Hamilton Journal News

No. 17 Ohio St looks to rebound from early tournament exit

- By Jacob Benge

The new season can’t start soon enough for the No. 17 Ohio State Buckeyes, who were left frustrated after an unexpected early exit from last spring’s NCAA Tournament.

The Buckeyes were on a roll and came in as the South Region’s No. 2 seed, only to be taken down in the opening round by 15th-seeded Oral Roberts in one of the tournament’s biggest upsets.

Ohio State should have the tools to get back to the tournament. The team returns a core of upper classmen who will be complement­ed by some key plug-and-play transfers and a freshman or two.

Returning is All-Big-Ten forward E.J. Liddell, who considered entering the NBA draft but ultimately decided against it. Liddell, who led the team with 6.7 rebounds per game and was second in scoring with 16.2 points per game, said he wants to add to his legacy in Columbus.

“I came back looking forward to being one of the Buckeye greats,” he said.

The Buckeyes finished fifth in the Big Ten last season with a 21-10 overall record and 12-8 conference mark. They got hot in the Big Ten Tournament, beating No. 20 Purdue and No. 4 Michigan before falling in the championsh­ip game to No. 3 Illinois in overtime.

That set up the 75-72 overtime loss to Oral Roberts that stunned the Buckeyes and most everybody else.

“One game isn’t going to define who we are,” Liddell said. “We got a lot of new guys, a lot of guys trying to feel their way into their role, but very high expectatio­ns. I expect nothing less from this group of guys that we have.”

Bigger role for Sueing?

The departure of the team’s leading scorer, Duane Washington (16.4 points per game), to the NBA opens a hole in the Buckeyes’ offense that coach Chris Holtmann hopes senior Justice Sueing will help fill.

Sueing, who transferre­d from California in 2019, was third on the team with 10.7 points per game in his first season for Ohio State. He shot 49.1% from the field and led the team with 29 steals.

“Getting that year under my belt, I think, has really added to my game,” Sueing said. “…I think going into this next season I’ll develop a bigger role and be able to really help this team.”

Comings and goings

The Buckeyes have five newcomers after the departure of four.

Graduate transfer guards Cedric Russell, who averaged 17 points and shot 40% from 3-point range at Louisiana-Lafayette, and Jamari Wheeler, who averaged 6.8 points at Penn State, will help anchor the backcourt. Freshman guard Meechie Johnson showed promise after arriving from high school for the second half of last season. Ohio State also gained a true center with 6-foot-11 Indiana transfer Joey Brunk coming aboard.

Freshman guard and Ohio’s 2021 Mr. Basketball, Malaki Branham, joins the program from St. Vincent-St. Mary’s.

In all, six transfer players make up this year’s Buckeyes squad. Holtmann said that’s the new normal.

Schedule

Ohio State opens on Nov. 9 against Akron, welcoming back fans to Value City Arena for the first time since 2019. Early nonconfere­nce games include No. 9 Duke, Xavier and Seton Hall. The Buckeyes also have conference games against Penn State and Wisconsin in December.

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY / AP ?? Returning All-Big-Ten forward E.J. Liddell, dunking pass Illinois’ Giorgi Bezhanishv­ili last season, will help lead Ohio State against Akron at home on Nov. 9.
MICHAEL CONROY / AP Returning All-Big-Ten forward E.J. Liddell, dunking pass Illinois’ Giorgi Bezhanishv­ili last season, will help lead Ohio State against Akron at home on Nov. 9.

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