COLUMBUS, Ohio — Senior guard Bruce Thornton added another milestone to his Ohio State career Saturday, becoming the all-time leading scorer in program history during the Buckeyes’ 91-78 win over the Indiana Hoosiers. Thornton entered the game needing 12 points to pass former Buckeye standout...
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Bruce Thornton’s Loyalty and Leadership Lead Him to Ohio State’s All-Time Scoring Record
March 8, 2026 by Caroline Rice
Senior guard Bruce Thornton added another milestone to his Ohio State career Saturday, becoming the all-time leading scorer in program history during the Buckeyes’ 91-78 win over the Indiana Hoosiers.
Thornton entered the game needing 12 points to pass former Buckeye standout Dennis Hopson atop the program’s scoring list with 2,096 all-time points. He reached the mark in front of a historic sellout home crowd at the Schottenstein Center with 18,809 in attendance, finishing the afternoon with 25 points and seven assists as Ohio State secured the victory, likely clinching their spot in the NCAA Tournament.
For Thornton, the achievement is one he admitted he never expected when he first arrived in Columbus.
“With all of the great players that came through here and played at a very high level and put this place in great positions. I never thought this would ever be a thing,” Thornton said. “If you told me freshman year this could happen, I would tell you to get out of my face.”
The senior guard has built his place in the Ohio State record book through steady production over four seasons. After arriving as a highly regarded recruit out of Milton High School in Fairburn, Georgia, Thornton quickly established himself in the Buckeyes’ lineup, starting all 35 games as a freshman during the 2022–23 season. His role and production continued to grow each year, eventually placing him among the most accomplished scorers in program history.
Thornton averaged 10.6 points per game as a freshman, then jumped to 15.7 as a sophomore, 17.7 as a junior and 19.9 per game this season. A three-level scorer throughout his career, he has shot 37.9 percent from three-point range and 48.2 percent overall from the field while posting a career effective field goal percentage of 55.6 percent.
His senior season has been the most efficient of his career as he has carried a significant offensive load for Ohio State.
Thornton is shooting 55.2 percent from the field and 39.4 percent from three this year, producing an effective field goal percentage of 62.3 percent, the best mark of his Buckeye career.
Thornton has also been recognized for his production within the conference. He earned second-team All-Big Ten honors during the 2024-25 season after being named third-team All-Big Ten the year prior. He has also excelled academically, earning Academic All-Big Ten recognition in both of those seasons, and graduating in December of 2025 with a degree in Sport Industry.
Beyond scoring, Thornton has been one of the most productive playmakers in program history. He ranks third all-time at Ohio State with 528 career assists and owns a career assist-to-turnover ratio of roughly three to one. His assist numbers dipped slightly late in the 2024-25 season when the Buckeyes began using him more frequently off the ball, but his ability to create for others has remained a key part of his game.
Thornton has also made an impact on the glass despite his size. Entering Saturday’s game, he was just nine rebounds away from becoming only the second player in Big Ten history to record 2,000 points, 500 rebounds and 500 assists in a career.
Before the game on Saturday, Ohio State head coach Jake Diebler reflected on the consistent efforts Thornton has shown throughout his career and the work that went into reaching the milestone.
In an era where many players transfer and move on to find better opportunities, Thornton stuck it out at Ohio State through the ups and downs and was the piece of the program that Diebler built his team around when taking over as head coach.
“It speaks to the consistency, the talent, the work ethic, just the person that Bruce is,” Diebler said. “He’s worked really hard and earned what he’s got.”
Thornton’s impact has extended beyond scoring. Over the course of his career, he developed into one of the program’s leaders and became the first player in Ohio State history to serve as a team captain for four consecutive seasons.
“My mom always told me, if you’re going to start something, you have to finish,” Thornton said. “Everything is different now with NIL and the portal changes, but I just stay true to who I am.”
That mindset helped define Thornton’s time with the Buckeyes as he remained with the program through all four years of his career during an era where roster movement has become common across college basketball.
Diebler is not the only coach to recognize just how rare a player like Thornton is.
“He’s what college basketball is all about,” Purdue head coach Matt Painter said after the Buckeyes beat the Boilermakers last Sunday. “He could’ve ran, he could’ve transferred, he could’ve done all that stuff but he stayed and he competed. He fought himself to be in this position. He has a lot of individual accolades, but I know the way he’s wired, good for him to be the all-time leading scorer, but I know he’d trade that to get in the NCAA Tournament. He’s about winning. He’s not about himself. He’s not about the fluff. He’s not about the attention-seeking behavior. He’s about winning, being a good teammate. Dudes like that are gold.”
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