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Get ready for the most important basketball game Ohio State has played all season long. Outside of the contest at Purdue, this will be the toughest challenge for young phenom Jared Sullinger to date. I've been very clear on TiSB and the Betting Dork that Sullinger has the absolute best footwork in college basketball and he's a fantastic player, but I love what Illinois' bigs bring to the table on both sides of the floor. Aside from leading the NCAA in effective height (+5.7), Illinois has the longest frontcourt in college basketball according to KenPom.com. Their trees aren't the toughest --- Tisdale is such a flake --- but it's the SIZE that cannot be discounted.
Tiz (7-1, 250), Davis (6-9, 255) and freshman Meyers Leonard (7-0, 240 freshman who isn't afraid to get DIRTY) are three outstanding athletes that can not only alter offensive looks with their length and wingspans, but they can do what no bigs have done to Sullinger all year long: run him down the floor in transition. Bruce Weber has been preaching "attack, attack, attack #0" in practice all week long in order to throw various looks at JJ on defense. The young Buckeye grabs hella rebounds, yes, but he's far from a great on-ball defender. Combine a slap happy defender with home court calls and the most hostile environment he's seen all season long and may very well be on the right end of some foul trouble. Illinois isn't the toughest team in the paint, but their sheer athleticism and versatility will be something that Sullinger has yet to deal with all season long.
Last Sunday we cashed an easy 5* ticket behind Mississippi State, nothing how Rick Stansbury’s team was going to be among the toughest for the oddsmakers to deal with in the weeks ahead. This is more of the same – a marketplace that is anchored down by mathematical power ratings is filled with gibberish that does not apply to the current team in any way.
Yes, if you lose to East Tennessee State and Florida Atlantic at home, and get trounced by 31 vs. Virginia Tech, 26 vs. Washington State and 22 vs. St. Mary’s, you should be around this line range. But those games carry no meaning - Dee Bost and Renardo Sidney were not together on the court yet. Bost did not play at all before SEC play, and Sidney only 25 minutes, and while there was an ugly clunker vs. Alabama in the league opener, since then they have shattered the spread by 26 points in a pair of wins and covers. Bost has scored 48 points, grabbed 12 rebounds and dished out 21 assists in his three games since returning, while Sidney produced 39 points and 11 rebounds in 58 mintues of the last two. Add them to holdover veterans Ravern Johnson and Kodi Augustus, and you have a team that is tournament-worthy once again, although those early defeats may wreck their resume. And in terms of toughness for this kind of setting, note that the Bost-Augustus-Johnson trio has led them to an 8-4 ATS tally as SEC road dogs the past three seasons.
Georgia has excellent front-line talent, but the Bulldogs are going to do a lot of “grinding” this season, lacking the depth to build margins vs. this class. They have been out-scored by 28 points in losing all three meetings vs. State the past two seasons, and this line does not reflect at all the true balance of power between the programs.
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