OSUK
Sometimes lucid, mostly confused
OSU's defense is very good but not great. Hooker and Baker are incredible talents but can get a bit undisciplined. OSU has 3 premiere DBs in CB Conley, CB Lattimore and S Hooker but are weak at the nickel spot (although sometimes weak = not a top-20 pick). Teams have picked on the other safety Webb and nickelback Arnette this year, to the point where OSU began 3 cover corners and sliding Conley into the slot in nickel formations.
OSU has recruited at a Bama level everywhere but WR and DT, specifically nose tackle. Not surprisingly, those are their two weaknesses in this game. OSU has a lot of 3-techs and promising tweeners, but at the 1-tech spot they have Michael Hill and no one else (redshirt frosh Hamilton has been okay but isn't a 3-down player). OSU came in second for Lawrence and Wilkins and would kill for either one (and now gets to face both).
In their place, they have junior Michael Hill and literally nothing but freshmen DTs. Dre'Mont Jones is a 3-tech hybrid who has played pretty well but is still a bit undersized (thickness wise). Robert Landers is a very undersized whirling dervish at DT and is the type of guy who usually lands at Purdue or Wisconsin and wreaks havoc on the blue bloods that thought he was too small. Nick Bosa has been ahead of big brother Joey Bosa at every point in his football career and that holds true this year as well. He's also a bit of a hybrid for now.
OSU is pretty good at forcing 3rd and medium to long situations, which brings out their best unit, their rushmen package with 4 killer pass rushers. They use Jalyn Holmes and Joey Bosa inside with Hubbard and Lewis outside. They don't always get home but they consistently force early passes and iffy decision making, leading to the many interceptions and TDs. Unlike early downs where they're a little undersized, they are as good as anyone in america when it comes to their DL on passing downs. They also force this pressure without much blitzing, making an unexpected blitzing LB even more devastating (like Michigan found out).
Truth. That's good stuff right there.
I think the youth and lack of discipline is why the Oklahoma backup QB was actually right - especially at the time he provided the bulletin board material: they played basic because they could and it was the best way to win. Before the season I heard about how Schiano was going to dial up some elaborate schemes. I did see some stuff like M or OLB, safety, an occasional corner blitz, and a couple of zone blitzes (which always causes that beautiful DE, Steve Miller to come to mind), but on the whole, they rushed 3 or 4 and played coverage.
We all love it when we have a really aggressive D that's sacking the QB, causing TO's, and producing a lot of negative plays, but there is risk involved with that. You have to have the rest of the defense compensate for the blitzer's normal responsibilities. Getting everyone reading the same thing and reacting to compensate is something that normally more experienced players do. I can see why the OSU defensive coaches chose to mostly play it safe given the youth of that defense. Still, that's just an impression I have. It may be wrong. Maybe they did more elaborate stuff than I was taking note of. I'd like to see what their percentage of blitz (run and pass) vs. basic actually was over the course of the season.
Regardless, I know this for sure, if Watson is able to stand back there for 4-5 seconds and go through all his reads, we in trouble. Now that this crew has 12 games under their belt together, it's time for Schiano to earn his money.
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