:Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball

{{Short description|Men's basketball team of Ohio State University}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox CBB Team

|name = Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball

|current = 2024–25 Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team

|logo = Ohio State Buckeyes logo.svg

|logo_size = 200

|university = Ohio State University

|firstseason = 1898

|record = {{winpct|1,765|1,143|record=y}}

|conference = Big Ten

|location = Columbus, Ohio

|coach = Jake Diebler

|tenure = 1st

|arena = Value City Arena
St. John Arena (Secondary)

|capacity = 18,809

|nickname = Buckeyes

|studentsection = Nuthouse

|bestfinish = 1

|NCAAchampion = 1960

|NCAArunnerup = 1939, 1961, 1962, 2007

|NCAAfinalfour = 1939, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1968, 1999*, 2007, 2012

|NCAAeliteeight = 1939, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1950, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1968, 1971, 1992, 1999*, 2007, 2012, 2013

|NCAAsweetsixteen = 1960, 1961, 1962, 1968, 1971, 1980, 1983, 1991, 1992, 1999*, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013

|NCAAroundof32 = 1980, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1999*, 2000*, 2002*, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2022

|NCAAtourneys = 1939, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1950, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1968, 1971, 1980, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1999*, 2000*, 2001*, 2002*, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022

|conference_tournament = 2002*, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2013

|conference_season = 1925, 1933, 1939, 1944, 1946, 1950, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1968, 1971, 1991, 1992, 2000*, 2002*, 2006, 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012
* - vacated by NCAA

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|athletic_director=Ross Bjork}}

The Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball team represents Ohio State University in NCAA Division I college basketball competition. The Buckeyes are a member of the Big Ten Conference.

The Buckeyes play their home games at Value City Arena in the Jerome Schottenstein Center in Columbus, Ohio, which opened in 1998. The official capacity of the center is 19,200. Ohio State ranked 28th in the nation in average home attendance as of the 2016 season.{{Cite web|url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/Reports/attend/2016.pdf|title=2016 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL ATTENDANCE}}

The Buckeyes have won one national championship (1960), been the national runner-up four times, appeared in 10 Final Fours (one additional appearance has been vacated by the NCAA), and appeared in 27 NCAA Tournaments (four other appearances have been vacated).

Thad Matta was named the head coach of Ohio State in 2004 to replace coach Jim O'Brien, who was fired due to NCAA violations which made Ohio State vacate 113 games between 1998 and 2002.{{Cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=1818082|title=O'Brien unexpectedly ousted as Ohio State coach|date=2004-06-08|website=ESPN.com|access-date=2017-06-05}}{{Cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=2362496|title=OSU gets probation|date=2006-03-10|website=ESPN.com|access-date=2017-06-05}} On June 5, 2017, after consecutive years of missing the NCAA Tournament, the school announced Matta would not return as head coach after 13 years and 337 wins at Ohio State. On June 9, 2017, the school hired Butler head coach Chris Holtmann as head coach.{{cite news|url=http://www.fresnobee.com/sports/article155271189.html|title=Ohio State hires Butler basketball coach Chris Holtmann|work=fresnobee|access-date=2017-06-09|language=en}}{{Dead link|date=April 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

The program is presently led by Jake Diebler, Holtmann's former assistant coach who was initially hired as an interim coach following Holtmann's firing in 2024.

Team history

=Early years and Olsen era (1898–1958)=

File:Ohio state basket ball team 1898.jpg

The first basketball team at Ohio State University was formed in 1898, playing its first game against East High. Sparing success followed the Buckeyes throughout their time as an independent school. In 1912, some 13 years after forming their first basketball team, the Buckeyes joined the Big Nine Conference, which would eventually be known as the Big Ten. At first, the Buckeyes were not able to mount a sustained run, never finishing higher than second in the conference standings[http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87809&SPID=10421&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=944995]. In 1923, Harold Olsen became head coach, launching the longest basketball coaching dynasty for OSU (24 seasons). Olsen began to see success with the Buckeyes' first conference championship during the 1922–1923 season. The Olsen era is also highlighted by appearing in the national championship game for the first NCAA Championship tournament in 1939, where the Buckeyes lost to Oregon 33–46. The Buckeyes would make three more Final Four appearances under Olsen, along with winning five Big Ten championships. Following Olsen as head coach, Tippy Dye and Floyd Stahl led the Buckeyes. Not seeing the same amount of success as Olsen did, Dye and Stahl had one NCAA Tournament appearance between them. With the closing of the 1950s, the Ohio State basketball team was not considered a national powerhouse. But it continued to develop and led to the hiring of a man who would change basketball at Ohio State and bring it national fame.

=Success and Fred Taylor era (1958–1997)=

File:1960_Ohio_State_Buckeyes.jpg

Of all Buckeye coaches, it was Fred Taylor who would put Ohio State basketball on the map. With the hiring of Taylor in 1958, not much was expected following an 11–11 record during the 1958–1959 season. However, in 1960, the second-year coach, Taylor, and future Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame players Jerry Lucas and John Havlicek led the Buckeyes to their first national championship, defeating California 75–55 in the final game. The 1960 season is the only NCAA Tournament championship that the Buckeyes have claimed. Taylor's team returned to the national championship game in both 1961 and 1962, but they would lose both to in-state foe Cincinnati. The Buckeyes made a total of five tournament appearances during Taylor's 18 seasons tenure, which included four trips to the Final Four (1960, 1961, 1962, 1968). With the departure of his championship team, Taylor began to see teams accustomed to Ohio State basketball of the past. Taylor's last season at Ohio State in 1976 had the Buckeyes going 6–20, their worst record, only to be eclipsed by the team in 1995. Taylor achieved seven conference titles and an impressive overall winning percentage of over 65%. Past the Taylor era, Ohio State saw Eldon Miller, Gary Williams, and Randy Ayers take the reins as head coach. Between 1976 and 1997, the Buckeyes made the NCAA bracket only eight times, while being crowned conference champions only twice.

=Jim O'Brien (1997–2004)=

In 1997, Jim O'Brien was hired to replace head coach Randy Ayers. During his seven years as head coach, O'Brien drove the team to four 20+ win seasons, two Big Ten regular season co-championships, the 2002 Big Ten tournament championship, and a school record four-consecutive NCAA tournament appearances. Controversy erupted when Ohio State athletic director Andy Geiger fired O'Brien over alleged NCAA rules violations. A two-year NCAA investigation found that player Boban Savovic might have received improper benefits while he played for Ohio State. On March 10, 2006, the NCAA gave Ohio State three years' probation and ordered it to pay back all tournament money earned from 1999–2002 when Boban Savovic was on the Buckeyes' roster. In addition, Ohio State was forced to remove all references to team accomplishments by the NCAA directorate from those years including a 1999 visit to the Final Four.

=Thad Matta era (2004–2017)=

File:Thad Matta in 2009.jpg, whose 337 wins is most in school history.]]

Thad Matta, former head coach at Butler and Xavier, was hired by Ohio State in July 2004.{{cite news|title=Matta gets job after Wednesday interview|newspaper=ESPN|url=https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=1835879|access-date=March 16, 2013|date=July 8, 2004}}

During Matta's first season at Ohio State, the Buckeyes compiled a 20–12 record, highlighted by a win in the final game of the season over top-ranked Illinois, which was undefeated up until that game. Ohio State was defeated by Wisconsin in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals, and the team was ineligible for further postseason due to self-imposed sanctions related to Jim O'Brien's time at the school. The 2005–06 season opened with the Buckeyes 11–0 heading into Big Ten play. Ohio State ended the season with a 26–6 record and 12–4 record in conference, the Buckeyes' first outright Big Ten championship since the 1991–92 season. Ohio State lost to Iowa in the Big Ten tournament championship game, but received a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament. After a first round win, the Buckeyes lost to No. 7 seed Georgetown 70–52 in the second round.

Matta's 2006–07 Ohio State team entered the season with the second-rated recruiting class in the nation, headed by Greg Oden and Mike Conley Jr., and ranked No. 4 in the preseason polls. Ohio State entered conference play with an 11–2 record, with the only defeats coming at No. 6 North Carolina and at No. 4 Florida.{{cite news|title=Class of 2006 team recruiting rankings|newspaper=Rivals.com |url=https://basketballrecruiting.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=477059|access-date=March 16, 2013|date=November 5, 2005}} Ohio State's loss against No. 4 Wisconsin on January 9, 2007, was the last loss of the regular season as the Buckeyes won 14 straight games to end the season with a 27–3 record. Ohio State defeated No. 20 Tennessee and No. 2 Wisconsin during this winning streak and ended the season as the top-ranked team in the nation. Ohio State won the Big Ten tournament, defeating Wisconsin 66–49 in the championship game, and entered the NCAA tournament as the overall No. 1 seed. Ohio State advanced to the Sweet Sixteen for the first time under Matta after an overtime victory against Xavier, which Matta had previously coached. A one-point victory over Tennessee and a 92–76 victory over No. 2 Memphis advanced the Buckeyes to the Final Four. Ohio State defeated Georgetown 67–60 in the national semifinal, but lost to Florida 84–75 in the national championship game. Oden and Conley both would enter the NBA draft following the season, with Oden being drafted number one overall and Conley going fourth.

File:20091112 Evan Turner cropped.jpg set new Big Ten records for number of career and single season Player of the Week awards during the 2009–10 season.]]

The 2007–08 season was a rebuilding one. Ohio State ended the season with a 19–12 record, finishing fifth in the Big Ten. It lost to Michigan State in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals and missed out on the NCAA tournament. The Buckeyes did receive a No. 1 seed in the National Invitation Tournament, where Ohio State would defeat Massachusetts 92–85 in the championship to take the NIT title.

Ohio State began the 2008–09 season with a 9–0 record and would finish 20–9. Ohio State defeated Wisconsin and No. 7 Michigan State to advance to the Big Ten tournament championship, where the Buckeyes lost to No. 24 Purdue. They received a bid to the NCAA tournament as a No. 8 seed, where they lost to No. 9 Siena in the first round.

The 2009–10 season marked Matta's sixth at Ohio State, with the team entering the season ranked No. 17 in the nation. The Buckeyes had compiled a 7–1 record before Evan Turner, who was averaging 20.6 points and 12.9 rebounds per game, was injured.{{cite news|title=Turner out 2 months with spine fractures|newspaper=ESPN|url=https://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/news/story?id=4716240|access-date=March 16, 2013|date=December 6, 2009}} Turner returned later in the season and help finish the season with a 24–7 record and a share of the Big Ten regular season championship. A victory over Minnesota in the Big Ten tournament gave Matta his second Big Ten tournament title and the Buckeyes a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament. Ohio State advanced to the Sweet Sixteen before losing to No. 6-seeded Tennessee 76–73. Turner was named the National Player of the Year and entered the NBA draft, where he was selected second overall.

Matta's recruiting class heading into the 2010–11 season was highly regard and the Buckeyes returned some key seniors such as David Lighty and Jon Diebler. Ohio State was ranked No. 4 in the preseason polls and entered Big Ten conference play undefeated at 13–0, defeating No. 9 Florida and moving up to No. 2 in the nation. Ohio State continued to dominate the opposition during the regular season, pushing its record to 24–0 and 11–0 in conference play before losing the first game at No. 13 Wisconsin. Another loss at No. 11 Purdue marked their last loss in the regular season. Ohio State ended the season with a 29–2 record and 16–2 record in the Big Ten, winning the outright Big Ten regular season championship. OSU defeated Penn State for the Big Ten tournament championship, giving the Buckeyes their second tournament championship in a row and Matta's third tournament championship as head coach. Ohio State entered the NCAA tournament as the No. 1 overall seed for the second time under Matta. However, for the second year in a row, the Buckeyes failed to advance past the Sweet Sixteen, losing to Kentucky 62–60.

The Buckeyes, led by returning starters Jared Sullinger, Deshaun Thomas and Aaron Craft, entered the 2011–12 season ranked No. 3 in the nation. Ohio State entered Big Ten play with a 12–1 record, losing at No. 13 Kansas without Sullinger, who was injured. Ohio State finished the season winning a share of the Big Ten regular season championship and lost to Michigan State in the Big Ten tournament championship. Ohio State received a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament and advanced to the Final Four for the second time under Matta after a 77–70 victory over No. 1-seeded Syracuse. The Buckeye season would end with another loss to Kansas, 64–62. Following the season, Sullinger entered the NBA draft and was taken 21st overall.

The 2012–13 Buckeyes entered the season ranked No. 4 in the country. Led by Deshaun Thomas and Aaron Craft, they entered Big Ten play with only two losses, at No. 2 Duke and at home against No. 9 Kansas. They finished the season 13–5 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for second place, but would beat No. 8 Michigan State and No. 22 Wisconsin to win the Big Ten tournament. As a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament, they advanced to the Elite Eight before losing to Wichita State. Following the season, Thomas declared for the NBA draft.

With the early departure of Thomas, the Buckeyes struggled in 2013–14, finishing the season 25–10, 10–8 in fifth place in Big Ten play. They advanced to the semifinals of the Big Ten tournament before losing to Michigan. As a No. 6 seed in the NCAA tournament, they lost to Dayton in the second round (formerly known as the first round).

The 2015 Buckeyes were led by freshman D'Angelo Russell, but still finished in sixth place in Big Ten play with an 11–7 record. Despite losing to Michigan State in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten tournament, OSU received a No. 10 seed in the NCAA tournament. They upset No. 7-seeded VCU in the second round, before losing to No. 5 Arizona in the third round. Following the season, Russell declared for the NBA draft and was selected second overall.

Without Russell, the 2016 Buckeyes finished 21–14, 11–7 in Big Ten play to finish in seventh place. They lost in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten tournament to Michigan State and failed to receive an invite to the NCAA tournament. They did receive a bid to the NIT, where they lost in the second round to Florida.

In 2016–17, OSU finished the season 17–15, 7–11 in Big Ten play to finish in a tie for 10th place. As the No. 11 seed in the Big Ten tournament, the Buckeyes lost in the first round to Rutgers. They did not receive an invite to a postseason tournament.

In a surprise move more than two months after the season ended, the school announced that, after failing to make the NCAA Tournament in 2016 and 2017, Matta would not return as head coach for the 2017–18 season.{{Cite news|url=http://www.mlive.com/sports/2017/06/longtime_ohio_state_coach_thad.html|title=In stunning Big Ten development, Thad Matta out as Ohio State head coach|work=MLive.com|access-date=2017-06-05|language=en-US}} Ohio State won 20 or more games in 12 of Matta's 13 seasons, received a berth in the NCAA Tournament eight times, made it to the Sweet Sixteen four times, and to the Final Four twice. Ohio State won the Big Ten regular-season championship five times and Big Ten tournament championship four times, appearing in the championship game six times under Matta.

Thad Matta's record at Ohio State

{{CBB Yearly Record Start

|type=team

|conference=

|postseason=

|poll=no

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead

|name=Thad Matta

|startyear=2004

|conference=Big Ten Conference

|endyear=2017

|}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2004–05

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 20–12

| conference = 8–8

| confstanding = 6th

| postseason =

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = conference

| season = 2005–06

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 26–6

| conference = 12–4

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = NCAA second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = confboth

| season = 2006–07

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 35–4

| conference = 15–1

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = NCAA Runner-up

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = postseason

| season = 2007–08

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 24–13

| conference = 10–8

| confstanding = 5th

| postseason = NIT Champions

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2008–09

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 22–11

| conference = 10–8

| confstanding = T–4th

| postseason = NCAA first round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = confboth

| season = 2009–10

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 29–8

| conference = 14–4

| confstanding = T–1st

| postseason = NCAA Sweet Sixteen

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = confboth

| season = 2010–11

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 34–3

| conference = 16–2

| confstanding = 1st

| postseason = NCAA Sweet Sixteen

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = conference

| season = 2011–12

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 31–8

| conference = 13–5

| confstanding = T–1st

| postseason = NCAA Final Four

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship = conference tournament

| season = 2012–13

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 29–8

| conference = 13–5

| confstanding = T–2nd

| postseason = NCAA Elite Eight

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2013–14

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 25–10

| conference = 10–8

| confstanding = 5th

| postseason = NCAA first round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2014–15

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 24–11

| conference = 11–7

| confstanding = 6th

| postseason = NCAA second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2015–16

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 21–14

| conference = 11–7

| confstanding = 7th

| postseason = NIT second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2016–17

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 17–15

| conference = 7–11

| confstanding = T–10th

| postseason =

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal

| name = Thad Matta

| overall = 337–123

| confrecord = 150–78

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record End

|overall = 337–123 ({{Winning percentage|337|123}})

}}

= Chris Holtmann era (2017–2024) =

File:Kaleb Wesson OSU (cropped).jpg, in March 2020.]]

On June 9, 2017, the school hired Butler head coach Chris Holtmann as head coach. The Buckeyes exceeded any and all expectations in Holtmann's first season in Columbus. Picked to finish no better than 11th in preseason media polls, the Buckeyes stormed out to a 9–0 record in Big Ten. Highlighting the 2017–18 season were home wins over Michigan, overcoming a first-half 20-point deficit, and No. 1 Michigan State along with a road victory at No. 3 Purdue, the Boilermakers’ only home loss of the season. Holtmann was named the 2018 Big Ten Coach of the Year after leading the Buckeyes to a 25–9 overall record, a second-place finish in the Big Ten regular-season standings (15–3). The Buckeyes were led by Big Ten Player of the Year, Keita Bates-Diop, and a four-year starter, Jae’Sean Tate; both of which are now in the NBA. The season ended on a somber note as the Buckeyes were eliminated in the second round of the 2018 NCAA tournament by Gonzaga.

In 2018–19, Holtmann's Buckeyes went 20–15, marking the sixth consecutive season a Holtmann team had won 20 or more games. As an 11-seed the Buckeyes knocked off 6-seed Iowa State to advance to the second round of the 2019 NCAA tournament, before being eliminated by Houston.

The 2019–20 season was cut short with the cancellation of the 2020 Big Ten and NCAA Tournaments. The Buckeyes posted an overall record of 21–10, which included four wins vs. Top 10 opponents (Villanova, at North Carolina, Kentucky and Maryland). Ohio State finished tied for fifth in the Big Ten at 11–9. Despite no postseason tournament, the Buckeyes managed 20 wins, marking the seventh consecutive season Holtmann-coach teams reached that plateau.

In a season shortened by COVID-19 implications, the 2020–21 Buckeyes went 21–10 record overall. Ohio State finished tied for fifth in the B1G (12–8) and reached the championship game of the 2021 Big Ten Tournament. The Buckeyes were led by 1st Team All-Big Ten forward EJ Liddell, and 3rd Team All-Big Ten guard Duane Washington Jr. Ohio State appeared in the AP Top 10 for the final seven weeks of the season and earned a #2 seed in the 2021 NCAA Tournament, only to lose to 15-seed Oral Roberts in the first round.

The 2021–22 Buckeyes posted a 20–12 record and 12–8 conference record. The team lost in the second round of the 2022 NCAA tournament to Villanova.

Holtmann is the second Ohio State coach to win 20 or more games in his first five seasons in Columbus, joining Thad Matta (12 from 2005 to 2016). However, he has not won a conference championship, and his teams have struggled in postseason play: through his first 11 seasons as a head coach, his teams had never won a conference tournament, and had advanced beyond the first weekend of the NCAA tournament only once, leading to some criticism from fans.

The criticism of Holtmann continued in the 2022–23 season, as after starting the season with 10 wins in 13 games, the Buckeyes went into an extended tailspin, losing 14 of 15 games. On February 12, the Buckeyes scored just 41 points in a home blowout loss to Michigan State, the program's lowest point total in 27 years.

Holtmann was fired on February 14, 2024, as the team continued to struggle in conference play as the team lost 9 out of his final 11 games. Assistant coach Jake Diebler was named interim head coach after his firing.

{{CBB Yearly Record Start

|type=team

|conference=

|postseason=

|poll=no

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Subhead

|name=Chris Holtmann

|startyear=2017

|conference=Big Ten Conference

|endyear=present

|}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2017–18

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 25–9

| conference = 15–3

| confstanding = T–2nd

| postseason = NCAA second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2018–19

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 20–15

| conference = 8–12

| confstanding = T–8th

| postseason = NCAA second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2019–20

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 21–10

| conference = 11–9

| confstanding = T–5th

| postseason = Cancelled (COVID Outbreak)

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2020–21

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 21–10

| conference = 12–8

| confstanding = 5th

| postseason = NCAA first round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| championship =

| season = 2021–22

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 20–12

| conference = 12–8

| confstanding = T–4th

| postseason = NCAA second round

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| season = 2022–23

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 16–19

| conference = 5–15

| confstanding = 13th

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record Entry

| season = 2023–24

| name = Ohio State

| overall = 14–11

| conference = 4–10

| confstanding =

}}{{CBB Yearly Record Subtotal

| name = Chris Holtmann

| overall = 137–86

| confrecord = 67–65

}}

{{CBB Yearly Record End

|overall = 137–86 ({{Winning percentage|137|86}})

}}

Facilities

Image:St. John Arena.JPG

The Ohio State Buckeyes presently play their home games in the 19,200-seat Value City Arena. The first official home court for the Buckeyes was the Ohio Expo Center Coliseum. Constructed in 1918, the Buckeyes called this arena home between the years 1920 to 1955. The facility had a capacity of 7,000 people.

In 1955, a new facility was built on the campus of Ohio State named the St. John Arena named after Lynn St. John, an Ohio State basketball coach and athletic director. This building, while hosting the men's basketball team, also hosted (and still to this day hosts) volleyball, gymnastics, and wrestling. The capacity of St. John Arena is 13,276. This building is the only Buckeye arena to serve as home for an Ohio State men's basketball championship team in 1960.

With the aging St. John Arena over 40 years old, Ohio State University decided to build Value City Arena to hold men's and women's basketball as well as hockey. The 770,000 sq foot arena was completed in 1998 and seats 19,500 for basketball games.

File:Duke Blue Devils v Ohio State University Buckeyes.jpg

Ohio State University completed a $19 million renovation to the Schottenstein Center in 2013 that includes updated locker rooms for the Men's and Women's Basketball teams, a new training room with hydrotherapy pools, a new weight room, and a new practice gym to complement the existing gym. A $34 million renovation completed in 2018 improved the concourse as well as added new space for the coaches, team shop, ticket office, and building administration.

During the team's formative years the Buckeyes played their home games at the Ohio State University Armory. Built in 1897 at a cost of $115,000, the massive brick medieval style building was demolished in 1958 after damage caused by a fire.[http://www.dispatch.com/content/topic/photography/then-and-now/Wexner-Center.html The Columbus Dispatch] From 1897 to 1917 the Buckeyes used the building known as "Drill Hall" or "The Gymnasium" as their home court, only being asked to leave due to the outbreak of World War I. The team's overall record at the Armory was 178–104. In 1919, without a definite home, the team played some of their games at Indianola Park as well as the Coliseum and the Armory. Finally, in 1920, the team officially moved to the Ohio State Fairgrounds and played in their home games at the Ohio Expo Center Coliseum. During their time at the Coliseum, the Buckeyes played in five national title games.[https://library.osu.edu/blogs/archives/2011/12/14/twelve-days-of-buckeyes-first-home-for-men%E2%80%99s-basketball/ The Ohio State University OSU.EDU]

Coaches

{{See also|List of Ohio State Buckeyes men's basketball head coaches}}

The Buckeyes have had 14 coaches in their 110-year history. Thad Matta, who was hired in 2004, and led the Buckeyes to five NCAA Tournament appearances and two Final Four appearances during the 2006–07 and 2011–12 seasons. The only Ohio State coach to win a national championship was Fred Taylor in 1960.

border="0" width="80%"

| valign="top" |

{| cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="50%"

align="center"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Coach|Years|Overall record}}

align="center"

| Unknown

1898–190121–11
align="center"

| No team

1901–1902
align="center"

| D.C. Huddleson

1902–190415–6
align="center"

| Unknown

1904–190833–14
align="center"

| Tom Kibler

1908–191022–2
align="center"

| Sox Raymond

1910–19117–2
align="center"

| Lynn St. John

1911–191979–70
align="center"

| George Trautman

1919–192229–33
align="center"

| Harold Olsen

1922–1946259–197
align="center"

| Tippy Dye

1946–195053–34
align="center"

| Floyd Stahl

1950–195884–92
align="center"

| Fred Taylor

1958–1976297–158
align="center"

| Eldon Miller

1976–1986174–120
align="center"

| Gary Williams

1986–198959–41
align="center"

| Randy Ayers

1989–1997124–108
align="center"

| Jim O'Brien

1997–2004133–88
align="center"

| Thad Matta

2004–2017337–123
align="center"

| Chris Holtmann

2017–2024137–86
align="center"

| Jake Diebler

2024–present25–18
align="center"

| colspan=2 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | Head coaches

| style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | 16

|}

=Current coaching staff=

class="wikitable"

! Name !! Position

Jake DieblerHead coach
Joel JustusAssociate head coach
Dave Dickerson

|Assistant coach

Jamall WalkerAssistant coach
Luke SimonsAssistant coach
Quadrian BanksAssistant Director of Strength & Conditioning
David EgelhoffDirector of Basketball Operations
Terence DialsDirector of Professional Development
Nicholas KelloggSpecial Assistant to Head Coach
Robbie RuckiVideo Coordinator
Tony LaurenziAthletic Trainer

Accomplishments

=NCAA National Championships=

cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="60%" style="text-align:center;"
align="center"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Coach|Opponent|Score|Site|Overall record|Big Ten Record}}

align="center"

| 1959–60

Fred TaylorCalifornia75–55San Francisco, CA25–313–1
align="center"

| colspan=5 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | National Championships

| colspan=2 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | 1

style="border:'1' 'solid' 'gray' " width="650"

|+ 1960 NCAA Tournament Results

bgcolor="#CCCCCC" | Round

! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" | Opponent

! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" | Score

Semifinals

| Western Kentucky

| 98–79

Regional Finals

| Georgia Tech

| 86–69

Final Four

| NYU

| 76–54

Championship

| California

| 75–55

=Final Four history=

style="width:60%"

|1939–Finalist

|1944–Semifinalist

|1945–Semifinalist

|1946–Semifinalist

1960–Champion

|1961–Finalist

|1962–Finalist

|1968–Semifinalist

1999–Semifinalist (vacated)

|2007–Finalist

|2012–Semifinalist

=NCAA tournament seeding history=

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

class="wikitable"

!style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0|color=white}};"|Years →

!'80

!'82

!'83

!'85

!'87

!'90

!'91

!'92

!'99

!'00

!'01

!'02

!'06

!'07

!'09

!'10

!'11

!'12

!'13

!'14

!'15

!'18

!'19

!'21

!'22

align=center

|align=left style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Seeds →

48349811435421821*2261051127

  • The * represents overall number one seed which began with the 2004 Tournament.

=NCAA tournament results=

class="wikitable"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Round|Opponent|Result}}

align="center"

| 1939

Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
Wake Forest
Villanova
Oregon
W 64–52
W 53–36
L 33–46
align="center"

| 1944

Elite Eight
Final Four
Temple
Dartmouth
W 57–47
L 53–60
align="center"

| 1945

Elite Eight
Final Four
Kentucky
New York University
W 45–37
L 65–70
align="center"

| 1946

Elite Eight
Final Four
Regional 3rd Place Game
Harvard
North Carolina
California
W 46–38
L 57–60
W 63–45
align="center"

| 1950

Elite Eight
3rd Place Game
City College of New York
Holy Cross
L 55–56
W 72–52
align="center"

| 1960

Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
Western Kentucky
Georgia Tech
New York University
California
W 98–79
W 86–69
W 76–54
W 75–55
align="center"

| 1961

Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
Louisville
Kentucky
Saint Joseph's
Cincinnati
W 56–55
W 87–44
W 95–69
L 65–70
align="center"

| 1962

Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
Western Kentucky
Kentucky
Wake Forest
Cincinnati
W 93–73
W 74–64
W 84–68
L 59–71
align="center"

| 1968

Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
3rd Place Game
East Tennessee State
Kentucky
North Carolina
Houston
W 79–72
W 82–81
L 66–80
W 89–85
align="center"

| 1971

Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Marquette
Western Kentucky
W 60–59
L 78–81
align="center"

| 1980

Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#5 Arizona State
#8 UCLA
W 89–75
L 68–72
align="center"

| 1982

First Round#8 James MadisonL 48–55
align="center"

| 1983

Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#6 Syracuse
#2 North Carolina
W 79–74
L 51–64
align="center"

| 1985

First Round
Second Round
#13 Iowa State
#5 Louisiana Tech
W 75–64
L 67–79
align="center"

| 1987

First Round
Second Round
#8 Kentucky
#1 Georgetown
W 91–77
L 79–82
align="center"

| 1990

First Round
Second Round
#9 Providence
#1 UNLV
W 84–83
L 65–76
align="center"

| 1991

First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#16 Towson
#8 Georgia Tech
#4 St. John's
W 97–86
W 65–61
L 74–91
align="center"

| 1992

First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Mississippi Valley State
#9 Connecticut
#4 North Carolina
#6 Michigan
W 83–56
W 78–55
W 80–73
L 71–75
align="center"

| 1999

First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#13 Murray State
#12 Detroit
#1 Auburn
#3 St. John's
#1 Connecticut
W 72–58
W 75–44
W 72–64
W 77–74
L 58–64
align="center"

| 2000

First Round
Second Round
#14 Appalachian St
#6 Miami, FL
W 87–61
L 62–75
align="center"

| 2001

First Round#12 Utah StateL 68–77
align="center"

| 2002

First Round
Second Round
#13 Davidson
#12 Missouri
W 69–64
L 67–83
align="center"

| 2006

First Round
Second Round
#15 Davidson
#7 Georgetown
W 70–60
L 52–70
align="center"

| 2007

First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship Game
#16 Central Connecticut State
#9 Xavier
#5 Tennessee
#2 Memphis
#2 Georgetown
#1 Florida
W 78–57
W 78–71
W 85–84
W 92–76
W 67–60
L 75–84
align="center"

| 2009

First Round#9 SienaL 72–74
align="center"

| 2010

First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#15 UC Santa Barbara
#10 Georgia Tech
#6 Tennessee
W 68–51
W 75–66
L 73–76
align="center"

| 2011

Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
#16 Texas–San Antonio
#8 George Mason
#4 Kentucky
W 75–46
W 98–66
L 60–62
align="center"

| 2012

Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#15 Loyola (MD)
#7 Gonzaga
#6 Cincinnati
#1 Syracuse
#2 Kansas
W 78–59
W 73–66
W 81–76
W 77–70
L 62–64
align="center"

| 2013

Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#15 Iona
#10 Iowa State
#6 Arizona
#9 Wichita State
W 95–70
W 78–75
W 73–70
L 66–70
align="center"

| 2014

Second Round#11 DaytonL 59–60
align="center"

| 2015

Second Round
Third Round
#7 VCU
#2 Arizona
W 75–72OT
L 58–73
align="center"

| 2018

First Round
Second Round
#12 South Dakota State
#4 Gonzaga
W 81–73
L 84–90
align="center"

| 2019

First Round
Second Round
#6 Iowa State
#3 Houston
W 62–59
L 59–74
align="center"

| 2021

First Round#15 Oral RobertsL 72–75OT
align="center"

| 2022

First Round
Second Round
#10 Loyola-Chicago
#2 Villanova
W 54–41
L 61–71

{{cite web |url=http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/tournament/history/_/team1/7012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100317070300/http://espn.go.com/mens-college-basketball/tournament/history/_/team1/7012|url-status=dead|archive-date=March 17, 2010|title=NCAA basketball tournament History: Ohio State|newspaper=ESPN}}

=NIT results=

The Buckeyes are two time NIT champions (1986, 2008).

class="wikitable"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Round|Opponent|Result}}

align="center"

| 1979

First Round
Second Round
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
St. Joseph's
Maryland
Indiana
Alabama
W 80–66
W 79–72
L 55–64
L 86–96
align="center"

| 1984

First RoundXavierL 57–60
align="center"

| 1986

First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Ohio
Texas
BYU
Louisiana Tech
Wyoming
W 65–62
W 71–65
W 79–68
W 79–66
W 73–63
align="center"

| 1988

First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Old Dominion
Cleveland State
New Mexico
Colorado State
Connecticut
W 86–73
W 86–80
W 68–65
W 64–62
L 67–72
align="center"

| 1989

First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Akron
Nebraska
St. John's
W 81–70
W 85–74
L 80–83
align="center"

| 1993

First RoundMiami (OH)L 53–56
align="center"

| 2003

First RoundGeorgia TechL 58–72
align="center"

| 2008

First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
UNC–Asheville
California
Dayton
Ole Miss
Massachusetts
W 84–66
W 73–56
W 74–63
W 81–69
W 92–85
align="center"

| 2016

First Round
Second Round
Akron
Florida
W 72–63
L 66–74
align="center"

| 2024

First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinal
Cornell
Virginia Tech
Georgia
W 88–83
W 81–73
L 79–77

=Big Ten tournament championships=

Ohio State has won 4 Big Ten tournament championships since its inception during the 1997–98 season. Ohio State won their first title in 2002 under Jim O'Brien (later vacated), while winning 4 under head coach Thad Matta. Under Matta, the Buckeyes appeared in the Big Ten tournament championship five consecutive seasons from 2009 to 2013.

cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="60%"
-align="center"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Coach|Opponent|Score|Site|Overall record|Big Ten record}}

align="center"

| 2006–07

Thad MattaWisconsin66–49Chicago, IL35–415–1
align="center"

| 2009–10

Thad MattaMinnesota90–61Indianapolis, IN29–814–4
align="center"

| 2010–11

Thad MattaPenn State71–60Indianapolis, IN34–316–2
align="center"

| 2012–13

Thad MattaWisconsin50–43Chicago, IL26–713–5
align="center"

| colspan=6 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}} | Big Ten tournament championships

| colspan=1 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}} | 4

=Big Ten regular season championships=

cellpadding="1" border="1" cellspacing="0" width="60%"
style="text-align:center"

{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Coach|Overall record|Big Ten record}}

align="center"

| 1924–25

Harold Olsen14–211–1
align="center"

| 1932–33

Harold Olsen17–310–2
align="center"

| 1938–39

Harold Olsen16–79–2
align="center"

| 1943–44

Harold Olsen15–610–2
align="center"

| 1945–46

Harold Olsen16–510–2
align="center"

| 1949–50

Tippy Dye22–412–1
align="center"

| 1959–60

Fred Taylor25–313–1
align="center"

| 1960–61

Fred Taylor27–114–0
align="center"

| 1961–62

Fred Taylor26–213–1
align="center"

| 1962–63

Fred Taylor20–411–3
align="center"

| 1963–64

Fred Taylor16–811–3
align="center"

| 1967–68

Fred Taylor21–810–4
align="center"

| 1970–71

Fred Taylor20–613–1
align="center"

| 1990–91

Randy Ayers27–415–3
align="center"

| 1991–92

Randy Ayers26–615–3
align="center"

| 2005–06

Thad Matta26–612–4
align="center"

| 2006–07

Thad Matta35–415–1
align="center"

| 2009–10

Thad Matta29–814–4
align="center"

| 2010–11

Thad Matta34–316–2
align="center"

| 2011–12

Thad Matta31–813–5
align="center"

| colspan=3 style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | Big Ten regular season championships

| style="{{NCAA secondary color cell|Ohio State Buckeyes}}" | 20

Record vs. Big Ten opponents

The Ohio State Buckeyes lead the all-time series vs. seven Big Ten opponents. Two of the all-time series are within three games. These records do not include vacated games (e.g. Purdue does count all their games played against Ohio State and tie the series 94–94 according to their records. Iowa counts all games played against OSU and lead the series 85–84 according to their records).

{{Cite web | url=https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/05_1819BigTenOpps.pdf | title=OHIO STATE VS. MINNESOTA | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220706100623/https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/05_1819BigTenOpps.pdf | archive-date=2022-07-06}}{{cite web| url = http://www.espn.com/mens-college-basketball/team/schedule/_/id/194| title = 2021-22 Ohio State Buckeyes Schedule {{!}} ESPN}}

class="wikitable sortable"

!Opponent

!Wins

!Losses

!Pct.

!Streak

Illinois

|76

|109

|.417

|ILL 3

Indiana

|84

|112

|.439

|IU 5

Iowa

|80

|83

|.490

|Iowa 1

Michigan

|101

|77

|.573

|Mich 1

Michigan State

|62

|79

|.434

|MSU 2

Minnesota

|91

|63

|.595

|Minn 2

Nebraska

|21

|8

|.826

|OSU 1

Northwestern

|122

|51

|.716

|NW 3

Penn State

|41

|20

|.679

|OSU 1

Purdue

|88

|94

|.48

|OSU 2

Wisconsin

|91

|78

|.549

|WIS 3

Maryland

|11

|12

|.471

|OSU 1

Rutgers

|15

|5

|.769

|OSU 3

Oregon

|2

|2

|.500

|Oregon 1

Washington

|4

|3

|.550

|OSU 2

UCLA

|4

|7

|.400

|UCLA 2

USC

|4

|3

|.555

|OSU 2

Awards

=Consensus All-American selections=

  • Wes Fesler (1931)
  • Jimmy Hull (1939)
  • Dick Schnittker (1950)
  • Robin Freeman (1955)
  • Jerry Lucas (1960, 1961*, 1962*)
  • Gary Bradds (1964*)
  • Jim Jackson (1991, 1992)
  • Evan Turner (2010*)
  • Jared Sullinger (2011, 2012)
  • D'Angelo Russell (2015)
  • Dennis Hopson (1987)

*National Player of the Year

=Big Ten Player of the Year=

  • Dennis Hopson (1987)
  • Jim Jackson (1991, 1992)
  • Scoonie Penn (1999)
  • Terence Dials (2006)
  • Evan Turner (2010)
  • Keita Bates-Diop (2018)

=Big Ten Coach of the Year=

  • Eldon Miller (1983)
  • Randy Ayers (1991, 1992)
  • Jim O’Brien (1999, 2001)
  • Thad Matta (2006, 2010)
  • Chris Holtmann (2018)

=First-Team All-Big Ten=

style="width:100%"

|Harold "Cookie" Cunningham (1925)

|Johnny Miner (1925)

|Adam Bales (1926)

|Bill Hunt (1927)

|Wes Fesler (1931)

Bill Hosket Sr. (1933)

|Tippy Dye (1936, 1937)

|Bob Lynch (1939)

|Jimmy Hull (1939)

Dick Fisher (1941)

|Arnold "Smokes" Risen (1944)

|Don Grate (1944, 1945)

|Jack Underman (1946)

|Paul Huston (1946)

Dick Schnittker (1949, 1950)

|Bob Donham (1950)

|Paul Ebert (1952, 1953, 1954)

|Robin Freeman (1955, 1956)

|Frank Howard (1957, 1958)

Jerry Lucas (1960, 1961, 1962)

|Larry Siegfried (1961)

|John Havlicek (1961, 1962)

|Gary Bradds (1963, 1964)

|Bill Hosket Jr. (1967, 1968)

Dave Sorenson (1969, 1970)

|Jim Cleamons (1971)

|Luke Witte (1971)

|Allan Hornyak (1971, 1972, 1973)

|Kelvin Ransey (1978, 1979, 1980)

Herb Williams (1980)

|Clark Kellogg (1982)

|Tony Campbell (1983, 1984)

|Brad Sellers (1986)

|Dennis Hopson (1987)

Jay Burson (1989)

|Jim Jackson (1991, 1992)

|Scoonie Penn (1999, 2000)

|Michael Redd (2000)

|Ken Johnson (2001)

Terence Dials (2006)

|Mike Conley Jr. (2007)

|Greg Oden (2007)

|Evan Turner (2009, 2010)

Jared Sullinger (2011, 2012)

|Deshaun Thomas (2013)

|D'Angelo Russell (2015)

|Keita Bates-Diop (2018)

|E.J. Liddell (2021, 2022)

All award data taken from[http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/osu/sports/m-baskbl/auto_pdf/traditions2.pdf History and Tradition/Honors and Awards]

Notable players

Image:Arenas guarding Evan Turner.jpg, Ohio State Buckeyes forward and 2010 National Player of the Year]]

Image:Jerry Lucas 1972.JPG, Ohio State Buckeyes center and 2-time National Player of the Year (1961–62)]]

class="toccolours"

!bgcolor=silver|Name

!bgcolor=silver|Position

!bgcolor=silver|Seasons

!bgcolor=silver|Notes

bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Gary Bradds

F1961–641964 AP Player of the Year
1964 UPI College Player of the Year
1964 Adolph Rupp Trophy Winner
1962-63 Consensus Second Team All-American
1963-64 Consensus First Team All-American
2x Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball (Big Ten MVP) (1963–64)
ABA Champion (1969)
1963 Pan American Games Men's Basketball Gold Medalist
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Wes Fesler

G1928–311930-31 Consensus First Team All-American
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Robin Freeman

G1953-561954-55 Consensus Second Team All-American
1955-56 Consensus First Team All-American
1956 Chicago Tribune Silver Basketball
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Jimmy Hull

F1938–391938-39 Consensus First Team All-American
1939 NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Jim Jackson

G1989–921992 UPI College Player of the Year
2× Big Ten Conference Player of the Year (1991–1992)
2× Consensus First Team All-American (1991–1992)
1991 Pan American Games Men's Basketball Bronze Medalist
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Jerry Lucas

C1959–622× AP Player of the Year (1961–1962)
2× NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player (1960–1961)
3× Consensus NCAA All-American First Team (1960–1962)
NCAA Champion (1960)
NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team
NBA Champion (1973)
7× NBA All-Star (1964–1969, 1971)
NBA All-Star Game MVP (1965)
3× All-NBA First Team (1965–1966, 1968)
2× All-NBA Second Team (1964, 1967)
NBA Rookie of the Year (1964)
NBA All-Rookie First Team (1964)
-bgcolor=#eeeeee

|John Havlicek

F1959-62Consensus NCAA All-America Second Team (1962)
AP Third-Team All-American (1962)
NCAA Champion (1960)
8x NBA Champion (1963–1966, 1968, 1969, 1974, 1976)
NBA Finals MVP (1974)
13x NBA All-Star (1966–1978)
4x All-NBA First Team (1971–1974)
7× All-NBA Second Team (1964, 1966, 1968–1970, 1975, 1976)
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Dick Schnittker

F1948–501950 Consensus First Team All-American
2x NBA Champion (1953, 1954)
bgcolor=#eeeeee

| Evan Turner

F2007–10Consensus First Team All-American (2010)
2010 National Player of the Year (AP, NABC, Naismith, Robertson, Wooden)
Big Ten Conference Player of the Year (2010)
Big Ten tournament MVP (2010)
bgcolor=#eeeeee
bgcolor=#eeeeee

=Retired numbers=

{{main|List of NCAA men's basketball retired numbers}}

Ohio State has retired five jersey numbers.

{{multiple image

|align =

|total_width = 500

|image1 = Havlicek ohiostate photo.jpg

|image2 = Jerry Lucas 1961.jpeg

|image3 = 20091112 Evan Turner cropped.jpg

|image4 = Gary_Bradds.jpg

|footer = Fltr: John Havlicek, Jerry Lucas, Evan Turner, and Gary Bradds, whose numbers were retired by Ohio State

}}

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"

| colspan="6" style= "{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0|color=white}}" | Ohio State Buckeyes retired numbers

width=40px style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}}" | No.

! width=150px style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}}" |Player

! width=70px style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}}" |Position

! width=100px style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}}" |Career

! width= px style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}}" |Ref.

5John HavlicekF1959–62[https://www.elevenwarriors.com/ohio-state-basketball/2021/07/123490/malaki-branham-to-wear-no-22-ohio-state-jersey-that-was-retired-for-jim-jackson#:~:text=Jackson's%20jersey%20is%20one%20of,the%20Schottenstein%20Center%20as%20well. MALAKI BRANHAM TO WEAR NO. 22 OHIO STATE JERSEY THAT WAS RETIRED FOR JIM JACKSON] By Colin Hass-Hill on July 10, 2021 - Elevenwarriors.com
11Jerry LucasC1959–62
21Evan TurnerG/F2007–10
22Jim JacksonG1989–92
35Gary BraddsC1961–64

=Honored coaches=

Two longtime head coaches have been honored with banners which hang alongside the retired numbers:

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
colspan="7" style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0|color=white}};" |Honored Coaches
style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Coach

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Years

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Record

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Conf. Titles

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Tourney Apps.

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};"|Final Four Apps.

! style="{{CollegeSecondaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|border=0}};" |National Titles

Fred Taylor

|1959–1976

|297–158 (.653)

|7

|5

|4

|1

Thad Matta

|2004–2017

|337–123 (.733)

|5

|9

|2

|0

References

{{reflist|30em}}