Lighty’s 21 propels Buckeyes past Illini


Associated Press

COLUMBUS

For a half, David Lighty was almost invisible.

Then it was as if he was invincible, refusing to let No. 2 Ohio State falter again.

Lighty scored 17 of his 21 points in the second half and William Buford had all 17 of his in the first to lead the Buckeyes to a big bounce-back win after two recent losses, beating Illinois 89-70 on Tuesday night.

“I’ve said since the beginning: I love him,” Illini coach Bruce Weber said of Lighty, only the third-leading scorer for the Buckeyes. “I think he’s the MVP. He probably won’t get it because people aren’t smart enough. But he’s their heart and soul.”

During one remarkable 3-minute span, Lighty scored all 13 of Ohio State’s points (to just two for the Illini) and had three steals.

“They should put a statue in front of the Schottenstein Center of David Lighty, just what he’s meant to this program, not only on the court,” coach Thad Matta said, referring to Ohio State’s home arena. “His performance there in the second half was high level. I looked out there (and) it was like he was everywhere.”

The Illini scored 11 of the first 13 points of the second half to pull within 49-43 before Lighty took over.

He scored Ohio State’s next 13 points to build the lead back to 62-45.

Just that quick, the Illini responded with an 8-0 run to narrow the gap to 62-53.

Lighty then fed substitute forward Deshaun Thomas, caught in a recent shooting slump, for a 3-pointer. Seconds later, Lighty missed a jumper and Thomas fought off a defender for the rebound and converted it into a three-point play for a 68-53 lead.

Between them, Lighty and Thomas accounted for all 19 Ohio State points over a span of 7 1/2 minutes.

The lead never dipped below double figures again.

“I’ve been through the ups and downs of college basketball,” said Lighty, a fifth-year senior who was just 2 for 9 from the field in Sunday’s loss at No. 8 Purdue. “People go through slumps. I just needed to work my way out of it. To keep shooting. My teammates have confidence in me and they get mad at me when I don’t shoot the ball when I’m open. They trust in me and I trust in them.”

Jon Diebler had 13 points, Aaron Craft 12 and Jared Sullinger 12 points and 11 rebounds for the Buckeyes (26-2, 13-2 Big Ten), who had lost two of three after winning their first 25 games.

Ohio State shot 53 percent from the field to end Illinois’ string of 37 consecutive games holding an opponent under 50 percent. The last team to reach 50 percent was also Ohio State, which shot 53.1 against the Illini on Feb. 14, 2010.

The Buckeyes had just three turnovers — they forced 16 turnovers, including getting nine steals.

“We knew we had to take care of the ball. That was pretty much the key to the last game,” Buford said of the game at Purdue, where the Buckeyes had 18 turnovers.