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2006 Ohio State Outlook: Defense

Link

Getting Defensive

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OSU defensive coordinator Jim Heacock will be the man in charge of a defense with nine first-year starters.

By Erik G. Pupillo
The Gridiron Gazette

Questions have abounded about Ohio State’s football team’s defensive unit ever since defensive backs Ashton Youboty and Donte Whitner declared themselves eligible for this past April’s NFL Draft shortly after the Buckeyes’ Fiesta Bowl victory over Notre Dame.
Even before Youboty’s and Whitener’s draft declaration, almost every OSU football fan wrung their hands as they imagined how OSU’s defense would respond to the loss of arguably its top trio of linebackers in school history and top defensive lineman, Mike Kudla, who had become a force off the edge at defensive end.
After their decision to leave school a year early, hand wringing became near panic.
“OSU only returns two starters on defense!” “How will they be able to compete?”
The Buckeyes have topped every major preseason voter’s poll and open up this weekend against North Illinois at home as the No. 1 team in the country. Most pundits have explained the Buckeyes’ No. 1 selection by claiming that OSU’s potentially potent offense will compensate for what they think still certainly is going to be an inexperienced and potentially porous defense.
The Hog completely disagrees.
The Hog thinks OSU’s defense is going to be just fine for several reasons.
* OSU returns just two starters, but they are defensive tackles Quinn Pitcock and David Patterson. Just like in baseball, it pays dividends to be strong up the middle defensively in football. This duo will create problems for opposing offenses in two ways: 1) They will make their fair share of plays, especially Patterson who will benefit from Pitcock being double teamed. 2) They will attract the center and both guards, which will translate in an open path to the ball carrier for linebackers James Laurinaitis, Marcus Freeman and John Kerr. Neither Pitcock nor Patterson are over 300 pounds, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing in an era where DTs can exceed 320. Pitcock’s and Pattersons’ style of play revolves around a quick first step, leverage and surprising quick pursuit. These guys can motor.
* The Hog heard Jason Lloyd of The Lorain Morning Journal on WKNR, 850-AM in northeast Ohio questioning whether OSU had any impact players at defensive end this season. He questioned if there was a Will Smith or even a Mike Kudla at defensive end this season.
*The Hog was a bit worried about the defensive end positions heading into spring practice, and then The Hog had a chance to watch the annual OSU Spring Game. Let’s just say that not only are Vernon Gholston (6-foot-4, 260 pounds), Lawrence Wilson (6-5, 270) and Jay Richardson (6-6, 280) first-off-the-bus-type of players just based on their impressive and intimidating physiques, but The Hog predicts that this trio, plus freshman Robert Rose will be first-in-the-backfield-type of players this fall. Gholston ran circles around offensive tackle Alex Boone in the spring game, while Richardson and Wilson did most of their damage against walk-on tackles, but they did plenty of damage.
Gholston is a star in the Will Smith mold. He’s fast and incredibly strong, and he’s a high-energy player. Richardson has always shown flashes of greatness, but he’s had troubles maintaining his intensity from play to play and series to series. Supposedly, the word out of Columbus is that he is putting everything together for one final last push toward greatness for his senior season.
The Hog predicts that the front four’s pass rush will be so relentless this season that defensive coordinator Jim Heacock doesn’t nearly call as many blitzes this season compared to last season.
The linebackers behind this potential great defensive front has the potential to be a very good unit.
Freeman will start at strong-side, James Laurinaitis will start in the middle and Kerr is slated to replace OSU legend A.J. Hawk at weak-side linebacker. One of the most interesting battles at linebacker involves JUCO transfer Larry Grant, who is pushing Laurinaitis for playing time.
Something tells The Hog don’t be surprised if Grant cracks the starting lineup this season.
But be extremely surprised if it happens at Laurinaitis’ expense. Even though no one has mentioned it at all, The Hog foresees Grant pushing Kerr for playing time and eventually becoming the weak-side starting linebacker. It’s just a hunch.
This group of linebackers has the potential to be outstanding, but not legendary.
The defensive secondary is almost completely raw, but sophomore Malcolm Jenkins started in a handful of games last season, and safety Brandon Mitchell has played quite a bit over the last few season. Jenkins is a budding superstar and plays with a chip on his shoulder and a pinch of attitude. He will shut an opposing receiver down and let them know about it in the process.
Nick Patterson has stepped up during the off season to beat out the much more heralded Jamario O’Neal and Anderson Russell.
The defensive secondary is rounded out by fifth-year senior and former walk-on Antonio Smith. This kid’s a great story, His made his name covering kicks for the Buckeyes, and he did it well enough to eventually earn a scholarship and starting nod at cornerback. Smith is a sure tackler as displayed his ability with his play on the punt and kick coverage teams the past few seasons.
The other thing that makes Smith so easy to root for is that he is truly a student-athlete. He’s as much a scholar as he is an athlete.
When you think of everything that Smith brings to the table, it’s very easy to root for him, but do not be surprised to see Donald Washington, an incredible athlete who won the long jump championship at the IHSAA State Finals Meet his junior and senior seasons, push past Smith and into the starting lineup.
Heacock has been on record stating that he likes the amazing speed and the youthful exuberance of the defensive unit as a whole this season.
Will we see a return of The Silver Bullets; flying across the field and wreaking havoc?
The Hog says, “Heck yes!”
This is a defense that will keep OSU close enough in all of its games this season for the offense to squeak out some victories..
 
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Denver Post

college football
Buckeyes breaking in linebackers
By John Henderson
Denver Post Staff Writer


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Senior linebacker John Kerr (52) left Indiana for Ohio State, where a Big Ten rule keeps him from a scholarship. (AP / Terry Gilliam)
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Columbus, Ohio - Ohio State's new linebackers aren't as good as last year's trio, all of whom are now making big coin in the NFL. However, here's a little warning for Texas: This trio could probably take last year's in a street fight.
Top-ranked Ohio State's new linebackers include the son of an internationally renowned pro wrestler, a black belt in taekwondo and a senior still fighting mad he wasn't a Buckeye four years ago.
Sophomores James Laurin- aitis and Marcus Freeman and senior John Kerr all show their fighting spirit in their own way. But if they want their names engraved in Ohio State linebacker lore, they have to come of age Saturday in the first No. 1 vs. No. 2 regular-season matchup in 10 years.
Just as Texas' 25-22 win at Ohio State in Week 2 helped propel the Longhorns to the 2005 national championship, the rematch Saturday in Austin could have the same implications. Ohio State (1-0) earned its No. 1 preseason ranking with one of the most exciting offenses in the country, but the Buckeyes also go into Austin with only two returning starters on defense.
And none at linebacker. Feel that Texas heat yet, guys?
"I don't know if we feel pressure from the media," Freeman said during the Buckeyes' media day last month. "We just feel pressure to perform at Ohio State."
Yes, there is a bit of a legacy here. The Buckeyes merely added to it last season with A.J. Hawk earning the Lombardi Award and going No. 5 overall to Green Bay, Bobby Carpenter going No. 18 to Dallas and Anthony Schlegel, a transfer from Air Force, going to the New York Jets in the third round.
The trio helped Ohio State win the Big Ten and vanquish Notre Dame's vaunted attack in a 34-20 Fiesta Bowl rout. This current crew has cut its teeth together only against Northern Illinois. Then again, they're Ohio State linebackers. How bad can they be? Well, they gave up 171 yards rushing to Northern Illinois' Garrett Wolfe. What could Texas' experienced offensive line do to them?
"I think we can be really good," Laurinaitis said. "We have a lot of good athletes. We're not going to be the same kind of core we had last year, where Bob could put his hand down and rush off the D-end, but I think we have three guys who can really get off the ball and run. And if you let us run around and make plays, we can do that."
To say they're green rookies is wrong. Laurinaitis played nearly the entire Michigan game and started against Notre Dame after Carpenter broke his ankle, and Kerr led Indiana in tackles as a freshman in 2002 before transferring. Only Freeman, who missed last season because of an infected knee, is truly inexperienced.
Laurinaitis learned plenty from his father, who coached him until his freshman year at Wayzata High School in Hamel, Minn. But his dad wasn't just any Pop Warner coach. He was the Road Warrior Animal in pro wrestling. Joe Laurinaitis was going to BYU to play defensive tackle until he got James' mom pregnant and went into wrestling to support his young family.
Turns out, he knew a little about playing linebacker, too.
"For the most part, he taught me everything I needed


to know about hard work," James Laurinaitis said. "I listened to him over anybody because, obviously, it worked for him." And what's it like having a pop culture icon as a father?
"It was awesome," Laurinaitis said. "Sometimes you get some mysterious friends who pop up because of it: 'Oh, your dad's The Animal, right? Let's hang out.' But it's fun because you get to meet a lot of cool people like Hulk Hogan, The Rock. You name them, I've met them."
Yes, they got in the ring a couple of times "but nothing serious." Then again, Laurinaitis would probably take his dad over Freeman, who earned a black belt at an early age and occasionally shows the difference to Laurinaitis after workouts.
"I sometimes go down to his level and do some fake wrestling," Freeman said.
His mother is South Korean, and she got him started early in taekwondo, a Korean martial art.
"You learn so much discipline and flexibility and respect out of that," Freeman said. "I don't know if you'd learn that in American culture."
Kerr has learned plenty, not all of it good. He was a lifetime Buckeyes fan growing up in suburban Cleveland, but the only Big Ten school to offer a scholarship was Indiana. He became a star as a true freshman. Psyched to the chinstrap for the Ohio State game, he had 17 unofficial tackles through three quarters and got yanked.
"I was flying high, a lot of emotions coming out because I was so angry (at Ohio State)," Kerr said. "They pulled me. I really had a tough time with that one."
However, he caught the eye of Ohio State. But because the Big Ten does not allow players to transfer within the conference, he cannot be on scholarship. He worked as a steakhouse valet to make ends meet, never telling any customers who he was, and still isn't even allowed at the training table. He never got off the scout team in 2004, and it wouldn't be until this season when he got out from Hawk's shadow that Kerr became a regular again.
Like the other linebackers, Kerr still feels he has something to prove.
"Absolutely," he said. "The past is the past. It doesn't mean anything. It's not helping me this year. People who really care about sports remember, but who cares? People forget. Quick. And they should."
For Ohio State, Saturday is the time the world starts remembering three new linebackers.
 
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Kerr is a good kid and a good story, but he got blocked way too easily and couldn't get off the blocks. Laurinaitis played well for the most part. Freeman needs to read the plays better or he will have a tough time getting near the ball. Curtis Terry is not ready yet. Larry Grant could not shed the blocks. Homan never gave up on the play until the whistle was blown and showed good instincts. I think you've gotta give the ball to Laurinaitis, Freeman and Homan on Saturday. Mitchell was always around the ball, which is a positive, but he missed way too many tackles. O'Neil is not ready at this point. Right now I think you split the snaps between Anderson and Patterson at the other safety spot. The dline played very well. Richardson was strong against the run. Patterson was always double teamed and still camped out in the backfield. Pitcock was his usual self, never giving up on the play and showed good quickness. Gholston played well, Barrow was strong against the run.

For us to have a good day on d against Texas, we'd have to hear Freeman's name called a lot, Homan's name called a lot, and Mitchell's name called a lot. These three guys are our most physically gifted and/or experienced right now. They need to lead the back seven for us to slow UT's running attack.
 
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I just can't wait to see how our guys respond...

Our OL is very, very physical and good. Our RB/WR are equally awesome. Just can't wait to see how Colt handles himself on a big stage against a team from a storied program like tOSU.

Sounds really cool to me that you guys will have so many fans in town not even going to the game. It will be a great time for you.

Hook'em
 
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Link

OSU shows it's 'D' best



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[SIZE=-1]Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel and his team sing their school song after their 24-7 victory over Texas yesterday. [/SIZE]
AUSTIN, Tex. - Ohio State left little doubt about which is the best team in the country, throttling Texas, 24-7, Saturday night at Memorial Stadium. It didn't take long for the pyromaniacs in Columbus to start partying. There were reports of 40 fires in the student neighborhoods, where couches and matresses were set ablaze. Police made 17 arrests, including five for arson. Fire batallion chief Kevin O'Connor and Ohio State assistant vice president for student affairs Barbara Rich and her husband all suffered minor injuries when they were hit by a car that drove into a temporary command post set up outside the student union.
After things die down, the top-ranked Buckeyes will try to remain on fire.
Everyone knew Ohio State - like USC last year - had two Heisman candidates in quarterback Troy Smith and wideout Ted Ginn Jr.
But nobody thought Ohio State's defense, which had to replace nine starters from last year's 10-2 Fiesta Bowl team, could reload this quickly. Coach Jim Tressel looks like he has discovered his latest playmaker at linebacker in sophomore James Laurinaitis, who had 13 tackles, forced two fumbles, made an interception and broke up another pass against Texas. And it appeared the Buckeyes' secondary, particularly cornerback Malcolm Jenkins and safety Anderson Russell, was able to frustrate Texas' young quarterback, Colt McCoy. McCoy completed 19 of 32 passes for 154 yards and one TD but attempted to throw downfield only once - an interception - against a blitzing OSU defense that applied constant pressure.
"They bought the house," the baby-faced McCoy said, adding, "We led the country in scoring last season. This was unacceptable."
McCoy will be a good one someday. But Ohio State gave him an education.
Texas had 327 total yards and 172 yards rushing but only one run or pass for more than 20 yards and no rushing touchdowns. The Longhorns were haunted by unfinished drives, including one in the first half that ended when Laurinaitis knocked the ball loose from Billy Pittman at the Texas 1 and Donald Washington scooped it up, returning it 48 yards to set up a Buckeye touchdown.
Despite the glowing reviews, some Ohio State fans still seem hesitant to order plane tickets to Phoenix for the national championship game. They want to see how the Buckeyes' defense will do against Big Ten rivals Michigan, Michigan State and Iowa, which have more experienced quarterback/running back combinations, and whether Ohio State can improve a suspect kicking game. They need to just enjoy this special moment, only without the pyrotechnics.
[SIZE=+1]Charlie's up, Joe Pa's down[/SIZE]

Notre Dame handed out towels to its fans on Saturday that sent the same message Charlie Weis put up on a banner at the school's football complex: "9-3 is not good enough." The Fighting Irish (2-0), who came in for more than their fair share of criticism after a tight 14-10 win at Georgia Tech in Week 1, erased a lot of doubts with their 41-17 shellacking of Penn State.
Meanwhile, Happy Valley message boards are filled with criticism aimed at Joe Paterno and the game plan that featured futile attempts at big plays after the Nittany Lions fell behind early, with some suggesting a Super Bowl offensive coordinator in his prime versus a 79-year-old coach was a mismatch.
The truth is, there wasn't much the Lions could do to slow down the Irish. Penn State was saddled with a thin defensive line that was unable to put pressure on quarterback Brady Quinn, while returning All-American linebacker Paul Posluszny does not look like he is close to 100% after tearing ligaments in his right knee during last year's Orange Bowl.

[SIZE=+1]A New World[/SIZE]

I never thought I'd be making this statement. Rutgers (2-0) deserves serious consideration for a spot in the Top 25. The Scarlet Knights beat up on Big Ten also-ran lllinois, 33-0, at Piscataway in a game that wasn't that close. "We stunk," Illini coach Ron Zook said. "They're a good team, but they're not 33 points better than us." Oh yeah?
Rutgers, which had a year to think about that huge second-half collapse in an OT loss at Illinois last year, had a 30-0 lead at the half. Greg Schiano's obviously improved defense limited the Illini to just 126 total yards of offense and did not allow them past their own 46-yard line. Illinois was 0-for-12 on third-down conversions. But it was the special teams that left the biggest impression. Joe Radigan had a 78-yard punt on the first series that pinned the Illini in the shadow of their end zone. Four plays later, Manny Collins burst through to block a Kyle Yelton punt that Derrick Roberson recovered in the end zone for a touchdown to start the carnage.
The Knights' next two games are at home against Ohio and Howard. Then Rutgers travels to South Florida to open the Big East season and plays Navy at Annapolis the following week. Did anyone catch that the Mids beat UMass by just a point, 21-20, at home Saturday?
Given the way this team is playing, a 6-0 start is not out of the realm of possibility.
[SIZE=+1]Weiss' Top 25[/SIZE]
1. Ohio State (2-0)
2. Notre Dame (2-0)
3. USC (1-0)
4. West Virginia (2-0)
5. Florida (2-0)
6. Auburn (2-0)
7. LSU (2-0)
8. Texas (1-1)
9. Georgia (2-0)
10. Louisville (2-0)

Second Ten: 11. Virginia Tech (2-0); 12. Michigan (2-0); 13. Nebraska (2-0); 14. Oregon (2-0); 15. Tennessee (2-0); 16. Iowa (2-0); 17. Boston College (2-0); 18. Florida St. (2-0); 19. Miami (1-1); 20. Georgia Tech (0-1). Five to Watch: 21. Pitt (1-0); 22. Clemson (1-1); 23. UCLA (2-0); 24. Rutgers (2-0); 25. Cal (1-1).
 
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Link


Column: OSU defense grew before our eyes
By Jon Spencer
News Journal

AUSTIN, Texas -- Godzillatron was big, but Ohio State looked bigger.
Rather than feed their giant new scoreboard with replay-worthy feats, the Texas Longhorns fell prey to a bunch of greenhorns-turned-green monster.
The sequel between the nation's top ranked teams did not live up to the hype, in large part because of an OSU defense that played beyond its years and up to the top-shelf standard set by a veteran offense.
Texas mustered just four possessions that lasted more than five plays and scored its fewest points in a home loss since a 66-3 debacle against UCLA in 1997.If anything, Ohio State's 24-7 victory was even more convincing. The colossal buildup resulted in a colossal mismatch. The mammoth video screen worked fine; it was the home team that short-circuited.
"They brought the house," said harassed freshman quarterback Colt McCoy after throwing one costly interception and getting sabotaged by a teammate's fumble at the 2, "and we didn't capitalize on our opportunities."
The Buckeyes did, though. They parlayed that goal-line fumble into their first touchdown and an interception by middle linebacker James Laurinaitis on the opening drive of the second half into a field goal. By then, the lead had grown to 17-7 and the handwriting was all but spelled out in script by the Ohio State marching band: There would be no comeback this time by Texas, and likely, no repeat national championship either.
Ohio State has to be a solid No. 1, even on coach Jim Tressel's ballot, and could have a clear path to the BCS title game if Drew Tate's abs of mush keep the Iowa quarterback sidelined when the Buckeyes visit at the end of the month.
"No way are we going to rest on this or be totally satisfied, no matter how sweet this victory was ... and it was sweet," said Anthony Gonzalez after his career night (8 catches, 142 yards and a TD) eased the burden on OSU's young defense.
"At the same time, we've got 10 games left to the end of the (regular) season and that's a long way off."
He's right you know. A lot can happen between now and then. Look how far the OSU defense has come in one week, from turning Northern Illinois tailback Garrett Wolfe into Barry Sanders to nearly keeping the Longhorns out of the end zone in their own house.
Texas' only touchdown was set up by a debatable roughing call on end Jay Richardson on third-and-six from the OSU 9 in the second quarter. McCoy shook off that hit to deliver a scoring pass, but from that point forward he would have a tougher time finding open receivers than he had spotting that Brokeback dude, Jake Gyllenhaal, in Lance Armstrong's skybox suite or John Cooper -- yes, John Cooper -- on the OSU sidelines.
"I think we have a lot of talent and now to go with that talent I think we have the confidence that, hey, we can play with the best," said Laurinaitis, who in addition to his pivotal pick forced the fumble that kept OSU from an early hole. "We should have had (confidence) earlier since we go against the best (offense) every day in practice."
Laurinaitis, whose name is most familiar to pro wrestling fans of his rasslin' father, is a fast-rising sophomore on a no-name defense whose other hero Saturday night -- redshirt freshman nickel back Donald Washington -- wasn't even listed on the printed rosters handed out at the game.
It was an obvious oversight, but almost an understandable mistake given all the strange faces on defense.
"We had a lot of young kids out there," co-defensive coordinator Jim Heacock said. "That's a big arena they were thrown into and I think the seniors (tackles Quinn Pitcock and David Patterson) did a good job of helping prepare them for the game.
"When you've got freshmen and redshirt freshmen out there in front of the crowd it's a little bit stressful, but I think they handled it well."
Given the extreme makeover of Heacock's bunch since last season, Texas players, fans and media knew better than to use the departure of Vince Young as an alibi for the rematch reversal of fortune. Let's just say some restoration work is going on within both programs and leave it at that.
Texas coach Mack Brown and his staff helped OSU's cause by not sticking to a ground assault even though tailbacks Selvin Young and Jamaal Charles rushed for 164 yards and averaged 6 yards a pop. But that should not detract from the spirited effort of a defense that has been resilient, relentless and resourceful so far while battling inevitable growing pains.
"I don't know nothing about yards; I know we kept (Texas) out of the end zone," Heacock said. "I'd rather not bend or break. I guess it's worse if you bend and break, so I guess we got part of it (right)."
For all the talk about the homegrown talent on each team, four of Ohio State's five leading tacklers Saturday were imports: Laurinaitis (13 tackles) is from Minnesota, Washington (5 tackles, 48-yard fumble return) is from Indiana, senior safety Brandon Mitchell (9 tackles) is from Georgia and sophomore cornerback Malcolm Jenkins (5 tackles, 1 pass breakup, 1 quarterback hurry) is from New Jersey.
They are adopted sons who have become favorite sons after one amazing night in Austin.
 
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amos

RB07OSU;566068; said:
CB will be very interesting this year. Smith is getting the nod as the starter right now but I tend to think that Coleman, Amos, or maybe Washington takes over the starting job. I think Coleman ends up being the NB and Amos takes over the starting job. He impressed me very much in HS and I think he is our best cover corner on the team. But then again Smith could really surprise us this year. Like I said, it will be very interesting.
amos had 8 pics in fall camp
 
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CPD

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[FONT=arial,sans-serif]Buckeyes' defenders improve tackling, Fickell says
Young defense showing improvement

By DOUG LESMERISES
Plain Dealer Reporter

COLUMBUS ? Ohio State linebackers coach Luke Fickell said Wednesday evening that even though Ohio State once again gave up a lot of rushing yards Saturday - with Texas gaining 172 yards on the ground after Northern Illinois had rushed for 151 - review of the game film showed progress.

?I think (the stats) look the same, but we felt like we played better,?? Fickell said. ?We got off of blocks better, we pursued better. We?re not there yet ? we missed 13 tackles.??

Fickell said 13 was fewer than the number of tackles missed against Northern Illinois, but he said that last year the Buckeyes would get through games hardly missing any tackles, and that anything more than 10 was viewed as a bad performance.

He also said the staff reviewed the 2004 game with Cincinnati while preparing for Saturday?s game with the Bearcats, and that offered a reminder that A.J. Hawk, Bobby Carpenter and friends weren?t always as good as they were as seniors in 2005.

?We forget that until we check back,?? Fickell said. ?Those guys had to come along as well.??

Another thing Fickell forgot on Saturday was getting starting weakside linebacker John Kerr in the game as often as planned. The Buckeyes played a nickel defense, with two linebackers, about 75 percent of the game, and James Laurinaitis and Marcus Freeman are typically the linebackers in that lineup.

But when the Buckeyes did use their base defense later, it was freshman Ross Homan?s turn to cycle in, and Kerr was left out. Kerr and Homan are basically sharing that job right now, but Fickell said it wasn?t Kerr?s performance that kept him on the sideline.

?It was really an oversight by me, and I apologized (to Kerr) for that,?? Fickell said. ?In a big game, you?re not always focused on someone in particular, you?re focused on the game and the call, and it can slip your mind.??
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TheMorningJournal

Tressel tuning up the defense
JASON LLOYD, Morning Journal Writer

09/16/2006


http://www.zwire.com/site/printerFriendly.cfm?brd=1699&dept_id=46370&newsid=17205896

COLUMBUS -- Before the season opener against Northern Illinois, coach Jim Tressel warned that the depth chart heading into Big Ten season might be more accurate than the one to begin the season.


With today's game against Cincinnati serving as the final warmup before Penn State comes to town next week, a few changes have been made, but not many.

Freshman Anderson Russell seems to have supplanted Nick Patterson as the starting safety. Freshman Ross Homan continues to push John Kerr at outside linebacker and redshirt freshman Donald Washington is staying close to fifth-year senior Antonio Smith at cornerback.

The link in all three position battles is that the players gaining ground are all freshmen just seeing the field for the first time. It's likely why they started the season as backups, but as No. 1 Ohio State begins its run for a Big Ten championship next week, the freshmen are slowly working their way onto the field in more meaningful roles.

''In the secondary, we've had a lot of rotation, so we're a long way from being as good as we want to be,'' Tressel said. ''We want a two-deep that's ready to be as good as the next guy.''

The heat forced Tressel to rotate a number of players last week in Texas. The score might allow him to do it again today. Tressel played a stunning 52 players in the first half last week against the Longhorns, including a brand new offensive line, complete with second string linemen, on the game's first touchdown drive.

''I think you'd rather keep the rotations going and then give thanks every time you don't have injuries,'' Tressel said, ''because the only way you can keep a rotation going is have enough guys healthy to do it.''

The fear heading into today was how the players would respond after such a highly-anticipated game last week. The word ''letdown'' was used as much as ''rotation.'' But the fact the coaches are still rotating players so frequently is just as good of a method as any to ensure any sort of letdown is minimal.

Aside from perhaps the left guard spot on offense, where Tim Schafter and Steve Rehring are still competing, the rest of the jobs seem secure. But defensively, on a unit that has already surrendered over 330 rushing yards, there is little reason to get complacent.

''We're all so young and unproven, we still have to prove ourselves,'' linebacker James Laurinaitis said. ''Yeah, we held (Texas) to 7 points, but they still gained a lot of yards rushing.''

The last time Ohio State won the national championship, it had to survive an enormous non-conference scare from the Bearcats in a game played in Cincinnati. That day, sophomore quarterback Gino Guidugli played one of the best games of his career, driving the Bearcats to the goal line for what would've been a game-winning touchdown.

But linebacker Matt Wilhelm tipped his fourth-down pass into the air and Will Allen made the interception, saving what would ultimately become a national championship.

Today the Bearcats are led by another sophomore in quarterback Dustin Grutza. But this time, the Buckeyes are playing at home and opened the week as 34-point favorites.

While some sort of letdown following last week's drama is inevitable, if today's game comes down to a Grutza pass into the end zone to win it, something went horribly wrong.

''The only way you can handle success is to sit down and watch the successful game on television and be honest with yourself and say, ?Where was I not as successful as I thought, and where do I need to improve?''' Tressel said. ''Our guys are pretty good from that standpoint. I have a lot of confidence in this group.''

[email protected]
 
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Any more doubts on OSU defense?
Sunday, September 17, 2006 SPORTS SPOTLIGHT TODD PORTER

COLUMBUS - At the start of the season, no one would have thought this. No one would have dared mention it.

Maybe the strength of Ohio State?s football team is its defense.

All right, call it crazy. Troy Smith is what Troy Smith is. A first-round draft pick. A much-improved passer. A guy who can pick apart a defense with his brain as well as run and throw over it.

Ted Ginn Jr. is special, too.

But look at this defense.

In the Texas heat last week, the Buckeyes defense created two turnovers. On Saturday against a feisty Cincinnati team hellbent on proving it could play with the No. 1 team in the nation, again it was the defense that led the Buckeyes to a win.

This defense that had to replace nine starters from last year held Cincinnati to minus-4 yards rushing and one touchdown, sacking the quarterback eight times.

The Buckeyes intercepted three passes. As good as Ohio State?s defense was last year, it forced only 12 turnovers all season. The Buckeyes have six after three games.

?I?ve got to say thanks to the defense for really helping us out,? center co-captain Doug Datish said. ?The offense couldn?t get it going. They did a tremendous job for us.?

If Cincinnati Head Coach Mark Dantonio knows one thing about football, it?s defense. He devised a scheme that made Ted Ginn Jr. a nonfactor Saturday. Dantonio was Ohio State?s defensive coordinator during the 2002 national title run.

Remember that defense?

Not bad, huh?

Dantonio said time will tell which one was better.

The one that held his team to 212 yards didn?t look to shabby.

?Ohio State has a good defense,? Dantonio said. ?(David) Patterson is one of the best defensive linemen I ever saw play as a freshman. I feel Pitcock will be a first-round draft pick. Ohio State has a great front four. It allows the linebackers to run free.?

Speaking of the linebackers: Is James Laurinaitis starting to look like a young A.J. Hawk, or what?

You?re right.

Laurinaitis is better than Hawk was at the same age. The true sophomore was the national Defensive Player of the Week after forcing a fumble and intercepting a pass against Texas.

On Saturday, he led Ohio State with nine tackles to go with an interception and a sack.

?I think it?s one of those things where the defense is playing with significant confidence right now,? Laurinaitis said. ?We made some mistakes. We have a lot of stuff we can get better at. But we made some plays, too. We got some turnovers.?

Anderson Russell and Malcolm Jenkins also had picks.

After Cincinnati?s first-quarter scoring drive, the Bearcats didn?t do much damage. There was the occasion leakage but not what you would expect from such a young unit.

?You?ve got to expect the unexpected,? Laurinaitis said. ?You?re not going to see on Saturdays what you see on film. They?re going to have something new for us every week.?

Ohio State?s linebacker tradition is well documented. Laurinaitis would seem to be the next in line to carry the torch.

?I came here because they had great linebackers before,? he said. ?I could learn behind those guys. I learned a lot last year. I have to keep working every week.?

Saturday?s game wasn?t what Ohio State fans wanted to see. Smith struggled at times. It might have been his worst game since last season against Penn State ? and he still threw for 202 yards and completed all but nine of his 30 passes.

Don?t get lost in the offense. Dantonio knows defense. He watched another good Ohio State defense Saturday.

?We did what we had to do, and it was led by an excellent defense,? Tressel said.

Reach Repository sports writer Todd Porter at (330) 580-8340 or e-mail: [email protected]

http://www.cantonrep.com/index.php?ID=308331&Category=17
 
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MililaniBuckeye;610746; said:
Current defensive stats per NCAA Div I stats page:

Rushing: #50 (106.3 ypg)
Passing: #55 (187.33 ypg)
Total: #43 (293.67 ypg)
Scoring: #10 (8.7 ppg)

The most important stat obviously is scoring defense. We keep holding teams to a single TD per game and you can book your flight to Glendale...

That's a great website! Greenies Mili! Also of note on the Defensive side of the ball for OSU (per the website linked above):

Passes Intercepted: #8 (5 INT's)
Turnovers Gained: #31 (6 total)
Sacks Gained: #3 (4.33/game)
Tackles For Loss: #5 (10.0/game)
3rd Down Conversion D: #3 (20.6%)
 
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