Lighty’s 20 points propel Buckeyes over Hawkeyes


IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — David Lighty scored 20 points, including 18 in the second half, and No. 20 Ohio State rallied past pesky Iowa 65-57 on Wednesday night for its fourth straight Big Ten win.

Evan Turner added 16 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists for the Buckeyes (15-6, 5-3), who closed the game with a 20-7 run and won on the road for only the second time this season.

Ohio State took its first lead of the second half with 2:46 left, jumping ahead 52-50 on a runner by Lighty.

Turner, who also had just two points in the first half, then got a steal and an easy dunk to put the Buckeyes ahead 55-50.

Turner’s layup through traffic made it 57-50 with 1:04 left.

Freshman Eric May tied a career high with 18 points for Iowa (8-13, 2-6).

Ohio State, whose only other road win came at Purdue on Jan. 12, now returns home for a three-game homestand and a chance to make its move up the Big Ten standings.

That’s certainly good news for the Buckeyes, who are 12-0 at home this season.

The Buckeyes scored a season-low 20 points in the first half and trailed by five at the break. They shook off that sluggish start behind Lighty and Turner, who had 32 of Ohio State’s 45 points in the second half to help stave off Iowa’s upset bid.

Turner broke through with a long 3-pointer to help Ohio State pull even at 28, but he picked up his third foul with 15:29 left and had to be careful defensively the rest of the way.

The Buckeyes then fell into a shooting funk, and the Hawkeyes stretched a slim lead to 42-36 on a pair of 3s by May with just under 10 minutes to go.

Ohio State closed within two before May’s 3 from the corner made it 50-45 Iowa with 4:46 left.

But the Hawkeyes’ inexperience was evident from then on, as Ohio State grabbed control shortly thereafter.

May was the only Iowa player in double figures. Jarryd Cole scored nine points and grabbed five rebounds, and freshman Cully Payne added six assists and six rebounds.

Iowa held Turner to 1-of-3 shooting in the first half, and Payne cut through the lane for a nifty reverse scoop off the glass to help put the Hawkeyes ahead 25-20 at halftime.

Ohio State shot a somewhat respectable 40 percent in the first half, but didn’t hit a 3-pointer or a free throw until the second half.

The fortunes of the inexperienced Hawkeyes had improved in the past two weeks after an ugly start to league play.

Though they crumbled down the stretch, Wednesday’s effort was yet another sign of progress for a team with four underclassmen in the starting lineup.