Ohio
Bruce Thornton Scores 31 Points, Makes Game-Winning 3 to Will Ohio State Past No. 18 Maryland in 17-Point Comeback, 73-70
No other man was taking the final shot for Ohio State.
Bruce Thornton caught an inbound pass in the backcourt with less than 30 seconds to play for the Buckeyes, legs aching after playing all 40 minutes and willing Ohio State to a ferocious second-half comeback.
Thornton dribbled down the shot clock to under five seconds, crossed over his defender and pulled up for a deep 3 as the clock ran under eight seconds in a tie game.
BANK IS OPEN pic.twitter.com/qAOLsuVOJ7
— Eleven Warriors (@11W) February 7, 2025
It banked in and the Buckeyes (14-9, 6-6 Big Ten) held on for a 73-70 win over No. 18 Maryland (17-6, 7-5).
| TEAM | 1 | 2 | FINAL |
|---|---|---|---|
| #18 MARYLAND | 41 | 29 | 70 |
| OHIO STATE | 32 | 41 | 73 |
For all the picturesque performances of Bruce Thornton’s Ohio State career, he painted his masterpiece on Thursday night in Value City Arena.
The Buckeyes’ star point guard willed his team back from a 17-point deficit against No. 18 Maryland to take their first lead with 2:02 to play, taking a silent Schottenstein Center crowd and making it one of the Buckeyes’ best atmospheres of the year. Thornton racked up 31 points, 21 of them in the second half.
Guard Micah Parrish followed with 13 points for Ohio State. Julian Reese and Rodney Rice led the way for Maryland with 24 and 18 points.
The win and comeback were a huge demarcation of the Buckeyes’ progress during the last three months of the season. The Terrapins shelled Ohio State 83-59 in the teams’ first meeting, a game Maryland led 50-17 at halftime.
First Half
For the first five minutes, it felt like Ohio State was destined to get run off the floor by Maryland a second time this season.
The Terrapins opened on a 15-2 run, getting three baskets each from Reese and Rice, deadening the sparse crowd in Value City Arena. But Mobley and Evan Mahaffey managed to resurrect it briefly, the former with an and-one floater and the latter with a coast-to-coast drive and-two handed slam through a defender.
Five straight points by Micah Parrish sliced the Maryland lead to 17-12, but the Terrapins launched another 12-3 run, catalyzed by makes on the inside by guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie and forward Derik Queen.
A silky turnaround jumper in the paint by Terrapin guard Selton Miguel and a way-too-easy layup by Reese pushed the Marlyand’s lead to 17, their largest of the game.
But Thornton wouldn’t let his team slip into the ether quite yet. The junior rattled off eight straight points for the Buckeyes, then found Mobley in transition to cut Maryland’s lead to single-digits at 41-32 entering halftime.
Second Half
| MARYLAND | STAT | OHIO STATE |
|---|---|---|
| 70 | POINTS | 73 |
| 23-55 (41.8%) | FGM-FGA (PCT.) | 27-59 (45.8%) |
| 3-13 (23.1%) | 3PM-3PA (PCT.) | 4-16 (25%) |
| 21-30 (70%) | FTM-FTA (PCT.) | 15-18 (83.3%) |
| 12 | TURNOVERS | 9 |
| 36 | TOTAL REBOUNDS | 30 |
| 11 | OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS | 8 |
| 25 | DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS | 22 |
| 2 | BENCH POINTS | 12 |
| 4 | BLOCKS | 5 |
| 2 | STEALS | 7 |
| 10 | ASSISTS | 11 |
A 6-0 Ohio State run early in the second period put the Buckeyes right back in the mix, down just 45-40 with less than 15 minutes to play. A steal and coast-to-coast layup by Sean Stewart had the Schottenstein Center the loudest it had been all evening at a 47-42 scoreline.
The Buckeyes had a shot to trim the lead even more in transition but Parrish missed a 3 and Rice answered with his own left-corner triple on the other end. Thornton and Ques Glover took turns cutting the edge to six but Reese and Miguel combined for five points to push it back to 11.
Trailing 61-50 with less than seven minutes to play, Thornton again took the reins to trot Ohio State back into the game. He converted two floaters, the second leading to a three-point play, then stole the ball from Queen on an offensive rebound and got to the free-throw line. He made his first and missed his second, but Royal skied for the rebound and slammed the ball back to pull Ohio State back within a possession for the first time since the game’s opening minutes.
Parrish finished strong through contact and got a friendly bounce to make it a 63-60 ballgame with 4:11 to play. Reese pushed the lead back to five and Parrish repeated his effort. Thornton cut it to 66-64 on a nasty stepback from mid-range.
Then Thornton canned a right-wing triple with two defenders attempting to corral him. The cheers in Value City Arena were ear-ringing as the Buckeyes took their first lead of the ballgame with 2:02 to play.
Queen drew a foul on Stewart one minute later, fouling the forward out of the game. Queen hit both free throws to make it 68-67 Terrapins. But Thornton drove straight to the rack for a goaltending call and a foul as the lead swapped again to 70-68 Ohio State. O-H-I-O chants made their way around at the timeout but Rice equalized on the other end.
All it did was make way for Thornton’s game-winning 3-pointer.
What’s Next
Ohio State goes back on the road to face Nebraska in Pinnacle Bank Arena on Sunday. Tipoff is at 2 p.m. on Big Ten Network.
Game Notes
- Forwards Stewart (illness) and Colin White (ankle) returned to Ohio State’s lineup against the Terrapins. Center Aaron Bradshaw (illness) and guard Meechie Johnson Jr. (personal reasons) missed the game vs. Maryland.
- Ohio State evened its all-time record to 11-11 vs. Maryland.
- The Buckeyes won despite tying their season-low for made 3-pointers with four.
- The Terrapins shot 15-of-20 from 2-point range in the first half and only 5-of-22 in the second half.
Ohio
4-star 2026 recruit released from agreement with Tennessee, set to sign with Ohio State football
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Four-star 2026 recruit Legend Bey has been released from signing with Tennessee and quickly flipped his decision to Ohio State.
As reported by Rivals on Tuesday, Bey no longer was a member of Tennessee’s program by the evening and quickly joined the Buckeyes’ 2026 class. He is free to play immediately in Columbus.
Bey committed to Tennessee before his senior year began, but flipped his decision to Ohio State in November, after he took an official visit. He then flipped his decision back to Tennessee on Wednesday, Dec. 3, on National Signing Day, in a dramatic flip that seemingly came out of nowhere.
Reports then surfaced that his mother, and other family members, influenced Bey’s decision to attend Tennessee.
Bey posted on X (formerly Twitter) a statement that was quickly deleted a day after signing with the Volunteers. His post read: “Good Afternoon, I was just recently logged out of my IG and probably will be logged out of this account as well by my older brother who has access to my account because I won’t sign to the school him and my mother wants – Legend Bey”
A week later, he posted pictures of himself on Instagram with the caption, “Imma do my own thing.”
Now, Bey is a member of Ohio State’s class.
From North Forney High School in Texas, he’s the No. 175 overall prospect and No. 9 athlete in the 247Sports composite rankings. He’ll come to Columbus with the positional versatility to be used in a hybrid running back/receiver role, as former Buckeye Curtis Samuel was, and should be an immediate contributor on special teams.
Bey is Ohio State’s 28th member of the 2026 recruiting class. Barring any more surprises, he should be the last addition.
Ohio
Ohio’s secretary of state shows “cognitive dissonance” on election integrity – again
Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose is once again demonstrating that he operates not based on principles but on his loyalty to President Donald Trump and the MAGA movement, say the hosts of the Today in Ohio podcast.
Tuesday’s episode took aim at LaRose’s recent announcement that Ohio is joining the EleXa Network, a system where states share voter data to combat fraud—nearly identical to the ERIC (Electronic Registration Information Center) system LaRose abandoned after MAGA criticism.
“This was the case that — for anybody that wanted to see it — showed just how lily-livered LaRose is, that he doesn’t stand for anything,” said Chris Quinn. He noted how LaRose was full-throated in supporting ERIC “until all of a sudden ‚the MAGA folks said it’s bad. And then like you said, hot potatoes.”
Lisa Garvin explained that LaRose had previously championed ERIC as an essential tool for maintaining accurate voter rolls and preventing fraud. However, when conservative media outlets began claiming the system favored Democrats and undermined election integrity, LaRose abandoned it—only to now join a nearly identical system with a different name.
Quinn didn’t hesitate to predict LaRose’s future behavior: “And watch, if MAGA comes out and says, ‘Oh, we hate this system,’ he’ll immediately turn tail again. And it shows you everything. He doesn’t stand for anything except supporting MAGA and the Republicans.”
Garvin said LaRose’s decisions are part of his pattern on election integrity.
“He’s always trumpeted the integrity of Ohio’s election system. And then he turns around and said, ‘well, there’s fraud everywhere.’” She said. “This is like cognitive dissonance?”
Both Eric and EleXa allow states to share information on people who may be registered in multiple states or who have died, helping to keep voter rolls accurate and prevent people from voting twice. Ohio is joining with nine neighboring states, including Indiana, Kentucky, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania.
Of course, as podcast hosts noted, voter fraud is extremely rare.
Listen to the episode here.
Listen to full “Today in Ohio” episodes where Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with Editorial Board member Lisa Garvin, Impact Editor Leila Atassi and Content Director Laura Johnston.
Ohio
Leaders from dozens of states in Ohio to fight federal overreach
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — The Ohio Statehouse hosted a historic gathering of legislative leaders from across the country Monday, discussing concerns about the increasing power of the federal government.
Senate presidents and House speakers from about 40 states met in the chambers of the Ohio House of Representatives, unanimously adopting a nonbinding declaration for the restoration of federalism and state empowerment.
“The states are not instrumentalities of the federal government; the states created the federal government, the states created the constitution,” said Bryan Thomas, spokesperson for the National Conference of State Legislatures (NSCL), which organized the assembly.
In addition to the federalism declaration, the inaugural Assembly of State Legislative Leaders unanimously adopted rules and frameworks for future assemblies. These rules were submitted by a bipartisan steering committee made up of five Democrats and five Republicans. Likewise, the Assembly’s proposal process requires bipartisan support in order to get a vote.
“Coming from a blue state and minority [party] in the current federal government, it’s really important for us to find partners to work with,” Hawaii Senate President Ron Kouchi (D) said. “What better partners than our fellow legislators?”
Ohio Speaker of the House Matt Huffman (R-Lima) has been working to organize an assembly of legislative leaders to reassert the tenets of federalism for years.
“What we’ve done in the last 50 years or so, I don’t think that George Washington and Thomas Jefferson and John Adams would recognize,” Huffman said. “There are some things that the states do better and some things that constitutionally the states are required to do.”
According to Thomas, there are several specific issues where many states feel their power has been usurped by the federal government—particularly with regard to Medicaid policy.
“With changes to Medicaid coming down the pipe from Congress, what is the state role?” Thomas said. “What flexibility can states have in administering this program?”
“Medicaid is the Pac-Man of the state budget. It is costing the state more and more money each year, it’s completely unsustainable,” Ohio Senate President Rob McColley (R-Napoleon) said. “It’s necessary for us to have these conversations about Medicaid because every state’s dealing with the same challenges.”
The Assembly did not end up voting on a proposed declaration regarding Medicaid, which would have urged Congress to “avoid unfunded mandates” and assert that states should “retain the authority to customize eligibility, benefits, and delivery systems.”
Although Thomas said planning for the Assembly has stretched between presidential administrations, President Donald Trump has made several moves during the first year of his second term to assert federal authority over the states — most recently by signing an executive order limiting states’ ability to regulate AI, and attempting to pressure the Indiana state legislature into redrawing congressional maps.
“There’s no specific action here of the current administration or the past administration that spurred this,” Thomas said. “This is more about a real grounding in principles.”
“Anybody has the ability to voice their opinion or their concerns on a variety of these issues,” McColley said of Trump’s campaign to influence the Indiana legislature. “I think the administration is free to talk about it and be involved in the process.”
It is not clear when or where the Assembly will meet next, but Kouchi suggested a meeting could be held at July’s NCSL conference in Chicago. With a framework in place, Kouchi said he hopes the next assembly will get into the “meaty issues” concerning state legislative leaders.
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