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#7 Ohio State 63, Penn State 56 (Final)

Back away from that computer and TV set and put both of your hands up!:biggrin:

I am officially done posting in the second half of games not played at the Schott.

Take for example @ Iowa we lose.
@ MSU I don't post the whole second half and we put a hurtin on them in the second half.
@NW put teh computer away with 130 left and we pull it out in the end.
Today I leave when we are down 12 to go to class. Then we come back and win.

Good win for the bucks, can't wait to watch it on tivo.
 
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Here are some more pics from today's win over PSU....

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Ohio State men's basketball coach Thad Matta, right, answers questions from members of the media Friday, March 10, 2006 in Indianapolis. Ohio State was placed on three years' probation Friday for using an ineligible player, a ruling that wipes out records from four NCAA tournament appearances by the men's basketball team, including a trip to the 1999 Final Four. At left is athletics director Gene Smith

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Ohio State men's basketball coach Thad Matta pauses during the postgame news conference Friday, March 10, 2006 in Indianapolis. Ohio State was placed on three years' probation Friday for using an ineligible player, a ruling that wipes out records from four NCAA tournament appearances by the men's basketball team, including a trip to the 1999 Final Four.


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INDIANAPOLIS - MARCH 10: J.J. Sullinger #0 of the Ohio State Buckeyes shoots against David Jackson #32 of the Penn State Nittany Lions during Day 2 of the Big 10 Tournament on March 10, 2006 at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Buckeyes defeated the Nittany Lions 63-56. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)

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INDIANAPOLIS - MARCH 10: Terence Dials #34 of the Ohio State Buckeyes blocks Travis Parker #11 of the Penn State Nittany Lions during Day 2 of the Big 10 Tournament on March 10, 2006 at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Buckeyes defeated the Nittany Lions 63-56. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)


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INDIANAPOLIS - MARCH 10: Ron Lewis #12 of the Ohio State Buckeyes dunks the ball in the second half against the Penn State Nittany Lions during Day 2 of the Big 10 Tournament on March 10, 2006 at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Buckeyes defeated the Nittany Lions 63-56. (Photo by Brian Bahr/Getty Images)


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Ohio State head coach Thad Matta is seen during the second half of the game against Penn State in the Big Ten men's basketball tournament Friday, March 10, 2006 in Indianapolis.


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Ohio State guard Ron Lewis (12) goes up for s basket against Penn State forward Ivan Harris (3) in the second half of the Big Ten men's basketball tournament Friday, March 10, 2006 in Indianapolis.
 
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Dispatch

3/11/06

OHIO STATE 63 | PENN STATE 56

Buckeyes just win

Ohio State suffers through off game before rallying to beat Penn State

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Bob Baptist
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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NEAL C . LAURON | DISPATCH Ohio State’s J.J. Sullinger defends Penn State’s Geary Claxton during the second half.
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NEAL C . LAURON | DISPATCH Penn State’s Geary Claxton and Ohio State’s Terence Dials jockey for position during a fight for the ball.
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INDIANAPOLIS — All the excuses were there.

The Ohio State men’s basketball team was tired from an exhausting, monthlong march to the Big Ten championship.

The Buckeyes could have used an extra two days of rest to refuel for the NCAA Tournament next week.

They had nothing left to prove in a conference tournament played for fans and revenue.

They played like all of the above for almost 30 minutes yesterday. They failed to execute on offense or get back on defense. But when crunch time came, they couldn’t help but win.

"The competitive nature really took over," coach Thad Matta said. "They wanted to win down the stretch."

Twelve points behind Penn State with 13 minutes to play and shooting like sixth-graders against the Nittany Lions’ zone defense, the Buckeyes suddenly found the mark from outside. They rode the wave of energy it gave them at both ends of the court to a 63-56 victory in a Big Ten tournament quarterfinal in Conseco Fieldhouse.

Sixth man Ron Lewis scored 15 of his 17 points in the second half and made four of the Buckeyes’ eight three-point baskets after halftime.

Ohio State made eight of its last 14 threes — including six of its last eight — after missing 14 of 16 in the first half.

"Even if you don’t make any shots the first half, you’ve always got to come out the second half confident," Lewis said. "You don’t want any player on the floor that’s not confident in their shots or in their game."

The win put the No. 7-ranked Buckeyes (24-4), the tournament’s top seed, into a semifinal today against fifth-seeded Indiana (18-10), which beat fourthseeded Wisconsin 61-56 in another quarterfinal.

"We didn’t want to lose our first game here in the tournament," said center Terence Dials, who added 13 points and 10 rebounds, his sixth double-double in the past eight games. "We came out, got it together on the court and played hard. Fortunately, we knocked down some shots and that got us going a little bit."

Penn State (15-14) got a game-high 18 points from Jamelle Cornley, a freshman from Brookhaven.

"They got in a rhythm and they are a senior-dominated team. We’re not that," Penn State coach Ed DeChellis said. "Sometimes experience plays a critical part in this thing. They’ve got some experienced guys who stepped up and made some big plays."

Ohio State trailed 42-30 with 13:07 remaining before Lewis made the second of two threes in less than two minutes. The Buckeyes were still down nine, 45-36, before Matt Sylvester struck twice in 77 seconds from behind the arc, around a Penn State basket, to whittle the deficit to 47-42 with 8:44 left.

"We only needed one or two to kind of light the fire," Sylvester said. "I think the two that I hit kind of threw some gas on the fire and lifted the morale and confidence of the rest of the guys."

Lewis’ third three less than a minute later reduced the margin to two, and Jamar Butler’s three from the left wing at 5:52 gave the Buckeyes their first lead, 50-49.

They took the lead for good, 52-51, on Je’Kel Foster’s driving layup with 4:54 remaining and pulled away on threes by J.J. Sullinger and Lewis and a threepoint play by Lewis in the final four minutes.

"In the second half, we went to a different zone attack and it worked better because the ball went in the basket," Matta said. "We got the same exact shots, but, quite honestly, the difference was the ball went in. "A lot of times shooting becomes contagious. Fortunately for us, it became contagious."


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Saturday, March 11, 2006
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