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Results for tag: Ohio State
Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 27, 2011 at 07:57:10 PM

 

Brandon Knight’s 15-foot jumper ended Ohio State’s season in a 62-60 loss to Kentucky in the Sweet Sixteen.  The Buckeyes ran into the same problem that led to Wisconsin’s defeat on Thursday, which is an inability to make shots--both contested and uncontested shots.  Most shocking was that OSU was just 31 percent inside the arc.  But give credit to Kentucky, which features one of the finest interior defenses in the country, allowing opponents to make just 42 percent of their two point attempts.  It was an especially frustrating night for William Buford, who was just 2 of 16 from the field.  The Buckeyes were led by Jared Sullinger’s 21 points.  
 
I’m writing this just after Virginia Commonwealth punched its ticket to
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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 20, 2011 at 10:13:57 PM

Jordan Taylor didn’t have a great game, but he had a great final two minutes.  The Big Ten Geek Player of the Year was an awful 2-16 from the field, and was severely outplayed by his counterpart, Jacob Pullen (who lit up the Badgers for 38 points).  But in crunch time, Taylor made his presence felt, with a key steal that led to a Mike Bruesewitz three pointer, and then later blocked Pullen’s three point attempt that would have tied the game with seconds on the clock.  The end result was a 70-65 win for Wisconsin, who advances to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2008.  And the good news is that they won’t have to guard Stephen Curry.  This game was a physical affair, as both Jon Leuer and Keaton Nankivil were bloodied in the opening minutes

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 19, 2011 at 12:52:26 PM

Illinois was fairly even with first round opponent UNLV to start off the game.  After the Rebels took an early 9-8 lead, however, it was all Illini as Bruce Weber's team cruised to a 73-62 victory.  Frankly, the game was not as close as the score, as Illinois had around a 20-point cushion for most of the game. The turnovers played out as expected, with UNLV forcing a lot of them, while Illinois failed to do the same.  But when you shoot 62 percent on twos and 54 percent on threes, while holding the opponent to 47 percent and 29 percent, the turnover battle just isn't as important.  The Illini also limited UNLV's second chances, grabbing 79 percent of the available defensive rebounds.  Mike Davis was especially impressive with 22 points (13 shots), 9 rebounds,

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 14, 2011 at 03:36:37 PM

 

Seven teams.  This time last week, no such thought entered my mind.  Did things break just right at the Big Ten Tournament for this to happen?  You bet.  But nonetheless, the conference is certainly good enough to get seven in, and they’re all good enough to be dancing.  The lowest ranking by Pomeroy is Michigan State, sitting at 41.  So bravo to the Big Ten, now let’s see if they can make some noise in the Dance.
 
Ohio State (#1 seed, East Region) 
Technically, Ohio State’s first game is the winner of Texas San-Antonio/Alabama State.  But the Buckeyes will win that game, easily, and nobody wants to read precisely why and how they will.  I’m sure Thad Matta will say all the right things about not overlooking
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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 6, 2011 at 06:30:09 PM

Iowa scored the biggest upset of the season when it took down Purdue 67-65 in a 71 possession game.  The Hawkeyes dominated the glass, limiting the Boilermakers to grabbing just 25 percent of their misses.  Iowa also hounded Purdue on the perimeter, limiting the Boilers to a 5-25 performance from behind the arc.  E’Twaun Moore and JaJuan Johnson were both rather pedestrian as well, needing 34 shots to get to 33 points.  Purdue also didn’t help themselves with their 59 percent accuracy from the free throw line.  
 
But give the Hawkeyes credit.  They took down a top-10 team that was playing for a share of the conference crown.  Fran McCaffrey’s squad denied them that banner, and there’s Jarryd Cole to thank for that.  The

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Mar 2, 2011 at 09:40:05 AM

In the college coaching community, there's almost no idea that is more deeply ingrained than the following formula:

 

2 fouls + first half = bench

 

This is so commonly accepted as the correct move that any variance from its wisdom is certain to prompt TV commentators to focus intently on it, with terms like "rolling the dice" being the norm. But is this always the correct move, regardless of the player?

 

Take last night's 75-67 Purdue win over Illinois. Bruce Weber's team was on fire out of the gates, passing and cutting their way to easy looks against the normally stingy Purdue defense. After 18 possessions, the Illini held a 31-18 lead and had the Boilers back on their heels. This was the good Illinois offense that we haven't seen much of in conference play, and

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Feb 27, 2011 at 07:23:23 PM

Michigan has really thrown a wrench into the at-large picture in the Big Ten.  Just a week ago, I thought Minnesota was in relatively good shape.  Sure, the Gophers were sitting at 6-8 in conference play, but with 3 of the 4 remaining games at home--none of which against Ohio State, Purdue, Wisconsin, or Illinois--as well as a road game at Northwestern, 9 or 10 wins certainly seemed possible.  Well, two home losses later, now it looks like Minnesota has work to do in the Big Ten Tournament.  The latest loss came at the hands of a surging Michigan team, who prevailed 70-63 thanks to some hot outside shooting.  The Wolverines made 12 of 28 three pointers, and when Michigan makes their threes, they’re very difficult to stop.  Of course, if Michigan is making

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Feb 23, 2011 at 09:58:12 AM

Coming off their second loss in three games, the Ohio State Buckeyes took out some frustration on Illinois in an 89-70 shellacking. This was a magnificent offensive performance for Thad Matta's team, as they turned it over just three times in a 63 possession game for a Wisconsin-like 4.8 turnover rate. The Buckeyes used all those error-free trips to shoot 55 percent on twos and 47 percent on threes. The resulting 1.42 points per possession matches a lofty level they've reached only three times this season (previously against Tennessee-Martin and Florida). Offense doesn't get much better than this.

 

Still, even with the Buckeyes pouring in the points, Illinois scored with them for long stretches. In fact, the outcome of this game hinged on two big Ohio State runs: the first came

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Feb 20, 2011 at 08:40:29 PM

Well, it looks like we have a real title race, after Purdue knocked off Ohio State 76-63 in West Lafayette.  Defensively, the Boilermakers pressured OSU into committing a turnover on over a quarter of their possessions and an effective field goal percentage of 42.6, each the second-worst marks posted by the Buckeyes this season.  The resulting 0.93 points per possession was likewise the second-worst mark for Thad Matta’s team on the year.  Offensively, Matt Painter just made sure E’Twaun Moore ate his Wheaties.  The senior guard lit up the Buckeyes for a career-high 38 points (that’s half the team’s total, mind you), on just 18 shots.  Moore scored his points all over the place--21 were on threes, 12 on twos, and another 5 at the free throw

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Posted by: Big Ten Geeks on Feb 16, 2011 at 10:23:58 AM

Michigan State's struggles have been well-documented, but they played a heck of a game for about 36 minutes at Ohio State last night. The Spartans kept it close most of the way, trailing by only four points with four and a half minutes remaining, but the Buckeyes used frequent trips to the line to pull away for a 71-61 victory.

 

The Spartans relentlessly fed the post, completely abandoning the perimeter-oriented approach that was clearly no longer working for them. It was an effective strategy when they were able to get a shot up--Michigan State shot 60 percent on twos--but all that manuevering in traffic led to turnovers on 30 percent of MSU's possessions.

 

That's one of the standard trade-offs of going inside, but one of the standard benefits--a high free throw rate--was

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