Buckeyes Head to Final Four, Face Georgetown – Ohio State Buckeyes
3/27/2007 12:00:00 AM | Men's Basketball
March 27, 2007
Final Four Media Guide Cover in PDF Format
Final Four Media Guide Inside Cover in PDF Format
Final Four Media Guide Notes in PDF Format
Final Four Media Guide Bios in PDF Format
Final Four Media Guide Inside Back Cover in PDF Format
Final Four Media Guide Back Cover in PDF Format
Download Free Acrobat Reader
Date: March 31, 2007
Opp: No. 9 Georgetown (30-6)
Site: Georgia Dome (53,500)
Game Time: 6:07 p.m. ET
Television: CBS
Local TV: WBNS 10 TV
TV Talent: Jim Nance (P-by-P), Billy Packer (Expert Analysis), TBA (Sideline)
Radio: OSU Radio Network (60 stations)
Local Radio: WBNS FM-97.1 AM-1460
Radio Talent: Paul Keels (P-by-P), Ron Stokes (Expert Analysis)
LEWIS CLIMBS NCAA SCORING CHART
Ron Lewis has scored 108 career points in NCAA tournament play, included a team-high 87 points in the four games this year. His NCAA tournament scoring total is the sixth-most in Ohio State history. Jerry Lucas (1960-62) owns the record with 266 points. He is followed by John Havlicek (156/1960-62), Michael Redd (133/1999-2000), Scoonie Penn (123/1999-2000) and Jim Jackson (121/1990-92). Lewis has three-consecutive 20+ scoring outings in NCAA tournament play (27 vs. Xavier, 25 vs. Tennessee and 22 vs. Memphis). The effort vs. Xavier is tied for the No. 9 spot in OSU history for points in an NCAA game. Against Memphis, Lewis tied an Ohio State NCAA tournament game record with 10 made foul shots (10 attempts). Arnold Risen knocked down 10 freebies against NYU at Madison Square Garden in 1945. Lewis has not missed a foul shot in NCAA tournament play this year (21-21) and is 29-31 (.935) from the charity stripe in six all-time NCAA tournament game appearances.
CONLEY SETS ANOTHER OSU RECORD
Freshman Mike Conley Jr. has made 24 of 30 foul shots in NCAA tournament play, including a 9 of 10 effort vs. Memphis and a 9 of 14 outing against Tennessee. He was 6 of 6 in the overtime victory vs. Xavier. The 14 attempts vs. the Volunteers is an Ohio State record for free throw opportunities in an NCAA tournament game. Arnold Risen went to the line 13 times vs. NYU in 1945.
BUCKEYES SET OSU NCAA FREE THROW RECORDS
As a team, Ohio State set school records for NCAA tournament games for both made (35) and attempted (41) foul shots in the win vs. Memphis.
SETTING THE SCENE Ohio State, the outright 2007 Big Ten regular season and tournament champions, enters the 2007 NCAA Final Four with a 34-3 overall record after a 15-1 regular season mark in Big Ten Conference play. Thad Matta, the league’s coach of the year, will lead the Buckeyes against Georgetown (30-6), the No. 2 seed in the East Region, at 6:07 p.m. Saturday in the first semifinal with the winner taking on No. 1 Florida (Midwest) or No. 2 UCLA (West) Monday, April 2, for the national title. The Gators and Bruins tipoff at 40 minutes (8:47 p.m. approx.) following the end of the Ohio State/Georgetown game in the second semifinal.
OHIO STATE ALL-ACCESS
Ohio State is one of the Final Four! Celebrate with ¼-off an Ohio State All-Access annual subscription! Click here and enter coupon code BUCKEYES4 to lock in this special 25% savings. Enjoy All-Access now through the madness in ’08 (including football!).
OHIO STATE VS. GEORGETOWN The game with the Hoyas is a rematch of the 2006 NCAA Tournament game in Dayton, Ohio, in which Georgetown eliminated the Buckeyes in the Second Round (70-52). The teams have split four all-time meetings. Ohio State and Georgetown first played in 1981. Ohio State won the first game played between the schools 47-46 at the Great Alaska Shootout in Anchorage. Georgetown was ranked No. 5 nationally in that Nov. 29, 1981 contest. The teams met for the second time March 15, 1987 in the Second Round of NCAA tournament play in Atlanta. The Hoyas, ranked No. 4, won 82-79. Prior to last year, the teams battled Dec. 22, 1990 in Las Vegas. The No. 7-ranked Buckeyes defeated No. 12 Georgetown 71-60.
THE NCAA TOURNAMENT
Ohio State is making its 20th appearance in the NCAA tournament. Overall, Ohio State has a 36-18 record all-time in NCAA tournament play. The Buckeyes have advanced to play in nine Final Fours, have finished as the runners-up three times (1939, 1961, 1962) and own one title (1960). Ohio State has finished third four times (1944, 1945, 1946, 1968).
OHIO STATE IN THE NCAA TOURNAMENT
| Year | Region/Seed | Rcd. | Rnd. |
| 1939 | Eastern | 2-1# | Finals |
| 1944 | Eastern | 1-1# | Semifinals |
| 1945 | Eastern | 1-1# | Semifinals |
| 1946 | Eastern | 2-1# | Semifinals |
| 1950 | Eastern | 1-1 | R. Finals |
| 1960 | Mideast | 4-0# | Finals |
| 1961 | Mideast | 3-1# | Finals |
| 1962 | Mideast | 3-1# | Finals |
| 1968 | Mideast | 3-1# | Semifinals |
| 1971 | Mideast | 1-1 | R. Finals |
| 1980 | West/No. 4 | 1-1 | Semifinals |
| 1982 | East/No. 8 | 0-1 | First Rnd. |
| 1983 | East/No. 3 | 1-1 | R. Semifinals |
| 1985 | Midwest/No. 4 | 1-1 | 2nd Rnd. |
| 1987 | Southwest/No. 9 | 1-1 | 2nd. Rnd. |
| 1990 | West/No. 8 | 1-1 | 2nd Rnd. |
| 1991 | Midwest/No. 1 | 2-1 | R. Semifinals |
| 1992 | Southwest/No. 1 | 3-1 | R. Finals |
| 2006 | Minneapolis/No. 2 | 1-1 | 2nd Rnd. |
| 2007 | South/No. 1 | 4-0 | Semifinals |
| Totals | 36-18 (.667) |
* Teams were not seeded prior to 1979.
# Final Four Appearance
NCAA TOURNAMENT FACTS
Ohio State has appeared in 20 NCAA Tournaments since 1939. TheBuckeyes are 2-2 vs. Georgetown in the all-time series and 67-46vs. current members of the Big East Conference. Ohio State defeatedCincinnati earlier this season in Indianapolis at the WoodenTradition. Ohio State has been among the Top 4 seeds seven timessince the seeding process began in 1979. Six Big Ten teams wereselected to participate in the 2007 NCAA Tournament. Ohio State,Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan State, Indiana and Purdue competed.Ohio State was 9-1 vs. those teams in the regular season and leaguetournament. The Buckeyes faced eight teams this season thatqualified for the 2007 NCAA Tournament. In addition to the Big Tenteams, Ohio State traveled to Florida and North Carolina, both No.1 seeds this year, and also played host to Tennessee in Columbus.Ohio State is 4-5 all-time vs. UCLA and 32-34 against members ofthe Pacific 10 Conference. The Buckeyes traveled to Florida earlierthis year and fell to the Gators 86-60. Ohio State is 5-3 in theseries with Florida and 27-23 vs. current members of theSoutheastern Conference. The Buckeyes downed Tennessee twice in2006-07.
ODEN NAMED AP FIRST TEAM ALL-AMERICAN
Ohio State freshman Greg Oden was selected to the Associated Press All-America First Team Monday. The Indianapolis native leads the Buckeyes in scoring (15.4 ppg), rebounding (9.5 rpg) and blocks (3.33 bpg). He is the first Buckeye since Jim Jackson in 1992 to make the AP All-America First Team. Oden, the Buckeyes’ first freshman All-American, is the 15th Ohio State first team All-America selection and 10th AP honoree. The last was Jim Jackson in 1992. The last center to earn the accolade was Gary Bradds in 1964.
Ohio State Associated Press All-Americans
| Year | Player, class, team | Pos. |
| 1950 | Dick Schnittker, Sr., First Team | F |
| 1955 | Robin Freeman, Jr., First Team | G |
| 1956 | Robin Freeman, Sr., First Team | G |
| 1960 | Jerry Lucas, So., First Team | C |
| 1961 | Jerry Lucas, Jr., First Team | C |
| 1962 | Jerry Lucas, Sr., First Team | C |
| 1963 | Gary Bradds, Jr., First Team | C |
| 1964 | Gary Bradds, Sr., First Team | C |
| 1992 | Jim Jackson, Jr., First Team | G |
| 2007 | Greg Oden, Fr., First Team | C |
BUCKEYE TRIO RECOGNIZED IN TEXAS
Freshman Mike Conley Jr. was named the Most Outstanding Player in the 2007 South Region after leading the Buckeyes to a pair of wins vs. Tennessee and Memphis last week. Conley joined teammates Greg Oden and Ron Lewis on the all-region squad. Oden scored 17 points on 7 of 8 shooting from the field in the regional final win over Memphis. Lewis scored 47 points in the two games to lead the Buckeyes in scoring. Conley was 9 of 21 from the field and 19 of 24 from the foul line while handing out eight assists and recording four steals to help the Buckeyes to the program’s ninth Final Four.
MATTA MAKES MARK ON SWEET 16
Three teams in the 2007 NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 have ties to Ohio State head coach Thad Matta. Southern Illinois University, who fell in the Sweet 16 to Kansas March 22, signed Matta to play men’s basketball for the start of the 1985-86 season. Matta played one year for the Salukis before transfering to Butler to finish his playing career (1988-90). Butler advanced to the Sweet 16 with a win over Maryland then had its season halted by Florida March 23. Ohio State continued its season with an overtime win over Xavier March 17. Matta was an administrative assistant at Butler from 1992-94 and was an assistant coach from 1998-2000. He began his career as a head coach with the Bulldogs as well, spending one season (2001) in charge before moving on to Xavier, where he coached for three years (2002-04) before taking over in Columbus.
MEMPHIS WIN ADDS TO BIG TEN RECORD
The overtime victory for the Ohio State men’s basketball team against Xavier March 17 set a Big Ten record for combined men’s and women’s basketball wins in a season by a league school. The Buckeyes have won 62 games this season. The men’s team is 34-3 while the women’s squad finished its season 28-4. Michigan State held the previous record with 59 wins (26-7 M, 33-4 W) in 2004-05. Ohio State also is the only Big Ten school to win outright league titles in both men’s and women’s basketball in the same season twice (2005-06 and 2006-07). Purdue (1993-94) and Indiana (1982-83) have done it once.
OHIO STATE ADVANCES TO FINAL FOUR FOR NINTH TIME, FIRST SINCE 1968
The victory over Memphis March 24 in San Antonio (92-76) allowed Ohio State to advance to the 2007 NCAA Final Four in Atlanta, Ga., Saturday. The Buckeyes have appeared in the NCAA Final Four nine times. The last appearance came in 1968. The Buckeyes advance as the No. 1 seed from the South Region. Ohio State is 9-2 all-time as a No. 1 seed. The NCAA began seeding tournament teams in 1979.
LEWIS LEADS BUCKEYES IN NCAA, POSTSEASON GAMES
Senior Ron Lewis is leading a young Ohio State team in postseason competition. In seven postseason games, three in the Big Ten tournament and four NCAA competitions, Lewis is the top Ohio State scorer with an average of 19.0 points a game in seven victories. Lewis has connected on 17 of 37 3-pointers (.459) and leads the team from the foul line with 32 of 35 makes (.914) from the stripe. Freshman Greg Oden averages a double-double with 15.7 points and 10.1 rebounds in postseason play. He also has 20 blocks. Classmate and high school teammate (Lawrence North, Indianapolis) Mike Conley Jr. has contributed 14.7 points, 35 assists and 14 steals. In the four NCAA tournament games, Lewis averaged 21.8 points while making 12 of 26 3s (.462) and all 21 foul shots. Jamar Butler also added 11.3 points a game on 11 of 25 3-pointers (.440).
MATTA IMPROVES NCAA RECORD
Thad Matta has taken each eligible team to NCAA tournament play in his seven seasons as a collegiate head coach. In six appearances in the annual postseason spectacle, Matta owns an 11-5 overall record. His teams have never lost in the opening round and have advanced to a pair of Sweet 16s. This is his first Final Four appearance as a head coach. Matta’s 2004 Xavier team fell to Duke in the regional finals prior to Matta taking over in Columbus. His first Ohio State team won 20 games but served a university-imposed postseason ban. The 2005-06 Buckeyes advanced to the NCAA Second Round.
1ST 100 FOR MATTA GOING WELL AT OHIO STATE
Thad Matta has coached 101 games to date with No. 100 contested in San Antonio, Texas, Thursday in the South Regional semifinals, an 85-84 win over Tennessee. Matta has the second-best winning percentage over the 13 Ohio State coaches all-time after 100 games on the job. Fred Taylor (1959-1976) was 85-15 over his first 100 games for a winning percentage of .850. Matta is 80-21 (.792) to date.
| Coach (yrs.) | 1st 100 gms. | W pct. |
| Fred Taylor (1959-76) | 85-15 | .850 |
| Thad Matta (2005- ) | 79-21 | .790 |
| Randy Ayers (1990-97) | 76-24 | .760 |
| Gary Williams (1987-89) | 59-41 | .590 |
| H.G. Olsen (1923-46) | 56-44 | .560 |
| Lynn W. St. John (1912-19) | 56-44 | .560 |
BUCKEYES EARN FIRST LEAGUE TOURNAMENT TITLE
Thad Matta led the Buckeyes to a sweep of the 2007 Big Ten regular season and postseason tournament championships with the win (66-49) over No. 3 Wisconsin March 11 in Chicago. Ohio State (34-3) clinched the regular-season title (15-1) vs. the Badgers as well Feb. 25 in Columbus with a 49-48 victory of the then-No. 1 ranked Badgers. The Buckeyes defeated Michigan (72-63, 3/9) and Purdue (63-52, 3/10) to reach the Big Ten tournament finals.
ODEN MATCHES LUCAS’ POSTSEASON DOUBLE-DOUBLE STREAK
Greg Oden extended his double-double streak to four games with 19 points and 10 rebounds vs. Central Connecticut State in the First Round and 14 points and 12 rebounds vs. Xavier in the Second Round of the 2007 NCAA Tournament in Lexington. Including the last two games of the Big Ten tournament, Oden matched Jerry Lucas (1960) as the only Buckeyes to record four postseason double-doubles. The last Ohio State player to post back-to-back double-doubles in NCAA tournament play was Perry Carter in 1991 (15 pts., 11 reb. vs. Towson; 19 pts., 18 reb. vs. Georgia Tech). Oden’s four-game double-double streak was the longest since Terence Dials had five in a row Feb. 12-25, 2006.
ODEN, CONLEY EARN ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM ACCOLADES
Freshmen Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr. were selected by the league media to the All-Big Ten Tournament squad March 11. Oden was named the Most Outstanding Player of the event as well. In three games, Oden averaged 17.0 points, 12.3 rebounds and 4.0 blocks while shooting 62 percent from the field (21-34). Conley played 33.3 minutes a game (100 minutes) in three days. He dished out 18 assists and recorded six steals while averaging 14.0 points a game.
NABC SELECTS ODEN TO ALL-AMERICA SQUAD
Greg Oden, a freshman center from Indianapolis, was selected to the National Association of Basketball Coaches Second Team All-America squad March 7. Fifteen student-athletes make up three NABC All-America teams from across the country. The teams were voted upon by the NABC membership. The honor adds to several Oden has earned to date. He was selected by the Big Ten coaches and media to the 2007 First Team All-Big Ten squad, made the league’s all-freshman team, was the conference freshman of the year and was the league’s defensive player of the year. The United States Basketball Writers Association also picked Oden and high school teammate Mike Conley Jr. to the All-District V team. Oden becomes the first All-America selection at Ohio State since point guard Scoonie Penn was an NABC second team All-America in 2000.
MATTA REPEATS AS BIG TEN COACH OF THE YEAR
Ohio State returned just one starter and four letterwinners from its 2006 Big Ten title team but has put together a record-breaking campaign in 2007 with a school-record 34 victories, including a 15-1 record in league play. After consecutive outright league titles, the Big Ten coaches and media selected Thad Matta as the league’s coach of the year in 2006-07, his second in as many seasons. Matta now has four coach-of-the-year honors to his credit in three NCAA Division I conferences. He also has five league titles in his seven years as a head coach. Ohio State coaches have won the Big Ten award seven times. Matta joins Randy Ayers as back-to-back honorees. Ayers did so in 1990 and 1991. Matta’s three-year record of 80-21 (.792) gives him the most wins of the 13 head coaches in program history over the first three years of their tenures. His three-year winning percentage is second only to legendary mentor Fred Taylor’s .808 win percentage over his first three seasons (63-15 from 1959-62).
BUCKEYES WELL REPRESENTED ON COACHES, MEDIA ALL-LEAGUE TEAMS
Big Ten coaches and media voted several Buckeyes to the all-league teams in 2006-07. The coaches chose Greg Oden as the conference Freshman of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year. He landed a spot on the First Team All-Big Ten and All-Defensive teams. Classmate Daequan Cook was voted the Sixth Man of the Year. Another OSU rookie, Mike Conley Jr., joined Oden on the All-Freshman Team as well as earning a spot on the Second Team All-Big Ten squad. Junior Jamar Butler and senior Ron Lewis were honorable mention All-Big Ten selections as well. The league media picked Oden and Conley on the first team with Butler, Cook and Lewis earning spots on the honorable mention squad. Oden was the media’s selection for Freshman of the Year. He also was Ohio State’s Big Ten Sportsmanship Award honoree.
OHIO STATE REPEATS ALL-BIG TEN HONORS AT CENTER
A season ago senior center Terence Dials earned the 2006 Big Ten’s Player of the Year award and gained First Team All-Big Ten accolades. With Greg Oden earning first team honors this season, Ohio State has repeat first teamers in the middle for the first time since 1970 (Dave Sorenson) and 1971 (Luke Witte). Jerry Lucas was a first team center in each of his three seasons from 1960-62. Oden is Ohio State’s fourth Big Ten Freshman of the Year joining Jim Jackson (1990), Greg Simpson (1993) and Michael Redd (1998). He is the Buckeyes’ second Defensive Player of the Year and third award winner. Ken Johnson won the honor in 2000 and 2001. Oden’s high school teammate at Lawrence North High School in Indianapolis, Mike Conley Jr., is the first Ohio State point guard to earn first team honors since Scoonie Penn was a back-to-back selection in 1999 and 2000.
BUCKEYES BACK NO. 1 SEED IN 2007 LEAGUE TOURNAMENT
Thad Matta’s Buckeyes earned the No. 1 seed in the annual Big Ten tournament for the second-consecutive season after securing the outright league title with the 49-48 victory Feb. 25 in Columbus vs. then-No. 1 Wisconsin. The Buckeyes closed out the regular season with a 65-61 win at Michigan March 3 and won all three conference tournament games to claim the first postseason championship in program history.
OSU BIG TEN TOURNAMENT HISTORY
The Buckeyes are 9-6 all-time in Big Ten Tournament play since the event began in 1998. The Buckeyes were the No. 1 seed in 2007.
| Year (seed) | W/L | Opp. (seed) | Score |
| 1998 (11) | L | Indiana (6) | 71-78 |
| 2000 (1) | L | Penn State (9) | 66-71 |
| 2003 (8) | W | Iowa (9) | 66-64 |
| W | Wisconsin (1) | 58-50 | |
| W | Mich. St. (5) | 55-54 | |
| L | Illinois (2) | 59-72 | |
| 2004 (9) | L | Indiana (8) | 69-83 |
| 2005 (6) | W | Penn State (11) | 72-69 |
| L | Wisconsin (3) | 49-60 | |
| 2006 (1) | W | Penn State (8) | 63-56 |
| W | Indiana (5) | 52-51 | |
| L | Iowa (2) | 60-67 | |
| 2007 (1) | W | Michigan (8) | 72-62 |
| W | Purdue (5) | 63-52 | |
| W | Wisconsin(2) | 66-49 |
MATTA GRABS 1ST BIG TEN POSTSEASON CROWN
Head coach Thad Matta guided the Buckeyes to the outright 2006 and 2007 Big Ten Conference regular-season titles, clinching the latter with a 49-48 home victory over then-No. 1 Wisconsin Feb. 25 at Value City Arena. The 2007 championship gives Matta five total regular-season league titles in three Division I conferences. Matta won both the regular-season and conference tournament titles in the Midwestern Collegiate Conference in 2001 while coaching his lone season at Butler, his alma mater. He then won both the regular-season and tournament Atlantic 10 titles in his first year at Xavier in 2002. The Musketeers won the regular-season title again in 2003 and the tournament championship in 2004. Matta was the coach of the year in both the MCC (2001) and A-10 (2002). He was tabbed the Big Ten’s coach-of-the-year in 2006 and again in 2007, his fourth honor in his seven years as a collegiate head coach. Matta has won either a regular season or postseason tournament title in six of seven years as a head coach. The 2007 Big Ten Tournament title is his first as a Buckeye.
Thad Matta Coaching Resumé
| Year | School | League Title |
P’season Title |
Coach of Yr. |
Conf. |
| 2001 | Butler | X | X | X | MCC |
| 2002 | Xavier | X | X | X | A-10 |
| 2003 | Xavier | X | — | — | A-10 |
| 2004 | Xavier | — | X | — | A-10 |
| 2005 | Ohio St. | — | — | — | Big Ten |
| 2006 | Ohio St. | X | — | X | Big Ten |
| 2007 | Ohio St. | X | X | X | Big Ten |
BUCKEYES ENTER FINAL FOUR ON 21-GAME WIN STREAK
Ohio State surged down the stretch in Big Ten Conference play, winning 13-consecutive regular season-league games, three conference tournament contests and 21 in a row overall. The current streak is the longest since the 1961-62 team opened the season with 22-consecutive victories. The Buckeyes won 32-consecutive games over the 1959-60 (last 5 gms.) and 1960-61 (first 27 gms.) seasons.
All-Time Ohio State Win Streaks
| Wins | Years |
| 32 | 1959-60 to 1960-61 |
| 22 | 1961-62 |
| 21 | 2006-07 |
BUCKEYES LOCK DOWN 17th TITLE
Ohio State secured the outright 2007 regular-season Big Ten title with the win vs. Wisconsin in the home finale Feb. 25. The Buckeyes have won 17 league championships in school history. The 2007 championship is the second in as many years under head coach Thad Matta. Ohio State has won 12 outright league titles and five shared championships.
ODEN AMONG WOODEN AWARD FINALISTS
Freshman center Greg Oden will be on the ballot of 22 student-athletes in the running for the 2007 Wooden Award. Only once before has a freshman been included on the final ballot. Oden and Kevin Durant of Texas are the only two first-year collegiate players in the running this year. The winner will be announced April 9 in Los Angeles.
ODEN, CONLEY JR. PICKED FOR POSTSEASON HONORS
Freshmen Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr. have been selected by the National Association of Basketball Coaches to the All-District 10 team with Oden picked for the first team and Conley for the second team. Oden leads the Buckeyes in scoring and rebounding while Conley is tops in assists and steals. Both players lead the Big Ten Conference in several statistical categories. Oden also is a finalist for the United States Basketball Writers’ Association’s Oscar Robertson Trophy, given to the nation’s player of the year. Oden, along with fellow freshman Kevin Durant of Texas, sophomore Tyler Hansbrough of North Carolina, junior Joakim Noah of Florida and Wisconsin senior Alando Tucker, make up the finalists for that award.
BUCKEYES REACH NO. 1 IN BOTH POLLS FOLLOWING WISCONSIN WIN
Voters in the Associated Press men’s college basketball poll picked Ohio State for the No. 1 spot in its weekly poll for the first time since 1962 Feb. 25. Ohio State last played a game as the AP No. 1 team March 24, 1962 in the NCAA title game that year. Ohio State is 57-3 all-time when ranked No. 1 in the AP poll after first reaching the top spot before a Dec. 17, 1960 win (93-82) at Wichita State. Ohio State has been rated No. 1 in the ESPN/USA Today coaches’ poll in 11 games, all this season, with a 10-1 record in those outings. Overall, Ohio State is 59-4 when playing in games as the No. 1-rated team nationally.
ODEN EARNS SECOND LEAGUE HONOR
Greg Oden shared Big Ten Player of the Week honors with Drew Neitzel of Michigan State after helping the Buckeyes to a pair of home wins as Ohio State clinched the outright Big Ten title for the second-consecutive year Feb. 25 at home vs. then-No. 1 Wisconsin (49-48). Oden registered 11 points while adding five rebounds vs. the Badgers. He began the week by tallying his ninth double-double of the season (13 total) with 17 points and 14 rebounds against Penn State. For the week, he averaged 14 points and 9.5 rebounds per game, while blocking seven shots.
SENIORS RECOGNIZED FOR CAREER ACHIEVEMENTS
The Ohio State men’s basketball program recognized four seniors prior to the start of the game vs. the Badgers, the final home contest of the season, Feb. 25. Ivan Harris, a four-year letterwinner from Springfield, Ohio, Ron Lewis, a Columbus native with a three-year tenure on the Buckeyes’ roster, and managers Ty Shepfer and Alan Stuker all made their final appearance at Value City Arena.
HARRIS PART OF RECORDS BOOK
Ivan Harris will leave Ohio State as one of its all-time best 3-point shooters. With 126 made 3-pointers over his 125-game career, Harris ranks No. 10 in history in 3-pointers made as a Buckeye. His .400 long-range shooting percentage (126-315) rates No. 3 all-time. With his 3-3 clip from 3-point land in the two games of the South Regional, Harris passed Sean Connolly, who made 39.9 percent of his 3-point attempts (147-368). During his career, Harris has been a part of 94 Ohio State victories, which includes 57 wins at Value City Arena.
LEWIS FINISHES AT OHIO STATE
Ron Lewis started elsewhere but finished at home. The Columbus Brookhaven alum started his career at Bowling Green State University but has spent the last three years at Ohio State where he has been a mainstay in the lineup the last two years after sitting out the 2004-05 season. Lewis has scored 1,709 career points in 129 games, 60 with the Falcons and 69 with the Buckeyes. His ability to score in a variety of ways has helped the Buckeyes to 60 victories the last two years to go along with the 2006 and 2007 outright Big Ten titles and a home record of 34-1 at Value City Arena.
OHIO STATE VS. NO. 1 AND AS NO. 1
Ohio State is no stranger when it comes to facing the top-rated team in the country. The Buckeyes are 8-9 all-time when taking on the nation’s best, which includes wins in six of the last seven opportunities vs. No. 1. The last time an Ohio State team took on the No. 1 team in the land was in the home finale this year against Wisconsin. The then No. 2-rated Buckeyes (AP) prevailed 49-48. Ohio State is 59-4 all-time with a 57-3 record as the AP No. 1 team and has a 10-1 record as the coaches’ poll leader.
BIG TEN WIN STREAK LONGEST SINCE 1961 FOR BUCKEYES
The most recent win over Michigan (March 3) in the season finale was the 13th-consecutive victory in Big Ten regular-season play for the Buckeyes. The league win streak is the longest since 1961. The win vs. Michigan gives the Buckeyes the second-longest league win streak in school history behind the 27-game run over the 1960-62 seasons. Ohio State was 14-0 in conference play in 1961 to make the longest single season league win streak. That team won the Big Ten title and advanced to the NCAA title game. The Buckeyes have won at least 10-consecutive regular-season league games six times in history.
| Yr. | Strk. | Big Ten Rcd. | Overall | NCAA |
| 1961 | 14 | 14-0 (1st) | 27-1 | Title gm. |
| 2007 | 13 | 15-1 (1st) | 34-3 | Final Four |
| 1962 | 12 | 13-1 (1st) | 26-2 | Title gm. |
| 1960 | 12 | 13-1 (1st) | 25-3 | Champs |
| 1971 | 10 | 13-1 (1st) | 20-6 | Regs. |
| 1950 | 10 | 12-1 (1st) | 22-4 | Regs. |
Note: OSU record for consecutive Big Ten wins is 27 over the1960-62 conference seasons: 1960 (1), 1961 (14), 1962 (12).
LEAGUE WINS TOTAL MOST SINCE ’92
The 15 Big Ten Conference wins this season is the most since the 1991 and 1992 Ohio State teams won 15 in an 18-game league schedule. The Big Ten schedule has been 16 games since 1998. The 1991 and 1992 teams were the last Buckeye squads to post back-to-back conference championships. The 1991 team tied for the league crown and the 1992 squad won it outright.
OHIO STATE REMAINS NO. 1 IN BOTH POLLS, 1ST IN AP SINCE 1962
Ohio State ended the 2006 season ranked No. 6 in the final Associated Press Poll and No. 13 in the last ESPN/USA Today coaches poll. This year, after losing four senior starters from 2005-06, the Buckeyes currently are ranked No. 1 in both the coaches’ poll and in the AP Top 25. The Buckeyes were ranked No. 1 earlier this season in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll when playing at North Carolina Nov. 29 and then again Feb. 19. The current No. 1 ranking in the AP poll is the highest since Ohio State was No. 1 at the end of the 1962 season. The Buckeyes were No. 1 for 53-consecutive games, the last being a loss to No. 2 Cincinnati in the 1962 title game March 24 (71-59).
BUCKEYES IN THE TOP 25
Ohio State is 50-39 all-time when playing in a game in which both teams are ranked. The Buckeyes are 229-54 (.809) when playing with an AP Top 10 ranking and 328-94 (.777) when playing with an AP Top 25 rating. Ohio State has been ranked among the AP’s Top 10 in each of the last 44 games dating back to March 1, 2006 (No. 9 at Northwestern). The Buckeyes are 39-5 during that stretch with losses to No. 10 Iowa (76-70, 3/12/06), vs. No. 23 Georgetown (70-52, 3/19/06), at No. 3 UNC (98-89, 11/29/06), at No. 5 Florida (86-60, 12/23/06) and at No. 3 Wisconsin (72-69, 1/9/07). Ohio State has been a Top 25 squad for the last 62 games (53-9) since Dec. 23, 2005 as the No. 24 team in a win vs. Tennessee St. (75-65).
BUCKEYES TOUGH TO BEAT AT HOME UNDER MATTA
Thad Matta has directed the Buckeyes to a 50-3 record in Columbus in three seasons as head coach of the Buckeyes. He is 48-3 overall at Value City Arena, which includes a 27-0 record vs. non-conference foes. Ohio State defeated Chattanooga in November of 2005 at St. John Arena on the OSU campus and Youngstown State at Nationwide Arena in downtown Columbus earlier this season. The 34-1 mark over the last two seasons at VCA is the best two-year record in the facility since Ohio State began play in 1998-99. The Buckeyes set the building record with 18 victories Feb. 25 against then No. 1 Wisconsin.
Matta at Value City Arena…
| Current win streak | 25 |
| vs. the Big Ten | 21-3 |
| vs. non-conference | 27-0 |
| in 2004-05 | 14-2 (6-2 in Big Ten) |
| in 2005-06 | 16-1 (7-1 in Big Ten) |
| in 2006-07 | 18-0 (8-0 in Big Ten) |
| as OSU head coach | 48-3 |
| Total in Columbus | 50-3* |
* Includes 1 win each at St. John and Nationwide arenas inColumbus.
BUTLER, CONLEY 1ST TANDEM WITH 100+ ASSISTS SINCE 1996-97
Jamar Butler has recorded 137 assists to date this season after dishing out four helpers vs. Memphis in the 2007 NCAA Tournament South Regional Final March 24. Freshman Mike Conley Jr. is the team and Big Ten leader with 226 assists on the year. The last time Ohio State had two players with 100+ assists in a season was the 1996-97 season when Damon Stringer (120) and Shaun Stonerook (101) accomplished the feat.
CONLEY EARNS BIG TEN HONOR
Mike Conley Jr., the Big Ten’s leader in assists, steals and assist-to-turnover ratio, earned co-Big Ten Player of the Week honors (Feb. 12) after he led Ohio State to a pair of home wins (Feb. 6 vs. Michigan, Feb. 10 vs. Purdue) to remain unbeaten at home (18-0) and at the top in Big Ten Conference play with a 15-1 record. Conley, a freshman point guard from Indianapolis, averaged 18.5 points and five assists while connecting on 61 percent of his shots from the field, 75 percent of his 3-point attempts and 86 percent of his foul shots. He scored a career-high 23 points in the win over Michigan while making 9-of-12 shots from the field and handing out six assists with just one turnover. He shared the award with Wisconsin senior forward Alando Tucker.
BUCKEYES REACH 10 WINS IN LEAGUE PLAY FOR 25TH TIME
Ohio State has won 10 or more games in Big Ten Conference play 25 times in history. The Buckeyes finished 15-1 vs. league competition in 2007. Ohio State, 12-4 in 2006, has posted back-to-back double-digit wins in conference play for the first time since 1990-92 when Ohio State reached at least 10 conference wins over three-consecutive seasons. The win total this season is the most in a 16-game league schedule and the most since a 14-0 record in a 14-game Big Ten schedule in 1961.
MATTA REACHES 7TH 20-WIN SEASON AS HEAD COACH, SETS CAREER HIGH
Thad Matta does not know what it’s like to end a season with fewer than 20 wins during his head coaching career. The third-year Ohio State coach came to the Buckeyes with a streak of four 20+ win seasons at Butler (24 wins in 2001) and Xavier (26 in all three years from 2002-04). With 20 victories in 2004-05, 26 a season ago and 34 this year at Ohio State, Matta is one of two coaches nationally to record 20 or more wins in the first seven seasons of his coaching career. Mark Few of Gonzaga is the other with 20+ in all eight years with the Bulldogs. Matta has the Buckeyes off to a 34-3 record after three wins to claim the 2007 Big Ten Tournament title March 11 in Chicago and four wins to open the 2007 NCAA Tournament. Overall, Ohio State has enjoyed 18 20-win seasons. The first was a 22-4 campaign in 1950 under the direction of head coach William H.H. Dye. Legendary Ohio State coach Fred Taylor recorded six 20-win campaigns. Eldon Miller directed four while Gary Williams and Randy Ayers each coached two teams to 20 or more wins in a season. Matta became the only Ohio State coach to guide his first three Buckeye teams to 20 or more victories. Bruce Weber (Illinois) is the only other current Big Ten head coach to reach 20+ wins in the first three seasons in the conference. Weber was 26-7 in 2003-04, 37-2 in 2004-05 and 26-7 in 2005-06.
ODEN CLAIMS FIRST OF TWO BIG TEN WEEKLY HONORS
Greg Oden, a freshman center, averaged a double-double in a pair of wins for the then-fifth-ranked Buckeyes to earn the Big Ten’s Player of the Week honor, which he shared with Wisconsin’s Alando Tucker, Jan. 29. Oden’s 18 points per game and 11.5 rebound average led Ohio State to victories at Northwestern and at home against Michigan State. He connected on 59 percent of his field goals (10-17) and 67 percent of his foul shots (16-24).
Against Northwestern, Oden recorded a career-high 17 rebounds. Northwestern had 19 rebounds as a team. His 11-of-14 shooting from the foul line against Michigan State was instrumental in Ohio State’s 66-64 victory over the Spartans. Oden earned the honor again Feb. 25, sharing it with Michigan State’s Drew Neitzel.
CONLEY’S PLAY EXCELLED DURING BIG TEN SEASON
Ohio State freshman Mike Conley Jr. has orchestrated 21-consecutive wins for the Buckeyes from his point guard position. In wins vs. Northwestern (1/17) and Iowa (1/20), Conley handed out 10 assists in each game, was credited with eight steals, became Ohio State’s all-time leader in assists by a freshman (226), was the first Buckeye to post back-to-back games with 10 assists since 1988, averaged a double-double with 12.5 points and 10.0 assists, recorded a career high with 17 points (vs. Northwestern), shot 63 percent from the field (10-16) and played 66 minutes with just four turnovers. In 16 regular-season Big Ten games, Conley averaged 6.6 assists, 2.1 steals and a +3.4 assist-to-turnover ratio (105/31). Five of his six 10-assist games this season have come against Big Ten foes (Indiana, Northwestern, Iowa, Minnesota and Penn State).
OSU FRESHMEN SETTING RECORDS
Ohio State freshmen are setting rookie records this season. Point guard Mike Conley Jr. has six games this season in which he has handed out 10 assists, which establishes an OSU record for double-digit assist games in a season. Conley’s six 10-assist games rate No. 2 in the freshman records book behind the 11 handed out by Damon Stringer against Central Connecticut State in 1995. In the single game steals category, Conley is tied for the top spot among freshmen all-time at OSU with five thefts three times this year. He also has six of the Top 7 games for a rookie with four or more steals. His 226 assists and 83 steals are both overall and freshman single-season records. Greg Oden is No. 4 among OSU freshmen in scoring average (15.4 ppg.), No. 2 in field goal percentage (.616/173-281), No. 2 in rebounding (9.5 rpg.) and No. 1 in blocked shots (100). Daequan Cook is No. 2 in 3-point shooting pct. (.422/54-128) and No. 1 in 3-pointers made (54).
CONLEY, ODEN AMONG TOP 10 NATIONALLY
Freshman Mike Conley Jr. averages 6.1 assists a game for the Buckeyes this season. He leads the Big Ten with 226 assists and is No. 7 nationally. Conley’s 83 steals leads all conference players. His steals average (2.2 spg.) is No. 28 nationally. Oden is No. 7 in blocks (100/3.3 bpg.), No. 17 in FG pct. (.616) and No. 14 in rebounds (9.5 rpg.).
CONLEY JR., BUTLER ON POINT
Ohio State’s point guard tandem of Mike Conley Jr. and Jamar Butler rate Nos. 1 and 8, respectively, in assists and Nos. 1 and 2 in assist/turnover ratio among all Big Ten players. The pair has combined to hand out 363 assists while committing 146 turnovers (+2.5 a/t ratio). Conley’s 226 assists this season set Ohio State’s single season record for assists. He passed Curtis Wilson’s 188 as a senior in 1988 for the record with four at Michigan March 3. Butler recorded 144 assists as a sophomore, good for the No. 9 spot all-time at OSU in single-season assists. With 355 to date, Butler took control of the No. 9 spot for career assists with six at Michigan March 3. Jim Jackson (1990-92) is up next at the No. 8 spot with 372.
FIVE BUCKEYES RECORD DOUBLE-DOUBLES
Five Ohio State players have recorded a double-double this season to date after freshman Mike Conley Jr. scored a then-career-high 17 points to go with 10 assists in a 73-41 win over Northwestern Jan. 17. Freshmen Daequan Cook and Greg Oden, junior Othello Hunter and senior Ron Lewis each have scored 10 or more points while grabbing at least 10 boards in a game already this year. The last time an Ohio State team had five different players record double-doubles was in 1994-95 (Antonio Watson, Kevin Martin, Carlos Davis, Rickey Dudley and Doug Etzler). Ohio State is 519-246 (.678) in games when at least one Buckeye has a double-double. Oden is the latest to hit double digits in scoring (14) and rebounding (12) in a game. He did so vs. Xavier (3/17).
ODEN’S DOUBLE-DOUBLE IN DEBUT MATCHES WILLIAMS’ EFFORT IN 1977
When Ohio State freshman Greg Oden took the court for the first time Dec. 2 little did he know he would be on his way to matching one of Ohio State’s all-time great’s career-opening efforts. With 14 points and 10 rebounds Oden became the first freshman to reach double digits in scoring and rebounding in his freshman debut since Ohio State Hall of Famer (HOF Class of 1999) Herb Williams did so in his first game as a Buckeye in 1977. Williams, who finished his career No. 2 in career scoring with 2,011 points, rebounding with 1,111 career boards and blocked shots with 328, scored 34 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in a 99-82 victory against California-Hayward Nov. 25, 1977. Williams went on to record 59 double-doubles for his career, second only to Jerry Lucas’ 78 in 82 career games.
OHIO STATE TOPS BIG TEN IN SEVERAL AREAS
The Buckeyes have put together a successful season with 34 wins in 37 outings, an outright Big Ten regular-season title, the 2007 Big Ten Tournament Championship and a Final Four appearance in the 2007 NCAA Tournament. The effort also has the team leading the 11 Big Ten schools in several statistical areas. Ohio State leads league institutions in scoring (73.9 ppg.), field goal shooting percentage (.471), rebounding (35.9 rpg.), scoring margin (+13.5), blocked shots (5.83) and defensive rebounds (24.8). Ohio State is second in 3-pointers made (7.6 pg.), assists (15.37), field goal pct. defense (.397) and assist-to-turnover ratio (+1.31 apg.).
YOUNG BUCKS LEAD BIG TEN
Mike Conley Jr. finds himself leading the Big Ten Conference in three statistical categories. He leads the league with 83 steals (2.2 spg.), has the best assist/turnover ratio (+2.7) and the highest assists per game average (6.1 apg.). Classmate Greg Oden is No. 1 in FG pct. (.616), rebounding (9.5 rpg.), blocked shots (3.3 bpg.), offensive rebounds (3.5 orpg.) and defensive rebounds (6.0 drpg.). Freshman Daequan Cook is No. 4 in 3-point shooting percentage (.422/54-128).
BUCKEYES DO WELL OUTSIDE THE LINE UNDER MATTA
Thad Matta’s Buckeyes shoot the 3-point shot and shoot it well. In three seasons as the Ohio State head coach, the Buckeyes have made 10 or more 3-point shots in 29 games. The Buckeyes are 24-5 in those contests, which includes a 6-2 record this season. Ohio State had a streak of 17-consecutive wins with 10+ made 3s snapped at North Carolina (Nov. 29) earlier this season when Ohio State connected on 13 of 26 treys but fell to the Tar Heels 98-89 in Chapel Hill. All-time, the Buckeyes have made 10+ 3-pointers 46 times, with wins in 39 of those games (.847). Matta’s teams have been involved in 63 percent of all games with 10 or more made 3s by the Buckeyes (29 of 46). Opponents have made 10+ treys 67 times with a record of 29-38 against OSU in those games.
HIGH PERCENTAGE SHOTS PAY OFF
The Buckeyes enjoy success from long range but the team still takes advantage of its opportunities down low as well. In the last three years under head coach Thad Matta the Buckeyes have made at least half their shots in 35 games, which includes 17 of 37 games this season. Ohio State is 32-3 under Matta when shooting 50 percent or better from the field, including a 16-1 record this season.
BUCKEYES COMPLETE TOUGH STRETCH 3-1 VS. 2006 NCAA TEAMS
Ohio State completed one of the more difficult stretches of its 2006-07 schedule with games vs. Indiana Jan. 2 (W 74-67), Illinois Jan. 6 (W 62-44), Wisconsin Jan. 9 (L 72-69) and Tennessee Jan. 13 (W 68-66). All four games were against teams that qualified for the NCAA tournament a year ago. After playing at then-No. 3 Wisconsin, Ohio State has played each of the Top 3 teams nationally on the road. Ohio State played at No. 1 Florida, at No. 2 Wisconsin and at No. 3 North Carolina earlier this year.
MATTA’S BUCKEYES HIT DOUBLE DIGITS BEFORE NEW YEAR FOR THIRD TIME
Ohio State opened Big Ten play against Indiana with 11 wins. Thad Matta’s teams have recorded 10 or more victories before ringing in the new year in each of his three seasons at Ohio State. His first team was 11-2 in 2004-05 and the 2005-06 squad was 10-0 before Jan. 1. Matta’s teams never have failed to reach 20 victories in each of his six previous seasons as a head coach, which includes a one-year stint at Butler and three seasons at Xavier.
BUCKEYES GO 5-0 VS. OHIO TEAMS
The game with Xavier March 17 was the fifth against a school from Ohio this year for the Buckeyes. Kent State (W 81-59), Youngstown State (W 91-57) and Cleveland State (W 78-57) all played in Columbus this year with the Buckeyes meeting Cincinnati (W 72-50) in Indianapolis Dec. 16 and Xavier (W 78-71-ot) in Lexington, Ky., March 17 in the Second Round of the 2007 NCAA Tournament.
BUCKEYES REACH NO. 1 IN FOOTBALL, BASKETBALL FOR 2ND TIME
Four schools, Ohio State, UCLA, Florida and Notre Dame, have been ranked No. 1 in both football and men’s basketball at the same time, according to research performed by Tim Bourret, Clemson sports information director, who sought the information for a book project. Ohio State (34-3) has managed the feat twice after it moved to the No. 1 spot in men’s basketball Nov. 27 of this year in the ESPN/USA Today coaches poll and to the No. 3 spot in the Associated Press writers poll that week. The Buckeyes were the first to reach No. 1 in both football and men’s basketball on Nov. 28, 1961 after the football Buckeyes defeated Michigan 50-20 (11/25/61) to claim the No. 1 spot in the United Press International poll. The basketball team was No. 1 the entire 1961-62 season until a loss to No. 2 Cincinnati in the title game March 24, 1962. The 2006 Buckeye football team (12-1) finished No. 2 in both the AP and ESPN/USA Today polls, after spending the entire 2006 regular season ranked No. 1. UCLA was No. 1 in both sports the week of Nov. 13-19 in 1967. The Bruins were No. 1 in the AP and UPI football polls that week and had won the national championship in men’s basketball the previous March. The first poll of the college basketball season that fall was on Dec. 5, 1967. UCLA was No. 1. The Bruins then lost to USC in football, 21-20, the next Saturday (Dec. 9, 1967) to drop from the No. 1 spot in football. Notre Dame won the national championship (football) in the AP poll with a 24-23 win over Alabama in the Dec. 31, 1973 Sugar Bowl. The Fighting Irish basketball team then defeated UCLA 71-70 in basketball to end the Bruins’ 88-game winning streak and move to No. 1 in both basketball polls. That game was played Jan. 19, 1974 and Notre Dame was ranked No. 1 the next Monday. The Irish stayed No. 1 in basketball for just that week before traveling to UCLA for a rematch the following Saturday (Jan. 26, 1974,) where they lost to the Bruins. Both UCLA (Nov. 13, 1967) and Notre Dame (Jan. 21, 1974) were No. 1 for just one week in both football and men’s basketball. Florida is the most recent team to accomplish the feat. The Gators did so this season after winning the 2006 National Title in football and reaching No. 1 in both basketball polls.
MATTA REACHES 50 WINS AT OSU
Thad Matta coached game No. 200 in his seven-year head coaching career in the contest vs. Kent State Nov. 12. He recorded win No. 50 as a Buckeye vs. Eastern Kentucky the next time out Nov. 17. Matta is 182-52 overall, which includes a record of 80-21 at Ohio State. He needed just 68 games to win 50 as a Buckeye, the third fewest total games to record win No. 50 as a Buckeye head coach. Fred Taylor (1959-76) won his 50th game in his 64th contest as a Buckeye while Randy Ayers (1990-97) was the second-fastest to 50 wins, doing so in 67 Ohio State games.
| Coach | Date | gms to 50 | 50th win, Score |
| Taylor | 1/28/61 | 64 | Purdue, 92-62 |
| Ayers | 12/18/91 | 67 | @Santa Barbara, 82-75 |
| Matta | 11/17/06 | 68 | Eastern Ky., 74-45 |
| Miller | 12/2/79 | 76 | Tennessee, 91-65 |
| Williams | 1/7/89 | 79 | Wisconsin, 73-70 |
| Olsen | 2/22/27 | 80 | @Indiana, 27-18 |
| Dye | 2/27/50 | 83 | @Michigan, 69-58 |
| St. John | 1/1/17 | 92 | @ Elyria, 33-25 |
| O’Brien | 2/25/04 | 104 | @Minnesota, 70-59 |
| Stahl | 12/19/55 | 106 | @Tulane, 72-66 |
NOTING THE NCAA TOURNAMENT GAMES IN SAN ANTONIO
Ohio State improved its record to 34-3 with the 92-76 win overMemphis. The 34 wins extend the school’s single-season record forvictories. The previous mark of 27 had been shared by the 1961 and1999 teams. The Buckeyes have now won 21 games in a row. The schoolrecord of 32 was set by the 1960 (five wins to close out theseason) and 1961 teams (27 wins to start the season before losingto Cincinnati in the national championship game). The currentstreak began with a 68-66 win over Tennessee Jan. 13 in Columbus.Saturday was just the second meeting between the Buckeyes andMemphis. OSU won the first, 94-55 in December of 1959, OSU’snational championship year. Ohio State is now 12-3 all-time againstteams from Conference USA. The Buckeyes are going to the Final Fourfor the first time since 1968 and the ninth time overall. OhioState played in the first NCAA finals in 1939 and finished asrunners-up to Oregon. The Buckeyes have appeared in 11 regionalfinals and have advanced every time with the exceptions of 1971,when after upsetting No. 1 Marquette in the semifinals they lost toWestern Kentucky in the final; and 1992 when after upending NorthCarolina in Lexington they lost to Michigan in overtime in theregional final. Thad Matta’s record with the Buckeyes now stands at80-21 in three seasons in Columbus. His overall record in sevenseasons is 182-52. This will be his first trip to the Final Four.Each of Matta’s seven teams have won at least 20 games. This is hisfirst 30-win season. He has averaged 26 wins a year. Matta hastaken all six of his eligible teams to the NCAA tournament. Hisrecord in the tourney now stands at 11-5. Mike Conley Jr., a truefreshman, owns the Ohio State single-season records for both steals(83) and assists (226). The Buckeyes are now 36-18 in NCAAtournament games and 9-2 as a No. 1 seed. Ohio State is now 59-4overall when ranked No. 1 in the polls. Conley is the 15th playerin Big Ten history to record at least 350 points, 150 assists, 100rebounds and 50 steals. Scoonie Penn (1998-99) is the only otherOhio State player to do so. Ron Lewis is averaging 21.8 points inNCAA tournament play. He has made 27 of 52 field goal attempts,including 12 of 26 3-point shots, and all 21 free throws. FreshmanGreg Oden now has 100 blocked shots on the season. He is just thesecond Ohio State player (first freshman) to block 100 shots in aseason. Ken Johnson, the Buckeyes’ career leader in that departmentwith 444 rejections, did it three times. Ohio State is now 22-1this year when scoring more than 70 points. With five 3-pointersvs. Memphis, the Buckeyes added to their school single-seasonrecord for made 3s (279). Their 757 attempts is also an OSU record.The 41 first-half points scored by Ohio State against Memphis isthe highest OSU output since Feb. 18 at Minnesota, a span of 10games. The 92 points by OSU is the second highest point total ofthe season, surpassed only by 103 in the season opener against VMI.Ohio State’s NCAA tournament record for points in a game was set inthe regional semifinals of the 1960 event when the Buckeyes downedWestern Kentucky (3/11/60) 98-79.
NOTING THE TENNESSEE GAME, SOUTH REGIONAL SEMIFINAL
The last time Ohio State played a non-conference opponent twicein the same season was during the 1988-89 campaign. The Buckeyesdefeated Nebraska in Columbus 103-76 (12/14/88) and then again85-74 (3/20/89) in the NIT. In that same season, Ohio State playedat St. John’s (W 75-72, 12/29/88) in the ECAC Holiday Classic andthen fell to St. John’s in overtime in the third round of the NIT(83-80) March 23, 1989. The Buckeyes downed Tennessee earlier thisseason in Columbus 68-66 (1/13/07). With the victory vs. Tennessee,Ohio State advanced to the Elite 8 for the first time since 1992.That year the Buckeyes were a No. 1 seed and defeated No. 4 NorthCarolina (80-73) in the regional semifinal but fell to No. 6Michigan in overtime (75-71) in the regional final. The one-pointwin vs. Tennessee in the South Region semifinals is the firstsingle-point victory in NCAA tournament play since an 84-83overtime win vs. Providence in the First Round of the 1990tournament. Ohio State is 4-1 in NCAA tournament games decided byone point. The Buckeyes own a 60-59 victory over Marquette in theregional semifinals of the 1971 event, an 82-81 win vs. Kentucky inthe regional final of the 1968 tournament, a 56-55 victory overLouisville in the regional semifinals in 1961 and a 56-55 loss toC.C.N.Y in the regional semifinals in 1950. Ohio State is 65-56(.527) all-time in one-point games with a record of 14-8 (.636) onneutral courts. The Buckeyes are 27-23 all-time vs. theSoutheastern Conference and 4-0 vs. Tennessee. Ohio State was down20 points in the first half (49-29) with 35 seconds to play andtrailed by 17 at the break. Ohio State outscored the Volunteers by18 over the final 20 minutes. The Buckeyes committed just oneturnover in the second half while shooting 58 percent (14-24) fromthe field. Ron Lewis finished with a team-high 25 points to againlead the Buckeyes in scoring. He tallied 27 in the overtime win vs.Xavier in the Second Round. Lewis scored 18 second-half pointswhile Conley added 13, including nine free throws. Freshman DavidLighty scored seven crucial points while playing 20 minutes, hismost court time since Dec. 2 against Valparaiso (20 mins.).Lighty’s point total was his most since a 10-point game Dec. 30 vs.Coppin State. Conley tallied six assists for the 20th time thisseason. Ohio State is 18-2 in those games.
BUCKEYES WIN BCA CHAMPIONSHIP TITLE GAME AGAINST KENT STATE
Ron Lewis led Ohio State with 18 points and three teammates joined him in double figures as the Buckeyes went 3-0 in the BCA Classic to claim the title with an 81-59 win against Kent State Nov. 12 at Value City Arena. Jamar Butler, the only starter back from last season’s Big Ten champions, added 14 points, junior-college transfer Othello Hunter had 13 and freshman David Lighty finished with 10. Lewis was the tournament MVP for the Buckeyes. He was joined on the all-tournament team by freshman Daequan Cook. Nobody hit double figures for Kent State, the defending Mid-American Conference regular-season and tournament champions. Omni Smith had nine points and three others had eight. The Buckeyes hit half of their 26 3-point attempts and ended up shooting 55 percent from the field. Kent State had 20 turnovers and hit just 4-of-15 shots behind the arc. Sub Ivan Harris hit three big 3-pointers that helped turn the tide.
MEDIA CORRECT WITH PRESEASON PREDICTION, BUCKEYES WIN LEAGUE
Big Ten Conference media selected Ohio State as its preseason favorite to win the league regular-season crown in 2006-07. The Buckeyes secured back-to-back conference titles for the first time since 1991 and 1992 with the 49-48 win against No. 1 Wisconsin Feb. 25 in Columbus. Ohio State (34-3, 15-1) returned one starter from a year ago when the Buckeyes posted a 26-6 overall record and a 12-4 league mark.
MEDIA SELECT ODEN TO SHINE
Freshman center Greg Oden had yet to play a collegiate game while recovering from right wrist surgery in June when he appeared on the preseason All-Big Ten list turned in by the conference media Oct. 29 in Chicago. The preseason recognition is believed to mark the first time a true freshman has been so recognized in conference history. Oden missed the first seven games of the season. He made his debut against Valparaiso Dec. 2. He recorded a double-double with 14 points and 10 rebounds in a 78-58 OSU victory. His first start came against Cleveland State Dec. 9. He finished with 16 points on 8 of 8 shooting from the field, which tied an OSU record for single game field goal percentage.
OSU FRESHMEN IN STARTING FIVE
Jamar Butler was the last true freshman to crack the starting lineup for the Buckeyes prior to the season opener vs. VMI when rookies Mike Conley Jr. and David Lighty earned starting nods for Thad Matta’s Buckeyes. Butler started his first game at Northwestern Jan. 29, 2005. He has been a mainstay in the first five ever since. The last true freshman to start the season opener prior to this season was Michael Redd vs. Kent State Nov. 19, 1997. Redd played 39 minutes and scored 21 points on 9 of 17 shooting from the field. He also had nine rebounds.
OHIO STATE ON NATIONAL TV
The Buckeyes appeared on national television 21 times this season. Fans across the country got their first look at Ohio State over national airwaves Nov. 29 when the Buckeyes traveled to North Carolina for a Big Ten/ACC Challenge matchup on ESPN. Cincinnati and Ohio State renewed a rivalry at the Wooden Tradition in Indianapolis on CBS Dec. 16. Other CBS games included the matchup at No. 1 Florida Dec. 23, a home game vs. Tennessee Jan. 13, at Michigan State Feb. 3, at Minnesota Feb. 18 vs. Wisconsin in Columbus Feb. 25 and in the season finale at Michigan March 3. ESPN televised the Buckeyes vs. their first three Big Ten foes vs. Indiana (W 74-67, Jan. 2), at Illinois Jan. 6 (W 62-44) and at Wisconsin Jan. 9 (L 72-69). ESPN had the Big Ten Tournament opener for the Buckeyes vs. Michigan while CBS carried the semifinals and final. Ohio State has won 11-consecutive games when playing on CBS television and has an overall record of 12-1 on CBS this year. Four other league games were featured on ESPN or ESPN2 during regular-season play.
THE NEWCOMERS
Thad Matta recruited one of the best classes nationally for the 2006-07 season. Four of the top freshmen in the country along with a talented junior college forward joined the Buckeyes for the 2006 fall quarter in Columbus.
The four Ohio State freshmen in 2006-07 all played for state championships during their senior high school seasons. Three won titles with the other finishing as runner-up.
Greg Oden (a 7-0 center) and 6-1 guard Mike Conley Jr., led Indiana’s Lawrence North High School to its third-consecutive state championship March 25, 2006, with a victory over Muncie Central (80-56). Oden led all scorers with 26 points on 11-of-17 shooting from the field. He also was the game’s top rebounder with 11. Conley added 21 points and seven boards in the win.
Daequan Cook, a 6-5 guard, led Dayton (Ohio) Dunbar to its first state title in 19 years with a 73-46 victory over Triway in the Ohio Division II state championship game (3/25/06) at Value City Arena in Columbus. Cook scored 23 points in the victory.
David Lighty, a 6-5 guard/forward, led his Villa Angela-St. Joseph (Cleveland, Ohio) squad to the Ohio Division III state title game as well. Lighty scored 20 points in a loss to North College Hill.
FOUR FIRST TEAMERS
All four freshmen were named to their state’s first team all-state squads as seniors. Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr., were honored in Class 4A, the large school division in Indiana, while Daequan Cook (Ohio Division II) and David Lighty (Ohio Division III) made their respective teams. Cook, the Division II Ohio Player of the Year, and Lighty both made the Associated Press all-state tournament teams as well in their respective divisions.
THREE MORE MCDONALD’S ALL-AMERICANS
With the addition of Greg Oden, Mike Conley Jr. and Daequan Cook, Ohio State has four former McDonald’s High School All-Americans on its squad in 2006-07.
Senior Ivan Harris played in the annual game (first played in 1977) in 2003. Ohio State h



