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Google Texas star very impressed watching Buckeyes roll over Oklahoma - 247Sports

Texas star very impressed watching Buckeyes roll over Oklahoma - 247Sports
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Texas star very impressed watching Buckeyes roll over Oklahoma
247Sports
Muhammad attended the Ohio State at Oklahoma game as a guest of the Sooners, but was also there to see the Buckeyes. “It was a good atmosphere, really loud,” Muhammad said. “Ohio State came to play. They dominated. I talked to them earlier in the ...


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Google Marotti has Buckeyes on cutting edge - 247Sports

Marotti has Buckeyes on cutting edge - 247Sports
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Marotti has Buckeyes on cutting edge
247Sports
He also hired the man that is often referred to as the best in the business at what he does, strength and conditioning coach Mickey Marotti. With Meyer and Marotti no stone is left unturned. Case in point, what Marotti and the Buckeyes are doing when ...


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LGHL Ohio State recruiting has been excellent, but what you do with that talent is just as important

Ohio State recruiting has been excellent, but what you do with that talent is just as important
Matt Brown
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


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Just look at USC.

A lot of digital ink has been spilled praising Ohio State’s recruiting as of late, and with good reasons. The Buckeyes are positioned to have a historically strong 2017 recruiting class, and multiple elite classes in a row have allowed them to replace tons of NFL draft picks without missing a beat. Outside of Alabama, nobody has earned more praise for recruiting and the sheer accumulation of talent than Ohio State.

But the Buckeyes aren’t actually the second most talented roster in the country. Judging from the recruiting rankings via the 247Sports Talent Composite, the Buckeyes are actually third.

The top team isn’t a surprise. Having the top ranked recruiting class every year since Obama’s first term will do that.

But number two? That’s USC. The Trojans currently have five times as many five-star players on their roster as Ohio State.

What’s going on with USC right now? Well, they got absolutely nuked by Alabama to open the season, and never really threatened Stanford in a Week 3 loss. They’ve scored a combined 16 points against Power 5 competition this season, and just changed quarterbacks. The Trojans finish the season with games against Oregon, at Washington, at UCLA, and with Notre Dame, meaning a bowl bid this season is hardly assured.

And yes, their head coach is now having to deny getting punched in the face by one of his players. So everything is going great in Troy right now.

This season’s struggles may be especially dramatic, but they aren’t exactly an aberration. The Trojans have just one finish above the AP Top 20 since 2008, the end of the Pete Carroll era. They haven’t won anything more prestigious than the Holiday Bowl in years.

NCAA sanctions that crippled the team’s depth obviously have some to do with that, but even in the face of scholarship reductions, the Trojans haven’t had a problem recruiting elite talent. The program’s history, location and resources make it a highly attractive destination for top recruits. But the results just haven’t been there.

USC is perhaps the most prominent case, but they’re hardly the only one. Auburn sits seventh in the talent composite, and they may also be fighting for their bowl lives too. Texas is 11th, and would consider winning eight games to be a successful season. Other programs that have recruited very well, like UCLA, Texas A&M, and Tennessee, among others, have yet to match those star rankings with on the field results.

This isn’t to say that recruiting isn’t important. The data shows that recruiting at an elite level is basically a requirement for national championship contention. A closer look at data shows a near linear relationship between recruiting rankings and wins. We cover it so closely on this website because it’s clear that recruiting matters a great deal. You can’t be an exceptionally successful program on a consistent basis without bringing in elite talent. And Ohio State has unquestionably hit that benchmark.

But it’s important to remember that’s not the only part of the equation here. Coaching, evaluation and development matter a great deal too.

And in case there was any doubt, Ohio State is doing just fine in that department as well.

One thing that speaks well to the evaluation and development of a coaching staff is the performance of lower-ranked recruits. Ohio State turned three-stars like Michael Thomas, Darron Lee and Cardale Jones into draft picks, and the early returns on the next batch of underrated Buckeyes look strong.

After all, one of the best centers in the country, Pat Elfein, was a three-star. Perhaps Ohio State’s biggest playmaker on defense this season, Malik Hooker, was a three-star. Noah Brown and Sam Hubbard were lower ranked four-stars, high upside recruits whose exact positional fit in college seemed up for debate. They’ve both already highly productive college players. And two of the lower ranked recruits that Urban Meyer has signed at Ohio State, defensive tackles Robert Landers and DaVon Hamilton, have shown they can play against elite competition.

Not every program can do that. The ability to project how a high school player will perform at a different position can be an inexact science. With a sea of elite prospects on the depth chart, keeping everybody motivated and engaged can be tricky too.

The fact that Ohio State has been able to do that is exceptionally impressive, especially as the Buckeyes have lost multiple assistants over the last few years. It’s also very rare.

It’s smart to focus a lot on recruiting. Ohio State is able to reload so quickly because they have a plethora of NFL-caliber prospects at most position groups. But they’re not the only program that can say that. Today it’s USC, but tomorrow, there may be another sterling example of a program that has figured out the talent acquisition part of the puzzle, but hasn’t figured out the rest that goes into building an excellent program.

Ohio State fans should enjoy what they have going while they can. It’s hard to put everything together all at once.

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Google Ohio State football | Jack Looks Back: Former assistants coaching against Buckeyes is...

Ohio State football | Jack Looks Back: Former assistants coaching against Buckeyes is nothing new - Columbus Dispatch
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Ohio State football | Jack Looks Back: Former assistants coaching against Buckeyes is nothing new
Columbus Dispatch
Jack Park, a leading Ohio State football historian, checks in each week during the college football season with a retrospective about the Buckeyes. Ohio State will open Big Ten play on Oct.1 against Rutgers in Ohio Stadium. The Scarlet Knights are ...

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LGHL Celebrate the catch of the season with a hugs from Ohio t-shirt

Celebrate the catch of the season with a hugs from Ohio t-shirt
Land-Grant Holy Land Staff
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


OhioHugs_BreakingT_shirt_1024x1024.0.jpg

*Hugs*

Our friends at BreakingT are at it again.

After Ohio State’s non-conference statement win of the season — on the road, in a hostile environment against a team that basically had to win to keep their College Football Playoff hopes alive — they’ve designed a great shirt commemorating what will undoubtedly be the most replayed moment of the 2016 season.

Whether you want to reflect on the catch you’ll never forget or think back to some pregame chatter that ultimately proved anything but “basic”, this shirt has everything you could want as a devoted member of Buckeye Nation:

OhioHugs_BreakingT_shirt_1024x1024.jpg


Who doesn't love a nice, tender, touchdown hug from Ohio?

BreakingT’s “Ohio Hugs” shirt is available now in all sizes.

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LGHL Ohio State basketball in talks with class of 2020 PG

Ohio State basketball in talks with class of 2020 PG
Austin Kemp
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


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It’s never too soon to start recruiting

On the hardwood, it's been reported that Ohio State has began to contact in-state prospect Dom Penn. Penn, a point guard, attends Dublin Coffman High School. Penn is a younger prospect (a class of 2020 athlete) and hasn't garnered too much attention on the recruiting trail.


'19 Gahanna SF Jordan Mitchell received some mail from Texas today. '20 Dublin Coffman PG Dom Penn received mail from Ohio State on Monday

— Zach Fleer (@ZachFleer270) September 21, 2016

Coach Thad Matta has made it apparent in the past several months that he would like to get back to taking a slew of Ohio recruits in each class. By the time 2020 rolls around, there's a chance that Penn could be one of the top prospects in the state. Ohio State will continue to monitor this one throughout Penn's high school career.

No game, but flags to plant


The bye week has hit the Ohio State football team and though that means no football on Saturday, it doesn't mean the staff won't be as busy as ever. During the bye week most, if not all, Ohio State coaches will be all around the country checking in on top prospects. Though not all the coaches are "out of office" just yet, some have already hit the trail. For example, Kerry Coombs has spent the last couple of days in Jacksonville, presumably checking in on current 2017 commit Shaun Wade.


In case anyone is wondering what happens on a bye week, just landed in Jacksonville to do a little flag planting! #onlywaytokeepthisrolling

— Kerry Coombs (@OsuCoachCoombs) September 19, 2016

Wade, who visited Notre Dame this past weekend, is still solid to Ohio State and has not given any indication lately as to why he wouldn't be apart of this class come February. Still, this recruitment won't be for the faint of heart down the stretch with Alabama looking like the biggest competition.

As the week goes on, there will be more news on which coaches are in which state. It's safe to assume that wide receivers coach Zach Smith will also venture down to Florida, where he's killed it on the recruiting trail over the last several years. You can count on Larry Johnson staying in the northeast with the huge amount of ties he has during his years at Ohio State and Penn State. With high school games Thursday-Saturday, there are sure to be coaches wherever Ohio State's top prospects play.

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Google Eddie George has big expectations for 2016 Buckeyes - ABC6OnYourSide.com

Eddie George has big expectations for 2016 Buckeyes - ABC6OnYourSide.com
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Eddie George has big expectations for 2016 Buckeyes
ABC6OnYourSide.com
Heisman winner Eddie George played for Ohio State as a redshirt freshman. He experienced the pressure and unwavering love from fans as a football player and understands what makes a good team. While the 2016 Buckeyes don't have the same ...


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Google Championship or bust for Buckeyes - CBS sports.com (blog)

Championship or bust for Buckeyes - CBS sports.com (blog)
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Championship or bust for Buckeyes
CBS sports.com (blog)
Championship or bust for Buckeyes. Dave Biddle joins Chris Wittyngham to talk about the perception of the Buckeyes needing to win the National Championship or this season is a failure. Watch your Team Videos ▽. Please log in or register to view your ...


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Google Ohio State football | Healthy Noah Brown a highlight for Buckeyes - Columbus Dispatch

Ohio State football | Healthy Noah Brown a highlight for Buckeyes - Columbus Dispatch
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Ohio State football | Healthy Noah Brown a highlight for Buckeyes
Columbus Dispatch
After the Buckeyes' 45-24 win at Oklahoma, it's clear that Barrett has someone to throw to who is capable of turning almost any pass into six points. Barrett knew it, saying before the season that the 6-foot-2, 218-pound sophomore “has suction cups for ...

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tBBC Get to Know The Buckeye Battle Cry: Brandon Z

Get to Know The Buckeye Battle Cry: Brandon Z
Mike Meals
via our good friends at Buckeye Battle Cry
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


The Buckeye Battle Cry has recently reached a milestone for the site. Over the weekend of the Oklahoma game, the Facebook page reached 10,000 likes. With reaching that milestone, we wanted to spend a little time interviewing the writers and editors of the Best Damn Website out there.

For the second episode of ‘Get to Know The Buckeye Battle Cry’, I sat down with Brandon Zimmerman, editor and writer here at The BBC. Brandon writes the ‘What Would Woody Watch’ and ‘Around the B1G’ here for us at The Buckeye Battle Cry. He also is regular Buckeye contributor on Mark Rogers TV (Twitter and YouTube).

Brandon and I grew up together in the same little town of Wapakoneta, Ohio, which scared me because there are so many stories we could tell on each other that someone would possibly end up in jail. Don’t let him fool you, his favorite Buckeye is clearly Blake Pfenning.

As for Brandon’s BBC Profile: Brandon Zimmerman grew up in the great state of Ohio as a Buckeyes, Reds, and Bengals fan. After graduating from high school in 2000, Brandon joined the Air Force and has worked in the government since then. Brandon has a B.S. in Sports Management and currently lives in Falcon, Colorado. He is married with two children. You can find him on twitter: @bzimmerman9.

Make sure you check out Brandon on twitter. He was the first person to report the “Basic Defense” report from before the OU game. He was randomly watching the Sooner Sports Daily and caught the video, which he posted. And as everyone knows, that went viral and was a major story-line before the game. And he even went so far as to apologize to Austin Kendall and the Oklahoma media. Our very own BZ started a movement the media in Norman will now have to suffer through.










The post Get to Know The Buckeye Battle Cry: Brandon Z appeared first on The Buckeye Battle Cry: Ohio State News and Commentary.

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LGHL Ohio State finally loaded up at its so-called ‘Percy Harvin’ position

Ohio State finally loaded up at its so-called ‘Percy Harvin’ position
Ian Cuevas
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


usa-today-9547206.0.jpg

Starting with Curtis Samuel, the long talked about Percy Harvin role is being filled.

“Urban Meyer isn't recruiting wide receivers. He's recruiting athletes. He's recruiting players that stress a defense in as many ways as possible.”

- Barton Simmons, 247Sports


Since the hiring of Urban Meyer at Ohio State, a constant topic of the offense has been the lack of a true ‘Percy Harvin’ type of player on the team. But with the recruiting efforts starting to pay off and the constant preaching to recruits by Meyer that they could have a Harvin-kind of role on the team, it seems the offense is filled with them. It starts with Curtis Samuel, the one player that has emulated Harvin this season the most. Both second on the team in rushing and first in receiving, Samuel’s versatility has been the key factor in running Meyer’s offense this season.

Of course, it doesn’t end with Samuel. Players like Dontre Wilson, Noah Brown, James Clark, and Terry McLaurin were all recruited to fill this sort of role within the offense. All of the players listed could play both running back and wide receiver in high school and even in Wilson’s case, he was a true running back at the high school level. Now he’s converted to more of an H-back role and it’s paying dividends for both Wilson and the Buckeyes. The recruiting of athletes that built in a similar fashion to Harvin is working and now Ohio State has a receiving core that is one of the scariest in terms of potential for the present and the future.

“Honestly, I feel like we can play a lot better. When we correct all the things we messed up, I feel like we’ll be 20 times better.”

- Malik Hooker via Brian Bennett, ESPN


The road trip to Norman, Oklahoma would definitely be categorized as a success, even in the eyes of the players and coaching staff at Ohio State. A decisive 45-24 victory over the Sooners helped Ohio State in its maturation process as the Buckeyes grew up quickly on the road. The offense was impressive again, showing off its young playmakers such as Mike Weber and already solidified stars in J.T. Barrett and Curtis Samuel. But perhaps one of the more impressive feats on Saturday came from the defense filled with underclassmen. Marshon Lattimore had an interception while Jerome Baker added a pick six to his stat sheet as well.

Though the Buckeyes might have looked like they were rolling on all cylinders, many of the players and coaches are letting it be known that they still have a lot of things to work on and clean up. And that in itself might be a scary thought when you consider Ohio State looked that good in September alone. By the time November rolls around, this team could look even better. They’ll need to be too, with a tough conference schedule ahead of them including games against Wisconsin, Michigan State, and of course, Michigan.

“I think any receiver that gets four touchdowns, especially against a crew like Oklahoma, would be a surprise. But when you watch the film and you watch the strengths, he has such good ball skills.”

- Urban Meyer via Ari Wasserman, Cleveland.com


Noah Brown undoubtedly had his breakout performance that Ohio State fans have been waiting for since he broke his leg last year causing him to miss the entirety of the 2015 season. The performance included four touchdowns, tying a school record for receiving touchdowns in a game, and one of the better catches you’ll see in college football. It was exactly what fans must have dreamed about, after Brown’s teammates and coaches deemed him “unguardable” in last season’s fall camp. He certainly looked the part against Oklahoma and now has brought about the question of the rotation at wide receiver.

Ohio State has a great problem to have - most of its wide receivers are all capable of being starters. The actual problem is that there’s only a couple of spots on the field at one time, and so far the rotational approach has been working out. But with Brown’s latest game against the Sooners, it might be time to pen in Brown as never leaving the field. His ability to go and get a ball is impressive, and he’s a big target to have for Barrett should a play break down. Meyer says for now that they’ll stick to a rotation of all the receivers, but don’t be surprised to see Brown getting even more time spent on the field than off of it.

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LGHL Urban Meyer's flipped the script on Ohio State fans’ nightmares

Urban Meyer's flipped the script on Ohio State fans’ nightmares
E.L. Speyer
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


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2006’s ending you wish you could forget has turned into something unforgettable.

You once hated Urban Meyer. It’s OK to admit it.

It was just 10 years ago that the state of Ohio declared Meyer public enemy number one, after the Ashtabula native and his Florida Gators thumped Jim Tressel and the Buckeyes in the 2007 BCS National Championship Game, 41-14.

I remember reading speculation before the game that Meyer could succeed Tressel in Columbus after The Senator eventually hung his sweater vest up for good. To hell with that, I thought, filled with the arrogance and naivety of a teenager expecting his team to win a national title. Why would we want this upstart coach with a gimmicky offense to replace the school’s greatest winner since Woody Hayes?

Little did I know Urban Meyer is a General, determined to rip out your soul, winning a game in the process.

It seemed inconceivable that the Buckeyes would lose that championship game in Phoenix, let alone get embarrassed. Ohio State opened the year as the top-ranked team in the country, and for an entire season that’s where they remained, beating the second-ranked team in the nation twice along the way.

None of that mattered to Urban Meyer. On that fateful night in January, the Buckeyes looked slow, overwhelmed and under-prepared. The quick-twitch Gators played with the swagger, confidence, and precise execution that’s been associated with any Meyer team ever since.

The Debacle in the Desert also ushered in the second leg of Tressel’s tenure in Columbus, in which the Buckeyes too often looked overmatched against college football’s elite. And Tressel never regained the unbeatable aura that previously followed him into big games.

Buckeye Nation has likely put those bitter memories in the rear view, so why bring them up now? Because Oklahoma very much resembled those Buckeye teams that were embarrassed by the Florida’s, LSU’s and USC’s of the world. And Meyer has taken those teams that once made you miserable and donned them in Scarlet and Grey.

Remember when the Buckeyes were conquered so simply by USC in 2008, that by halftime you wondered how the program had fallen so far behind? That has to be how Sooner fans felt as Ohio State outmatched Oklahoma in every facet of the game on Saturday.

Or how about the chorus of S-E-C! S-E-C! chants that rained down upon the field as Florida and LSU mauled OSU in consecutive title games?

That was replaced by the strength of Buckeye Nation, which took over Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, bellowing a rolling O-H-I-O chant throughout the second half; the college football equivalent of taking your flag to an enemy’s country and firmly placing it in their soil.

There was a moment when I knew that the Buckeyes would prevail victorious Saturday night. It wasn’t when Jerome Baker intercepted a Baker Mayfield pass for a touchdown, pushing the score to 14-0. It wasn’t when Noah Brown extended Ohio State’s lead to 18 right before the half, hauling in what should be the catch of the year:


The game hadn’t kicked off yet. The broadcast had just started. As Oklahoma took the field for the opening kickoff, Meyer brought his coverage unit aside for a prolonged huddle. The words he spoke were not audible to those watching at home, but the intensity in his eyes rang true.

The general had his troops prepared. The first line was being sent into battle.


Ohio State entered the season as the youngest team in college football, with only six returning starters and six scholarship seniors on the roster. Even as a preseason top-ten team, the Buckeyes flew under the radar. If Ohio State was to contend for a conference or national title, it would come after some early-season growing pains.

That perception will likely never surround the program again under Meyer. Not after his young Bucks undressed a quality opponent on the road. In prime time. On national television.

Despite all the hype the SEC received for winning seven straight titles from 2006-2012, the conference’s reign can, in a sense, be attributed to two men. Meyer won two championships with Florida in 2006 and 2008. Nick Saban won three with Alabama, in 2009, 2011 and 2012.

The other two titles were claimed by LSU and Auburn. LSU, of course, beat the Buckeyes in 2007, with a team of seniors recruited by Saban, who coached the program through 2004. Auburn was carried to its title by Cam Newton, who started his college career with Meyer’s Gators, but had to transfer after violating school rules.

Saban has now won four titles with Alabama, and it’s assumed that his Crimson Tide will contend for a national championship every year, regardless of attrition from the prior season. Meyer has accomplished less so far in Columbus, but the same should be assumed of his Buckeyes.

Did you think that you were going to miss Michael Thomas and Taylor Decker? Darron Lee and Vonn Bell? It’s easy to forget those first and second round picks when Meyer replaces them with equal, if not higher-rated recruits.

Have you enjoyed watching Curtis Samuel being thrust into a featured role? How about Malik Hooker and Marshon Lattimore seemingly intercepting every pass thrown their way? Enjoy that now, this could very well be the last season any of them play for the Buckeyes.

And that’s OK. Their departure would only pave the way for another crop of hungry, young talent, and a 2017 recruiting class pacing to be one of the greatest of all time.

In a sport that relies on the arms of 21-year-old quarterbacks and the hands of 19-year-old receivers, there are few certainties in college football. Kirk Ferentz receiving a contract extension and then losing to North Dakota State is probably one of them. As is Jim Harbaugh being a cyborg that functions on the fuel of its own ... Well, you know:


Ohio State being a perennial contender for bigger and better things is a certainty too. As long as it has General Meyer leading the way.

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Google Ohio State football | Buckeyes have 'so much more room for improvement,' Meyer says -...

Ohio State football | Buckeyes have 'so much more room for improvement,' Meyer says - Columbus Dispatch
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Ohio State football | Buckeyes have 'so much more room for improvement,' Meyer says
Columbus Dispatch
Ohio State's 45-24 win at Oklahoma was a major moment in the development of a young football team, but coach Urban Meyer said that when he and the Buckeyes got around finally to watching video of the game Tuesday, there also was some wincing.
After 'coming of age game,' Buckeyes get ready for Big TenThe Seattle Times
Buckeyes recruit, develop, produce, repeat247Sports.com
Buckeyes honored following Saturday's win10TV
Comcast SportsNet Chicago
all 147 news articles »


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Google Watch: Weber helps Buckeyes put away Oklahoma - 247Sports

Watch: Weber helps Buckeyes put away Oklahoma - 247Sports
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Watch: Weber helps Buckeyes put away Oklahoma
247Sports
Ohio State rushed for nearly 300 yards in its road win at Oklahoma. Leading the way was emerging redshirt freshman Michael Weber, who had 123 yards on 18 ...

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LGHL The Ohio State offense exploited Oklahoma’s weaknesses on defense

The Ohio State offense exploited Oklahoma’s weaknesses on defense
Christopher Jason
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


usa-today-9547417.0.jpg

The Buckeyes dominated the perimeter.

If we go back to last week, we saw the Ohio State offense take a major step-back from their Week 1 performance. Against Bowling Green, we saw the offense spread the ball around to a multitude of playmakers on the perimeter and in the backfield. Then the following week against Tulsa, the offense went back to the vanilla disaster that we had to endure throughout the 2015 season.

Buckeye fans tried to give them the benefit of the doubt because of the weather, but their performance really worried fans that they would bring that boring playbook to Norman, Oklahoma.

45 points and 433 total yards later, the Buckeye offense was back.

Here’s the film review:

J.T. Barrett

Designed runs
Dropbacks
Completions
Incompletions
Total TD
Scrambles
Overthrows
Throwaways
12​
24​
14​
6​
4​
3​
2​
0
Pressured
Sacked
Hit
Pass break-up
Batted at LOS
Drops
Turnovers
Defensive PI
6​
1​
2​
1​
0​
0​
0​
0​
  • 12 designed runs is usually way too much for this offense, and anything over 11 typically results in a loss. But against Oklahoma, these designed runs were perfectly executed and attacked the Sooners’ defensive weakness — which we’ll touch on later.
  • Barrett looked like a man possessed and left it all out on the field. Here's an example of just that, when he decided to run over Oklahoma's strong safety to move-the-chains:
  • Out of Barrett’s 24 dropbacks, he was only pressured on six. The offensive line — especially up the middle, where Oklahoma is tough — did an excellent job of keeping Barrett upright. He was only sacked once and hit twice while he threw.
  • There were two instances where Barrett looked like the 2014 J.T. Barrett — in regards to his calmness and presence in the pocket.
  • The passing yardage does not fly off the page (14-of-20, 152 yards), but his passing was extremely efficient. Barrett didn’t force the ball into tight windows or into double coverage in the middle of the field. Instead, he took what the defense gave him, by checking down in the flats, or exploiting Oklahoma’s poor cornerbacks outside of the numbers.

***​

When looking at the main weaknesses of the Oklahoma defense that the Houston offense exploited, it was obvious that the Ohio State coaching staff saw similar holes:

The Oklahoma secondary had difficulty covering Houston’s big wide-outs:

When watching the Oklahoma-Houston game, it was obvious that Tom Herman wanted to take advantage of Houston’s big receivers against the smaller Oklahoma cornerbacks. On numerous occasions, Houston quarterback Greg Ward Jr. threw up back-shoulder fades and vertical routes, and let his bigger wideouts go up and get the football.

From the preview: "From an Ohio State standpoint, it looks like Barrett should target Noah Brown and Marcus Baugh vertically. Both are big, athletic targets who can go up and make plays. Oklahoma’s secondary really lacks a true ball-hawk, as they only defended one of Greg Ward Jr.’s 40 pass attempts."

Fast forward to Saturday, and the Buckeyes did just that. Barrett connected with Brown five times and the big wideout came down with four of them in the end zone. One of the four touchdowns was on a comeback route, but the other three came on jump balls, where Brown just had his way with the Sooner cornerbacks.

This was the first Barrett-Brown endzone connection, where the staff was comfortable enough taking advantage of single coverage on the outside, rather than running it inside the 5-yard line on 3rd-and-1. Barrett threw it at Brown's back-shoulder, and only to a place where Brown could catch it.

Major, major mismatch here:


After executing the back-shoulder fade a couple of times, Brown ran a killer comeback route in the endzone -- leaving the cornerback with his back turned and 5-yards off the receiver.

What a route:



The Oklahoma secondary misses a ton of tackles and cannot get off blocks:

When watching Houston play Oklahoma, it was obvious that Oklahoma's strength was their interior defensive line and inside linebackers.

It was clear from the first series of the game, that the Buckeyes wanted to attack the perimeter with Samuel, Barrett and Weber. They peppered the Sooners' soft edge with outside zone plays, speed options, sweeps and in the flats in the passing game. Ed Warinner and Tim Beck really exploited the under-coached and not-so-talented Sooner secondary. They basically took their playbook from the 2014 Sugar Bowl vs Alabama, and replicated it.

On the majority of Samuel, Barrett or Weber’s carries on the perimeter, the secondary just could not get off their blocks and were running in space for a good chunk of yardage. For a team that is very strong and big up the middle, they are extremely weak on the outside.

In the prior two seasons on 3rd or 4th-and-short, the Buckeyes would typically dial-up a designed QB run up the A or B gap, or run inside zone. They had a good success rate, but as you can see here, they were so comfortable with their gameplan that they were confident running outside the tackles on 4th-and-1. As one can see, the cornerbacks have zero ability to get off blocks and Terry McLaurin had his man blocked 15-yards downfield.



The Buckeyes continued to take advantage of their strengths, versus Oklahoma's weakness on the edge. Barrett did a great job here of holding the ball at the mesh-point, freezing the defense just enough, before giving the ball to Samuel on a sweep. Once Samuel got to the second level, it was game over for the would-be-tackler.



This was a complete effort from the coaching staff to dissect the weakness of the defense, put the players in the correct position to make plays and then the players to execute the gameplan.

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Google After 'coming of age game,' Buckeyes get ready for Big Ten - The Seattle Times

After 'coming of age game,' Buckeyes get ready for Big Ten - The Seattle Times
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


After 'coming of age game,' Buckeyes get ready for Big Ten
The Seattle Times
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The Ohio State Buckeyes couldn't have positioned themselves much better to begin the grueling nine-game Big Ten schedule: Three no-doubt wins, including a rout of Oklahoma in a marquee Saturday night game. Stars emerging ...
Ohio State football | Buckeyes have 'so much more room for improvement,' Meyer saysColumbus Dispatch
Philosophy of running the ball working well for BuckeyesOSU - The Lantern
Buckeyes recruit, develop, produce, repeat247Sports.com
247Sports
all 28 news articles »


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Google Buckeye Alum Michael Hulme Returns To Columbus As New Assistant Coach - SwimSwam

Buckeye Alum Michael Hulme Returns To Columbus As New Assistant Coach - SwimSwam
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Buckeye Alum Michael Hulme Returns To Columbus As New Assistant Coach
SwimSwam
Ohio State is one of the top programs in the Big Ten, particularly on the men's side, where the Buckeyes are the last team to win a Big Ten title since Michigan's six-year run, and are one of a couple programs (Indiana being another) within striking ...

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BTN Audio: Listen to your Big Ten coach’s Week 4 teleconference

Audio: Listen to your Big Ten coach’s Week 4 teleconference
BTN.com staff via Big Ten Network

Each Tuesday morning during the Big Ten football season, the 14 Big Ten football coaches hold a Big Ten teleconference with reporters from around the country. We post the audio for each segment of the call here. Filed under: Audio Tagged: Teleconferences
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LGHL Is Ohio State’s season now ‘playoff or bust?’

Is Ohio State’s season now ‘playoff or bust?’
Colton Denning
via our friends at Land-Grant Holy Land
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


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The Buckeyes destroyed a good team in a tough environment.

Heading into Saturday’s game against the Oklahoma Sooners, most of the questions about Ohio State centered on their “basic defense” and whether a team this young could actually go into Norman and emerge victorious. Safe to say that both were answered.

On this week’s Hangout in the Holyland, Matt and I went through everything that impressed us about the Buckeyes’ dominant performance, including:

  • Dominating the line of scrimmage on both sides
  • How the run game is so dynamic and diverse
  • J.T. Barrett’s renewed confidence in the passing game
  • Wondering whether this season’s offense is already better than last year’s
  • The secondary destroying everything

After breaking down the game, we then discussed whether the win makes this season “playoff or bust,” for the Buckeyes, and the possibility of the Big Ten East with two (or more) worthy playoff teams at the end of the year.

Stick around long enough, and you’ll also hear me compare Jalyn Holmes to a chaperone at high school prom, our thoughts on the broader college football landscape through three weeks, and more.

You can find the podcast on our new iTunes page, and we strongly encourage reviews, comments, criticisms, etc. to help us deliver the best possible audio product. The more we hear from you, the better we can make it. We’re also on Soundcloud, the SB Nation podcast page, and you can subscribe via RSS on your Android and Windows Phone devices here.

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tBBC The View From Beyond The Shoe: Big 12 – DOA

The View From Beyond The Shoe: Big 12 – DOA
Mike Meals
via our good friends at Buckeye Battle Cry
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Time: 11:37 PM, Local Time. Date: September 17th, 2016. Location: 76 Canyon Road, Berkeley, California 94704. Crime: The murder of the 2016 Big 12 College Football Playoff hopes and dreams.

When Houston took on Oklahoma in early September, everyone in college football knew that this was going to be a game…one that shows where Oklahoma was in terms of their planned returned to the CFP this season, one that shows if Houston was a one-hit wonder last year, and one that showed the nation that college football was officially back for 2016.
As everyone knows, OU lost that game, handedly, to a Group of 5 team. Granted, UH is probably the best (and the highest ranked) Go5 team this year, but it was a loss to a Group of 5 team none the less. The Sooners had a chance to return to glory, as even Ohio State fans know, an early season loss is recoverable.
Later that weekend, the Sooners were turned into something they hate…Texas fans. They needed Texas to beat Notre Dame in order to make their season that much better, to strengthen their schedule, and allow the Sooners a chance to redeem themselves with a potential running of the table back into the CFP.
Of course, this weekend happened, and none of that mattered anymore. The Buckeyes flat out destroyed the Sooners, in every facet of the game. While Oklahoma is still probably one of the best 25 teams in the country, to call them a top 10 team would be insulting to anyone who watches football on any level.
But the Big 12 still had hope. Charlie Strong took his Longhorns to Berkeley to take on the Golden Bears of Cal. Suddenly, everyone at the B1g 12 headquarters in Dallas became Longhorns. The entire season was riding on Texas running the table and earning a spot in the Dance at the end.
You see, this wasn’t much of a stretch though. Anyone with any kind of observation knows the Big 12 is really Texas/Oklahoma and friends. Football makes the college world go ‘round, and the Big 12 has never tried or done a good job at hiding that all the money in the conference lives in Austin or Norman. These 2 schools control everything…football TV money distribution, expansion, even the opportunity for the conference to fold and split teams up into the other 4 of the Power 5 conferences.
Anyone who has watched the conference this year knows they died Saturday night in Berkeley. It is a well-known fact that the defensive play of all 10 teams is a joke at best. Even TCU slid backwards into a Big 12 defense. That was one of their strengths before they made the Power 5 leap.
As it is now, the only hope for the conference is…no one. The respect the power 2 used to have won’t carry a conference champion into the playoffs. That means there will be no CFP money to split up among the teams.
The only thing the Big 12 has going for it anymore this year? Conference expansion. I have never hidden my support for the UH to the Big 12 push. I personally think the conference goes to 14 teams. UH, UC, BYU, Air Force. Those are my 4. I think it brings a lot to the table…recruits, respect, and TV money.
Why am I looking forward to expansion? I live in Big 12 country, even though I follow the B1G. And around here, there isn’t much left to hold onto for the locals. But it made me think…what if this really is the true cause of death for the Big 12? Do these dashed dreams start the ball that causes the conference to over-inflate and eventually die? There are more than a few folks who have thought college football is going to 4 “Mega Conferences”. Could this year be the first leak in the dyke that takes us there?
It really could be.

The post The View From Beyond The Shoe: Big 12 – DOA appeared first on The Buckeye Battle Cry: Ohio State News and Commentary.

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Google Ohio State appears to 'stand out' for 5-star safety - Land-Grant Holy Land

Ohio State appears to 'stand out' for 5-star safety - Land-Grant Holy Land
via Google News using key phrase "Buckeyes".


Ohio State appears to 'stand out' for 5-star safety
Land-Grant Holy Land
Ohio State is entering a bye week following a terrific win this past weekend. While the players will have some time off, the Buckeye coaching staff is using this time to recruit. It is this dedication that has kept this program among the elites year ...

and more »


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tBBC Buckeyes in the NFL – Week 2

Buckeyes in the NFL – Week 2
Ben van Ooyen
via our good friends at Buckeye Battle Cry
Visit their fantastic blog and read the full article (and so much more) here


Week two of the NFL is now over, and some former Buckeyes had some impressive games, and some had days they probably want to forget. Let’s jump in and see what all the Buckeye alumni did this past weekend.

Ezekiel Elliott had a touchdown in his debut, but was pretty much bottled up all game. This week he got free a little more and ran the ball 21 times for 83 yards and his second career touchdown. However, it was more about his fumbles this week that has everyone talking. Zeke fumbled twice in the Cowboys 27-23 victory over the Washington Redskins. Only one was lost though, but it did briefly give the Redskins a 23-20 lead when they converted a field goal on their drive after the recovery.


Ezekiel Elliott & David Johnson are tied for the NFC lead in rushing yards with 134.

Christine Michael is 3rd in the NFC with 126.

— Jayson Braddock (@JaysonBraddock) September 19, 2016


Terrelle Pryor also made some headlines this weekend when he made a catch late in the game to set up a potential game winning drive, but he flipped the ball to what looked like the ref, but it landed on the Ravens defensive back Lardarious Webb instead, causing a flag to be thrown. The flag was a 15 yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty and since there was a defensive holding that would have been declined, the penalties offset causing the down to be replayed. Then the Browns Josh McCown threw a pick on the next play sealing the Browns fate.


"Taunting" #CLEvsBAL pic.twitter.com/v0I3ON0ll6

— Down With Damon (@DownWithDamon) September 18, 2016


Johnathan Hankins had himself a game as well along with teammate Eli Apple, as those two combined for 11 total tackles. Hankins also had a tackle for a loss and a blocked field goal that led to Janoris Jenkins returning it for a touchdown in the 2nd quarter against the Saints.


New York Giants' Janoris Jenkins returns blocked New Orleans Saints field goal for a touchdown #NYGvsNO #NFLonFox pic.twitter.com/n8ge55DABx

— NFL (@NFLonLive) September 18, 2016


Complete List of OSU Players in the NFL for Week 2:


Cardale Jones – DNP

Adolphus Washington – 3 total tackles

Corey Brown – 3 catches for 15 yards

Kurt Coleman – 3 total tackles

Ted Ginn Jr. – 2 catches for 51 yards, 1 rush for 5 yards

Andrew Norwell – Started on O-line

Mike Adams – DNP

Mike Nugent – 3 for 3 on field goals, 1/1 XP’s

Terrelle Pryor – 3 catches for 22 yards

Ezekiel Elliott – 21 carries for 83 yards and a touchdown, 2 catches for 4 yards

Rod Smith – DNP

Jeff Heuerman – DNP

Bradley Roby – Played, no game stats

Taylor Decker – Started on O-line

Corey Linsley – DNP

Braxton Miller – One catch for 3 yards, one rush for -2 yards

John Simon – 6 tackles, 1.5 sacks

Jack Mewhort – Started on O-line

Michael Bennett – DNP

Jake McQuaide – Starting long snapper

Alex Boone – Started on O-line

Nate Ebner – Played, no game stats

Vonn Bell – 9 total tackles, 1 TFL

James Laurinaitis – 3 tackles, 1 fumble recovery

Michael Thomas – 4 catches for 56 yards

Eli Apple – 7 total tackles

Johnathan Hankins – 4 total tackles, 1 TFL, Blocked FG

Darron Lee – 5 total tackles, 1 TFL

Nick Mangold – Started on O-line

Jalin Marshall – 3 catches for 45 yards, 1 fumble lost

Devin Smith – DNP

Malcolm Jenkins – 5 total tackles, 1 sack, 1 TFL, 1 pass deflection, 1 QB Hit

Cameron Heyward – Two total tackles

Ryan Shazier – 11 total tackles, 1 TFL

Joey Bosa – DNP

Joshua Perry – 1 total tackle

Carlos Hyde – 14 rushes for 34 yards, 3 catches for 18 yards

Tyvis Powell – 1 total tackle

Nick Vannett – DNP

The post Buckeyes in the NFL – Week 2 appeared first on The Buckeye Battle Cry: Ohio State News and Commentary.

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