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No. 3 seed Buckeyes advance to Sweet 16 on Sheldon’s game-sealing jumper

JAYLA VANHORN Lantern reporter vanhorn.110@osu.edu

This story was originally published March 20 but has been updated for the commencement edition.

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The Ohio State’s women basketball team’s 2022-23 season came down to the waning seconds of the fourth quarter.

With nine seconds left, the Buckeyes had a chance to take the lead.

And with the ball in her hands, senior guard Jacy Sheldon pulled up for a goahead jumper in the lane, leaving only one second remaining on the clock for North Carolina.

The No. 3 seeded Buckeyes advanced to the Sweet 16 for the second-straight season, after defeating No. 6 seed North Carolina 71-69 at the Schottenstein Center

Congratulations to our 2022-23 Graduates! on March 20.

“This is a great win for us because it puts us in the Sweet 16,” head coach Kevin McGuff said. “But also I have so much respect for North Carolina, so we beat a great opponent today.”

Sheldon, who missed nearly two months of play after suffering a foot injury on Nov. 20, 2022, and appeared in five games since Feb. 5, finished the game with 16 points, grabbing six rebounds and dishing out five assists. Senior guard Taylor Mikesell led the way with a team-high 17 points on 4-of-8 shooting from 3.

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Also propelling the Buckeyes to victory was a career high for senior forward Eboni Walker, as she scored 15 points on 4-of-7 shooting from the field.

For the Tar Heels junior guard Deja Kelly finished with a game-high 22 points despite leaving mid-fourth quarter with an apparent leg injury. She would later return during the final two minutes of the game.

Juniors forward Alyssa Ustby and guard Kennedy Todd-Williams scored 16 apiece and combined for 15 points in North Carolina’s fourth-quarter run.

After being down for the entire game, North Carolina took its first lead with 2:09 left in the fourth quarter after a steal from Ustby led to a fastbreak layup for freshman guard Paulina Paris, who filled in for the injured Kelly.

Yet, the veteran Sheldon took over the game for the Buckeyes in the final minute. Sheldon finished with a fastbreak layup with 1:07 remaining which put the Buckeyes back up by one, and on the following play, split a pair of free throws which gave Ohio State a two-point lead.

“We did a great job in that moment, keeping our composure and staying focused on winning,” Sheldon said. “Whether we like it or not, we’ve been down a couple of times this year and had to fight back, and we’ve done it, so we’ve been there before. So, we’re familiar with that feeling.”

With 23 seconds remaining North Carolina had a chance to take the lead, but redshirt freshman forward Teonni Key was called for a moving screen.

Now with the shot clock off, the Buckeye faithful rose to their feet as their team stood seconds away from their second straight appearance to the Sweet 16.

But the Tar Heels, who led the Atlantic Coast Conference in turnovers forced per game, had other plans in mind. North Carolina came up with a turnover with 16 seconds left after corralling Mikesell, which forced the senior to throw a halfcourt pass that went right through the hands of redshirt junior guard Rikki Harris in front of the Buckeyes bench.

The Tar Heels again had a chance to either tie or take the lead with a go-ahead 3-point shot. And North Carolina looked to leading-scorer Kelly, who converted on a 3-point play in the lane with just under two seconds remaining in a win against No. 11 seed St. John on March 18.

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Kelly came up big again, hitting a midrange jumper from the key with nine seconds remaining in the quarter. But for Sheldon and the Buckeyes, this was more than enough time to get a shot off in front of their home crowd of 5,185.

“I thought the crowd was once again impactful, especially for a 4 o’clock tip,” McGuff said. “So, that was really cool to have the crowd there supporting us like they did.”

Harris inbounded the ball to Walker, who scored eight points in the fourth quarter. Walker looked for Sheldon in the lane, but North Carolina cut the Dublin, Ohio, native off from catching the ball.

Walker then pivoted and found Sheldon in the corner, who scrambled in the lane against three defenders and pulled up for a jumper for the go-ahead shot. McGuff said the play didn’t go as planned but believed Walker made a great decision not to pass the ball on the initial play.

“I told them in the locker room sometimes it’s about X’s and O’s and sometimes about having the best player on the court, Jacy,” McGuff said.

McGuff said despite the broken play he believed Walker made a great decision not to pass the ball on the first play. Walker, a transfer from two universities and contender for three different conferences, said she wants to do whatever she can to support Buckeye fans and help the program win.

“They support me in so many different ways other than basketball,” Walker said. “And just thinking I transferred this many times, and they took a chance on me just from that, I knew that I had to give them my very best.”

For Sheldon, who’s been out for most of the regular season, this win was “extra special.”

“It’s always special to win,” Sheldon said. “I think especially in March. I mean it’s hard to win. So, it’s awesome. Winning is fun, and we got a group of competitors, so it’s extra special for us.”

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