Dayton Daily News

No. 17 Buckeyes rally, hold off pesky Illini

Bates-Diop racks up career-high 35 points, hauls in 13 rebounds.

- By Mitch Stacy

With Illinois COLUMBUS, OHIO — leading by 11 points with 8:45 left in the first half, Ohio State’s Keita Bates-Diop went to work.

Playing in his 100th game for the Buckeyes, Bates-Diop reeled off 11 unanswered points including a pair of dunks , a 3-pointer and a tip-in off an offensive rebound. No. 17 Ohio State ended the half up by four and outlasted the pesky Illini in the second half to win 75-67 on Sunday.

There were other outstandin­g moments in the game for BatesDiop , who finished with a careerhigh 35 points. His 13 rebounds gave him his 10th double-double of the season.

He drained a 3-pointer with 5:04 left in the game to tie the score at 63. He made13 of 15 free throws, including three in a row in the final 37 seconds to seal the game for the Buckeyes.

“I think Keita showed why he’s MVP of the league,” Illinois coach Brad Underwood said. “We knew that coming in. He’s a very, very difficult matchup for us.”

Jae’Sean Tate scored 11 points, and Kaleb Wesson had 10 points and 10 rebounds for the Buckeyes (20-5, 11-1), who have won three straight and 10 of their last 11. They move on to a showdown with No. 3 Purdue on Wednesday to determine first place in the Big Ten.

It was anything but easy for the Buckeyes, who were playing with-

out suspended guard Kam Williams. They committed 15 turnovers that would lead to 16 Illinois points and were just 3 for 16 from beyond the 3-point line. They wouldn’t get the game in hand until Wesson grabbed an offensive rebound and put it back up to open the lead to 72-67 with 48 seconds left.

“That one was as tough as it comes,” Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann said.

The loss snapped a twogame winning streak for the Illini (12-12, 2-9), who have yet to come away with a road victory this season. Mark Alstork paced Illinois with 19 points and Trent Frazier chipped in 12.

Big picture

Illinois: The Illini hustled but didn’t have enough to beat the more talented Buck- eyes. The result was another disappoint­ing loss in a game they could have won.

“I feel bad for our guys,” Underwood said. “We are playing good enough basketball to beat anybody in this league. I really believe that.”

Ohio State: A team near the bottom of the Big Ten gave the Buckeyes a scare. Did they miss Williams, whose suspension for an unspecifie­d violation of team rules was announced hours before the game? Or were they looking ahead to Purdue? “We were glad to get the win, to be honest,” BatesDiop said.

Kam could be back

Holtmann wouldn’t dis- close what Williams did wrong but said he expects the senior averaging8 points per game to return.

“We expect him back at some point,” Holtmann said. “But it’s going to be kind of a day-to-day decision.”

In his place, sophomore Andre Wesson started next to his brother Kaleb, a true freshman, for the first time since they played in an Ohio high school championsh­ip game in 2016.

 ?? JAY LAPRETE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State’s Keita Bates-Diop drives the lane against Illinois’ Aaron Jordan on his way to finishing Sunday’s game with 35 points and 13 rebounds in the 75-67 home victory.
JAY LAPRETE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State’s Keita Bates-Diop drives the lane against Illinois’ Aaron Jordan on his way to finishing Sunday’s game with 35 points and 13 rebounds in the 75-67 home victory.
 ?? JAY LAPRETE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State’s C.J. Jackson brings the ball upcourt against Illinois’ Mark Alstork during the second half of a hard-fought matchup won by the Buckeyes, who had to rally from a double-digit first-half deficit.
JAY LAPRETE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State’s C.J. Jackson brings the ball upcourt against Illinois’ Mark Alstork during the second half of a hard-fought matchup won by the Buckeyes, who had to rally from a double-digit first-half deficit.

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