Springfield News-Sun

Tourney clash has potential for shootout

Buckeyes’ Washington, Oral Roberts’ Abmas can score in bunches.

- By Marcus Hartman Staff Writer

If the Ohio State-Oral Roberts first round NCAA Tournament game were a UFC fight card, the headline matchup would be easy to identify.

Ohio State’s Duane Washington Jr. vs Oral Roberts’ Max Abmas has the potential to be a real barn burner, a shootout for the ages with two high-scoring guards throwing bombs for 40 minutes.

May the hottest hand win. Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann is aware of that possibilit­y but hopeful it won’t quite come to pass.

“I would hope that Duane is mature enough to understand that this is the tournament — you’re playing to win every possession,” Holtmann told reporters on a video conference Tuesday. “Playing to win, whatever that requires, but it certainly doesn’t require getting involved in a one-on-one battle. I think he’s mature enough to understand that. Would it be something we discuss? I’m not sure. I think

Duane’s really grown in his ability to stay aggressive and yet also play the game the right way.” Despite the emergence of soph

omore forward E.J. Liddell as a force inside (and sometimes out), the Buckeyes still tend to go as Washington, their junior combo guard, goes.

Washington was magnificen­t most of the Big Ten Tournament last week, scoring 16 points against

Minnesota, 20 against Purdue, 24 against Michigan and 32 against Illinois.

But just as significan­tly, Washington was not at his best for most of the previous four games, all Ohio State losses.

After an efficient and explosive 30 points in a narrow loss to

Michigan on Feb. 21, he had only 44 points in the following three

games, all losses as well to Michigan State, Iowa and Illinois.

For the season, Washington is averaging 16.3 points per game and shooting 38.1% from 3-point range. He was second on the team with 87 assists but led the squad with 64 turnovers and his shot selection can be an adventure at times.

“That’s something I’ve struggled with honestly,” Washington said Tuesday.

Although Steph Curry might have popularize­d popping off from 3-point range any time a talented shooter gets any space from a defender, such an opportunit­y can be both a blessing and a curse for a new generation of guards who came of age watching him with the Golden State Warriors.

Nowadays many coaches are more open-minded about letting that be part of the game of a player like Washington, but Holtmann still needs him to play a more team-oriented game for the Buckeyes to be at their best.

That is a conversati­on Washington said he has frequently had with both his father, Duane Washington Sr., and OSU assistant Jake Diebler.

“We can always get off the 3, and I think working on it in practice and understand­ing what is settling and what’s not, taking what the defense gives you and getting what we want, those two things are different,” Washington said. “You’ve just got to focus and lock in a little bit more and be really locked into what you want to do in that game. Obviously sometimes you want to make plays. Always got to be aggressive, but just knowing time and score and time and place is what I’ve been working on and getting pretty good at.”

Friday, when the second-seeded Buckeyes take the floor against 15th-seeded Oral Roberts, they will see essentiall­y a college version of Curry.

Abmas leads the nation in scoring at 24.2 points per game and is 90 for 208 from 3-point range, a success rate of 43.3%.

The 6-foot-1, 165-pound sophomore might be slight, but he is dangerous.

“He really can come across half court and raise up,” Holtmann said. “He shoots it with great accuracy. He shot 46% in league play. Those are phenomenal numbers. It is part of his game. He’s got the ability to raise up and shoot it. He’s got strong legs and he can shoot it from right across half court.”

So can Washington, who shares ball-handling duties with senior point guard CJ Walker, but Holtmann will hope he has bigger things on his mind most of the afternoon.

“We’re going to need him to really be on point defensivel­y and continue to play smart, aggressive basketball,” Holtmann said of Washington. “He’s supremely confident as we all know. Sometimes that’s gotten him in trouble, and we’re all aware of that, too.”

Holtmann has seen a more focused Washington since he struggled late in the regular season, particular­ly in the closing minutes of a home loss to Illinois to close out the campaign.

“I think he felt on Senior Day he didn’t perform as well as he wanted to in the last four or five minutes and that motivated him coming into tournament time and now he’s got to stay consistent with that,” Holtmann said.

 ?? JOSEPH CRESS / IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN ?? Duane Washington (4) is averaging 16.3 points per game and shooting 38.1% from 3-point range. He was second on the team with 87 assists but led the squad with 64 turnovers and his shot selection can be an adventure at times.
JOSEPH CRESS / IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN Duane Washington (4) is averaging 16.3 points per game and shooting 38.1% from 3-point range. He was second on the team with 87 assists but led the squad with 64 turnovers and his shot selection can be an adventure at times.

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