- Final0CIN
HALL65
5965
59 - Final1SYR
PITT55
6555
65 - Final2AUB
MIZZ77
9177
91 - Final3DUKE
FSU79
6079
60 - Final4SDSU
AFA67
7067
70 - Final5BRAD
CREI58
7558
75 - Final6OKST
KU85
8085
80 - Final7URI
BUT68
7568
75 - Final814
19MIA
NCST79
7879
78 - Final9WICH
UNI52
5752
57 - Final10ORE
CAL54
5854
58 - Final11KSU
OKLA52
5052
50 - Final1216
4MISS
FLA64
7864
78 - Final13OSU
NEB63
5663
56 - Final14NEV
UNM62
7562
75 - Final151
3MICH
IND73
8173
81 - Final16ARIZ
WSU79
6579
65 - Final17GONZ
USD65
6365
63
Final
Coverage: BTN
7:00 PM ET, February 2, 2013
Bob Devaney Sports Center, Lincoln, NE
When Deshaun Thomas is on his game, Ohio State is usually tough to beat.
Nebraska knows that all too well.Coming off one of the strongest performances of his career, the star forward looks to lead the No. 11 Buckeyes to a fourth consecutive victory Saturday night as they visit a Nebraska team he outscored by himself in the first half of their meeting exactly one month ago.Thomas leads the Big Ten in scoring (20.3 points per game) while shooting a career-best 41.3 percent from 3-point range, and his maturation with Jared Sullinger and William Buford gone could give Ohio State (16-4, 6-2) the chance to make a run at its second straight Final Four appearance.After recording season lows of 11 points and 30.8 percent shooting (4 of 13) in last Saturday's 65-51 win at Penn State, the 6-foot-7 junior used a combination of strength and finesse to go 10 of 17 from the field for 25 points in a 58-49 win over Wisconsin on Tuesday. Thomas, who matched a career-high with four assists, scored 10 during a game-changing 15-0 second-half run.Ohio State is 8-1 this season when Thomas shoots 50.0 percent or better, and 9-0 in three seasons when he has at least three assists."That's easily the best player we've played because of how he can get his own shots," Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan said. "Thomas is good. He can attack. He's so strong."Though Thomas pulled down two rebounds, well below his team-best average of 6.3, he kept Wisconsin's post players out of position and applied pressure when they did have the ball -- a facet of his game missing when he arrived in Columbus as a highly touted recruit."We talk about his growth," said coach Thad Matta, who thought Tuesday's performance might have been Thomas' best as a Buckeye. "Two years ago he would have just shut down completely on the defensive end and saved it for the offensive end."Nebraska (11-11, 2-7) is well aware of Thomas' potential to dominate. He single-handedly outscored the Cornhuskers 18-17 in the opening 20 minutes in Columbus on Jan. 2, finishing with 22 points in a 70-44 rout.Coach Tim Miles switched to a zone after Thomas' early success, but it made little difference."They're so good with their dribble-drive stuff," Miles said. "Thomas is so good at his all-around game that I don't think you can give him a steady drive on defense and expect to be successful."Though the Buckeyes are still searching for someone to consistently support Thomas on the offensive end, they rank second in the Big Ten in points allowed (57.4 per game) and opponents' field-goal percentage (37.9). Responsible for the Buckeyes' two league defeats, Illinois and Michigan State are the only conference opponents to shoot better than 38.8 percent against them.The Buckeyes held Nebraska to a season-low 30.4 percent shooting and forced 14 turnovers last month."They were just pressuring everybody," Nebraska guard Ray Gallegos said after that meeting. "They made it tough for us, inside and out."Gallegos had a team-high 14 points but went 4 of 18 from the field as Nebraska dropped its sixth straight in the series. The Cornhuskers have averaged 43.0 points and shot 30.3 percent while losing the three Big Ten meetings with Ohio State by an average of 30.3 points.Gallegos scored a career-high 30 on 12-of-17 shooting in Tuesday's 84-65 loss at No. 23 Minnesota. Nebraska shot 54.5 percent but the Gophers shot 54.2 and held a 36-19 rebounding advantage to drop the Cornhuskers to 0-5 this season against ranked opponents.SPONSORED HEADLINES
Gameday Matchup
OSU | NEB | |
|---|---|---|
| W-L | 26-7 | 15-18 |
| Avg Points | 69.3 | 58.3 |
| Avg Points Allowed | 57.9 | 63.5 |
| Home Record | 16-2 | 11-6 |
| Road Record | 5-5 | 2-10 |
| Current Streak | W8 | L1 |
Line
Ohio State -12, O/U: 123.5
School Info
| OSU | NEB | |
|---|---|---|
| Conference | Big Ten | Big Ten |
| Nickname | Buckeyes | Cornhuskers |
| Type | Public | Public |
Starting Lineup
| OSU (PPG) | NEB (PPG) |
|---|---|
| C A. Williams 3.8 | F B. Ubel 11.5 |
| F D. Thomas 19.5 | G R. Gallegos 12.5 |
| F S. Thompson 7.4 | G D. Talley 13.7 |
| G A. Craft 9.9 | G-F D. Rivers 5.6 |
| G L. Smith, Jr. 9.5 | G-F S. Shields 8.6 |
| Team rosters: Ohio State | Nebraska | |
Team Stat Leaders
| OSU | NEB | |
|---|---|---|
| Points | ||
| Rebounds | ||
| Assists | ||
| Steals | ||
| Blocks | ||
| Team Stats: Ohio State | Nebraska | ||



