Buckeye ladies run over Michigan, 70-50

December 21, 2008 by feed · Leave a Comment 

Jantel Lavender (28pts,8reb) ain’t the lady you mess with…

Scoff if you must for me covering women’s basketball, but there’s probably a few things you know about this blog if you’ve followed it for any length of time1. First, this is Title IX compliant blog and I find myself (earnestly) interested in the women’s hoops team though I don’t always have the time to follow the team faithfully.  Second, I hate Michigan.  I hate Michigan with every aching muscle in this tired body of mine.  I hate Michigan and will exhaust all avenues of action until that great menace of our time is eventually conquered.

Evidently, our ladies hoops team felt the same way.  Earlier this day in front of a not-so-packed Schottenstein Center crowd of ~4,000 fans2, the lady Buckeyes manhandled smited-in-a-gender-neutral-tone Michigan 70-50. The tone for the beatdown was set early into the matchup.  Michigan scored the game’s first 4 points in the game’s first two minutes.  The Buckeyes countered by scoring the next 22 over the next 8 minutes.  Up 22-4, the Buckeyes eventually settled with a 44-22 lead at intermission. With the enemy demoralized at halftime, the ~20pt lead held for a 70-50 victory.  The 22-0 run in question came from some opportunistic defense by the Buckeyes.  During that period, the Buckeyes tallied six steals from Shavelle Little (x2), Star Allen, Samantha Prahalis, Brittany Johnson, and Sarah Schulze.  The team finished with 9 steals for the game.

Kevin Borseth, head coach of Michigan, reacts to the loss. This will never get old.

Jantel Lavender ain’t the lady you mess with, a point made particularly strongly with her performance this game.  Her 28 points (13/19fg) and 8 rebounds were game highs for all players involved in this contest.  11 of those points came in the second half with the Buckeyes principally in cruise control, but they were necessary as she and Ashlee Trebilcock were the only consistent sources of offense for the Buckeyes after intermission.  Trebilcock chipped in 7 second half points, finishing with 16 points for the game.  Trebilcock and Lavender combined for all but 8 of the Buckeyes’ 26 second half points.  Of those 8, 4 points came in the final minutes from reserves with garbage time in full gear.  Further, of those 8, only two came from a field goal (a Prahalis jumper with about 6 minutes left to play).

With the victory in the conference opener, the #17 lady Buckeyes improve to 10-2 overall.  In spite of the great record entering conference play, the tale of the lady Buckeyes seems to mirror the trajectory of the football team: good, but not great.  Great, but not elite.  Whatever terms you want to use, the ladies are consistently good enough to thrive in the Big Ten and enter the NCAA tournament every year.  Yet, it’s just not Tennessee, Stanford or Duke.  The Buckeyes have played 4 marquee games this young season by my measure, though I certainly don’t claim to be an expert on women’s basketball.  Of those 4, the Buckeyes have won 2.  The Buckeyes hosted now 9-2 Syracuse in their third game of the season and won 78-71.  Earlier this month, the Buckeyes traveled to Lincoln, Nebraska and handed the ‘Huskers their third loss of the season, though it was certainly no easy task to do so (see: above point made about Jantel Lavender not being the lady you should mess with).  Both were tournament teams last year.

The losses, however, stick out.  4 days after the Syracuse game, the Buckeyes traveled to Auburn3 and lost to the #10 Tigers in overtime 87-80.  In their biggest matchup of the season, the Buckeyes were smothered all game by #2 North Carolina in front of a home crowd in Columbus.  This doesn’t bode entirely well for what I want to see most from this team: a tournament run in March.  Jim Foster has had great success in Columbus since coming over from Vanderbilt.  Sadly, in spite of some great teams — one that even reached the 30 win plateau — the furthest he’s gone in the tournament with the Buckeyes is the Sweet 16 (with said 30 win team).  Worse yet, the past two seasons have ended in the first round.

Samantha Prahalis, a name you should remember

Perhaps a strong tournament push is feasible for this year’s Buckeyes, though this team lacks the completeness of the 2005, 2006 and 2007 teams.  After all, this year’s team has who I think is far and away the best conference player (Jantel Lavender, conference leader in points and rebounds).  Samantha Prahalis, the freshman all-everything from New York and probably the most important 2008 recruit in Buckeye athletics not named Terrelle Pryor, could be the difference here.  Presently, she’s struggling with her 3pt shot (2-7 against Michigan, ~35% on the season) and with turning the ball over (6 TOs against Michigan, ~4 a game on the season).  Should the college game slow down for her, this team could be pretty lethal at the end of the season.  With Lavender in the interior, Trebilcock on the outside (~50% from 3) and Prahalis setting it all up, the Buckeyes should have the necessary prerequisites for success.

This might be just my little spiel, but I encourage anyone in and around Columbus who has some spare time and money to burn to attend these games.  If costs prohibit you from following the Buckeyes out to Glendale this winter, it shouldn’t prohibit you from showing up to the Schott and supporting our lady hoopsters.  Of course, I say that right as the Buckeyes take the next 10 days off for the holidays and play their next game on New Year’s Eve against Northwestern (in Evanston).  The next home game is on January 4th as the Buckeyes host 8-4 traditional conference contenders Michigan State.  Tickets never cost more than for these things, and that’s for the lower bowl at the Schott.  Odds are, you can buy a ticket and just “upgrade” during the game.

Show up, make some noise, and cheer on our lady ballers.

  1. Most importantly, I need to do something to justify having this shitty blog in the Big Ten Bloggers RSS feed
  2. who were making as much noise and fanfare as they do for the men’s team, no doubt…
  3. Auburn is an IMPOSSIBLE place to travel to unless you can drive there within a couple hours.  Why the Buckeyes agreed to trek down to Auburn is beyond me.

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Preview of Women’s Basketball vs. UNC

December 2, 2008 by feed · Leave a Comment 

Who: Ohio State Buckeyes Women’s Basketball Team

What: ACC/Big Ten Challenge vs. North Carolina

Where: Value City Arena – Columbus, OH

When: Wednesday December 3, 2008 7:00pm

Important Info:   (www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com) – highlights listed below 

·       OSU ranked 18 – UNC ranked 2

·       Radio Coverage on WOSU 820 AM/ www.wosu.org and Television coverage on Big Ten Network

·       OSU leads series 3-2 and their last meeting was on 12/18/1980

·       The No. 2 Tar Heels are the highest-ranked opponent to play in Value City Arena since 1999 when Ohio State lost 64-56 to No. 2 Purdue Jan. 26, 1999.

·       Sophomore center Jantel Lavender, the Big Ten player of the week two weeks running, leads the Big Ten in scoring (21.7 ppg), rebounding (12.1 rpg) and offensive rebounds (3.8) as of Dec. 1. She ranks 14th nationally in scoring and eighth in rebounding.

·       Lavender has scored in double-figures in all 38 career games and has recorded a double-double in every game this season. She has 20 for her career and the Buckeyes are 16-4 in those games.

·       Freshman point guard Samantha Prahalis is second in the Big Ten with 5.0 assists per game. She had a season-high eight dimes in the overtime loss at Auburn and seven dimes in the win over Army. She also is tied for third in the conference in 3-point shooting with 14 makes.

·       Sophomore forward Sarah Schulze has provided a spark off the bench the last two games with 21 points and five 3FG’s. She recorded career-highs of 11 points and three 3FG’s vs. Dayton Sunday.

·       Ohio State owns the seventh-best winning percentage (.838) and has the ninth-most wins (109) in all of women’s basketball during the last four full years.

·       The Buckeyes have been ranked in the Associated Press Top 25 for 83-consecutive weeks.

·       Ohio State owns the most Big Ten titles with 11. This season they are attempting to become the first team to win five in a row since the Ohio State teams from 1983-87.

·       Ohio State has won 82-consecutive games at home against unranked opponents. The last unranked team to win in Columbus was Penn State, Feb. 3, 2002.

·       Ohio State is 71-3 at home since the start of the 2004-05 season. The Buckeyes are 98-7 all-time at home under head coach Jim Foster.

·       Ohio State has had four Big Ten Player of the Year selections the last four seasons; Jessica Davenport in 2005-07 and Jantel Lavender in 2008.


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No. 20 Ohio State Beats Dayton 76-61

December 1, 2008 by feed · Leave a Comment 

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Jantel Lavender scored 27 points and Samantha Prahalis had 17 to help No. 20 Ohio State rally from a 10-point deficit in the second half to beat Dayton 76-61 in the final of the Buckeye Classic.

Kristin Daugherty had 18 points and Justine Raterman 16 for the Flyers (4-3), who went up 49-39 when Kendel Ross hit a 3-pointer with 12:40 to play.

But Ohio State (6-1) answered with an 11-1 run that included Prahalis making a 3-pointer and a three-point play. Lavender ended the stretch with two free throws that tied it at 50.

Patrice Lalor gave the Flyers their last lead at 52-50 with 9:20 remaining but Lavender followed with a free throw and short jumper and Sarah Schulze hit a 3-pointer hit to put Ohio State ahead 56-51.

Dayton couldn’t get closer than five the rest of the way.

Ohio State’s Shavelle Little had five steals and six rebounds and Schulze came off the bench to score a career-high 11 points in the final 12 minutes.

The game featured nine lead changes and 11 ties. Raterman said the Flyers came out determined in the second half.

"We weren’t going to back down," she said. "I think that’s what they expected us to do."

Ohio State’s defense stepped up once Dayton took the 10-point lead and really made the difference, Raterman said.

"We kind of cracked under the pressure," said Dayton coach Jim Jabir, who cited Ohio State’s enthusiastic home crowd as another key factor.

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