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A chance to win? Or a blowout? KSU women get ready for Ohio State

Starting five

Kent State’s starting five (from left): Nila Blackford, Asian Dingle (3), Lindsey Thall, Megan Carter (31), Katie Shumate (right). (Photo from team website.)

When Kent State played Michigan four days ago, the Wolverines took charge of the game in the second quarter and did just about everything they wanted to on the way to a 88-53 victory.

When the Flashes played at North Carolina in their opener a year ago, they led the Tar Heels by two points with five minutes to go before losing 73-60.

Is either a pattern for Kent State’s home game against Ohio State on Thursday?

“Is Ohio State good enough to blow us out?” coach Todd Starkey said in an interview Tuesday. “Absolutely. ”

“If we play really well and shoot the ball really well, can we make it interesting and potentially win? I think so as well.”

Ohio State is coming off a 74-68 loss to MAC favorite Ohio University on Sunday. “I suspect they’re pretty mad,” Starkey said. “That doesn’t help our cause a whole lot.”

The Buckeyes are 2-1, beating Valparaiso 89-38 and winning at Cincinnati 78-73 in overtime.

Kent State is 3-1, with road wins over Duquesne 77-75 and Youngstown State 82-71 and a win over Purdue Fort Wayne 75-67 Sunday in the Akron Classic. The Flashes’ loss to Michigan also was in Akron.

Both teams are young and still learning to play as a unit.

Kent State’s second-leading scorer and top two rebounders are both freshman. Two other starters are sophomores.

Ohio State starts a junior transfer, three sophomores and a freshman. The five other players who got into the Oho game were all freshmen. That group’s recruiting class was rated fourth in the country this year.

“They’ve got former Ms. Basketballs and all-state players and all-Americans and all that type of things,” Starkey said. “They’re very talented at every position and have depth at every position. But they’re young and trying to find their way, just like we are.

“They’re playing players together than have not played major minutes together. Even Braxton Miller, who’s a junior transfer from Oklahoma with a lot of experience, hasn’t played with this group before. You’ve got all those freshmen and a group of sophomores who played some last year. But they didn’t play with these players.”

Kent State has enough talent that its starting five all average at least 12 points a game. But Starkey has said after every game that the team wasn’t connected enough.

On offense, that has meant the players have been scoring without a lot of help from their teammates. KSU averages just nine assists a game, which 310th of 350 Division I teams ranked by herhoopstats, an analytics service.

“We have to be more willing passers,” Starkey said. “We have to make the extra pass — pass up average shots for good shots, good shorts for great shots. That comes from experience and time playing with each other, but also from people being conscious of it.”

Still KSU is averaging 71.8 points, highest in Starkey’s four years here.

On defense,  a similar lack of “connectiveness” (Starkey’s word) has created problems.

“Everybody is kind of focused on what their individual responsibility is right,” the coach said. “When you’ve got five players kind of on a defensive Island, they may be able to do their specific job. But if they don’t know what the other person’s job is and they don’t know what to do when that person doesn’t do their job, it throws everybody off a little.

“We’ve been very reactionary defensively. You want to be a team that anticipates defensively. Regardless of the talent that you have, if you’re always reacting on the court, it slows down your talent.”

Something has to get better on defense. The Flashes are allowing almost 17 points a game more than they did last season. Some of that 78.9 average is distorted by Michigan’s 88 points. Some is distorted by the extra scoring of their overtime win at Youngstown State. But take those away and and they’re still allowing 68.7 points a game — six more than last season.

Opponents’ are making 46.8% of their shots, a figure that would have been last in the MAC by 3 percentage points last season. Michigan made 54.7% of its shots. Duquesne and Youngstown State each shot above 45%.

Ohio State is perhaps the most intriguing matchup in Kent in school history. But people need to remember it’s still just a game in November, Starkey said.

“My biggest focus is help this team grow on the timeline that they need so they can be playing their best basketball in February and March. We can’t just try to win a single game against Ohio State. We’ve got to figure out how to get better.”

All about the game

It will start about 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the M.A.C. Center. It’s the second game of a doubleheader with the Kent State men, who play Division II Concord (2-2) at 5 p.m. The women’s game will start a half hour after the men’s game ends.

One ticket gets you in both games. Men’s reserved seats are $20, general admission $15. You may have to switch seats between games. Students get in free with their ID. Men’s and women’s season tickets will be honored. Kent State is hoping for a record crowd for a women’s game, which would be more than 4,000 in the 6,000-seat M.A.C.C.

The game is on ESPN+, which costs $4.99 a month. This link will take you to the ESPN page, which will guide you through paying. Other home and away men’s and women’s basketball games are also on ESPN+, along with those of other MAC teams and other mid-majors and events in other sports like wrestling and gymnastics. Dave Wilson and Tanner Castora are the announcers.

On radio, the game is on WHLO 640 AM and on Golden Flash iHeart Radio. Ty Linder is the announcer.

During the game, you can get live statistics through the KSU website.

All about the Buckeyes

Against Ohio, the five people off the bench were all freshmen

Game preview from Ohio State team website, which has links to statistics, roster, schedule and more.

All about the Flashes

Top reserves are:

Preview from KSU team webpage, with links to roster, statistics, schedule and more.

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