Women's Basketball: Ohio defeats Miami 79-62 to win its fourth straight game
OXFORD — In the first half, it seemed no shot could fall for Ohio. The Bobcats struggled to hit nearly every basket.
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OXFORD — In the first half, it seemed no shot could fall for Ohio. The Bobcats struggled to hit nearly every basket.
Despite losing two starters to injury Wednesday during the first half of its game against Western Michigan, Ohio still played as if they had a full roster.
The season has gone back and forth for the Bobcats. They've played solid defense for a stretch of games, only to play decent on offense. At the start of the new year, however, that was flipped. The Bobcats played well on offense, but they didn't on defense.
For the last two season, coach Bob Boldon has strayed from running a 2-3 zone.
With 5:42 left in the fourth quarter of Ohio’s game against Toledo, Hannah Boesinger elbowed Toledo guard Jay Bravo-Harriott under the basket.
Ohio’s zone offense isn’t elite, but it's better than it was a season ago. Back then, the Bobcats struggled moving the ball and cutting through zone defenses.
Ohio had 1.1 seconds.
The Bobcats wouldn’t have been one of the best defenses in the Mid-American Conference this past season without Javon Hagan.
Ohio (11-3, 2-1 Mid-American Conference) had a setback against Northern Illinois, playing poor defense against the conference's best scoring team.
Ohio's offense is simple: find easy baskets in the low post or find an open teammate for a 3-pointer.
Quiera Lampkins didn’t need to play like a superhero Wednesday nigh for Ohio to defeat Buffalo at The Convo.
Ohio has two types of offenses: one that plays halfway decent, and one that lacks so much ball movement it would make San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich cry.
The Bobcats continued their primitive methods of defending their defensive reputation in the jungle on Saturday.
DETROIT — Ohio's defense didn’t stop being the best when it was time to continue being the best.
Playing against a Western Michigan team that boasts the best turnover margin in the Mid-American Conference, Ohio’s two quick fumbles in the first quarter were a sign — Ohio wasn’t going to beat Western Michigan.
DETROIT — Ohio (8-4, 6-2 Mid-American Conference) was a 17-point underdog heading into the MAC Championship Game against Western Michigan (12-0, 8-0 MAC).
Mid-American Conference play hasn’t started yet, but at 5-0, Ohio is tied with Buffalo for first in the conference’s east division.
Although they are redshirt freshmen, Louie Zervos, Javon Hagan and Elijah Ball have not failed to be impact players in their first season of athletic eligibility.
With Ohio four games into its regular season, it has already competed against various styles of play. Whether it be a zone or man-to-man defense, Ohio has seen it — the team has faced a 2-3 zone, a 3-2 zone and a press defense so far.
The Ohio offense didn’t play nearly as well as it should have against Akron on Tuesday night.