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Ohio State basketball

Buckeyes wonder what might have been

OSU has been hit harder by early departures than any team in the country.

By Rusty Miller

Associated Press

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

COLUMBUS — Feeling the frustration of a third consecutive loss on Sunday, Feb. 22, Ohio State's Jon Diebler said when the Buckeyes go over the video of the defeats they ask, "What if?"

For an entirely different reason, that's the question that nags coach Thad Matta.

No team in the nation over the last three years has been hurt more by one-then-done freshmen moving on to the NBA. Instead of jockeying a team that must win at least two or three more games to make it into the NCAA tournament, Matta knows that he could easily be in charge of the dominant program in the nation.

"(CBS basketball analyst) Bill Raftery and I were laughing about it the other day," Matta said on Monday. "You could conceivably be starting Michael (Conley Jr.), Daequan Cook, Evan Turner, Kosta Koufos and Greg Oden — and still not be starting a senior."

Conley, Cook and Oden, of course, helped the Buckeyes go 35-4 two years ago, capped by a second-place finish in the NCAA tournament to defending champion Florida. All three freshmen were taken in the top 21 picks in the NBA draft the next spring.

A year ago, the Buckeyes went 24-13 and, spurned by the NCAA tournament, went on to capture the NIT title. Then Koufos, like Oden an athletic 7-footer, also skipped town to play in the big league.

Now the Buckeyes (17-8, 7-7) need some good news and fast when they host Penn State (19-8, 8-6) on Tuesday night.

Matta needs three more wins — the Buckeyes have four more regular-season games remaining, in addition to the Big Ten tournament — to go 9-for-9 in 20-win seasons as a head coach at Butler, Xavier and Ohio State. In his five seasons with the Buckeyes, his teams have gone 122-43 (a 74 percent success rate), won two regular-season and one Big Ten tournament title.

Yet, in an odd circumstance, some Ohio State fans grumble that Matta may be too good of a recruiter.

Matta is not about to dumb down his recruiting to get players who are not top prospects just so they'll stick around for four years. But even he gets winsome about what might have been.

Asked if he thinks about the players who left early, he said, "Oh, maybe once or twice."

Then he laughed.

Asked if he liked the one-year rule, Matta hesitated and laughed again.

"What do you think?" he said.

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