- Final0SYR
TEM79
8379
83 - Final1AMER
GTWN48
6548
65 - Final2MCNS
UNC63
9763
97 - Final3TNTC
OKST42
7842
78 - Final4EVAN
BUT67
7567
75 - Final5TEX
MSU56
6756
67 - Final6SDST
UNM70
6570
65 - Final7SBON
NCST73
9273
92 - Final89
7KU
OSU74
6674
66 - Final9WRST
CIN58
6858
68 - Final1012
10MIZZ
ILL82
7382
73 - Final11SDSU
SF80
5880
58 - Final12LAF
MINN50
7550
75 - Final13FLA
KSU61
6761
67 - Final14LOU
WKU78
5578
55 - Final15CAN
UNLV74
8974
89 - Final16ARIZ
ETSU73
5373
53
Final
Coverage: CBS
4:00 PM ET, December 22, 2012
Value City Arena, Columbus, OH
Top Performers
Kansas: B. McLemore 22 Pts, 6 Reb, 2 Ast, 1 Stl, 1 Blk
Ohio State: S. Scott 15 Pts, 6 Reb, 4 Ast, 2 Stl
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- After Kansas knocked off Ohio State last season in the national semifinals, Buckeyes guard Lenzelle Smith Jr. didn't have the heart to even watch the championship game.
As this season has progressed, Smith has grown more and more excited by the looming specter of a home rematch with the Jayhawks."I've kind of been waiting for this game ever since our schedule got released in the summer," he said about Saturday's game pitting No. 9 Kansas against seventh-ranked Ohio State.These are not the same teams from a year ago, when Kansas beat Ohio State twice. But that doesn't mean there still won't be a little edge to the game. What would you expect with the teams' recent history?"I'm sure they have some hard feelings toward us and it is going to be a really tough environment," Kansas big man Jeff Withey said of the contest at Ohio State's Value City Arena. "We haven't really been on the road yet so we'll see how the new guys react to that. But we are definitely looking forward to it."The 13th-ranked Jayhawks won the regular-season matchup at Allen Fieldhouse almost a year ago, taking advantage of All-America forward Jared Sullinger's absence (bad back) in a 78-67 victory over No. 2 Ohio State.Then they squared off in New Orleans in the Final Four, with the Buckeyes leading most of the game and by 13 points before withering down the stretch to fall 64-62."If you look at the games last year, we didn't play them very well at all, but they guarded us. And they didn't play great, but we guarded them," Kansas coach Bill Self said. "The difference for us was in the second half we were able to get some 3-on-2s and some 2-on-1s and was able to make six or eight easy baskets and score easy points that we didn't have to go against half-court defense."The game figures to be a grade card for each team."Kansas right now is playing at a level as high as anybody in college basketball," Ohio State coach Thad Matta said. "They start four seniors. It's like, wow. Their leading scorer is a redshirt freshman. So they're a very, very experienced, seasoned team. From the standpoint of the caliber of the team that they are, obviously you're going to hopefully learn quite a bit about your team as you get ready to head into January, February and March."Comparisons to last year are frivolous, since the two best players on the floor are now in the NBA. Kansas' Thomas Robinson had 19 points and eight rebounds in the Final Four and now plays for pay for the Sacramento Kings.Sullinger had 11 points and 11 rebounds but had three shots blocked by Withey in New Orleans. Currently with the Boston Celtics, Sullinger was surrounded by defenders after teammate Deshaun Thomas got into foul trouble in the semifinal.Thomas, who pondered skipping out of his final two years to join them in the pros, is averaging 20.4 points and 7 rebounds a game. The 6-foot-7 junior never met a shot he wouldn't take -- and make -- which makes guarding him the biggest task for the Jayhawks."If you're a natural scorer like he is and averaging over 20 a game you've got the green light to shoot some good contested shots and he is good at making them," Self said. "He is a shotmaker. He is a professional scorer at our level and last year we didn't stop him."Thomas had 19 points and kept Ohio State in it before a raucous crowd in Lawrence, Kan., a year ago.The Jayhawks (9-1) have benefited from a comfortable schedule so far. They've had six home games in addition to three games before friendly faces in Kansas City. Their only loss came in their lone foray far from home, a 67-64 defeat to Michigan State in Atlanta.Ohio State (9-1) dropped its biggest previous challenge, a 73-68 decision at current No. 1 Duke on Nov. 28. In that game, much like the last meeting with Kansas, the Buckeyes led most of the night but didn't make enough plays down the stretch.Aaron Craft, Ohio State's pesky defensive whiz at point guard, believes the rematch will come down to toughness."Who's going to be the tougher team?" he said. "They do a phenomenal job of getting second-chance points, grabbing 50-50 balls, really limiting possessions. We have to find a way to overcome that, and match or better their intensity and their toughness. Because that's what Kansas basketball is about."Funny, but that's what Kansas also thinks of Ohio State."They are physical and they play that Big Ten style where they try to bully you," Withey said. "They do all that really well. We've got to come ready."No matter who wins, both would like a redo -- when the NCAA Final Four shifts to Atlanta in April.---Follow Rusty Miller on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/rustymillerapSPONSORED HEADLINES
Gameday Matchup
KU | OSU | |
|---|---|---|
| W-L | 29-5 | 26-7 |
| Avg Points | 75.4 | 69.3 |
| Avg Points Allowed | 61.5 | 57.9 |
| Home Record | 16-1 | 16-2 |
| Road Record | 7-3 | 5-5 |
| Current Streak | W3 | W8 |
Line
Ohio State -5, O/U: 140.5
School Info
| KU | OSU | |
|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big 12 | Big Ten |
| Nickname | Jayhawks | Buckeyes |
| Type | Public | Public |
2012-13 Season
| DATE | GAME | LINKS |
|---|---|---|
| » Dec 22, 2012 | KU 74, @OSU 66 | Recap |
Starting Lineup
| KU (PPG) | OSU (PPG) |
|---|---|
| C J. Withey 13.6 | F E. Ravenel 5.1 |
| F K. Young 7.6 | F D. Thomas 19.5 |
| G E. Johnson 10.1 | F S. Thompson 7.4 |
| G B. McLemore 16.4 | G A. Craft 9.9 |
| G T. Releford 11.5 | G L. Smith, Jr. 9.5 |
| Team rosters: Kansas | Ohio State | |
Team Stat Leaders
| KU | OSU | |
|---|---|---|
| Points | ||
| Rebounds | ||
| Assists | ||
| Steals | ||
| Blocks | ||
| Team Stats: Kansas | Ohio State | ||
Research Notes
Ben McLemore has improved his scoring over the last 4 games, averaging 19 points per game and shooting 54.3% from the floor, after averaging just 13.8 points per game in his first 6 games this season.
McLemore has really improved his shooting efficiency on plays coming off a screen, an area that he struggled with at the start of the season. He has made 5-of-10 shots coming off a screen in his last 4 games, including 4-of-7 3-pointers. In his first 6 games he connected on just 3-of-16 attempts coming off a screen and missed all 8 of his shots from beyond the arc.
Because of his ability to get open on these screen plays, McLemore has had much more success recently on jumpers of the catch-and-shoot variety. All but two of his 16 catch-and-shoot attempts have been uncontested in his last 4 games and he has hit 11 of those 16 jump shots without a dribble. In his first 6 games, he was guarded on two-thirds of his catch-and-shoot jumpers and often misfired, making just 7 of 24 attempts. |
ESPN Stats & Information |



