Tressel takes blame for OSU offense's sluggish performance
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
BY TODD PORTER
[email protected]
COLUMBUS Duke ? yes Duke ? has a better scoring offense than Ohio State. Duke ? yes Duke ? is ranked ahead of the Buckeyes in total offense. And ? ready for this? ? Temple has a better passing offense than the Buckeyes.
No wonder Jim Tressel offered to apologize for Ohio State's offense. But Tressel isn't pointing fingers at any one player. Instead, he said he will look at what the coaches are planning and see if that needs adjustment first.
"I think you always have to start by being troubled by the plan, because there's got to be some reasons why you're not executing," Tressel said. "If you said it's just because John Doe didn't execute, that's a copout. You would never start and say, 'Well, gosh, you know, if these guys were better, we'd be fine, because that's not true.' "
What has Tressel determined?
"I'm not going to confide in you," Tressel said. "We're working on it."
As far as the players, though, Tressel didn't find a single one on that side of the ball worthy of being named the team's offensive player of the week. More telling is for the second time this season no offensive lineman was honored with the Jim Parker lineman of the week.
"If an apology is what you'd like, we can all go to lunch. I apologize," Tressel said Tuesday. "We'll try to get better. But we're working and trying to win games."
All kidding aside, if offensive rankings and stats determined the outcome of a game, the Buckeyes would have lost to Purdue.
OSU, ranked 12th, has its toughest two-game stretch of the season at No. 20 Michigan State and then at home in a night game against No. 3 Penn State.
OSU's offense and freshman quarterback Terrelle Pryor are coming off their worst performance of the season against Purdue. The Boilermakers had the worst defensive unit in the Big Ten, according to rankings. Still, Pryor couldn't engineer a single touchdown drive at home during a lackluster 16-3 win.
Cont...