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Milestone Brew: A Golden (Era) Lager

Thad MattaLet's go get some brew.

This football season has stirred up many debates, as all of the preseason top 10 teams have lost at least one game. Ohio State has done what they were supposed to do against inferior opponents, win all of their games and dominate while doing so. Now they sit atop all the rankings and have 5 games left against 5-2 teams.

While it is easy for non-fans to bash Buckeye Nation, due to the BCS debacle and current Big Ten reputation, I thought I would take a few minutes to make a couple of points about the era of Buckeye sports we are witnessing and the sense of pride that should go with it.

The Buckeyes played their 500th game in The Shoe against Northwestern on September 22. Since Ohio Stadium opened up in 1922, it has been home to 377 victories and a winning percentage of 77.2 percent. Ohio State has won 16 straight at home and 20 of their last 21. The Shoe has also been host to 38 consecutive games with 100,000+ fans. That same Northwestern win gave the Buckeyes 22 regular season victories in a row, eclipsing the previous mark set by Woody's boys from 1967-1969.

The Vest has coached the Buckeyes to 25 consecutive victories now and 17 of those have come within the conference. A victory over Michigan State this weekend would set a school record of 18 straight conference wins. As a school, Ohio State has won 17 straight conference games three other times (1954-1956, 1967-1969 and 1974-1976) and that school up north holds the all time mark, with 19. Wouldn't it be great to tie that mark next week at Beaver Stadium?

This year's version of the Silver Bullets are ranked #1 nationally in scoring and total defense and have helped Jim Tressel become the 5th fastest coach to reach 200 victories (33-14 @ Washington). Tressel is tied with Frank Beamer for third in career victories amongst active coaches, behind only Traffic Cop Joe and Bobby Bowden. Tress's winning percentage of 83% (69-14) at OSU is simply amazing. Only USC, Boise State and LSU have more victories over the last 5 years. Since Ohio State lost three straight games in early '04, they have gone 34-4!

Football has always been king at Ohio State and the basketball program has shown flashes of success, although not consistent enough to be considered a historical national powerhouse. That perception could soon be changing. Thanks to Jim O'Brien's vision for the youth of Eastern Europe, Thad Matta has quickly thrust Ohio State into the national spotlight.

Matta has taken a dead beat program and turned it into a National Powerhouse in just three years. Remember the year before he arrived Ohio State was 13-15. Thad is Rad and this year he looks to become only the 2nd coach in history to record at least 20 victories in his first 8 years.

Last basketball season was the perfect hangover remedy following the BCS Title game (you didn't forget the 22 game winning streak did you?) and with this season's recruiting class, I see no reason why the trend won't continue. Hopefully this year we won't need the hangover cure.

Tressel and Matta are both under contract for years to come and quite honestly, where else would they go? Over the last two seasons these two have lead Ohio State to a combined 80-11 record! I know we take heat nationally for our Buckeye homerism, pride and semi-obnoxiousness, but as fans we need to sit back and enjoy this era of Buckeye Sports, which is shaping up to be one of the best in history.

Video Drop

Ginn's (almost) first NFL touchdown:

The new NBC Notre Dame promo (via Boiled Sports):

Robo feature on BTN:

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And finally, There Is No Name On My Jersey has a collection of videos highlighting the Lou Holtz ESPN pep talk curse.

11W Mix Tape - Karma's A Biotch Edition

11 Mix Tape

I came across a few bits and pieces worth sharing while taking a break from a gargantuan home improvement task. Thankfully, I've never before realized how hard it is to type with cut up hands covered in sorta dried layers of PVC cement. I have no idea how someone can do that kinda work for a living but more power to 'em. Backbreaking work and no internet? Sucky.

Since my home improvement was necessary, not a choice, I began to wonder what karma was paying me back for? Like Bono, she moves in mysterious ways. Alas, I'm not alone. The fellows below have also gotten recent visits from the karma-fairy.

Daequan To NBDL For A Spell?
Speaking of sucky.. I wonder if Daequan's entourage is still happy with their decision to mindrape him into going pro? Even with D-Wade out of action, it doesn't appear Pat Riley considers Daequan an option in the rotation. Worse yet, the Herald notes Riles might sent Daequan to the NBDL for some seasoning. Ouch:

Pat Riley said last week that rookie Daequan Cook -- a long shot to crack the rotation -- ''is not making a lot of shots in practice or games'' and indicated he eventually might send him for a 20-game stint in the NBA's developmental league.


Another Notre Dame Player Hits The Road
Can it get any worse for Fat Charlie? Besides being the architect of the nation's worst offense and the head man in charge of a 1-6 Irish squad, his players are transferring at an alarming rate. O-lineman Matt Carufel left the team Monday making it four sophomores in four months leaving ND in search of a skinnier, less egomaniacal coach. So, how many more months until Fat Charlie heads back the NFL as an offensive coordinator? He simply doesn't have the patience or personality to effectively recruit and manage all the responsibilities that come with being a college head coach.


IU Coach Sampson Sharts On Rulebook, Again
Not happy with shaming just one program, the ever-classy Kelvin Sampson has again been busted for making impermissable phone calls to recruits. To his credit, Sampson did 'dial-down' his antics this time making just 35 impermissable calls including 10 three way calls made by assistant Rob Senderoff. Problem is, Sampson was banned from making ANY calls for one year following his shenanigans at Oklahoma. The punishment was the result of 577 impermissable calls by Sampson and staff. Considering that staggering total, I can only assume Sampson has since developed arthritic fingers because you certainly can't attribute the lower total at Indiana to respect for the rules.

When Number One Isn't Number One

OuchThis is what most of the nation first thinks of
whenever Ohio State is brought up.

The Buckeyes may be at the top of the BCS standings along with every other major poll, but has there ever been a #1 receiving so little respect around the country?

The computers have the team tied for 5th and two AP voters felt compelled to cast their first-place votes for schools already saddled with a loss. Early ballots for the BlogPoll are leaning South as well.

Ohio State has really no one to blame for this but themselves. Their showing, or rather lack thereof, against the Gators 9 months ago is still haunting the program.

Their Big Ten brethren haven't helped the team's cause much either. It started with this. Add some of that and pretty soon you arrive here.

(Note: When SEC teams beat up on each other, it's because the conference is so tough. When it's the Big Ten doing the same, well that's a different story.)

You could see this coming and quite honestly, a lot of the doubters make good points. The team's "signature" wins pale in comparison to other elite squads and when the team picked to win the conference gets beat by a I-AA at home to start the season, the Big Ten deserves some shots.

There's still so much football to be played, but you have to like the fact that your team is getting no respect and controls its own destiny. That's a hell of a motivation point for any team.

Even better is the possibility that the Buckeyes could conceivably win out and still be getting no respect. There's even a good chance that if they win out, they could get jumped in the rankings by a one-loss team along the way.

All the better. I'll take that chip on the shoulder with a shot at redemption into New Orleans any day.

Buckeye NFLer Of The Week - 6

Shane Olivea

Occasionally you have to throw the big men in the trenches a bone. This week we have decided to do just that.

The Buckeye NFLer of the Week for week 6 is Shane Olivea of the San Diego Chargers for his play in San Diego's 28-14 win over the Raiders. The Chargers seem to have turned around their season having won their last 2 games after starting the season 1-3.

Olivea and the rest of the Chargers offensive line allowed no sacks and paved the way for 206 rushing yards against the imposing Raiders defense.

Tomlinson was responsible for 198 of those rushing yards, including touchdown runs of 3, 27, 13, and 41 yards. LT may be the best back in the league, but he has Olivea and the other Chargers lineman to thank for part of his glory.

San Diego drafted Olivea in the 7th round (209th overall) of the 2004 NFL Draft. He started 15 games as a rookie at right tackle and has held down the position ever since. He's currently under contract with the Chargers until 2011.

BlogPoll Ballot: Week 7

USF Bulls FanAs JHC would say: Bulls fans pass the "look" test.

Can you feel the beat of the playoffs drum growing louder? If this season has shown us anything, it's just how hard it is to win your ball game week-in and week-out. We're heading into week 8 and Carroll, Stoops, Miles and Meyer each have a loss (or two in Meyer's case).

We warned last week about something similar to a USF/Boston College BCS Championship game, but I'm not even certain that will be a reality. The Bulls have to go to Rutgers, then UConn before getting Cincinnati and Louisville at home over the next five weeks. Boston College? Not exactly murderer's row, but their last five: at Virginia Tech, Florida State, at Maryland, at Clemson and Miami.

Look, we're as big of Buckeye proponents as you're going to find, but even we have to concede that there's only a 50/50 chance the team sweeps its next five games. What if Ohio State drops one as well? I can already see the congressional hearings after two one-loss teams are chosen to be worthy over 5 other one-loss teams for all the marbles.

In the midst of this chaos sits our ballot, which honestly is a mish-mash of who we think is playing hot right now, which teams deserve their ranking for just getting the almighty "W" and who we think would win a neutral field battle. 100% scientific method. Or something like that.

This week's ballot coincides with the initial release of the BCS rankings and although the Buckeyes sit atop the rankings, the computers no likey. That's cool and we can feel the sudden nationwide man-crush on South Florida -- in fact, there's a good chance that when this week's BlogPoll is released, the Bucks will find themselves in 2nd place. At least that may help some folks believe in the concept a little more.

It's worth pointing out that the Master Coaches Poll has a different opinion. You know the guys that get the games shipped to them on DVDs and vote via conference. The guys like Vince Dooley, Hayden Fry, Don James, Tom Osborne, Gene Stallings and John Robinson. Those guys. They're a unanimous 16-0 in favor of the Buckeyes, while the Bulls are 4th.

The truth is, polls, computer-generated or not, are wack. Once more: American College Football is the only sport on earth where a team can go undefeated and not have a chance to play for the title. We digress.

As always, you can check the ballots of every voter and the final version is due Wednesday morning, so get your thoughts in by Tuesday night if you think we got it wrong.

1 Ohio State True, they've played nobody. More true: they've kicked a bunch of nobody's asses. UP1
2 Oklahoma If you lose early enough in 2007, you're still in good shape. What's scary is that this team will keep improving through their bowl game. UP2
3 South Florida They're undefeated with some quality wins, but there are a handful of teams that would eat their lunch on a neutral field. UP2
4 LSU National championship teams get the breaks the Tigers didn't get in Lexington. They still scare us, though. DOWN3
5 Boston College Rather uninspired victory over a pretty bad Notre Dame, but a win is a win. UP1
6 Oregon Got back on track by throttling Washington State 53-7. UP1
7 South Carolina Slipped past UNC and figure to hang around for another week at least as they welcome Vanderbilt to town. UP1
8 Cal One bone-headed play from a backup quarterback away from being #1. DOWN5
9 West Virginia Had the weekend off before welcoming Mississippi State to town this weekend. --
10 Arizona State Survived the Jake Locker test in a big way (44-20). Reader Dave N. will be putting his Ohio roots to work by organizing orgy riots ahead of the big Cal game in Tempe this next weekend. UP5
11 Kansas Kansas is 6-0 and Danny Manning has absolutely nothing to do with it. UP7
12 Virginia Tech Since the Beatdown in the Bayou, Beamer has this squad rolling. Huge game at Boston College this weekend. --
13 Florida After a bye, it's Florida's turn to try to win in Lexington. --
14 USC We are having a hard time believing how bad this team looks right now. Even the savior Joe McKnight was caught from behind against Arizona. DOWN4
15 Kentucky This team showed a lot of guts against LSU. They can prove it wasn't a fluke by doing Florida this weekend. up4
16 Missouri Mizzou is for real. Just ask Oklahoma. DOWN5
17 Texas Candidate #1 for bipolar team of the year. NR
18 Virginia We took some heat for ranking them last week, but they went out this weekend and beat a decent UConn to move to 6-1. up3
19 Tennessee Don't look now, but the Vols have put together a winning streak. Fulmer promptly orders more gravy. up5
20 Georgia Dancing on Vanderbilt's midfield star after a comeback win? That's what it's come to for the program Dooley built? NR
21 Auburn It wasn't pretty, but they handed Houston Nutt and his Hogs another defeat. NR
22 Hawaii Hawaii should have lost to San Jose State. They're pretty much vulnerable in any game played in the Continental 48 right now. DOWN6
23 Cincinnati The Bearcats picked the wrong time for Louisville's defense to look halfway decent. DOWN9
24 Texas Tech Standing at 6-1, Leach and his pirates absolutely spanked A&M. NR
25 Michigan Look who's back, seemingly getting things together for an improbable run at a Big Ten title. NR

DROPPED OUT: Illinois (#17), Florida State (#20), Wisconsin (#22), Texas A&M (#23), Purdue (#25)

Buckeye Seedlings

Devier Posey No poser here.

While the current Buckeyes are back where they belong, the Buckeye Seedlings have tried to keep up at the high school level. It was a big week for Devier Posey, a future Buckeye wide receiver from Cincinnati LaSalle High School. Posey has 43 catches for 718 yards and 6 touchdowns so far this season and his sprinter speed helped gain him another star from Rivals.com. He is the second 5 star commitment in next year's class and 7 others are ranked as 4 stars. The other WR recruit for next year, Jake Stoneburner continued to look impressive, hauling in 12 catches for 147 yards and a TD in a 21-14 win.

Michael Brewster is the other 5 star recruit and he has helped lead Edgewater (Orlando, FL) to a 5-1 record. He is ranked 8th nationally and was selected to the Junior All-American team. Another top ranked O-lineman, J.B. Shugarts has returned from early season injuries to lead Klein (Houston, TX) to a 6-1 record. The other great lineman of this group, Michael Adams has lead Dublin Coffman (Columbus, OH) to a 8-0 record. On the defensive side, D-Lineman Garrett Goebel moved up 20 spots in the Rivals.com top 100 and now is ranked as the 54th best prospect. His Montini (Chicago, IL) team is 7-0 and the defense has pitched 4 shutouts. Another indication that Tressel gets kids from winning programs.

Ohio State's 11 recruits have the Buckeyes ranked 12th nationally, but they have the highest average of ranked recruits. 6 of those recruits are in the top 100, which is the most since Jim Tressel has been here. Hopefully these players will live up to their ranking, but The Vest is great at finding talent. Malcolm Jenkins, Little Animal, Brian Robiskie and Brian Hartline were all 3 star recruits, while Donald Washington, Anderson Russell and A.J. Trapasso were only two stars.

Don't Look Now...

Upsets

.. but guess who the new #1 is. Just in time for the initial BCS rankings to come out on Sunday.

Oh, let me taste your tears, America's foremost football conference! Mmm, your tears are so yummy and sweet!

Buckeyes Light Up Flashes

Brian HartlineHartline's 90 yard punt return set a new Buckeye record

It was fitting that Anthony Gonzalez was in town to witness Ohio State's 48-3 demolition of Kent State. After all, his successor wanted to show him something.

After scoring on a 14 yard slant on OSU's first drive of the game, sophomore wideout Brian Hartline broke a 57 year-old school record by returning a punt for 90 yards following Kent State's second possession of the game.

That and three more 2nd quarter touchdowns, including a "holy shit a Buckeye defender actually held onto the pick" moment that resulted in a 70-yard pick-six for Donald Washington, had the team enjoying a comfortable 35-0 halftime lead. Some second half scoring out of Buckeye backups in the 2nd half and the thought-to-be rebuilding Buckeyes are sitting pretty at 7-0.

Although diminutive Kent State running back Eugene Jarvis got some early yards and safety Anderson Russell went down with an ankle injury thanks to a dirty block from Kent State's Derek McByrd, you have to be happy with the effort out of the Buckeyes. They came out and dominated a Kent State team like a great team should.


OFFENSE:

You can tell that the Vest reads 11W because after initially being pretty adamant about Beanie playing, he managed to essentially give him the week off while still getting him a little work (including a nifty 7 yard touchdown run in the 2nd quarter).

His backups had mixed days. Mo Wells, after looking so solid against Purdue last weekend, was held to 4 yards on 5 carries, including a key stop behind the line on a 3rd and 1 on the Buckeyes' 2nd drive of the game.

On the other hand, Brandon Saine looked pretty electric in seeing his biggest workload since before getting his knee scoped a few weeks ago. Saine led the team in both rushing (9/69) and receiving (5/76) on the day.

Let there be no doubt -- Beanie is the man, but Saine's ability to catch balls out of the backfield and lined up in the slot is just one more facet of a multi-threat Buckeye offense. Especially considering the kid isn't even thinking about his knee anymore:

"It’s not an issue at all for me. I’m not thinking about it and it doesn’t hurt."

Quarterback Todd Boeckman was a surgeon in his lone half of action. He had the first quarter strike to Hartline and a swing pass that went for a 15-yard touchdown to Mo Wells with less than 30 seconds remaining in the first half on the way to a 13/16 day. He had one near interception, but you can't complain when you're looking up at halftime and thinking he's well on the way to a 300 yard day against a team that required his services for more than a half.

Colin FerrellKent State defensive lineman Colin Ferrell, while
handsome, was helpless against the Buckeyes.

We applaud the Vest's willingness to continue slinging it on all downs and that philosophy didn't change much when Bellisari the 2nd took over on the Buckeyes' opening drive of the 2nd half. With a few more performances like the 7 of 9 passing and a rushing touchdown that he put on today, we'll gladly retire the nickname. I'm not sure if it was actually good play out of Rob or the beers, but for the first time ever, I wasn't worried when he was under center.

The running game looked good at times after looking pretty bleak heading into the half. I still have this recurring nightmare of the team not being able to pick up a huge 3rd and 1 or 4th and 1 because for whatever reason, they continue to have a hard time converting in those situations. Despite looking great at virtually every scenario in a game, the Buckeyes have not convinced me that they'll be able to pick that play up when it really counts (Michigan, BCS Championship).


DEFENSE:

Two minutes and 37 seconds. That's how close the Buckeye defense came to notching their ever-elusive first shutout of the season. That meager 34-yard field goal in garbage time surely won't hurt the team's national-best scoring defense ranking, but you'd like to see it happen and with a tough 5-game stretch coming up, you have to wonder if it will at all this season.

The Buckeye defense, led by the Gun Show's two sacks, forced the Kent State offense to punt on 8 times on the day. For those keeping score, that's punts - 65, points - 46 for the season. Damn impressive.

Jarvis got some yards -- especially early and at times the Flashes were effective moving the ball against the Silver Bullets, but the defense once again came up huge where it counts the most - the scoreboard. Washington's interception came after Kent State had started to look better than the vaunted (but suddenly very pedestrian) Purdue offense of a week before. I don't know about you, but I was pretty relieved to see a Buckeye defender actually hold onto a ball that hit him in the hands.

Donald WashingtonWashington's pick-six

The truth is that defense, because it's more of an instinctual play than on the offensive side of the ball, is usually impacted more by these games against the Kent States of the world. If you were to walk into any random locker room in the nation and see a player banging his head against a locker before kickoff, you'd bet that he played defense and you'd be right. Considering the unit blanked Kent for 98% of the game, the effort is to be applauded.

Anderson Russell's ankle injury was related to something he was nursing, according to Tressel, but local radio is reporting that he was seen leaving the locker room with crutches. Linebacker James Laurinaitis was kept out of the 2nd half as a precaution, as he appeared to get dinged up. Not really what you want to see after playing a MAC team, but the injury bug has bitten the Buckeyes especially hard this season.


SPECIAL TEAMS:

I'm not sure if it was the Big Ten Network's angle or what, but I have never seen a returner turn the corner and see absolutely nobody aroudn him for 30 yards. Hartline said that maybe the Flashes had out-kicked their coverage, but after he made that initial juke and then hit the sideline there were no Kent State defenders within site. The record-breaking return because that second score effectively ended the game. At 7-0, you're about 99% confident but there's a "dont't F with karma" thing going on in the background. At 14-0, with this defense, you're sold.

The kicking game continues to click as Ryan Pretorius hit a career long 49-yard field goal on the way to a 12 point day, while punter A.J. Trapasso put a punt inside the Kent State 20 early in the game.

Tressel continues to tinker with his kickoff game as four kickers received kickoff honors on the afternoon. Pretorius handled duty early, while Trapasso, Andrew Good and Jon Thoma (??) got cracks.


NOTES: Hartlines punt return broke the record of 87 yards by set by Robert Demmel vs Iowa in 1950. Ted Ginn's best only went for 82 yards... Ohio State has now won 15 consecutive games at Ohio Stadium... Coming to NBC in January: Glen and Earl. A tale about two former coaches that give each other noogies.

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