The most eye-catching number from Ohio State’s 20-8 rout of North Carolina last weekend might not be the Buckeyes’ gaudy goal total.
There’s no doubt the offensive onslaught, especially a 14-goal second half, was impressive. But Ohio State also sprayed 53 shots, a noteworthy total for a program that’s long been one of the more methodical teams in the sport.
Coach Nick Myers insists the Buckeyes’ main aim is generating as many quality looks as they can. But Ohio State (3-0) also took a statistical deep dive after going 4-7 against a Big Ten-only schedule in 2021, and a more assertive approach is one of the byproducts.
“For us as a coaching staff, we’ve really tried to evaluate the analytics of the shot clock era, study it, [see] who’s been successful, how do we need to adjust to where we were prior to the shot clock to now and how do we continue to grow,” Myers said. “Because the game’s different. It just is. Bottom line. I don’t think it’s necessarily one thing. It’s studying the game and really studying the possessions of the game.”
The Buckeyes were remarkably steady in their shot production over the last decade. After averaging 34.7 shots in 2012, Ohio State took between 32.1 and 33.9 shots per game for the next six seasons. When the shot clock was implemented in 2019, the average jumped to 38.5 — followed by 38.9 in 2020 and 38.4 last season.
So a leap to 51.7 attempts a game stands out through three games, even if part of it is a function of more opportunities thanks to the stellar early play of Justin Inacio (.812 faceoff percentage).
OHIO STATE SHOTS PER GAME
Year Shots
2012 34.7
2013 33.7
2014 32.1
2015 33.3
2016 33.9
2017 33.8
2018 33.2
2019 38.5
2020 38.9
2021 38.4
2022 51.7
“There is definitely a difference in our approach,” attackman Jack Myers said. “We want to score in many different ways. I can see how people would think last year it was, ‘Get the ball to the offense, get time of possession, try to sustain offense.’ Whereas this year, we’re definitely trying to speed up our game and we can do that with the middies we have. There was definitely a big emphasis this fall to get the ball up and out and play fast.”
Myers had two goals and seven assists against North Carolina, but he was hardly the only star. Seven Buckeyes managed multi-point games, and Jason Knox (four goals), Colby Smith (three), Ari Allen (two), Trent DiCicco (two) and Jackson Reid (two) each had multi-goal outings.