Home US SportsNCAAW No. 10 OSU women’s basketball loses at No. 23 Minnesota

No. 10 OSU women’s basketball loses at No. 23 Minnesota

by
No. 10 OSU women’s basketball loses at No. 23 Minnesota

No. 10 Ohio State continued to struggle in the final stretch of the regular season, losing 74-61 to No. 23 Minnesota on Feb. 18.

The Buckeyes (22-5) traveled to Minnesota (21-6) three days after a 76-75 loss at No. 14 Maryland. The Terrapins capitalized on grabbing 16 more offensive boards than Ohio State, which led to 17 second-chance points.

Advertisement

More: Takeaways from Ohio State women’s upset loss vs Maryland

The same issue caused problems for Ohio State when Minnesota came out at halftime and flipped a three-point deficit to a 10-point lead in five minutes.

“They really did a good job on the offensive boards,” Ohio State coach Kevin McGuff said. “That hurt us. But overall, I thought they played a great game, and we didn’t play quite good enough. We’ve got to play significantly better if we’re going to win against a good team like Minnesota.”

While Ohio State was outrebounded 47-32 overall and 15-6 on the offensive boards, the rebounding margin was just two in favor of Minnesota in the first half.

Ohio State Buckeyes center Elsa LemmilΓ€ (12) looks to pass the ball in the second half of the NCAA basketball game at Value City Arena on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio.

In the Golden Gophers‘ dominant third-quarter performance, they outscored the Buckeyes 27-13, hitting four 3-pointers, and won the battle of the boards 10-4.

Advertisement

It took until the 5:44 mark in the third quarter for Jaloni Cambridge to score the Buckeyes’ first field goal of the second half.

Cambridge and guard Chance Gray produced nearly all of Ohio State’s offense in the second half, combining for 27 of 32 points.

Guard Amaya Battle provided a valuable 7 points, three rebounds and two assists in the third quarter, boosting Minnesota to a 53-42 lead, but Golden Gophers center Sophie Hart had the biggest overall impact.

Ohio State Buckeyes guard Chance Gray (2) dribbles the ball against the Penn State Nittany Lions in the second half of the NCAA basketball game at Value City Arena on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio.

Ohio State Buckeyes guard Chance Gray (2) dribbles the ball against the Penn State Nittany Lions in the second half of the NCAA basketball game at Value City Arena on Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026 in Columbus, Ohio.

The Buckeyes failed to stop Hart down low, allowing her to finish with 18 points and combine for 22 rebounds with Battle.

“She takes up a lot of space, and she requires a lot of people to help around,” Ohio State center Elsa Lemmila said. “She’s such a dominant post player.”

Advertisement

Lemmila had 10 rebounds, though only one was grabbed on the offensive end.

In the first half, the Buckeyes held on to a slight lead, which never went above nine points because of Minnesota’s 27.5% shooting from the field. The Golden Gophers improved that percentage to 57.1% throughout the second half.

Ohio State will attempt to turn the tide in a home matchup against USC (16-9) on Feb. 22. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m.

bmackay@dispatch.com

@brimackay15

This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: Ohio State women fall to Minnesota in second straight loss



Source link

You may also like