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The Lesson: Lose Early

The conventional wisdom is that if a team is to lose, losing early in the season is best for any type of MNC aspirations. Though most fans (including the authors of this blog) don't believe this team is worthy of being considered for another title game berth, the early loss to USC was refreshing on two fronts. First, the loss, and more importantly, the magnitude of the loss, prompted Tressel to make some changes that he otherwise would have probably avoided making. Second, losing early spared us all from the eight month fallout and second-guessing that has followed the program in each of the previous two big game losses.

The USC beat-down hurt on so many levels, but it's refreshing to watch this team take flight with some younger and inspiring personnel, most notably Pryor, contributing so much. The Buckeyes now find themselves with arguably the two best players in the conference lining up in the same backfield and winning a fourth-straight conference title will mean that much more with other teams in the Big Ten smelling a little blood in the water. While the play of those two have been off the charts, there remains some areas of improvement if Ohio State wants to complete the job this year:

  • The O-Line: We're starting to see some improvements, with the Minnesota game being perhaps their best outing of the year. Boone absolutely dominated that game and is showing signs that he is serious about being a first-day draft choice in the NFL. The interior of the line still has its work cut out and Rehring's return will present a problem of sorts for the staff in terms of deciding who stays and who sits, but if they can keep improving game-by-game, the offense should start to really put some points up.
  • Receivers: Robo had a really nice game against the Gophers, but there's still an APB out on Hartline. What's really frustrating is that he talked so much trash over the course of the summer. Time to step up. Also, I know Vico is really high on the guy, but I'm not sold on Dane Sanzenbacher. On the option play that Boom bobbled at first Saturday, I watched a defensive back hit him and knock him four yards backwards before making the tackle. Is there really any doubt that he'd be the 7th receiver on a team like USC? It's especially disheartening when you have a freak like Posey standing on the sidelines.
  • The D-Line: Another group that's slowly coming along and I think the insertion of Gibson will pay huge dividends, but Heyward and the interior of the line will get a true test this weekend. It's absolutely crazy to think that the Buckeyes have lost the sack battle in every game they've played this season.
  • Special Teams: The inconsistency of Pretorius is frustrating, but what really gets me is the sad state of affairs on kick returns. To date, the Buckeyes have only played one team that can put similarly skilled athletes on the field against them, but everyone has been eating up the OSU kick return game. If it's not missed blocks (which happen way too often), it's guys like Saine cutting into tacklers instead of finding seams. There will be a game this year where the team needs a big special teams play and at this pace it looks like thye may not be able to deliver.

In only five weeks this season, Buckeye fans' feelings have run the gamut from hope and excitement to crushing frustration and recriminiations before finally circling back to hope and excitement. The visit to Madison this weekend is the first big road game of the Pryor era and if the team can take care of what they need to do to continue growing, they have a great chance to win out, get a great BCS bowl win (rematch against USC in the Rose, perhaps) and set some crazy momentum for a big-time run in 2009.

Blogpoll Ballot: Week 5

With nine ranked teams losing, including four of our previous top eight, this week's initial ballot has a new look to it. Alabama was most impressive and with that offensive line and the game JPW played, it wasn't hard to slot them at #2.

As usual, I'm sure we'll be up for the Coulter/Krugman award for homerism with OSU in the 10th spot but I honestly think that's where this team belongs right now. It's a different team with Pryor and Beanie on the field.

With all the upsets, I'm sure you'll all have different opinions so please voice them in the comments. I'm conflicted on where Florida truly fits and what about Texas Tech? Should they really be that high just because they haven't lost?

The final ballot isn't due until Wednesday.

1 Oklahoma Oklahoma avoided the upset bug behind Sam Bradford's 411 yards passing and 4 TD's in a 35-10 thrashing of TCU. Shockingly, the Sooners rushed for only 25 yards on 36 carries. Still, the win is enough to put them atop our initial ballot. UP1
2 Alabama I admit, I didn't think 'Bama was good enough to roll into Athens and put a thumping on UGA but props to JPW (13/16, 205, 1TD) and Bedouin Saban for having his team ready to play. 'Bama has yet to trail in a game this season. UP9
3 Missouri Bye week. Next up: @ Nebraska 9pm ESPN UP3
4 LSU The Tigers beat Miss State 34-24 behind Charles Scott's 4th straight 100 yard game (27/141, 2 TD). Not an overly impressive performance considering the competition and 2 turnovers but on this weekend it was all about survive and advance. UP1
5 Texas Colt McCoy is quietly rewriting Texas record books after 5 TD (3pass, 2 rush) in 52-10 stomping of Arkansas. McCoy's 75 career TDs moved him one behind Ricky Chong, er Williams and the Longhorn D held the Razorbacks to 11 yards rushing. Texas' brutal October schedule has them traveling to Colorado next week before a trip to Norman to face the Sooners on 10/11 then they host Mizzou on 10/18. UP2
6 Penn State Human Highlight Derrick Williams ran for a score, caught a TD pass and ran a kickoff back to paydirt in PSU's 38-24 win over Zooker's Illini. PSU ran for 241 yards and committed only one penalty dropping Illinois t o 3-22 against ranked teams since '02. UP4
7 Texas Tech Bye week. Next up: @ Kansas State UP2
8 Southern Cal Keeping with past trends, Surfer Pete blew another one against an inferior foe as the Beavers shocked USC 27-21 in Corvallis. Freshman RB Jacquizz Rodgers rushed for 186 yards and 2 TDs showing the Buckeyes how to beat the Trojans. Oye. DOWN7
9 Georgia Georgia sported the rarely seen black jerseys but found out "there's more to life than being really, really ridiculously good looking" as the Crimson Tide opened up a 31-0 first half can of whoop-ass en route to a 41-30 win betwixt the hedges. Bulldogs have now lost 5 of last 6 against top 10 teams including all 3 at home. DOWN5
10 Ohio State The Beanie/Pryor combo (22 for 203, 2 TD) provided a much needed reality check to Gopher Fan in a 34-21 win in the 'Shoe. The score doesn't do the game justice as OSU was firmly in control midway through the 3rd qtr (27-6) before giving snaps to everyone wearing a uniform. UP2
11 Brigham Young Bye week. Next up: @ Utah State UP2
12 South Florida South Florida racked up 520 yards of offense behind 259 yards passing and 68 rushing from Bulls QB Matt Grothe to hand NC State a 41-10 defeat. The teams combined for 21 penalties. UP2
13 Florida A blocked PAT on a late 4th qtr score, an INT and fumble from St. Tebow, 1/11 on 3rd downs and a stuffed 4th and 1 in the final minute combined to give Ole Miss a 31-30 upset win in the Swamp. Florida moved to 0-5 when trailing at any point in the second half with Tebow under center. See ya, Heisman hopes. DOWN10
14 Auburn Auburn squeaked past hapless Tennessee 14-12 thanks to a defensive effort that yielded just 67 yards passing, 191 total, and 9 first downs. The Tigers' sad offense better find some production, especially from the QB spot or else the D is eventually going to tire out. UP1
15 Kansas Bye week. Next up: @ Iowa State UP3
16 Utah The Utes scored 30 straight points to beat Weber State 37-21. Next up: @ giant killer Oregon State. UP5
17 Boise State Bye week. Next up: host Louisiana Tech on Wednesday, 8pm ESPN UP5
18 Fresno State Bulldog QB Tom Brandstater passed for 236 and 3 scores and RB Ryan Mathews went for 21/166 helping Fresno State to a 36-31 win at UCLA. Brandstater has 7 TD tosses in last 2 games. UP5
19 Vanderbilt Bye week. Next up: host Auburn 6pm Saturday. UP6
20 Wisconsin The Badgers blew a 19-0 halftime lead allowing Michigan to rally back from the largest deficit ever at home in a 27-25 loss in the 500th game in the Big Hole in the Ground. Wonder if they got caught looking ahead to OSU? DOWN12
21 Oklahoma State The Cowboys moved to 4-0 racking up 612 yards of offense in a 55-24 beating of Troy. Kendall Hunter (24/169) and Keith Toston (17/114) gave OSU a pair of 100 yard rushers and QB Zac Robinson threw for 254 and 3 TDs. NR
22 Virginia Tech The Hokies picked up their 4th straight win with a 35-30 victory at Nebraska. The Tech D held the Huskers to 55 yards rushing and 2/11 on third down. NR
23 Oregon The banged up Ducks got 3 rushing TD's each from LaGarrette Blount and Jeremiah Johnson as Oregon blitzed a bad Washington State squad 63-14 in Pullman. Turnovers: Cougars 4, Ducks 0. NR
24 Connecticut Uconn moved to 5-0 with a 26-21 win at Louisville. The Huskies closed the game on a 16-0 run and Donald Brown rushed for 190 yards on 33 carries (1 TD). NR
25 Michigan State Sparty improved to 4-1 beating Indiana 42-29 behind 198 yards rushing from Javon Ringer. Brian Hoyer added 261 yards passing and 2 TD in addition to another on the ground. NR

DROPPED OUT: Wake Forest (#16), Illinois (#17), Nebraska (#19), Clemson (#20), TCU (#24).

Terrelle Pryor Trucks Minnesota Defender

This highlight deserves a post of its own. Was a Gopher coach actually asking him to lower his head and hit someone?

Interesting that Rex Sharpe is described by the Gopher sports information folks as "A speedy, hard-hitting linebacker...".

You really need to do yourself a favor and head over to YouTube to watch the video in high quality.

Five Things: Minnesota

Thaddeus Maximus and Marcus Freeman whip up a double Decker sandwich. (photo: Jay LaPrete)

D-Licious The defense, especially the front four and safety Anderson Russell, have taken a little heat this year but I felt the unit played much faster yesterday and with a renewed sense of urgency. Sure, there were some breakdowns starting midway through the 3rd quarter but the game was no longer in doubt after a stout first half performance.

Statistically, the Silver Bullets surrendered only 92 first half yards - just 16 on the ground - yielding a minuscule four first downs. Even better, the defense came up with two turnovers in the opening half (3 total), in the form of a pick by Donald Washington and a fumble recovery by the (hopefully) resurgent Russell.

They picked up just one sack and five tackles for loss but I was happy with the pressure the front four was able to generate. If nothing else, Heyward clogged up the middle as he continues to get comfortable with the move to DT and my man Thaddeus Maximus looked to get decent pressure off the edge on numerous occasions. With the Minnesota offense focused on short to intermediate routes, to expect a ton of sacks was unrealistic.

Another encouraging sign was how the Buckeyes approached 3rd and short-medium. They often stuffed the box and brought the blitz forcing Adam Weber to get rid of the ball. The result? Minnesota converted just 2/7 third downs in the opening half.

Finally, I didn't see as many missed tackles this week. Laurinaitis still doesn't deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as Hawk, Kat, Spielman etc, but he had a solid, if unspectacular, 12 tackles with Ross Homan adding a career high 10 stops. Russell did something other than piss me off for the first time this year with 7 tackles and the fumble recovery and I was also glad to see Curtis Terry out there. He's got a mean streak that needs to rub off on his teammates. Dude will shank you. Serious.

Don't worry, I was already well aware before kickoff that Minnesota didn't belong on the same field as OSU (despite their delusions) but I still think the defense took a positive step forward. If nothing else, this should be a confidence builder as they began preparation for the Badgers.

The Continued Emancipation of Terrelle Start number two for Pryor was another step in the right direction. He still has some things to work on but man is he going to be sick.

Aerially speaking, I thought the TD to Robo was beautifully thrown and my impression was he didn't stare down receivers like he did at times versus Troy. Also, I know the majority of his throws have been short routes but the guy is an accurate passer. To my untrained eye (and to those sitting on the same couch as me every game) the main area to improve is knowing what type of pass to throw based on the route. Two specific throws yesterday illustrate this point.

He tried to hit Small coming out of a double move in the first half but the pass was more of a floater / touch pass when he really needed to put less loft and more heat on it. As a result, the defender was able to catch back up to Small and knock the ball away. Another example was the incompletion to Hartline on a post route with a little over two minutes left in the half. Again, he put a little too much under the ball when he needed to guide a laser in there. Hartline had some space but the ball needed more hair on it. A little knit picky but he did the same thing against Troy. Arm strength isn't an issue, he just needs to recognize what type of throw is required and confidently deliver. He will.

As my bro pointed out a few minutes before the BTN, Pryor had 7 TD in his first 7 quarters as a starter (5 pass, 2 run). On the season, he's now 28/44 (64%) through the air for 293 yards with 5 TD, 1 INT with another 47/292 on the ground, good for 6.2 yards per carry. Any doubt he's going to be the ultimate weapon in college football by the end of this year? Not in my eyes.

Rushing Attack in High Gear I assume you noticed Beanie's back - or was that Edwin Moses? Knowing Beanie can be a little dramatic, I was impressed in that he ran hard and sought contact, showing no concern for the foot mid-play.

And what's up with the offensive line? There were actually holes yesterday and I can't put my finger on why. Is it Tressel showing Bollman how to do his job or does Minnesota just suck? Or maybe it's that Beanie is such a force and with his power and unrivaled vision on cutbacks, he can make a pedestrian line look better? Maybe it's a little of all those things but either way, I like it.

As Jason discussed, the backfield is definitely special with Beanie and Pryor back there giving defenses something to think about. In the decisive first half, the duo combined for 155 yards on 15 carries, running downhill on virtually every touch. As teams scheme to stop them, that can only mean good things for the passing attack.

Another lesser discussed strength of Pryor's that impacts the rushing attack is his how well he hides the ball on fake handoffs. Those fakes are lethal in that when he does hand it to Wells, the defense has to freeze for a second to determine who actually has the rock. That extra time gives a little added advantage to the running back (or Pryor on the keeper) as the defenders are caught on their heels.

Finally, I know some knock Herron for a lack of big play / breakaway speed but if he's your backup, complementing the runs of Pryor and Beanie, then you've got yourself a lethal rushing attack. The kid popped another 10 carries for 50 yards and continues to improve his pass protection.

Again, I know Minnesota is a weak to mediocre team but the stat line of 37 carries for 279 yards (7.5 ypc) is fun to look at.

A Robiskie Sighting?! How 'bout Robo taking off the invisible cloak he donned the first month of the season? In the first four games, he produced a meager 12 catches for 113 yards and 2 TD while drawing the ire of the fans for too many drops, weak downfield blocking, a half hearted attempt at a sure TD toss from Pryor last week then lazily running out of bounds on a Pryor scramble killing a third down conversion.

Yesterday, however, Robo was a different man hauling in 8 passes for 90 yards and 2 scores. I'm still not sure he's a strong blocker but the catch of Boeckman's TD ball was pretty while the fade from Pryor was thrown so well I would've caught it (then got a penalty for excessive celebration as I moon-walked back the bench).

Hopefully, this will be the jump start needed to get Robo on track. Pryor's gonna need a go to guy and after yesterday, maybe he found one. I can't be sure though considering half of Robo's 8 grabs came on passes from Todd.

From the Aggravation Department Not a whole lot to complain about yesterday but what the hell is the deal with 10 penalties for 90 yards? I heard all the blather about playing so many guys and how that led to the numerous illegal subsitution / 12 men in the huddle penalties but I don't want to hear that garbage. The coaches need to get that nonsense under control.

And how about that sequence at the end of the half before the 8 yard TP to Robo touchdown? A delay of game at the three yard line then they had to call a timeout on the next attempt at getting a play off. No excuse.

Can't say I was particularly fond of the two false starts on the drive toward the end of the 3rd quarter, either. The second one was especially painful as the Bucks were set to go for it on 4th and 3 from the Gopher 20 before the penalty made it 4th and 8 setting up a pushed 43 yarder from Pretorius. Ridiculous.

Buckeye NFL Watch: Week Four

Bob LeBeau jams out the Steel Curtain Blues.

While we relish in the renewed energy of the Buckeye's future NFLers, the current pros have some key matchups today and tomorrow, as bye weeks start to creep into the regular schedule.

To me, the biggest surprise continues to be Donte Whitner and Ashton Youboty. The Bills look to be for real and have a great chance to extend their record to 4-0, with a visit to the struggling St. Louis Rams. Whitner leads the team with 15 solo tackles and Youboty is fourth with 11. The Bills defense have allowed only 7 of 39 third down conversions and 49 total points.

Down in Tampa, Joey Galloway will sit his second straight game with a foot injury, as A.J. Hawk and the Packers renew this old NFC Norris division rivalry, with the winner moving to 3-1. Hawk ranks ninth in the league with 26 tackles, including 19 solo stops and 2 sacks. Ryan Pickett has solidified his starting spot on the D-Line and has chipped in with 9 total tackles on the season. Will Allen plays sparingly for Tampa, recording only 2 tackles on the season.

The game that will showcase the most Buckeyes is Atlanta at Carolina. Chris Gamble, Na'il Diggs and Nate Salley will try to lead Carolina to a victory in this battle for first place in the NFC South. Michael Jenkins, Ben Hartstock, Alex Stepanovich and Simon Fraser will suit up for Atlanta, who have been an early surprise in the NFL, at 2-1, behind Matt Ryan and Michael Turner.

The 11W game of the week is Baltimore at Pittsburgh on Monday night. Former Buckeye great Dick Lebeau is leading another Pittsburgh squad, currently rank second in the league in total defense. LeBeau played on the 1957 National Championship team and you know he has to be licking his chops facing a rookie QB at home on national TV.

LeBeau's defense did their part last week in a 15-6 loss at Philadelphia, holding the Eagles to 260 total yards and the Steelers need a victory to keep pace with Baltimore. Santonio Holmes ranks second on the Steelers with 10 catches for 145 yards, but Troy Smith is still out from his bout of infected tonsils.

The Swag is Back

A sight for sore toes

For everyone wanting to know how a Pryor/Wells backfield might perform, the Buckeyes' first series of their 34-21 win over the previously unbeaten Gophers was a good indicator.

After the two helped move the chains once to set up a 1st and 10 at their own 33, Beanie showed no indications of rust or injury as he made a couple of nice cuts to spring a 28 yard run. On the following play, Pryor took a high snap, looked briefly downfield before tucking the ball around the right end for a nifty 33 yard touchdown scamper that once again showcased his ability to look like he's hardly running while flying by defenders.

The scary thing is that the one-two combo of Pryor and Wells should only get better as the season goes with one learning more and more of the playbook and the other getting back up to speed from turf toe. And while some don't like what they see with the option, that play is going to be money with more practice and repetitions. How do you stop an offense that can run the I, shotgun/spread and the option?

Wells finished with 108 yards on 14 carries and looked a lot better than I thought he would, while Pryor chipped in with 97 -- just barely missing his first 100 yard game -- on 8 carries. The two accounted for 203 of the Buckeyes' 279 rushing yards on the day and if you're impressed with Beanie's average of 7.6 per tote, which you should be, Pryor's 12.1 is almost a full five yards more per attempt.

The defense, lead by Laurinaitis' 12 and Homan's 10 tackles turned in a solid effort and all things considered, this was easily the Buckeyes' best looking outing of this young season.

Offense

I was really hesitant to chalk up anything to do with the beat-down in LA with Beanie's absence in that game, but after seeing him play today, how can you not? I'm not saying he would have accounted for the full 32-point difference by himself, but perhaps I needed a reminder of just how awesome/valuable to this offense he is. Consider myself reminded.

His vision is uncanny. Boom will be a very good running back at Ohio State, but the way Wells can cut off of what he sees so quickly is what separates him from just about every running back in the country (Moreno appears to have similar tools, but not at Beanie's size). I'm really, really encouraged by the way he played and the fact that he got through the game without too much pain, or at least from what I could see. He'll catch some heat in film study for that fumble (and if you're keeping score at home, that's his 2nd fumble in a four carry stretch), but it was a good tune-up for the trip to Madison next weekend, where he'll undoubtedly be needed to do more.

Boom made the most of his chances, finishing with 51 yards on 10 attempts. He almost took two to the house and gets better by the week. If Beanie does go down again, I'll feel better about it than I did in week one.

After tossing four touchdowns in his debut last week, Pryor really showcased his feet against the Gophers. He had 75 rushing yards in the first half alone and a mixture of option keepers, bootlegs and called quarterback draws served him well on the afternoon. The bootlegs on the goal line are going to be a nightmare for opposing DCs, especially when you consider the inside stuff it will open later on, and the staff is putting in some of the Tebow stuff like a fake first step draw out of the shotgun that leads to a step back and a throw.

Between his ability to pump fake and get receivers open, keep plays alive with his feet in the backfield and deliver nice passes with touch, he's the best quarterback in the Big Ten right now after just two career starts. LeBron in Cleats, indeed.

Boeckman saw his first action of the day halfway through the 3rd quarter on Ohio State's 2nd drive of the second half. He threw the ball around a little bit and though he did cause some stress with the throw to Hartline into quadruple-thousand coverage, he's earned these snaps. Besides, he more than made up for it with that amazing toss to Robo for six.

It was nice to see some of the young receivers getting early snaps. Posey had a magnificent block on Pryor's first touchdown run and a nice catch a little later in traffic for an 11-yard pickup. Flash actually finished 2nd on the team in receptions with though, though they went for just four yards combined. On one screen in particular, he did a nice job of plucking a Pryor throw off the turf.

More importantly, the play of the freshmen seemed to light a spark under Robiskie. He turned in his best game of the season, finishing with 8 receptions for 90 yards and two touchdowns on more than a few tough catches. The first score was a textbook fade and a beautifully thrown ball by Pryor. The second was an even prettier throw -- and catch -- with Boeckman hitting him on a 31-yard bomb that Robo hauled in from his finger tips. Welcome back, Robo.

There was an injury in that group when tight end Rory Nicol went down with an ankle injury after it was rolled while he was run-blocking. He was seen in a boot and on crutches in the 2nd half, though Tressel did say that the injury did not appear to be a season-ender.

The line may have turned its finest performance of the season after a little bit of Tressel practice love to get them going earlier in the week. The Gophers did produce two sacks, but overall I thought the protection was excellent on the afternoon. The 279 rushing yards speak volumes to how they fared in the other department, though Beanie does have a knack for turning one yard into five (and four into 28). They are clearly benefiting from the halo effect generated by both Pryor and Wells and I'd expect them to continue to look better as the season continues.

Defense

The defense did its part in limiting a high-powered offense to six points really. The Gophers put some on late during garbage time, but Heacock's crew set the tone from the first series with an afternoon of solid tackling and good penetration. They registered one sack (Freeman), five TFLs a forced fumble that led to a recovery and an interception on the way to harassing Adam Weber into his worst outing this year.

They kept Eric Decker out of the endzone and limited him to half his average production and held Weber 10 points under his completion percentage coming in. Most importantly, they stood strong when needed. After Beanie turned the ball over on the Buckeyes' second possession, basically gift-wrapping a red-zone series for Minnesota, they forced the field goal.

Despite the overall level of good play out of the defense, I must admit to having a little defensive tackle envy early in the game. Regardless the interior of the Buckeye line helped limit Eskridge to 79 and more importantly, no touchdowns or impact plays.

Homan's 10 tackles is a career-high for him, but Russell may have been the defensive star on the day. His seven tackles (including a nice five solos) was good for third on the team and he's in the books with two forced fumbles. (I do have to admit that if the strip he got on the gang tackle had happened against Ohio State, I would have gone bonkers. But Brewster did get a payback on the facemask on Wilson in the 3rd quarter.)

I really thought Thad Gibson made the most of his first start at end. He didn't record a sack, but did finish with four tackles and seemed to be in Weber's face quite a bit.

15 of the Gophers points came late, mixed in were a two-point conversion and an onside kick, which I have no problem with. Brewster has to do what's best for his team and whether that means more snaps for the offense, a more respectable-looking score he can take into his next annual review or whatever, that's fine. It's also good practice for those types of plays and when you can get it, you should take it.

Special Teams

Once again the special teams were a mixed-bag. Trapasso absolutely rocked the ball again, averaging 54.5 on his two punts, but Pretorius missed another field goal and the return game was only meh again. I have absolutely no problem with a kicker at this level missing one from the low-to-mid 40s now and then, but every week? It's frustrating to see a guy rock a 44-yarder home early on only to follow it up my shanking a 43-yarder. Leg strength isn't something you can easily work on. Accuracy is. Also, is it me or does Saine look for tacklers to cut into on kickoff returns?

Notes

Mo Wells was held out of the game because of a sore back... Georgia fan to go ballistic if ESPN shows the Wells hurdle highlight... The Buckeyes have won their last four conference openers by a combined score of 151-40... Minnesota has only been able to muster a combined 28 points in their last three tilts with the Buckeyes... For the second week in a row, Pryor took the opening drive and put up six -- this is good... Pryor's 97 rushing yards set a Buckeye record for rushing yards in a game out of a true freshman quarterback, topping Schlichter's 77 set in 1978 against SMU... Boom's 26-yarder was a career long.

Minnesota Open Thread Sponsored By Carl Spackler

The Return

Should be a fun Saturday and a good test for the Buckeyes. The Gophers (and their fans) are riding high and are a step up from the Penguins, Bobcats and Trojans (lesser type). The defense, in particular, has a good chance to answer some critics today. I'm excited to see what Gibson can do getting a majority of the snaps at one of the end spots and it's also nice to watch the continued evolution of Hines -- the next great Buckeye safety (though judging from last week, Coleman has taken notice and would like to join him).

The first time you see Beanie and Pryor line up in the same backfield, you're excused for crapping yourself in excitement because you won't be alone. We know Posey, Thomas and Washington will get more snaps and all it would take right now would be one big game out of one of those burners to put possibly thrust them into a starting role. The message from the Boeckman situation is that no job is safe, regardless of how long you've been in the program and that's a refreshing change to see.

Say what you will about Tressel being stubborn and conservative, but he's making the changes the fans are demanding. Some, like the Pryor switch, were inevitable. But I like how he's tinkered with the offensive and defensive lines as well as at receiver. I have a feeling that this team is getting ready to go off.


Later in the day, there are some interesting matchups as conference play begins:

#10 Wisconsin @ Michigan, 3:30 - ABC
The big story heading into this one is that the Badgers have a really, really good shot to get their first win in Ann Arbor in 14 years. I think they'll get it done, but I have this creeping suspicion that Rodriguez will get one upset this year -- and the sooner the better. If he's upset-less by the time 11/22 rolls around, I'll be slightly more worried than I probably should be.

#8 Alabama @ #4 Georgia, 7:45 - ESPN
Georgia is busting out the black as they welcome Bear Saban and the Crimson Tide to Athens. The Dawgs are stacked and have played well this year, despite losing a little bit of ground in the rankings. Alabama has looked like an elite team and say what you will about Saban -- the guy can coach the college game. If nothing else, tune in for the Southern honies dotting the stands.

#24 Illinois @ #9 Penn State, 8:00 - ABC
On Thursday afternoon, Penn State looked like a great team. They had dominated everyone they played and put up mad points in the process. Then late Thursday night, Pacific time, they began to look even better, considering the pasting they administered to Oregon State way back in week two. If they do to Illinois what they've done to every other team they've played this season, they'll jump into the top five and deserve to be there.

Preview: #15 Ohio State vs. Minnesota

Obligatory.
Ohio State Buckeyes #15 Ohio State 3-1, 0-0 Big Ten Roster | Schedule 12:00 PM ET - BTN —— Ohio Stadium Columbus, OH Minnesota Golden Gophers Minnesota 4-0, 0-0 Big Ten Roster | Schedule

You have to go all of the way back to 2002 to find a Gopher team heading into a showdown with Ohio State playing with this much confidence. That season, Glen Mason's team raced out to a 7-1 start before getting handled 34-3 in Columbus. The Gophers would go on to lose their next three Big Ten games and ultimately finished the season 8-5. In 2004 Minnesota started the season 5-0 before losing a close one to Michigan and then watching their season spiral away to the tune of five losses in their final six regular season games. Will this year be any different?

I'm certainly not here to say the 2008 Buckeyes are as good as that 2002 squad that would go on to shock the Canes, but despite the confidence of Gopher fans, the historical numbers and the fact that the Buckeyes, thanks to USC and some questionable play in other games, are out of the woods in regards to sleeping on any decent teams makes this a game that I just don't see Minnesota pulling out.

Maybe in another year where they aren't facing Pryor, a refurbished Beanie and a defense hungry to prove doubters wrong could Tim Brewster get that landmark win he so sorely needs. Just not this Saturday.

Opponent

There was some debate earlier in the week about how the Gopher's out of league schedule compared to Ohio State's. Sure, the Buckeyes can claim to have played against USC, but that's all they really can claim in that one. The Gophers, meanwhile, avenged a tough loss to FAU last season by thumping the Sun Belt favorites 37-3. Two weeks prior, they erupted in the fourth quarter to blow-out a pretty decent Bowling Green team on the road (ask the Wannstache). But their true colors came out in narrow wins over Northern Illinois and Montana State. Juggernauts they are not.

Still, they are 4-0, a record Buckeye fans would kill to have and come into this game vastly improved over the inaugural Brew Stew of 2007. That mark is aided largely by turnovers. It was turnovers that did the Falcons in and the Gophers have forced 13 on the season, good enough for 3rd-best in the nation. Meanwhile, they've only given the ball away twice. So there you have it: +11 against middling competition and you have that spotless record.

On offense, they're powered by the Adam Weber (#8) to Eric Decker (#7) combo. Weber, the reigning all-freshman quarterback in the conference is off to a hot start of his sophomore season. He's completing nearly 72 percent of his passes with 7 touchdowns and only one interception. Steady, he's thrown for at least 200 yards and one touchdown in each of his four starts this season and is good enough to play at a lot of places.

Decker, his safety blanket, is putting up monster numbers, leading the Big Ten and placing fourth nationally with 32 receptions heading into the game. He's on pace for a 100/1400 season. He's also consistent -- the junior has exactly one touchdown catch in each of his four starts. And then the big drop-off. Decker, as good as he is, has three times as many receptions as Minnesota's second-leading active receiver, Ben Kuznia (#16).

It's not just an arial attack as Brewster will look to establish the running game. After starter Duane Bennett went down for the season in week two, freshman DeLeon Eskridge (#23) stepped up and has filled-in nicely. Listed as 5-11/190, he has decent, but not large size for a back and he's already delivered one 100-yard game with another near miss in his two starts. He's also a touchdown factory, having popped-off for 5 in those games.

The Minnesota offensive line enters the game allowing only 1.5 sack per game, while their counterparts on the Buckeye said are allowing 2.5 (though USC did its part to inflate that number). It looks like between Becker's poise and the line, getting to him will be difficult, but the schedule to date has not provided any real type of indication of how they will perform against top units.

Senior end William VanDeSteeg (#91), besides having an awesome name, will be the guy to watch on the Gopher defensive line. He has 20 career starts and served as a captain as a junior last year.

There's nobody in the linebacker corps that really jumps out at you (though senior Steve Davis is one of the captains), but the JUCO-infused secondary is off to a hot start. Two players, sophomore Kyle Theret (#27) and junior Traye Simmons have multiple interceptions on the year -- all part of a unit that's already collected 8 picks.

Aside from Eskridge, a number of players from Brewster's nationally ranked 2008 class for Minnesota will also see action, most prominently return man Troy Stoudemire Jr. (#11) and his 30.7 average on kick returns and defensive tackle Jewhan Edwards (#68).

NOTES: Former Gopher coach Glen Mason is serving as the honorary captain for the game... After allowing 38.5 points per game last season, the Gophers are giving up just 17.5 this year... Eskridge's five scores tie him with Baylor's Robert Griffin for most among FBS freshmen... Minnesota actually holds a winning all-time record against six Big Ten teams, but they're just 7-40 all-time against the Buckeyes.

Buckeye Breakdown

With the anticipated return of Beanie this weekend, Buckeye fans are envisioning a Pryor/Wells-powered backfield destroying just about any defense that they run into. The truth is that Beanie will probably only get a handful of carries this weekend in an effort to see where he stands with his turf toe mysterious toe injury. Still, the mere threat of him on the field, with Pryor, opens up all sorts of problems for opposing defensive coordinators. In the two, you have two former Army All-American Bowl MVPs in the same backfield and you'd be right to key heavily on each of them, at the same time exposing your corners to a lot of man coverage.

The line, after receiving an extended verbal smack-down from Tressel for the better part of this week should be ready to come out and finally play up to their considerable hype heading into the season. I'm excited to watch the growth of Brewster at the center position and you have to being to wonder whether Rehring will find himself either out of a job or moving in to take Person's once he's healthy again.

The Gophers do appear to have a decent secondary, but with so much focus being placed on stopping Pryor and Beanie/Boom from gnawing up huge chunks on the ground, the Brians are also poised to contribute in a big way. Robo, especially, should be hungry to atone for the dropped 90 yard touchdown strike that Pryor gifted to him last Saturday. Beyond those two, it's nice to know that in only his first career start, Pryor was checking down to his tight ends and fullbacks, often the third and fourth options on the play. If he continues doing that, the offense will continue to grow, making even a mediocre line shine and the Buckeyes will be a very difficult team to stop. A dash of Posey wouldn't hurt, either.

On the defensive side of the ball, the key is to get to Weber. Hit him early and get to him as often as possible to disrupt him because he is good enough to make the Buckeyes pay -- especially down the middle of the field -- if he's given time to operate. Expect a big performance out of Gibson, making his first start at defensive end. I'll also be keeping a close eye at Heyward in the middle to see if the new spot is working out for him.

The secondary will have to know where Decker is on every play. If they take him out of the game, that will go a long way towards taking Weber out as well. This is also a good opportunity to put Jenkins on Decker in man coverage and turn up the blitz dial a little bit. This defense needs to get that swagger back and a heavy dose of blitzing may do just that.

Kick coverage is also huge in a game like this because nothing keeps a team in games they don't deserve to be in like a couple of quick returns and the Gophers have the horses to do just that.

Ultimately, the Gophers are just catching the Buckeyes at the wrong time and I expect that to be fully reflected in the final score.

NOTES: The Buckeyes are outscoring foes 38-0 in the fourth quarter of games this season... The quarterback/running back combination of Pryor and Boom has put up 416 yards on the ground this season, good enough for 2nd-best nationally... The Buckeyes are 5-0 against the Gophers under Tressel... Despite the USC pounding, the Buckeyes have held their opponents scoreless in 10 of 16 quarters played to date.


PREDICTION: Ohio State 38, Minnesota 13

Bizarro Tressel?

One guy wins all of the big ones, but always drops a small one. The other guy takes care of the small ones, but has trouble with the big ones.

Which one would you rather have?

The Internet's Best 404 Page

So full of win. And loss.

Sticking with today's theme of technical troubles, I ran across this 404 page on NCAA.com of all places.

For those not wearing pocket protectors or just finding their way to the internet, 404 is of course the error code returned when a page (or image or other asset) cannot be found on the server. The pages sites use to handle this can be informative, clever, funny or just downright strange -- there are even galleries of some of the finer examples out there.

And here is the staid NCAA with Adam Morrison on their 404 page.

On the ground.

Most likely crying.

Awesome.

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