Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Ohio State Football Michigan State Recap





5 Things from Mich St.


By Chris Lauderback    elevenwarriors.com

BEST GUNNER I'VE EVER BEEN AROUND

In Urban Meyer's world, every one is the best he's ever been around at something. Yesterday, Terry McLaurin was handed the crown as the best gunner Meyer's ever been around. 
“It’s with great reverence I say that, because you go back all the way to Brad Roby to Devin Smith to Denzel Ward, Gareon Conley (other gunners that Meyer has had at Ohio State) … Terry’s as good as there is,” Meyer said. “Terry’s taken over the title as the best as I’ve ever had.”
Indeed, McLaurin showed awesome awareness and hand-eye coordination downing a handful of Drue Chrisman punts inside the 6-yard line during Ohio State's big second half. 
What might get lost in those heady, athletic plays are the contributions he made on offense as part of a 5-catch, 63-yard outing. 
McLaurin's toughness and strength turned three receptions into first downs as he fought for yards after the catch including a really impressive 3rd-and-6 haul in which he spun over and through a defender, outstretching the ball to move the chains on Ohio State's final scoring drive of the day. 
I just love the way the dude goes about his business, always willing to do the dirty work and he's a great leader by example. The icing on today's win came as McLaurin's efforts pushed him over the 1,000 yard receiving mark for his career. 
He now stands at 1,011 receiving yards on 66 catches with 16 touchdowns in his Buckeye career. 
© Mike Carter-USA TODAY Sports
Terry McLaurin now has 1,011 career receiving yards after a 5-catch, 63-yard day against the Spartans.

ON GUARD

Ever since Meyer's arrival he has noted this is an offensive line driven program. And over the years he's had some damn good ones. This year, he has his worst. Michael Jordan has been serviceable as a blocker but his snaps as a first-year center are still unpredictable and a pair of seniors in right tackle Isaiah Prince and left guard Malcolm Pridgeon continue to struggle. 
Yesterday, even with a Jordan snap causing a turnover near the goal line and Prince getting worked by Michigan State's Kenny Willekes, Pridgeon really struggled. 
Beyond issues in executing his blocking assignments, Pridgeon committed two costly penalties, vaulting into a tie for the team lead with seven through 10 games. 
On 3rd-and-7 from the Spartan 17 after having already given up a sack on the drive, Dwayne Haskins appeared to pick up the conversion with a 12-yard run to the 5-yard line but Pridgeon was whistled for a 15-yard hands to face penalty wiping out 1st-and-Goal, instead putting Ohio State in a 3rd-and-22 at the 27-yard line. Two plays later, Blake Haubeil pushed his field goal try right to keep the game scoreless. 
Early in the third quarter, after Ohio State had moved the ball from its own 35 to Michigan State's 35, Meyer decided to go for it on 4th-and-1 but Pridgeon committed a false start forcing the Buckeyes to instead punt the ball away. 
Like it or lump it, left guard has been a problem against virtually every legit opponent and coupled with Prince's struggles in particular, the Buckeyes are running out of time to shore things up in the trenches if they don't want to get exposed in a few weeks. 

CHRISMAN PUTS HIS FOOT IN SPARTY'S...

It didn't look like it would be Drue Chrisman's day after his first punt of the day traveled all of four yards, setting a new Buckeye record. 
Chrisman would settle down after the shank, going on to drop six of nine punts inside the 20 with all five of his second-half efforts downed inside Michigan State's own 6-yard line including efforts to the 5, 6, 3, 1 and 2-yard line, respectively. 
Two of those final five were also key field-flippers traveling 53 and 44 yards. 
Forcing Sparty to start with awful field position the entire second half was huge as it only further exposed the tragedy that is Jim Bollman's offense. 
Backed up against its own goal line and rotating between a quarterback with a bum shoulder and another with a bum haircut, Michigan State gained a total of 27 yards on four of those five possessions, fumbling for an OSU touchdown to end one possession and taking a safety to end another. 
On the season, Chrisman has dropped 26 of his 44 punts inside the opponent's 20-yard line. 
© Mike Carter-USA TODAY Sports
Drue Chrisman turned in a legendary performance with five punts downed inside the 6-yard line. 

TATE COMES IN LATE

Talked about for weeks as Ohio State continued its struggles in the red zone, Tate Martell made his first appearance since the Tulane game back in September, helping loosen up a rushing attack that's been gasping for air for large stretches of the season, particularly in the red zone. 
Meyer would often pay lip service to reporters' questions about Martell being an option in the red zone but he didn't see the field as the Buckeyes scored three touchdowns in 12 red zone trips over the last three games. 
Yesterday, however, Meyer changed things up and inserted Martell as Ohio State faced 1st-and-Goal at the Spartan 6-yard line in the first half. Martell kept for five yards on the play and Parris Campbell would score on a jet sweep – from Dwayne Haskins – two plays later. 
Martell also saw action as Ohio State faced a 3rd-and-3 up 19-6 in the fourth quarter. With Mark Dantonio's defense respecting the quarterback run, Martell guided the Buckeyes from the MSU 27 to the 4 where a 3rd-and-Goal play fell victim to a horrible snap from Michael Jordan resulting in a turnover. 
Even with the turnover, there's no denying Martell helped create some alleys for the running game and it wasn't lost on Meyer who offered postgame, “I think we’re going to do more of that.” 
I'm still astonished at the inability of the braintrust to install straight up running plays with a non-running quarterback that can consistently get some yards but here we are. On one hand, it feels like admitting defeat to install Martell. On the other, maybe that's a good thing because through nine games, they'd really only remotely cracked the code on that approach a couple times. 

SIGNS OF LIFE

Keeping in mind Michigan State's offense is a steaming pile, Ohio State's defense still showed some signs of improvement in an effort that limited the Spartans to just two drives of 33+ yards and two field goals. 
I can't give the defense too much credit for two of the three turnovers considering two came on self-inflicted fumbles though Shaun Wade did record Ohio State's first interception since October 13th against Minnesota. 
The defense did hold the Spartans to 274 total yards (86 below season avg) including just 54 on the ground (71 below season avg), 47 of which came on one play, but some of that was due to the green and white falling behind and throwing it 48 times compared to just 18 rushing attempts. 
And while the quarterback situation in East Lansing is dreadful, the coverage was largely solid except for a nice day from Cody White (8 for 115) as the combo of Lewerke and Lombardi completed 18 throws, or 37.5%. 
With the passing attack on ice, Sparty converted just two of 16 third down tries. 
It's probably not a coincidence the linebackers seemed to play a little better knowing the back line is in much better shape with Brendon White opposite Jordan Fuller instead of Isaiah Pryor who had missed 36.4% of his tackle attempts through eight games. 
The defense still allowed eight chunk plays but that's a decrease from 10 last week and 16 the game before that so we'll take it. 
In all honesty, I'm still not sure what percent of the defense's statistical improvement is the result of positive changes versus what percent is the result of playing against a terrible offense void of a functioning quarterback.




10 Things We Learned from Michigan St.

by      theozone.net


1. As the running game picks up, the pass protection is slipping.
The running game has improved, but I wonder if all of the focus on run blocking played a part in how poor the pass protection was against Michigan State. Or maybe it was a simply a matter of neither Thayer Munford or Isaiah Prince being ready for MSU defensive end Kenny Willekes. Willekes finished with 13 tackles, 3.5 tackles for loss, and a sack. He had both of the OSU offensive tackles spinning. Pass protection has been pretty good for most of the year. Maybe this was just a bad matchup for them, but it is something to watch as the Buckeyes creep toward Michigan Week.
2. The secondary is finally settling.
The Buckeye cornerbacks were finally healthy, which meant that they were back to their normal three-man rotation. The safeties have finally settled, as Brendon White is at boundary (strong) and Jordan Fuller is at field (free). This has also allowed Shaun Wade to focus more on his nickel position. Wade was thrown at six times and gave up just one 5-yard reception. He also came away with an interception. Right now, the secondary is finally settling down, and it’s about time.
3. Dwayne Haskins does not have the best pocket presence.
There were times on Saturday when Dwayne Haskins had an opportunity to step up into the pocket and avoid the pass rush but it didn’t happen. I would expect him to step forward on a few of those plays, and when he didn’t, I had to remind myself that he just made his 10th career start. He’ll get better at his pocket awareness, but there will still be blind spots this year.
4. Tate Martell is still on the team.
Who knew? It is a very significant development that Urban Meyer has agreed to allow Tate Martell to play in games that are not already decided. If we saw him on the road at Michigan State, then we should also see him against Michigan. And even if we don’t, the Wolverines are still going to have to prepare for him. Perhaps against MSU and Maryland we will only see Martell run the ball. He won’t throw it until Michigan least expects it.
5. Jim Tressel had to be torn.
Jim Tressel loves Ohio State, he loves Mark Dantonio, and he loves his nephew Mike Tressel (who is MSU’s defensive coordinator), but perhaps more than any of that, he loves punting. While Drue Chrisman’s first punt of four yards couldn’t have been pleasing, everything else that he and the Buckeye gunners did on the day had to be appreciated like only a true punting aficionado can do. While Tressel had to feel bad for Mark Dantonio, the fact that the Spartan loss came via the punt perhaps eased the pain.
6. Michigan State’s offense was made for OSU’s defense.
Michigan State’s 274 yards of total offense were the fewest the Buckeyes have allowed since Tulane managed 256. Part of that is because of quarterback Brian Lewerke’s bum shoulder, and part of that is because the Spartan offense doesn’t necessarily ask opposing linebackers to do anything too out of character. There were times when OSU’s man defense forced linebacker Pete Werner to split out past the numbers in coverage, but MSU never went at him to take advantage of what could have been a mismatch. Instead, the Spartans threw the ball a bunch with two quarterbacks who were incapable of being accurate.
7. Mike Weber rushing for 104 is significant.
Michigan State’s rush defense is legit. Ohio State is just the third team to rush for over 100 yards against MSU this year. Beyond that, however, is the importance of Mike Weber rushing for 104 yards on 22 carries. He kept plugging away and rushed for 56 yards on Ohio State’s final two possessions. Last week, it was J.K. Dobbins salting the game away. This week it was Mike Weber. The fact that the Buckeyes have two guys now with recent experience running out the clock shows that they are running as tough as Urban Meyer was asking them to do.
8. This offense misses Austin Mack.
I kept waiting for a linebacker to step in front of a Dwayne Haskins slant pass and take it back for six. At times, it felt like that was the only way the Buckeyes felt comfortable throwing the ball. Gone are the days when they could move the chains with Austin Mack out wide, or perhaps anybody out wide. So they have had to turn their eyes inside to passes over the middle to move the chains. While there is plenty of room to operate, it is not unusual for linebackers to go unseen by a quarterback on some of those slants and meshes over the middle.
9. Dwayne Haskins hears the talk.
Dwayne Haskins hears what people say about his running ability. He was criticized for sliding early against Nebraska, so when he finally showed that he can run hard against Michigan State, he was excited. Of course, the run in question — with his head lowered and him successfully fighting for yardage nearer and nearer the goal line — was called back due to penalty. Haskins said after the game that he was “salty” about that play coming back. It does show that he is interested in proving people wrong about his toughness, which is a step in the right direction.
10. The defense is more confident than it was a week ago.
The Michigan State offense will make most defenses more confident, and that’s exactly what they did for the Buckeyes this weekend. The coaches were excited about OSU’s performance on that side of the ball as well. While the performance is relative to the offense that the defense is facing, we have seen this defense give up plays against bad offenses, so it is a positive thing that the Buckeyes did what they were supposed to against Michigan State’s offense. As such, the defense as a whole is feeling better about themselves. That confidence is a good thing, but if the Buckeyes don’t perform against a twitchy Maryland offense, then confidence could become an issue against Michigan.

Monday, October 29, 2018

Buckeyes Bye Week












RANKTEAMRECORDPOINTSCHANGE
1Alabama8-01,500 (60 1st-place votes)
2Clemson8-01,433
3Notre Dame8-01,374
4LSU7-11,317
5Michigan7-11,240
6Georgia7-11,202+1
7Oklahoma7-11,132+1
8Ohio State7-11,022+3
9UCF7-01,014+1
10Washington State7-1938+4
11Kentucky7-1905+1
12West Virginia6-1891+1
13Florida6-2734-4
14Penn State6-2733+3
15Texas6-2719-9
16Utah6-2593+7
17Houston7-1403NR
18Utah State7-1340NR
19Iowa6-2323-1
20Fresno State7-1261NR
21Mississippi State5-3204NR
22Syracuse6-2192NR
23Virginia6-2175NR
24Boston College6-2169NR
25Texas A&M5-3132-9






5 Things Bye Week
By Chris Lauderback

K.J. THRILL DOING WORK

Slot man K.J. Hill led the Buckeyes in receptions last year with 56 but was rarely able to do much after hauling it in resulting in a yards per catch of 9.8 which was by far the lowest within the wide receiver rotation. 
This year, Hill is not only still a proven reception-machine, he's doing a lot more after the grab averaging 13.4 yards per catch. He's second among the receivers in missed tackles forced and, of course, it helps Dwayne Haskins is prone to perfectly leading his receivers but Hill has still shown more shake. 
Through eight games, he already has 656 receiving yards which is 112 more yards than he put up in 14 games last season. He continues to have the best hands on the team and he's averaging a team-high 82 receiving yards per game, up from 39 a season ago. 
Hill's consistency this season is also a strength has he's caught at least four balls in every game versus last season when he had two or less catches in six of 14 games. After a 12-catch outing against Penn State last year, Hill had only 16 catches during the following six games to round out the 2017 schedule. 
He's also leading the team with just two drops on 62 targets. Season-to-date, you can't be anything but pleased with Hill's output. 

C3PO CAN THROW

Everyone knew Dwayne Haskins could sling it but I don't think too many honest fans had him pegged to break nearly every Buckeye single-season passing record. 
The dude has been phenomenal and currently ranks No. 2 nationally in passing yards per game, No. 4 in QB rating, No. 9 in yards per attempt, No. 5 in completion percentage and No. 1 in touchdown passes. 
Haskins has already set or tied a host of single-game records. He broke Art Schlichter's records 49 completions with 470 passing yards against Purdue, he tied J.T. Barrett and Kenny Guiton with six touchdown passes against Indiana, and whatever else that I'm too lazy to look up or remember. 
As for single-season marks, the following are on borrowed time: 
  • Passing Yards: Joe Germaine owns record with 3,330. Haskins has 2,801 through eight games.
  • Completions: Barrett set the mark with 240 last year. Haskins has 224. 
  • Completion Percentage: Troy Smith's Heisman season saw him complete 65.3% of his passes. Haskins is sitting on 71.1% at the moment. 
  • Touchdown Passes: Again, it's Barrett with 35 last season. Haskins has 30 already. 
  • Passing Yards Per Game: Germaine went for 277.5 during that sick 1998 season. Haskins is averaging a ridiculous 350.1 so far. 
  • 300-Yard Passing Games: Joe had seven. Haskins has six (including three 400-yard outings)
  • Pass Efficiency: Barrett again with a 169.8 mark. Haskins stands at 174.1. 
It might not be pretty watching him run but watching his throw is a privilege. 

MCLAURIN GETTING IT DOWN

If you ever hear wide receiver Terry McLaurin in any media setting, his leadership, maturity and selflessness jump out. 
He's a prideful guy, one the best blocking wide receivers Urban Meyer's ever been around and has a knack for making some big catches as evidenced by the fact 38% of his grabs have resulted in touchdowns (8). 
McLaurin also has just one drop in 27 targets and his 19.0 yards per catch lead the team. 
Last season, he recorded 29 catches for 436 yards. This year, he's already as 21 receptions for 398 yards but again, it's probably his leadership that has factored in the most to the turnaround of Zone Six. 
I've been unkind either in thought, if not in writing, in my assessment of McLaurin over the years but the veteran has really impressed this season in a variety of different ways and is the kind of glue guy you need in a position room. 

CONVERSION KIT

The angst over the lack of a consistent running game, red zone issues and short yardage struggles are very real but you might be surprised to know that Ohio State ranks No. 9 nationally converting 49.2% of its third down tries. 
That mark is on track to be the second-best of the Meyer era behind the 2014 Buckeye offense that converted an impressive 52.0% of its third down tries. 
Conversely, the enigmatic 2015 team loaded with NFL talent converted just 40.7% of its third down tries. 
With Ohio State's defense looking like a dumpster fire, finding a running game to complement Haskins and the passing game and extending drives via third down conversions could be increasingly important in an effort to not just score but chew up some clock while doing it. 

THEY'RE NOT ALL BAD

Urban Meyer's fire and the value of some of his assistant coaches have been called into question a lot this season especially after last weekend's debacle but two guys who are doing the job include Larry Johnson and Brian Hartline. 
Johnson's defensive line has definitely seen a drop off since Nick Bosa's injury plus dings to Dre'Mont Jones, Robert Landers and Johnathon Cooper but the group is the least worrisome among Ohio State's defensive troubles. 
Jones is still showing his NFL value with 9.0 tackles for loss and 5.5 sacks while Chase Young is right behind him with 8.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks. If everyone can get healthy, this group can pick up back up a little and take some of the pressure off a pedestrian back seven. 
On the other side of the ball, Hartline's receiving corps is flat out getting it done. We've already talked about Hill and McLaurin and obviously Parris Campbell leads the team in catches (52) and is just behind Hill in yards. With Austin Mack on the shelf, it'll be interesting to see if/how Hartline can help Ben Victor's continued growth as a complete receiver. 
So there you go. Ohio State has much to lament and who knows if it can address enough of the issues to make a run at a playoff spot but amid those concerns there are some things going right. 

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Ohio State Football Recap - Minnesota


Buckeye Recap - Minnesota



By Chris Lauderback

NOWHERE TO RUN

As hot as the passing has been, the running game has been hot.. doodoo. 
The trend continued yesterday as the Buckeyes were held below 100 yards rushing for the first time this season and just the third time since Urban Meyer arrived in Columbus.
Yesterday's stinker saw the trio of Mike Weber, J.K. Dobbins and Haskins average a season-low 2.9 yards per carry and for the first time this year, the Buckeyes failed to record a rushing touchdown. 
OHIO STATE RUSHING STATS THROUGH SEVEN GAMES
OPPONENTRUSH ATTRUSH YARDSYARDS PER CARRYTOUCHDOWNS
OREGON STATE533757.15
RUTGERS402255.62
TCU421824.31
TULANE381514.02
PENN STATE371193.21
INDIANA481543.21
MINNESOTA32922.90
Behind an offensive line featuring subpar showings from Demetrius Knox, Michael Jordan and Isaiah Prince in particular, the combo of Dobbins and Weber saw 39% of their rushing attempts (9 of 23) go for two yards or less. That's even worse than last week when 31% of their attempts (12 of 39) failed to generate more than two yards.
Dobbins in particular has been bottled up averaging 4.6 yards per carry this year after nearly setting the school's single-season mark last season with 7.2 yards per tote. Dobbins has lost 10 yards this year amid his 109 attempts. Last season, Dobbins lost nine yards on 194 attempts. 
Similarly, Weber lost only 14 total yards last year on 101 attempts but through seven games this season, he's already lost 25 yards on only 87 attempts. 
The reality is Ohio State's rushing attack looks lost without the option of leaning on the quarterback run and the offensive line hasn't generated a consistent push in over a month. 
J.K. Dobbins in traffic.
J.K. Dobbins is averaging 4.6 yards per carry thus far in 2018 after averaging 7.2 last season. 

TALE OF TWO HALVES

If your glass is half-full, you're thrilled Greg Schiano and company have consistently made adjustments at halftime that have proved fruitful in the second half. If your glass is half empty, you're puzzled at how Ohio State's defense continues to give up a high volume of chunk plays both on the ground and through the air. 
The Jekyll and Hyde defense was on full display yesterday as it surrendered 14 points, 238 total yards, 128 rushing yards on 6.4 per carry and a 67% completion rate while failing to register a sack with just two tackles-for-loss in the opening half. But after regrouping at intermission, the Buckeyes came out and held the Gophers to zero points, 150 total yards, 50 rushing on 3.8 per carry and a 45% completion rate while tallying two sacks, three tackles-for-loss and four pass breakups over the final two quarters. 
You'll recall the same thing happened last week as Indiana put up 20 points and 317 total yards including 7.8 yards per carry in first half only to muster just six points, 89 total yards and 0.5 yards per carry in the second. 
Look, there are a ton of things wrong with this defense but if you're searching for a positive, it rests on the unit's ability to tighten the screws in the second half. And of course that its poor first half showings haven't cost the team a game yet. 

K.J. THRILL

Another week, another career-day from a Buckeye receiver as K.J. Hill took his turn with a spectacular nine-catch, 187-yard day on 10 targets featuring two touchdowns including a highlight reel one-hander for six. 
The 187 yards set a new personal best for the redshirt junior and tied him for the seventh-best single-game receiving performance in school history while the nine receptions were the second-most of his career (12 vs. PSU last year). 
Hill's ridiculous one-handed stab was incredible but he made plays all day including a 42-yard reception leading to an OSU field goal on its opening possession, a 4th-and-3 catch extending a drive, a 20-yard catch to convert a third down and a 27-yard touchdown providing the game's final score. 
Through seven games, Hill is second on the squad with 40 receptions and 551 yards. Both stats compare quite favorably to his strong 2017 season in which he hauled in 56 balls for 549 yards. 
What's maybe most impressive about Hill's 2018 season is that his yards per catch is up to 13.8 which is a full four yards better than last season's 9.8 mark. He is also averaging twice as many receiving yards per game this year (78.7) compared to last (39.2) and his four touchdowns just past the midway point of the 2018 regular season are one better than his tally over 14 games a year ago. 
K.J. Hill

TIGHT, TIGHT, TIGHT, YEAH!

As someone who manually tracks individual penalties because they infuriate me, I'm here to tell you Ohio State's tight ends – Rashod Berry and Luke Farrell – committed zero penalties for the first time since the Rutgers game. 
Not only that, the duo combined for four catches on four targets for 57 yards. 
Farrell recorded both of his catches in the fourth quarter hauling in a 24-yarder on a key drive that ended in a field goal pushing Ohio State's lead to 23-14 before recording a 13-yard grab on a 3rd-and-2 snap, paving the way for Hill's 27-yard touchdown two plays later to cap the scoring. 
Berry's two catches were his first since the season opener, one of which extended a drive on a 3rd-and-2. 
The pair hasn't been all that great run blocking this season and Berry's five penalties are tied for the team lead with Malcolm Pridgeon but it was nice to see some signs of life on Saturday. 

INVALID IP

Ohio State has more than one problem within the back seven and the linebackers were obviously not great yesterday which wasn't helped by Malik Harrison's medical DNP but this might also be the worst safety situation Meyer has had since he's been here. 
First-year starter and true sophomore Isaiah Pryor has taken lumps pretty consistently this season and yesterday was another tough outing despite a gift interception late when he stepped in front of a duck from Gophers true freshman walk-on quarterback Zack Annexstad who stared down his receiver, refusing to look off Pryor, before underthrowing and directing a ball towards converging traffic.
Pryor dropped an interception on Minnesota's second possession of the game which led to a touchdown run where Pryor was bowled over at the goal line giving the Gophers a 7-3 lead late in the first quarter. 
After the Buckeye offense answered with a touchdown of its own, Pryor had another tough series giving up a sideline catch to Tyler Johnson for about 10 yards before whiffing badly on a tackle attempt, springing what became a 29-yard gash. Four plays later, he got beat again by Johnson, this time on a slant for 13 yards and a first down at the Buckeye 18 yard line. Five plays later, Minnesota found the end zone for a 14-10 lead. 
I'm really not trying to pile on the kid but I do wonder how much improvement is realistic to expect this season if the issues with poor run pursuit angles and coverage skills are still so prevalent through seven games. There just isn't a ton of time in-season to attack fundamentals amid prepping for the next opponent. 
I'll also can't help but wonder how much of Jordan Fuller's drop off in effectiveness so far this season can be attributed to being forced to play both safety spots at times, in conjunction with concerns over not having a dependable sidekick anchoring the last line of defense. 
Pryor came in as a four-star, Top-100 player and he's a cerebral kid taboot so hopefully there's more in-season maturation to come but for now, it would be unreasonable to not be extremely worried about the back line of the Buckeye defense. 







by 

1. Things are not trending well.
Let’s go ahead and couch this statement by reminding you that this is just October and October frequently has its share of stinkers. September is for pretenders, November is for contenders, and October is just a means to an end. That being said, the Buckeyes are not getting better, and if you’re not getting better, then by football definition you are getting worse.
2. This is probably K.J. Hill’s last season as a Buckeye.
K.J. Hill told me either at the Cotton Bowl last year or the preseason this winter that he was treating this season as his last. As a fourth-year junior, he has another year of eligibility available to him, but as we know, fifth years are fairly rare at the Ohio State skill positions. Plus, it will be difficult for him to stick around with Parris Campbell, Terry McLaurin, and Johnnie Dixon all leaving. Right now, Hill and Campbell are both on pace for 1,000-yard seasons, which would give the Buckeyes a 1,000-yard receiver for the first time since 2002. If they both get there, it would be the first time in school history that Ohio State had two 1,000-yard pass catchers. With his nine catches for 187 yards and two scores on Saturday, Hill showed that he can do more than move the chains over the middle.
3. The defense looks outnumbered badly at times.
I tweeted this during the game, but so often Ohio State’s defense looks like it’s playing at least a man-and-a-half down. Like it’s 11 guys on offense against 9.5 on defense. There are entire segments of the field completely empty, which makes it look like the guy who was supposed to be there was still on the sideline. This may simply be a matter of unfortunate play calling, but then the question becomes why offenses continue to have success when they do. Other defenses — like Michigan — look like they have 13 defenders out there. That’s rarely been the case for OSU this season.
4. It’s not just Bill Davis’ fault.
Linebackers coach Bill Davis has been a popular punching bag among the fans and media, but you cannot have gigantic voids in the defense as mentioned above and blame it on a position coach. That’s a defensive system or call that is rendering linebackers moot, not coaching or playing. That’s not meant to dismiss the times when the players and coach deserve criticism, but it’s not just the linebackers or their coach’s fault that the defense isn’t right.
5. Sustained drives are worse than big hits.
When a guy goes 93 yards, you can chalk it up to one guy not doing his part. When a team goes 75 yards on 11 plays and then another 75 yards on nine plays, that’s not because of one guy — it’s because of 11. That’s what Minnesota did on their two touchdown drives. Fortunately for the Buckeyes, those were the only two touchdown drives of the game. There used to be a gigantic percentage of OSU’s yards allowed coming via big plays. Against Minnesota, they did a lot more consistent moving of the ball than other teams have done. That’s not a great sign.
6. The Buckeyes found another kicker.
Due to a “minor strain” of some part of his body, starting kicker Sean Nuernberger was out for the Minnesota game. In his place, Blake Haubeil hit three PATs, three field goals, and only allowed one return on his seven kickoffs. The biggest moment of his game, however, came when he hit a 47-yarder straight and true midway through the third quarter to extend Ohio State’s lead to 20-14. With questions about Sean Nuernberger’s accuracy on longer field goals, this has to be good for Urban Meyer to see.
7. The secondary can make plays.
Both Kendall Sheffield and Isaiah Pryor covered a ton of ground to make red-zone interceptions against Minnesota quarterback Zach Annexstad. The throws weren’t necessary, but the Buckeyes were happy to have them. Those two interceptions basically kept this from being a much closer game than it could have been. The interception by Pryor was what he needs to be able to do as the post safety. That’s two weeks in a row he has shown good range in defending a pass.
8. It might be time to move Michael Jordan back to left guard.
Fifth-year senior center Brady Taylor has been hurt and didn’t dress again last week, and there is certainly some trepidation about switching to redshirt freshman Josh Myers at center, but I can’t help but wonder if the running game is missing Michael Jordan at left guard. We talked in the preseason about OSU’s desire to put the best five offensive linemen on the field and weighed that against a lineup that maybe keeps its best players where they can be most effective. I asked offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson after the game if there were possible personnel changes coming, but he said no.
9. There are too many injuries not to be noticeable.
Nick Bosa went down early in the third quarter of the TCU game, but the entire defensive line responded well and won that game for the Buckeyes. At the time it was a great story, but also one that we knew couldn’t be sustained. Eventually, the bills are going to come due. Then defensive tackles Dre’Mont Jones and Robert Landers got hurt. Landers missed a game, but Jones has played hurt for weeks now. Last week, starting defensive end Jonathon Cooper missed the game due to a concussion he suffered the week before. Middle linebacker Tuf Borland said he’s good to go, but we’ve seen that he wasn’t 100% just a couple of weeks ago. Starting Will linebacker Malik Harrison missed the Minnesota game with a concussion as well. Cornerback Damon Arnette went down early in the game. Basically, this is a depleted Ohio State defense right now, so difficulties should expect to be occurring. That being said, there were also difficulties when all of those players were healthy. Can everyone get healthy in time to also fix those problems that were occurring before they all got hurt? Maybe.
10. The offensive line needs a change in attitude.
I’ll write about this a bit more after this, but Kevin Wilson said after the game that when it comes to the running game, the offense needs something to hang its hat on. They can do so many different things with formations and play calling, but when we’re talking about running the ball, the offensive line simply has to have the mentality that it doesn’t matter how many defenders are lined up on the other side of the ball, they are going to move them backwards. I asked him if it was about mentality rather than physicality and he told me, “No doubt.” So he believes this group is capable, they just now to need to turn on whichever switch engages the proper determined mindset. If they can’t find that switch, good luck finding a running game.