Ryan Day cannot function as both the Buckeyes’ GM and primary play-caller.
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The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Ohio State’s 23-3 win over Indiana
Ryan Day cannot function as both the Buckeyes’ GM and primary play-caller.
The Ugly
Play-Calling
Holy hell, was the play-calling in this game bad. I don't even quite know where to start. We touched on the plays in the run game a few times earlier on here, but Ryan Day was seemingly addicted to calling runs into the boundary no matter how many times it failed. The play-calling on the ground was especially predictable, continuing to run headfirst into the blitz on third-and-short as a big reason Ohio State did so poorly converting. Especially behind a line that clearly needs more work in the run blocking area, Day was setting his team up to fail time and time again.
In addition, Day trying to outsmart himself by going away from his best players far too often. Marvin Harrison Jr. and Emeka Egbuka finished this game combining for five catches for 34 yards. There is no reason to not put the ball in the hands of your best players more. Every time the Buckeyes needed to pick up yards in key areas, Day elected to draw up a play directed towards a tight end or running back. It is good that you trust all of your guys to come up in big spots, but you have two of the best wide receivers in the country — use them!
So many of Ohio State’s issues on offense can be directly attributed to play-calling. I don’t think McCord played exceptionally good or bad, but we really didn't get to see all that he can do out there because Day seemed too scared to call a forward pass more than five yards upfield and instead remained conservative from start to finish. With all of the talent the Buckeyes have at the skill positions, it is indefensible to not let these guys loose. Instead, the offense looked tight and played scared against an inferior opponent for no good reason. To finish a game without a passing touchdown in this offense is inexcusable.
It is looking more and more apparent that Ohio State will not be able to maximize its talent until Day gives up the play-calling. He is a tremendous quarterback coach, recruiter and program-builder, but it is putting too much on your plate to also have the call sheet in your hands on game days. He is trying to do too much and always wants to look like the smartest guy in the room, and it is going to once again cost his team at the end of the year — if not sooner.