The Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State familiar with Big Ten teams in women’s NCAA

- Ray Stein

When Kevin Mcguff looked at an updated bracket for the women's NCAA Tournament the other day, he saw a lot of familiar names.

The Ohio State women's basketball coach also recalled some fond memories.

Big Ten teams have been the surprise of the tournament thus far, with four conference schools — Indiana, Iowa, Maryland and Michigan — among the Sweet 16 teams qualifying for the regional semifinals that begin Saturday in San Antonio.

In the past four seasons, the Big Ten had four teams total reach this far in the tournament.

“This has been incredible for the Big Ten,” Mcguff said this week. “This run in the tournament is showing the depth of talent in our league.”

Mcguff knows all of the survivors well, and also knows what it's like to be congratula­ted for beating them.

The Buckeyes did just that in a 15day stretch in January, racking up victories over Iowa (84-82 on Jan. 13), Michigan (81-77 on Jan. 21), Maryland (88-86 on Jan. 25) and Indiana (78-70 on Jan. 28). OSU later added a second win over Iowa, 92-87 on Feb. 4.

“At the time it was hard to pinpoint what those games meant. You're just going through it,” Mcguff said. “But as the season went on and you saw these teams go through these incredible stretches, it showed that we were playing as well as anyone in the country at that point.”

The Buckeyes cooled off, largely because a presumed positive COVID-19 test for sophomore point guard Madison Greene, and finished 13-7. They no doubt would have made the tournament, though, had the program not imposed a one-year postseason ban for recruiting violations by a former assistant coach.

Rather than focus on what could have been, Mcguff is urging his team to consider the possibilit­ies for next season.

“We have to look at what we did in that stretch and carry it into the offseason and into next year,” he said. “We can certainly have a special season.”

Mcguff wishes nothing but success for the league's four remaining teams, three of which play on Saturday and will be underdogs.

In the River Walk region, fifth-seeded Iowa meets top-seeded Connecticu­t at 1 p.m. and No. 6 seed Michigan faces No. 2 Baylor at 3 p.m. In the Mercado region, fourth-seeded Indiana meets top-seeded North Carolina State at 6 p.m.

On Sunday, Maryland is the No. 2 seed in the Hemisfair region and will play No. 6 Texas at 9 p.m. The Terrapins haven't lost since that January night two months ago in Value City Arena.

“The team I want to keep an eye on is Maryland,” Mcguff said. “The way they're scoring, they're playing as well as anyone right now.”

rstein@dispatch.com

 ?? RONALD CORTES/AP ?? Maryland players including Angel Reese (10) couldn’t be more excited about the Terrapins’ play thus far in the women’s NCAA Tournament.
RONALD CORTES/AP Maryland players including Angel Reese (10) couldn’t be more excited about the Terrapins’ play thus far in the women’s NCAA Tournament.

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