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Land-Grant Podcast Network: An Ohio State University podcastA podcast for Ohio State fans, by Ohio State fans. Author: FFSN
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Off-Script Ohio: Tournament heartbreak, season perspective, and what comes next
Tuesday, 24 March, 2026
After clawing back from the bubble and earning an 8-seed in the NCAA Tournament, the Buckeyes saw their season end in a 66–64 loss to TCU. It was the kind of game that lingers. A comeback that showed their ceiling, and a final sequence that underscored how thin the margin really was. Episode 28 of Off-Script Ohio captured that tension. Progress and frustration, both real, both true, and both defining how this season will ultimately be remembered. A season that earned March, and a finish that stings Ohio State’s loss to TCU was not a collapse. It was a reminder. Down 15 at halftime, the Buckeyes responded with urgency and composure, flipping the game and taking a 55–50 lead with six minutes to play. Every starter finished in double figures, with John Mobley Jr. leading the way with 15 points and Amare Bynum delivering one of his most complete performances with 12 points and 9 rebounds, including several clutch moments late. That is what makes the ending harder to process. Ohio State had control. It had momentum. And then, in the final seconds, the execution simply was not there. A disjointed final possession ended without a clean look, closing the door on what felt like a very real opportunity to advance. And that is the lingering thought. Not just that Ohio State lost, but that the path ahead, potentially a matchup with Duke, felt more open than expected. Grading the season: progress with perspective The final record tells a straightforward story. 21–13 overall. Eighth in the Big Ten. An NCAA Tournament appearance. But the context adds weight. Ohio State spent much of the season hovering around the bubble, navigating close losses, inconsistency, and questions about identity. Then, late in the year, everything shifted. Wins over Purdue, Penn State, Indiana, and Iowa reshaped the resume and gave the Buckeyes real momentum entering March. Making the tournament mattered. It ended a three-year absence and reestablished a baseline expectation for the program. At the same time, the TCU loss reinforces how much room there still is between back in the field and built to advance. There is also a broader truth. This team was a handful of possessions away from looking very different. Flip a few of those close losses earlier in the season, and Ohio State is not an 8-seed. It is a top-25 team, maybe even playing for seeding instead of survival. That duality defines the evaluation. Encouraging, but not complete. Around March Madness: chaos, near-misses, and shifting picks Beyond Ohio State, the tournament delivered exactly what it always does. Chaos. Duke survived a major scare against Siena. High Point delivered a game winner against Wisconsin. VCU knocked off North Carolina in overtime. Kentucky needed a half-court shot just to extend its game before eventually advancing. And Vanderbilt’s season ended on a full-court heave that nearly forced overtime. Even the favorites have looked vulnerable, which only amplifies the frustration for Ohio State. This was not a bracket defined by invincible teams. It was one defined by opportunity. Final Four predictions are already shifting. Joey is reconsidering Duke’s path and eyeing Michigan State as a potential replacement. Cole is doubling down on St. John’s, with Florida, Arizona, and Iowa State rounding out the picture. The only certainty is uncertainty. March remains what it always is. Unpredictable and unforgiving. Looking ahead: momentum, expectations, and the next step Despite the early exit, the trajectory matters. Ohio State found something late in the season. A more balanced offense, a clearer rotation, and the emergence of Amare Bynum as a legitimate frontcourt presence changed how this team functioned. That version of the Buckeyes looked sustainable, not just dangerous. The question now is whether that becomes the foundation or the peak. Jake Diebler did enough to stabilize the program and earn another year. The next step is clear. Move from making the tournament to winning in it. From competitive to consistent. From flashes to identity. The goals reflect that shift. A top-six seed. At least one NCAA Tournament win. A top-five finish in the Big Ten. That is the new baseline. Ohio State is no longer trying to get back. It is trying to move forward. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices













