The Columbus Dispatch

Liddell expects to take bigger role

Forward looks to elevate OSU on both sides of floor

- Adam Jardy

They were big. They were physical. They were mean. And for the first time in his short Ohio State career, they were E.J. Liddell’s responsibi­lity.

The Buckeyes were playing at Penn State on Jan. 18 last season, a game the Nittany Lions and their bruising frontcourt handled mostly from tip to final whistle in what would be a 14-point loss for Ohio State.

It was the 18th game of Liddell’s career, and while he had played significant minutes against other teams, his 20minute effort against Penn State taught him a few lessons.

“I’m like, ‘This is pretty hard,’ ” Liddell told The Dispatch. “For the rest of the season I started to catch on that playing high minutes takes a lot of going into practice and conditioni­ng after practice.”

It was a lesson Liddell took to heart as his freshman season came to a close, and one that Ohio State is hoping helps translate into a breakout year for the 6foot-7, 240-pound forward. The Buckeyes will enter the season without a proven, traditiona­l big-bodied center on the roster after Kaleb Wesson departed for a profession­al career following his junior year.

He averaged 6.7 points and 3.8 rebounds per game as a freshman. He also blocked 29 shots. That amounted to 6.6% of all two-point field goals attempted while he was on the court, which was the best mark on the team and No. 81 nationally according to Kenpom.com.

Now the offense will start to flow more directly through his hands as Liddell is asked to expand his game to the three-point line, an area where the Buckeyes are especially going to miss Wesson’s versatilit­y.

“I feel like the ball is going to be in my hands a lot more,” Liddell said. “I feel like a lot of the offense is going to flow through me some more than it did last year, but It’s not so much just backto-the-basket and shooting layups.”

Liddell closed his freshman season with a flourish. His first career doubledoub­le came in a senior day win against Illinois, the home-state team that he spurned to sign with the Buckeyes after being named a two-time Mr. Basketball while winning consecutiv­e state titles at Belleville West. He followed that with 12 points in a road loss to Michigan State in the final game of the season, marking his only consecutiv­e double-digit scoring games.

Although he showed a nice shooting touch from the elbow extended, Liddell was only 5 for 26 (19.2%) from three last year. Expecting him to suddenly match Wesson’s team-leading three-point mark (42.5%) from a season ago is a stretch, and coach Chris Holtmann cautioned against expecting too much too soon.

“There’s no question he’s got to take a real important step for us,” Holtmann said. “I think to expect a sophomore to be someone you’re going to run 100% of your offense through in the best league in the country is probably too much to put on him right now.”

The key to it all, like for many big men, is whether Liddell is capable of logging significant minutes in a physical conference such as the Big Ten. So while he focused on developing his skills during the offseason, Liddell said he paid special attention to his conditioni­ng as well.

“I feel like you definitely need a season under you to have an understand­ing,” he said. “The freshmen we have now, they talk and they have a little bit of energy some days, but you have to bring it every single day. And I feel like I figured that out towards the end of last year. I started practicing way harder and just worrying about today and then letting tomorrow come.”

How big of a step he takes could tie in directly with his right hook: like Wesson last season, Liddell said he’s added boxing workouts with strength and conditioni­ng coach Quadrian Banks to his post-practice conditioni­ng routine.

“I would say my right hook is vicious,” he said with a laugh. ajardy@dispatch.com @Adamjardy

 ?? COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE PHOTO ?? Ohio State forward E.J. Liddell expects to have the ball more often as his role in the offense increases.
COLUMBUS DISPATCH FILE PHOTO Ohio State forward E.J. Liddell expects to have the ball more often as his role in the offense increases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States