ScriptOhio
Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.
Like Ohio State did when he was there, Okudah noticed the Buckeyes are still carrying on a certain tradition:
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I look for the Bucks opponents to set a record for most yards given up for holding penalties.Technically we did get Nick and Chase for 2.5 games and it was amazing. Bosa had what 5.5 sacks in that time?
I'm serious when I ask this but how are big ten teams going to block these two in years 2 and 3? Particularly with the DTs we have and the corners we will have (especially next year). The reason I thought JTT was a must get was because of what Alabama was doing on the OL at OT. To me they're the only ones equipped to handle our DL.
I look for the Bucks opponents to set a record for most yards given up for holding penalties.
Has a very similar profile and measurables to Rashan Gary coming out of HS (Gary was rated a perfect 1.000 vs. 0.990 for J.T.). It will be interesting to see who has the more productive college career. That said, since tOSU doesn't scheme to "make their best player invisible", I'm putting my money on J.T.
https://www.si.com/college/michigan...wolverines-career-in-retrospective-recruitingMany of the top rated recruits in a class are household names today: Trevor Lawrence, Leonard Fournette, Adrian Peterson, Vince Young, Jadeveon Clowney and Ernie Sims to name a few. Gary doesn't belong in that company, but the question that persists more than a year after he left Michigan following his junior season is: did Gary meet expectations?
Whether Michigan should have turned Gary loose, like it did with Chase Winovich on the other side of the line (18 sacks and a sack rate of 9.8%), or like Ohio State did with the Bosa brothers (Nick 18 sacks and a rate of 23.4%; Joey 26 sacks and 17.6%) and Chase Young (30 sacks, 30.6%), is a question that will long be debated and hinges largely on whether Gary had the requisite skill set to be that type of player.
A second debate argues the coaches should have moved Gary inside to the 3-tech defensive tackle, allowing him to be more of a pass rusher like a Mike Martin, Willie Henry or Maurice Hurst, the latter having a sack rate of 10.4% and a tackle-for-loss rate of 24.6% from 2014-17 (Gary had a TFL clip of 17.5%).
With 643 total points, Ohio State defensive end Chase Young finished fourth in the voting. Young, who is just the ninth defensive player to be named a Heisman finalist, has had one of the most dominant seasons in college football history.
Has a very similar profile and measurables to Rashan Gary coming out of HS (Gary was rated a perfect 1.000 vs. 0.990 for J.T.). It will be interesting to see who has the more productive college career. That said, since tOSU doesn't scheme to "make their best player invisible", I'm putting my money on J.T.