Hopes high for Ohio State mens basketball season - Canton Repository

By Josh Weir
Posted Oct 14, 2011 @ 12:56 AM
Print Comment
COLUMBUS

In an otherwise dreary 11 months at Ohio State filled with NCAA problems, a bit of salvation could be just around the corner.

The mens basketball team of coach Thad Matta is coming off a sterling 34-3 record and has three stars back. The Buckeyes held their media day on Thursday and unlike their football brethren who are 3-3 and down in the dumps were joking about the lofty expectations surrounding the team.

Its a motivational thing when a fan comes up to you and says, You have to win this year, star forward Jared Sullinger said. Its like all the spotlights are on us for the first time. Its like, whoa. Let me step back, its a shocker.

Basketball players have long been second-tier celebrities on campus while any football player starting quarterback or long-snapper is adored wherever they go.

But in a year when football players have continually gotten in trouble with either the NCAA or the law, the darlings of Ohio State fans are suddenly the guys who play inside at Value City Arena.

Oh, yeah, the expectations are high, forward Deshaun Thomas said. We can be really, really great. This team weve got right here, it can be an NCAA champion. This team can accomplish more than even what everybody thinks.

Thats hard to fathom. Last years team won its first 24 games to climb to undisputed No. 1 and conjure up thoughts of Indianas unbeaten season in 1976. The Buckeyes lost two road games at NCAA-bound teams, Wisconsin and Purdue, while clinching first the Big Tens regular-season and then tournament titles. They coasted through the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament, winning by an average of 31 points, before running into a red-hot Kentucky team that hung a stinging 62-60 loss on the Buckeyes.

Gone from that team are three mainstays: record-setting 3-point shooter Jon Diebler, versatile defender David Lighty and shot-blocker extraordinaire Dallas Lauderdale.

This years version of the Buckeyes includes only one senior (four-year starting shooting guard William Buford) and just a single junior scholarship player (Boston College transfer Evan Ravenel). Everybody else is either in their first or second year in the program.

But, oh, how good those youngsters are. Sullinger was an All-American a year ago as a callow freshman. In the offseason, he pared 25 pounds off his frame and added a lot of muscle. Now he says he has more stamina, is more mobile and retains his same brutish play around the boards and the paint.

Joining him in the frontcourt are some intriguing possibilities.

Thomas is 6-foot-7 but never saw a jumper he wouldnt take. He grew into a dependable offense-energizer in the stretch run and says hes improved his defense this year so he can step into the starting lineup.

Freshmen Amir Williams (6-11), Sam Thompson (6-7) and Trey McDonald (6-8) could offer instant help inside, along with Ravenel (6-8) and J.D. Weatherspoon (6-6), a high-school teammate of Sullingers at Columbus Northland High School under Jareds dad, Satch Sullinger.

After a year wowing people as the Buckeyes first player off the bench, Aaron Craft takes over on the point where he could be paired with Georgia high school phenom Shannon Scott the son of former NBA and North Carolina Tar Heels star Charlie Scott.

Jordan Sibert and Lenzelle Smith Jr. will likely see plenty of action off the bench.

Matta recognizes that Ohio States fans have a lot invested in his team.

The one thing Ive learned in eight years at Ohio State is these people have great passion for this university, he said. They want this university to do well. Theres been a couple of bumps along the way. But our mindset doesnt change from the standpoint of, were always going to try to put the best product out on the floor that we possibly can. And try to attempt to do the things that were supposed to to make the university proud.

The Buckeyes open practice at 5 p.m. on Friday. Their first game is Nov. 11 against Wright State. They have two titanic early-season battles coming up against Duke and Kansas before beginning conference play.

Ticket sales have been brisk. A lot of people are talking about the Buckeyes.

But Sullinger knows that, still, basketball probably remains No. 2 to King Football.

The football team is special. Regardless, we came to a football school, Sullinger said. With (Buckeyes fans) coming to us and saying theyre looking at us as their savior, it means a lot to us.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Contact Lindsay Lohan

Life After Death: Cryonics Pioneer Robert Ettinger Dies - International Business Times

Fall TV: Capsule reviews of all the new shows - San Jose Mercury News