April 19, 2024

Ohio State upsets No. 18 Wisconsin at home

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Playing for little more than pride in front of a home crowd and a national TV audience, Ohio State put together its most complete game of the season.

The Buckeyes, out of the Big Ten race and nearing the end of a second straight underachieving season, showed a consistency that has been lacking for most of the season in an 83-73 victory over No. 16 Wisconsin on Thursday night.

C.J. Jackson scored a career-high 18 points on 4-for-4 shooting from the 3-point line, JaQuan Lyle had 17 and Jae’Sean Tate added 15 points and 12 rebounds as Ohio State (16-13, 6-10) snapped a three-game losing streak and beat a ranked team for the first time in nearly a year.

“The motto for this game was just go out there and play,” Jackson said. “From the head guy to the bottom guy, we were all just dialed in tonight.”

Bronson Koenig had 27 points for Wisconsin (22-6, 11-4), which lost the lead in the game’s first minute and could never get enough traction.

The Badgers have lost three of their last four.

“We let them get comfortable early, something we had talked about knowing the talent they’ve got in this group that they can do that to you,” Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said. “We didn’t follow what we had talked about for two days in terms of letting them do what they wanted to do.”

Ohio State led by 12 points with 10 minutes left on a 3 by Lyle, went up by 20 with 3:41 left and cruised to the win, beating Wisconsin for the first time in the last four tries.

Ohio State seemed to have an answer every time Wisconsin picked up some momentum.

“We were hitting on offense, and they just ran out of time,” Tate said.

After Wisconsin’s Vitto Brown hit a 3-pointer to start the game, the Buckeyes answered with a 13-2 run and would never relinquish the lead.

Five Ohio State players hit 3-pointers and they led 44-31 at halftime — despite the efforts of Koenig, who had 14 points on 4-for-7 shooting from beyond the arc.

Ohio State shot 50 percent for the game, including 10 for 16 from beyond the arc, to Wisconsin’s 44 percent. The Badgers came into the game fourth in the nation in scoring defense.

“It wasn’t our offense that got us in trouble tonight, it was our inability to stop them,” Gard said.