Dayton Daily News

Wesson leads OSU past Northweste­rn

Sophomore scores 22 in Buckeyes’ 63-49 victory.

- By Adam Jardy

There was no COLUMBUS — fatigue to be found for Kaleb Wesson on Wednesday night.

One game removed from a second half where both Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann and Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said the sophomore center looked tired during the second half of a loss at the Spartans, Wesson responded in a big way against Northweste­rn at Value City Arena.

In arguably his most complete performanc­e of the season, Wesson scored 22 points, pulled down eight rebounds and had four assists, and the Buckeyes overcame an ugly start in a 63-49 win over the Wildcats.

Wesson did it against a Northweste­rn team that learned quickly it couldn’t contain him with double teams in the post.

“I thought Kaleb was really good the whole night on both ends,” Holtmann said. “He was assertive.”

During the second half, Ohio State (17-9, 7-8 Big Ten) had 12 assists on 16 field goals and turned the ball over just once. The Buckeyes scored their most points since they had 74 in a win against Penn State four games ago and finished with 18 assists against only eight turnovers.

They were finally able to pull away once someone other than Duane Washington Jr. hit some 3s. The freshman guard was 2 of 4 from deep while the rest of the Buckeyes were 0 of 12 until C.J. Jackson and Kaleb Wesson broke the skid with 3-pointers on consecutiv­e possession­s midway through the second half.

When Wesson added a basket deep in the land on the next possession, it was a 50-38 lead and Northweste­rn (12-14, 3-12) called timeout with 8:21 to play. It only delayed the inevitable, as the Buckeyes led by as many as 19 points and were never seriously threatened again.

“We just knew that we really needed this game,” said Washington, who had eight points and also took two charges. “We all bought into a good day of prep and went really hard (Tuesday) and realized we can be really good when we lock in and do what we’re supposed to do.”

Wesson finished with his most points since scoring 27 against Rutgers on Feb. 2. In the four games since, he hadn’t topped 12 points.

“It’s always good to have a big performanc­e, but the best thing is we got the win,” he said. “My teammates found me when I was open. I had a lot of open looks because they were hitting shots.”

Coming off a 13-point second-half performanc­e Sunday at Michigan State, the Buckeyes picked up right where they left off — and brought Northweste­rn along with them. In a brutal offensive start on both sides, the Buckeyes and Wildcats both missed nine of their first 10 shots. Ohio State didn’t eclipse its second-half point total against the Spartans until a Jackson layup with 7:05 remaining in the half gave it a 14-8 lead.

“I don’t think Chris or I would say it was a beautifull­y played game, but it was a hard-played game,” Northweste­rn coach Chris Collins said. “They got a little rhythm there in the second half to get some separation.”

At the break, Ohio State led 24-20 and Wesson had nine of those OSU points on 3-of-8 shooting. His brother, junior forward Andre Wesson, left the game late in the half with what was announced as a right elbow contusion, but he returned to start the second half.

It wasn’t the only injury of note for the Buckeyes. Jackson, who went down clutching his left shoulder as Northweste­rn’s Barret Benson was called for an illegal screen, came out of the game during a timeout with 16:55 to play and went to the locker room after being checked by the training staff. He, too, returned after a few minutes.

Freshman Justin Ahrens, who did not play during the first half, replaced starter Musa Jallow for the second half. Jallow did not see play after halftime, and Ahrens, a Versailles product, chipped in four points on two backdoor cuts. Holtmann lauded Ahrens’ engagement from the bench during the first half, saying it earned him the right to start the second.

In the second half against Michigan State and first half against Northweste­rn, Ohio State was 13 of 45 (28.9 percent) from the field, 3 of 21 (14.3 percent) from 3-point range and had 18 turnovers and 37 points.

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