Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
CHU;1282171; said:It was nice to see Malcolm jump around with Donald Washington between the 3rd and the 4th.
Sometimes having fun while playing football makes a difference.
BUCKYLE;1282248; said:I don't drink before or during games. I just liked that he was doing it with more style than the Badgers.
Ohio State notebook: Jenkins' pick seals win
Senior cornerback makes sure Badgers can't mount rally
Sunday, October 5, 2008 4:11 AM
By Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
MADISON, Wis. -- The Ohio State defense needed to make a play, so senior cornerback and co-captain Malcolm Jenkins held up his hand to volunteer at the most important moment last night.
Actually, he used both hands to intercept Wisconsin quarterback Allan Evridge with 53 seconds left to seal the Buckeyes' 20-17 win. It was the least he and the defense could do, he reasoned, after watching quarterback Terrelle Pryor and the offense drive to the go-ahead touchdown with 1:08 left.
"We'd gotten all riled up on the sideline; we knew the game was going to come down to us," Jenkins said.
Continued...................
GoBucksForever;1282262; said:
Malcolm Jenkins: He's got it covered
Through work ethic and attention to detail, Buckeye has developed into an NFL-caliber cornerback
Saturday, October 11, 2008 3:14 AM
By Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Karl Kuntz Dispatch
Teammates thought so much of Malcolm Jenkins' decision to return for his senior season that they elected him a co-captain. He takes the role to heart when trying to fire up the team before games.
Malcolm Jenkins was on his way to a meeting in the Ohio State football facility the other day when he stopped to check an incoming text message.
"It's from Coach Lester," he said.
Well, of course. There probably hasn't been a week go by in the past seven years when Jenkins has failed to communicate at least once with Larry Lester.
But to call him merely a coach is to lessen the import he had in the athletic rise of Jenkins, Ohio State's outstanding senior cornerback. Back at Piscataway (N.J.) High School, the defensive backs coach at the time, was the first to preach to Jenkins that with continued hard work and dedication, football could take him places.
Continued..............