While it may have been sunny and warm at game time, thunder and lightning were the order of the day for the Ohio State baseball team Wednesday night.The Buckeyes – who got untracked early as Mike Lockwood took the first pitch of the game over the right field fence – banged out 12 hits and seven runs as they topped Youngstown State 7-4.”It felt nice,” Lockwood said. “I was looking for something to drive and he got the pitch over the plate a little bit.”The Bucks stayed quiet until the fourth, when Jason Trott strode to the dish with the bags juiced. Trott had not left the yard all season, but remedied that by launching a bomb to center field that cleared the 400 foot sign.”It (the lack of home runs) was kind of disappointing,” Trott said. “I went back to basics this week and tried to hit line drives.”Coach (Bob) Todd and coach (Greg) Cypret emphasize line drives in practice. You have to be disciplined and a little bit lucky to get a good pitch.”Trott would do further damage in the fifth, when he jumped all over a John Scudder offering and drove it deep into the night sky in left field for his second homer of the game.”Both felt good off the bat,” Trott said. “I could tell right away they were gone.”Hopefully this well help me get on a roll.”Trott had a chance to homer in three consecutive at-bats, but he was plunked by Scudder his next time up. “Trott had a great night,” Bucks coach Bob Todd said. “This is what we need. Everybody in the lineup needs to come through.”Even though we hit the ball well, we still left too many men (11) on base. Against good teams, you only get so many chances and you have to capitalize.”The Buckeyes played an all-around solid game. Five pitchers saw action as Todd tried to get his staff some work before this weekend’s crucial series with Illinois, and the Bucks commited no errors.Kevin Goodrum started on the hill for the Bucks, and hurled four solid innings of three-hit, one-run ball to get the win. Goodrum left after the inning.”We wanted Kevin to go three innings,” Todd said. “But, when we looked at his pitch count, we decided to give him one more inning.”We wanted to get him about 50 pitches and he threw 45. We tried to get everybody some work.”Cory Cox threw the next two innings, and Eric Thompson and Mike Stafford each threw an inning before Justin Fry came on in the ninth to close the door on the Penguins, fanning two to get the save.