The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Ohio State powers through Indiana

- By Mitch Stacy

E.J. Liddell scored 19 points and Justice Sueing had 16 points and 10 rebounds as the Buckeyes pulled away to beat the Hoosiers 78-59 on Feb. 13.

COLUMBUS >> With a rout of Indiana, No. 4 Ohio State has won six straight and nine out of the last 10, and the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee on Feb. 13 projected the Buckeyes as a No. 1 seed in the tournament next month.

Without a superstar performer, Ohio State (17-4, 11-4 Big Ten) has gotten there with a hustling style of play that has become its identity — good shooting, aggressive rebounding on both ends, multiple role players contributi­ng and making fewer mistakes than its opponents.

E.J. Liddell scored 19 points and Justice Sueing had 16 points and 10 rebounds as the Buckeyes pulled away to beat the Hoosiers 78-59 on Feb. 13. They shot 48% and scored 21 points off Indiana’s 15 turnovers.

“Gifted and versatile offensive players, and I think they bought in to playing together,” Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann said after eight of his players scored against Indiana, and Sueing and freshman Zed Key combined for 18 rebounds.

Trace Jackson-Davis scored 23 points and Jerome Hunter added 10 to pace Indiana (11-9, 6-7), which saw a two-game winning streak snapped.

“We got worked on the boards,” Indiana coach Archie Miller said. “Secondchan­ce points was 20 (for the Buckeyes). We are not going to be able to play with 15 turnovers. Ohio State deserves all the credit today.

They imposed really physically. Just a different way for us to feel in a game. We have to learn from it and move on.”

Backed by a 21-3 run over eight minutes, Ohio State led 38-28 at halftime while forcing eight turnovers, including three early by guard Armaan Franklin. The Buckeyes led by as many as 16 in the half, but an 11-0 run by the Hoosiers kept it from getting away.

An emphatic dunk by Jackson-Davis ignited the Indiana bench and got the Hoosiers back to within five points with 14:11 left, but a 9-0 Ohio State run pushed the lead back up and the Buckeyes continued to roll as Indiana developed foul trouble.

“We felt good that we were able to extend that lead against a quality team,” Holtmann said. “I just thought we played with maturity, and played with maturity with the lead.”

Tournament? What tournament?

The Buckeyes aren’t putting too much into the early projection as a No. 1 tournament seed.

“The 1 seed, I mean that’s cool and all,” Sueing said. “But as far as how the team takes in all of that, we’re just worried about the next game, the next week. The next week is going to be the most important week for us. We go to Penn State next week, and that’s going to be our most important week. And we try not to focus too much on what’s ahead of us, like the tournament and stuff.”

Holtmann said he’s got to keep ensuring sustained concentrat­ion and effort.

“I think the biggest thing as a coach right now is we’ve got to get better in the moment, that (if) any type of complacenc­y comes in and we see it in practice, it needs to be addressed,” Holtmann said. “We’ve got to continue to get better, and we’ve got to stay fully engaged as a group, from scout team on down.”

 ?? PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indiana forward Trayce Jackson-Davis, center, reaches for a rebound between Ohio State forward Zed Key, left, and forward E.J. Liddell on Feb. 13in Columbus.
PAUL VERNON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indiana forward Trayce Jackson-Davis, center, reaches for a rebound between Ohio State forward Zed Key, left, and forward E.J. Liddell on Feb. 13in Columbus.

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