By BRETT HUSTON
STATS Writer
Alcorn State (0-0) at Ohio State (0-0), 7:00 p.m. EDT
Evan Turner led the Big Ten in scoring last season before
considering the NBA draft, but he is back - along with nearly
every other key part of an Ohio State team that felt it exited
the NCAA tournament far too early.
Turner's role this season, however, will be much different.
Coach Thad Matta moved Turner to point guard in the offseason,
and the No. 16 Buckeyes' best player gets his first chance to
shine at his new position Monday night against Alcorn State in
the 2K Sports Classic.
Ohio State was 22-11 last season and Turner led the way with
17.3 points per game. Though it went 10-8 in the Big Ten to tie
for fourth, Matta's team advanced to the conference title game
where it lost to Purdue.
Turner's presence and that late-season surge figured to give the
Buckeyes a chance to make a run in the NCAA tournament as a No.
8 seed. Their first trip to the NCAAs since losing in the 2007
national championship game, however, turned out to be brief.
Turner had a game-high 25 points but didn't get much help in a
74-72 double-overtime loss to Siena in the first round.
Only B.J. Mullens is gone from last season's roster after the
backup big man left for the NBA, leaving Ohio State confident it
can make a stronger push in the tournament in 2009-10.
"We've got so much potential on this team that it just kind of
gets everybody excited," said guard Jon Diebler, second in the
Big Ten with 96 3-pointers last season. "We see glimpses of how
good we can be and that just excites everybody. We've all been
through the battles - let's put it all together and see where it
takes us."
While Diebler, William Buford and David Lighty - limited to
seven games last season due to a broken foot - give the Buckeyes
some firepower in the backcourt, the three are primarily scorers
with limited ballhandling skills.
That lack of a true point guard prompted Matta to insert the
6-foot-7 Turner into the role, a decision that makes some sense
despite his natural knack for scoring.
Turner led the Buckeyes and was eighth in the conference with
4.0 assists per game. He had six in Ohio State's lone exhibition
game to go along with 15 points and 14 rebounds in an 86-48
blowout of Walsh University on Wednesday.
"He is just so active on the floor," Diebler said. "He's just
letting the game come to him. I think he could get a
triple-double but he's the type of player who isn't going to go
out hoping for it."
Turner says he is already growing into his new position.
"Jon and I have been around long enough to feel comfortable, but
right now we're just trying to get everybody else out there
feeling good," Turner said.
Buford rounds out Ohio State's perimeter attack after scoring
11.3 points per game and being named the Big Ten freshman of the
year, while Lighty also should see plenty of minutes after
recovering from his injury.
Lighty is a strong defensive player, and the Buckeyes were No. 1
nationally in scoring defense at 52.9 points per game in the
seven contests he played last season.
The question marks for Matta's club are up front, where they'll
look to fill the void left by Mullens, who figured to be one of
the conference's best big men had he stayed. They will also
likely face Alcorn State (6-25) without big man Dallas
Lauderdale, who broke a finger in the preseason.
While Lauderdale is doubtful against the Braves, Matta expects
he will return by the time Ohio State faces defending national
champion North Carolina on Nov. 19.
If Lauderdale can't go Monday, sophomore Zisis Sarikopoulos, who
sat out last season after transferring from Alabama-Birmingham,
and senior Kyle Madsen will split time in the middle.
Alcorn State doesn't figure to pose much of a threat to the
Buckeyes, as it lost its top three scorers from a team that went
4-14 in the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
Senior Jonathan Boyd (9.3 ppg) is the leading returning scorer
and the Braves' best 3-point shooter, having connected on 40.3
percent from beyond the arc last season.
Coach Larry Smith's team lost its lone matchup with a Big Ten
opponent last season, 118-60 to Michigan State.
Ohio State, winner of all five season openers under Matta, hosts
James Madison on Thursday before heading to Madison Square
Garden to face the Tar Heels, all as part of the 2K Sports
Classic.
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