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Ohio State's Chris Holtmann: Inability to communicate with officiating crew led to ejection

The first technical, Chris Holtmann said repeatedly, was warranted and one he accepted without hesitation.

The second one, though, and the circumstances leading up to it were a different story.

In need of a win to break a stretch of seven losses in eight games, Ohio State immediately fell behind a similarly desperate Wisconsin team Thursday at Value City Arena. The Badgers opened the game on an 8-0 run and never trailed in their 65-60 win, but Holtmann wasn’t around to watch the majority of it. When forward Justice Sueing was called for a charge with 27.7 seconds remaining in the first half to negate a made basket, an irate Holtmann charged up the court and let the officiating crew of Kelly Pfeifer, John Higgins and Courtney Green know his feelings.

In short order, Holtmann was gone. It was the second ejection of his Ohio State career.

Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann yells at official John Higgins after receiving his second technical and being ejected during Thursday's game against Wisconsin.
Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann yells at official John Higgins after receiving his second technical and being ejected during Thursday's game against Wisconsin.

“I’ve been ejected twice,” he said. “Once, I asked for it. The game was over. I’ve coached hundreds of games. Never even come close to being ejected. This was an official who I believe I couldn’t communicate with the entire game. Unfortunately, the first technical was warranted. I deserved the first technical. I don’t believe the second one was, but officials are going to do what they want to do and I’ve got to be more composed in that situation. I wasn’t composed. That’s on me.”

The first technical came from Green, who had refereed three Ohio State games earlier this season. The second came from Higgins, although Holtmann did not identify him by name in his postgame press conference.

Asked what the officials had told him as the technical fouls were being assessed, Holtmann said, “Couldn’t tell me anything. I couldn’t talk to them. Couldn’t talk to him. Couldn’t talk to him, whole night. All we wanna do as coaches is talk to officials. Couldn’t talk to one of them.

“Couldn’t talk the whole half. Didn’t wanna hear it.”

The charge call was the second Ohio State was called for during the first half. Wisconsin’s Chucky Hepburn drew one on Brice Sensabaugh with 13:56 remaining and the Badgers ahead 15-10.

Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said the Big Ten needs to do a better job of simplifying the rulebook and not continually add addendums that prevent officials from calling the game as they see it. Holtmann said games are being officiated differently compared to a few weeks ago.

“I think the flop was called much better earlier in the season,” he said. “I’ve clearly done a poor job getting our guys to understand that there’s a technique to that. I’m not taking anything away from Wisconsin. They beat us. I’ve said, I lost my composure. That was on me.”

Ohio State center Zed Key stands at midcourt following Thursday's loss to Wisconsin.
Ohio State center Zed Key stands at midcourt following Thursday's loss to Wisconsin.

Holtmann was last ejected in a 71-67 loss at Michigan State on Feb. 25, 2021, when he picked up a second technical foul with two seconds remaining.

Higgins was the subject of national scrutiny during Monday’s ESPN broadcast of a game between Texas and Baylor. That was his third game in as many days after refereeing at Stanford on Saturday and at Purdue on Sunday. Higgins, who is rated as the nation’s fourth-best official by KenPom.com, then was at Kansas on Tuesday and Drake on Wednesday before getting to Columbus for Thursday night’s game.

Ohio State forward Brice Sensabaugh reacts after being called for a foul while defending Wisconsin's Tyler Wahl.
Ohio State forward Brice Sensabaugh reacts after being called for a foul while defending Wisconsin's Tyler Wahl.

The ejection helped the Badgers create some breathing room that came in handy later. Had Sueing’s basket counted, Ohio State could have been within 37-30 after trailing by as many as 15 points during the half. Instead, Connor Essegian, an 89.5% free-throw shooter, hit all four attempts and Hepburn sunk a jumper with two seconds left to send the Badgers practically floating into their locker room with a 43-27 halftime lead thanks to that six-point possession.

Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann yells from the bench during the first half of Thursday's loss to Wisconsin.
Ohio State coach Chris Holtmann yells from the bench during the first half of Thursday's loss to Wisconsin.

“I would like to be able to talk to officials,” Holtmann said. “That’s all I would ask. I’ve coached hundreds of games and not gotten thrown out. The first technical was warranted. I thought it was a flop. I thought the video concluded that it was a flop. They’re trying to get that out of the game. They didn’t. Give them credit. He took the hit. I believe it was a flop. I said that. I shouldn’t have reacted like I reacted. "

Center Zed Key, who was among those trying to restrain Holtmann, said the move showed that the coach is fighting for them even as the losses pile up.

“It definitely gave us extra fire,” he said. “(Isaac Likekele), said, ‘Look, we’ve got to pick it up. Holtmann’s out there fighting for us and we’re not giving it back.’ ”

ajardy@dispatch.com

@AdamJardy

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This article originally appeared on The Columbus Dispatch: OSU's Chris Holtmann, on ejection: 'I couldn't talk to (officials)'