Sonny Styles says the Buckeyes have the “ultimate confidence” in their defensive tackles as Will Smith Jr. emerges as a depth option behind Kayden McDonald and Eddrick Houston.
www.elevenwarriors.com
Will Smith Jr. Making Waves This Summer As Ohio State Focuses on Maximizing Defensive Tackle Room
Thus, the directive for Day and defensive line coach Larry Johnson is clear: Develop who is already in Ohio State’s defensive tackle room, because despite depth concerns, there’s no turning back.
“We've got to develop these guys. We got to get them stronger, we got to get more out of them,” Day said. “We got to maximize these guys, and that's what we got to do, and that's what the focus is going to be.”
Kayden McDonald and Eddrick Houston were stenciled in as Ohio State’s next starters at DT when 2023 and 2024’s top tandem, Tyleik Williams and Ty Hamilton, left the Woody Hayes Athletic Center. But the first name out of Day’s mouth when discussing the position on Tuesday came as a surprise.
“Will Smith has stepped up in a big way,” Day said. “We feel like K-Mac has done a good job. Eddrick's got to have a huge August for us, and then the list goes on because we’ve got to build some depth behind those guys.”
Will Smith Jr., the son of the late great former Ohio State defensive end Will Smith, has flown under the radar of conversations about the Buckeyes’ defensive tackle room this offseason. He missed the team’s spring game. He played just 35 defensive snaps as a redshirt freshman in 2024, eighth-most at the position.
Redshirt senior Tywone Malone and fellow redshirt sophomore Jason Moore both had more stars next to their names as high school prospects. Yet Day’s comment wasn’t the last time a Buckeye praised Smith ahead of both of them at media days.
“I think Will Smith is probably one of the guys that took the biggest jumps this year,” linebacker Sonny Styles said. “He's looking like an absolute baller. So I'm really excited for him.”
If Smith is taking a leap as gargantuan as Styles suggested, the question will then be whether he, listed at 6-foot-4 and 288 pounds, can handle nose guard duties to spell McDonald. That’s the primary issue facing Ohio State’s defensive tackle room right now, given that Moore and Malone are clearly in the mold of three-techniques within the scheme. Especially Moore, who struggled as the Buckeyes’ backup nose guard while Smith missed the spring game.
Should Smith truly emerge from the rest of the pack, he’d likely see work at both defensive tackle spots. In any case, he’ll be acting in support of a starting duo that Styles expects special things from.
“Kayden McDonald’s a monster,” Styles said. “I think he’s one of the best nose tackles in the country. Eddrick Houston’s a guy that came in at D-end, now he’s playing three-tech. And the way he's able to put on weight and hold it in a good way, and still be freakishly athletic, he's a great athlete. And he’s going to be a great player.”
.
.
.
continued