Purdue's Chantel Poston, right. knocks the ball away from Ohio State's Tayler Hill (4) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game on Sunday, Feb. 12, 2012, in Columbus, Ohio. Ohio State won 80-71.
Terry Gilliam, Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio — Coach Sharon Versyp knows there is nothing more important for her Purdue team than to learn from its mistakes.
The No. 16 Boilermakers wasted an eight-point second-half lead on Sunday and fell at No. 10 Ohio State, 80-71. But with just a little bit of fine-tuning, Versyp says Purdue can remain at or near the top of the Big Ten standings.
"I thought we played real good basketball today and that's what was good," she said. "We made some mistakes. We have to learn from that. But that's what you want to be doing at this time of year."
Purdue (19-6, 9-3) came into the showdown at Value City Arena with the lead in the conference. Instead, it fell into a four-team dogfight with Penn State, Ohio State and Nebraska — each with three losses in league play — heading into the final two weeks of the regular season.
"You always say that the next game is important," Versyp said. "Well, when it comes down the stretch, jockeying for the top four spots (in the Big Ten tournament), you've got to take care of your home and you've got to steal some on the road."
The Boilermakers have home games against Penn State and Indiana bookending games at Michigan State and Michigan.
"We have a lot of things that we can learn from," said Brittany Rayburn, who led Purdue with 22 points. "We're getting to that point where you want to start peaking. We're playing well. There's still a lot of things to learn from and you learn every day."
Ohio State trailed for most of the second half before Samantha Prahalis, who scored 21 of her 26 points after the break, led Ohio State (22-3, 9-3) back to take a late lead.
Purdue's Courtney Moses hit a left-handed follow with just over a minute left to narrow what had been a six-point deficit to 73-71.
The Buckeyes called time out with 43 seconds left. Prahalis, the Big Ten's second-leading scorer at 21.4 points a game, tossed an inbound pass into center Ashley Adams, who quickly kicked it right back to her. Prahalis' 3-pointer from the right wing pushed the lead to five and spurred a clinching 7-0 run over the final minute.
"Ashley posted up pretty strong and I saw that she was open, so I passed to her," Prahalis said. "She made a great pass back and I hit it."
Versyp regretted a slip by her defense.
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