Men's Basketball: Bobcats rally late in second half to defeat Bulls
Ohio shares a similar trait with “Friday the 13th” character Jason Voorhees in that it never seems to die.
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Ohio shares a similar trait with “Friday the 13th” character Jason Voorhees in that it never seems to die.
Ohio will enter Saturday’s contest on the road against Buffalo with two major question marks: the statuses of junior point guard Stevie Taylor and senior forward T.J. Hall, which likely won’t be determined until the day of the game.
Turning the page on a trying 2013 season is at the top of the minds of this season’s Ohio squad, as the Bobcats open the 2014 campaign at Western Carolina on Saturday.
Four Bobcats hail from within a 65-mile radius, but the perception of basketball on their respective home courts is drastically different.
In the closing seconds of Texas Tech’s Saturday upset of then-No. 19 Oklahoma State, sophomore guard Marcus Smart committed a hard foul that sent him tumbling through a row of photographers, close to the fans who were seated behind the basket.
Call him Ice, call him the Stormin’ Mormon or just call him Travis.
In the aftermath of what coach Jim Christian called the worst defensive game Ohio’s played this season, improving the performance won’t require massive adjustments.
The common theme heard from Ohio players before Wednesday night’s game was focused upon how difficult it is to win against Western Michigan at University Arena in Kalamazoo, Mich.
During the 2013 season, Ohio won 14 games and went its entire Mid-American Conference campaign without a series victory on its way to missing out on the conference tournament.
Ohio forward Maurice Ndour and Toledo guard Juice Brown inserted their names with authority into the Mid-American Conference player of the year award conversation.
Open your thesaurus and find every synonym for the word excitement.
The early bird may get the worm, but it seems that the late one gets the win.
Replacing the 24 minutes per game senior Ricardo Johnson provided has been a trying task for Ohio coach Jim Christian.
Improbability defined Ohio’s 58-56 win against Eastern Michigan on Saturday.
The phrase “MACtion” was coined for the usually quirky and exciting nature of weeknight Mid-American Conference football action.
Ohio surged to a 15-4 lead against Bowling Green on Wednesday night and appeared to have set its first-half struggle behind, but after a media timeout with 13:21 left in the first half, Bowling Green coach Louis Orr pulled out a zone defense that befuddled the Bobcats for the remainder of the 58-56 defeat, Ohio’s third loss at The Convo this season.
The script Ohio wrote in its past four Mid-American Conference games was acted out once again Wednesday at The Convo, as first-half struggles continued to plague the Bobcats.
For the first 20 minutes of games, Ohio pushes a figurative snooze button and doesn’t play to its potential until the second half.
After the first two games of the season, Ohio guard Javarez “Bean” Willis said reality hadn’t set in yet in regards to his play.
The Huskies started from the bottom, now they’re getting there.