to do. There's so many unknowns. College basketball has changed drastically. Greg Oden is not healthy, that's nobody's fault, that's life. A coach once told me, 'We're all a sprained ankle away from mediocrity.'
``We're going to go through some ups and downs. We want to play our best basketball in February and March. We have some tremendous challenges early on, those will do nothing but strengthen us.''
Oden, who joined LeBron James, Lew Alcindor and Jerry Lucas as the only two-time national prep players of the year, underwent surgery June 16 to repair a torn tendon in his right wrist. Oden was first injured during the season at Indianapolis North High School, then aggravated it during the McDonald's All-American game.
Matta's target date to have Oden is Jan. 1, but Matta said, ``No one has given a definitive date, `This is when he'll be free to do whatever.' Even then he may have to play with a cast on.''
While he waits for Oden, Matta must infuse his young talent with his four veterans. The four freshmen -- Oden and prep teammate Mike Conley, Villa Angela-St. Joseph's David Lighty and Dayton Dunbar's Daequan Cook -- played for state championships during their senior seasons and all but Lighty won titles. Indianapolis North claimed its third consecutive Class 4A crown, Division II Dunbar captured its first championship in 19 years and VASJ fell to North College Hill in Division III.
Oden, Conley and Cook were McDonald's All-Americans, giving the Buckeyes four on the roster, including Harris (of Oak Hill Academy). Conley has such athleticism and ability to run a game that Matta could play him and Butler together.
Also making a big impact could be newcomer Othello Hunter, a junior forward from Hillsborough Community College. Hunter averaged 16.8 points and 11.4 rebounds last season and might have the power to challenge Terwilliger for the starting center spot until Oden returns. (Terwilliger is 6-8, 230 pounds, Hunter 6-9 and 225).
``Othello is big and strong like Greg is,'' Lewis said. ``He's going to show a lot of people he's a top player and could be good in this league.''
The program was plagued by controversy and lawsuits at the end of former coach Jim O'Brien's era, but the dark clouds seem to have disappeared. After going 48-16 in two years Matta is enthused, and not just because his eight-year, $11 million contract is being renegotiated.
``I'm happy about how many people have said, 'We're excited about basketball,' '' Matta said. ``With where ticket sales are, I think every Big Ten game is sold out, I think we've got the highest student tickets sold Ohio State has ever had. That is exciting.
``When we came here three years ago, we knew we had a mission to build this program. I don't think we're there yet. Things are definitely heading in the right direction.''
 
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THELANTERN

Big year ahead for Buckeye basketball



Chris Patrick

Issue date: 10/18/06 Section: Sports

For months, talk of a national championship has crossed the lips of Buckeyes fans. Now, many forecasters predict similar conversations will continue well into spring concerning prospects in a sport other than football.

The biggest names in college basketball analysis, from Digger Phelps to Dick Vitale, believe this year's edition of the Ohio State men's basketball team will have its best opportunity to win the second title in school history since Scoonie Penn and Michael Redd led the 1999 Final Four run, now erased from the record books and the rafters. Phelps and Vitale, both of ESPN, rank the Buckeyes third and fourth, respectively.

With the ultimate goal in reach, it is definitely present on the players' minds.

"The first day we met as a team, coach (Thad Matta) showed us a packet with Final Four information," preseason first-team All-Big Ten pick Jamar Butler said at media day last Thursday. "He told us if we want to be there we have to work hard."

The junior guard is one of only four returning players that saw significant action for last season's Big Ten regular-season and tournament championship squad (26-6, 12-4), selected as a No. 2 seed in the Minnesota Regional before falling to Georgetown in the second round. Expected to step into the void is one of the most highly-touted recruiting classes in OSU history.

In spite of the publicity, the newcomers have been pupils rather than prima donnas.

"The freshmen listen and respect us," senior guard Ron Lewis said at media day. "(They) came ready to learn and without big heads."

Highlighting the list is 7-foot, 275-pound center Greg Oden. The two-time Gatorade High School Player of the Year brought immediate credibility to the Buckeyes and has already drawn praise from his new coach.

"I have been really impressed with his basketball intellect and how well he has picked up on things," Matta said Thursday.

Oden is expected to be sidelined until January while recovering from off-season surgery on his right wrist. When he does return, he will be joined by his teammate from Lawrence North High School and fellow McDonald's All-American guard Mike Conley Jr. The two led the Indianapolis school to a third straight state championship this past spring. Guard Daequan Cook, also an All-American, and guard/forward David Lighty round out the group of four freshmen; none of whom are permitted to talk with the media until logging game action.

Talent aside, Matta knows it will not be easy to have his team prepared for opening night.

"We have a tremendous challenge ahead of us because we are so young," he said. "We have a lot of new guys and a short time to figure out what we can and can't do without sacrificing teaching the fundamentals."

Nevertheless, the blend of new and old faces hasn't diminished the solid team chemistry that was so important to the success enjoyed last season.

"From the first day we were really close," Butler said. "We have a strong team bond."

With the early-season absence of Oden, junior center/forward Matt Terwilliger will get a chance to step up for OSU after spending his first two years in the shadow of Terrence Dials.

"If we played tomorrow, he would likely be our center," Matta said. "He can step out and shoot the ball for us and his post game has gotten better."

The Buckeyes will open regular-season competition against the Virginia Military Institute in the eight-team SportsTime Ohio Black Coaches Association Classic at Schottenstein Arena on Nov. 10. A number of early tests highlight this year's schedule, including trips to Chapel Hill to face off with North Carolina on Nov. 29, Indianapolis for a neutral-site affair with Cincinnati on Dec. 16 and Gainesville to play the defending champions - the Florida Gators - a week later.

"You can't wait for these games," Terwilliger said Thursday afternoon. "They are why you play basketball. They will be a challenge, but it doesn't get much better than that."

OSU will embark on the new calendar year and the 16-game Big Ten slate on Jan. 2 at home against Indiana.
 
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Dispatch

Thad Matta , whose Ohio State men?s basketball team will wear redesigned white uniforms at home and scarlet on the road this season, would like to add a third set to the wardrobe: gray uniforms last worn when Randy Ayers was coach.
But Matta can?t bring the old ones out of mothballs, so it remains only a wish.
"(Nike doesn?t) give those uniforms away," Matta said. "That?s a myth that we get whatever we want."
A set would cost about $6,000. "Maybe we can get Jimmy Jackson to buy them for us," Matta said.
 
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