The Columbus Dispatch

Buckeyes see road win as progress

Team finally builds comfortabl­e margin

- Adam Jardy

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — No lastminute theatrics were necessary. When the final seconds ticked off the clock inside the Bryce Jordan Center on Sunday night, no desperate heave was in the air, and no defense was franticall­y backpedali­ng after a game-clinching shot had just landed.

The Ohio State lead was in double figures, where it had been for the majority of the game and nearly the entire second half. So while the Nittany Lions were briefly able to whittle it down to a single-digit deficit during the final five minutes, the Buckeyes were in full-on celebrator­y form after winning their Big Ten opener 76-62 in a game they led for 34:31.

Leaning against the wall in close proximity to a locker room that

moments earlier had heard the chanted version of the final lines of the “Buckeye Battle Cry” spilling into the hallway, coach Chris Holtmann had his nits to pick about the way his team beat the Nittany Lions. But an 18-point second-half lead being cut to six points with 2:39 to play wasn’t among them.

“What I would say to people is, do people think that that’s just us? That’s college basketball,” he said. “(If they think that’s just us,) they need to watch more games than just our games, because the reality is that’s college basketball. Teams make runs, and teams make runs at home. We need to do better in some things. We own that, but to say this is something that happens every game or whatever the case may be, go watch another game and you’ll understand that that happens.”

Tuesday morning, CBS analyst and Ohio State alumnus Clark Kellogg wrote on Twitter that the win at Penn State was “workmanlik­e roadkill,” adding “THAT is how you validate growth and progress” on the heels of an emotional home win against No. 1 Duke five days prior. The sentiment will be put to the test again Wednesday with a 9 p.m. tip against Towson.

At no point did Penn State have the ball with a chance to make it a single-possession game during the final 33 minutes. The high point came less than four minutes into the second half when Jamari Wheeler stole the ball from former teammate Sam Sessoms, burned it up the court and finished a layup that led to a Penn State timeout with 16:22 to play. When the Nittany Lions used a 6-0 run to pull within 64-57 with 4:25 to play, Meechie Johnson Jr. hit a 3-pointer to push it back to double digits.

Two minutes later, Justin Ahrens immediatel­y answered a pair of Jalen Pickett free throws to push Ohio

State’s lead back to nine points. Holtmann called them two of the game’s most critical shots, because they showed that the Buckeyes could stem the tide as a sleepy crowd thought about getting into the game late.

“There’s always things you can work on, but you did some really good things to build that 18-point lead and you did some things to give it up, but so did they,” Holtmann said. “They made some plays. There’s some things we’ve got to get better on, and do a better job in, but I’m really proud of our guys’ effort.”

Wheeler said the key was defensive communicat­ion. Already ahead comfortabl­y, the Buckeyes knew they didn’t need to score more: if they kept Penn State from

scoring, they couldn’t lose. Forward Kyle Young said the final minutes were a continuati­on of the lessons learned in final-second wins against Akron and Seton Hall, a last-second loss to Florida and battles against Duke and Xavier that were one-possession games in the final 20 seconds.

“You have a lot of experience­s on the road that end up like this where teams battle back,” he said. “That’s just how it goes. It was just us staying poised, getting the right shots we wanted, stringing together some stops and that’s pretty much what did it for us.” ajardy@dispatch.com

@Adamjardy

 ?? MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Justin Ahrens hit a big 3-pointer that helped prevent a Penn State comeback on Sunday.
MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS Justin Ahrens hit a big 3-pointer that helped prevent a Penn State comeback on Sunday.
 ?? MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann liked how E.J. Liddell and his teammates kept their composure during a Penn State run late in Sunday’s win.
MATTHEW O’HAREN/USA TODAY SPORTS Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann liked how E.J. Liddell and his teammates kept their composure during a Penn State run late in Sunday’s win.

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