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.
BuckeyeNation27;625561; said:IF CHARLIE WEIS SAID THAT YOU'D ALL BE CALLING HIM FAT!!!!!!!
BuckeyeNation27;625561; said:IF CHARLIE WEIS SAID THAT YOU'D ALL BE CALLING HIM FAT!!!!!!!
gregorylee;625570; said:Whyyes, yes we would...
Steve19;625592; said:REPORTER: Are you better, too, over the years?
COACH TRESSEL: Am I? No, unfortunately. Old people don't get better with age.
I call BS!![]()
As for Weis, is anyone not calling him fat?
with answers like this, a senator's seat is one day waiting for tressel if he wants it.REPORTER: There are some stories floating around out there that Gonzalez is the best receiver on the team.
COACH TRESSEL: There are some stories floating around, written by any of these people?
REPORTER: Most of them are nationally. I was just wondering how you feel about that.
COACH TRESSEL: Gonzalez is the best receiver playing the position we have him playing. Teddy is the best guy we have playing that position and that's the way it is.
BuckeyeNation27;625561; said:IF CHARLIE WEIS SAID THAT YOU'D ALL BE CALLING HIM FAT!!!!!!!
" is an action not a statment so your actual statement should be something along the lines of: IF CHARLIE WEIS WERE TO BOW BEFORE TRESSLE YOU'D ALL BE CALLING HIM FAT!!!!!!!

Transcript From The October 10th Football Press Luncheon
Previewing Ohio State at Michigan State
Oct. 10, 2006
COACH TRESSEL: I have a picture here that I asked the folks in the back from the -- I don't know if you can see that, Rusty, can you see that?
REPORTER: Oh, yeah.
COACH TRESSEL: Earl Lefty Bruce going around the corner, the turkey day game, and I asked him if he scored or not and you know he emphatically said that he did. So in case anyone wants a copy of that for tomorrow's edition. It was a little bit different experience we had this past week going with a nonconference game in the midst of the conference schedule and as opposed to an open week and so forth.
I mentioned a couple times that I thought our guys did a good job Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, using that time, did a lot of work against one another, did a little extra scrimmage on Tuesday with some of the young guys and really worked hard to try to get a little bit better, and I thought we used the day Saturday solid. I don't know that it was wonderful. As we mentioned, after the game, but I think there are some things we can learn from it. There are some experiences that some guys got that I think will help them in the future and I think we learned a little bit more about ourselves and where we need to get better and how we need to attack things as we jump back in to the Big Ten schedule.
As far as winning performances, I think there were four or five on the defensive side and I think eight or nine over on the offensive side, so probably not as high as we would like to get from a consistency standpoint. There were some outstanding performances. And Andre Amos was selected the special units player. He did a great job on the kickoff cover unit, made a tackle inside the 20. Did a great job on the punt cover unit. Made a tackle inside the 10, and Andre Amos just keeps getting better and better all the time, playing a lot more corner and he's going to be a fine player for us.
Over on the defensive side, Vernon Gholston was the player of the week on defense, and Vernon continues to improve at a very difficult position. It's a position where you go one moment from rushing the passer to the next moment handling the run and the next moment dropping in to pass and he's doing a good job of handling all those goals and made some things happen in the ball game on Saturday. And Troy Smith was the offensive player of the week. He was 17 for 20. A couple of those were dropped. I thought his footwork, his focus on doing just the little things right was really outstanding in the ball game. He graded a winning performance, which is very difficult at that position and did a good job stepping up and running with it when he needed to do that as well, and Troy Smith was the offensive player of the week.
The Jim Parker offensive lineman of the week was Rory Nicol. Rory had his best grade blocking at the point that he's had all year. He continues to improve. Also caught a touchdown and played a very solid game, probably the most consistent game that he's played since the season began, and he was the Jim Parker offensive lineman award winner.
The attack force award winner was Quinn Pitcock. Quinn continues to play well in the middle. We've been talking for a good bit of the season that we think we have an inside tandem that's as good as any in the country, and Quinn certainly has been carrying his end of the bargain, as is David Patterson. Probably won't have David Patterson this week, and so Quinn and Joel Penton and Todd Denlinger and Doug Worthington moving in there a little bit, we're going to have to make up for the absence of David this weekend, but Quinn had an outstanding game and was the attack force player of the week.
We didn't have a Jack Tatum hit. We did have some great scout team play to get us ready. Jonathan Thoma was the special units player and he continues to improve as an outstanding punter, and I think with he and A. J. Trapasso, we have good depth, good solid punting for years to come here, and Jonathan was the scout special units player of the week.
The scout defensive player was Matt Daniels. Matt moved over from fullback to free safety this year for really one reason: Matt wants to be a coach like his dad and he wanted to go over on defense to learn a little more about that side of the ball, and I thought it was a good move for him and he just does a great job playing free safety, which is kind of like the quarterback of the defense, and he did a great job getting people lined up this past week.
And Danny Dye, one of our walk-on offensive linemen from up in Napoleon, Ohio, was the scout offensive player of the week, and did a good job, and anytime you have to spend a couple hours banging against our defensive front every day and no one knows your name, you deserve any kudos you can get, and Danny Dye won that scout team player.
Turning our attention back to the Big Ten is an exciting thing, because while we were playing on Saturday, virtually the rest of the Big Ten was playing and moving toward the final outcome of the league standings, and I know our guys are interested in getting back in the fray. And I think they've known all along that when you look at our Big Ten schedule, the traveling over to East Lansing to play Michigan State was going to be a tremendous challenge.
Just look at the history of Ohio State. We've had some tremendous battles every time we play Michigan State, whether it's here or at Spartan Stadium, and our guys are very aware of that. Our guys are very aware of most of the players that we have playing because as you look at their lineups both offensively and defensively, they're guys we've faced for the last couple years, and they're guys that are very, very talented.
They're guys that, I think Coach Smith mentioned this week in his comments that when you turn the field on and you see things being executed properly, you see as good a team as there is, and I would agree with that. And they've had their share of things like turnovers that have hurt them and penalties and so forth, but you look at the things that they've done extremely well and they're as talented as any group, and our guys are aware of that, need to be aware of that, and know the battle that is there as we get to East Lansing.
When you talk about what's the one thing that is kind of the trademark of their football team, and in my mind, it's number 5, Drew Stanton is special. He's one of those guys that's tough, he never stops playing, he's a kid that Troy Smith happened to room with at Elite 11 high school camp back when they were in there, way into their senior year of high school, and they've kept a strong relationship. And I think they've done that because they're similar kind of people. They're great leaders. They're tough. They're working hard to become good at their trade, and I think he typifies what Michigan State is all about, and they're a very talented, skillful team. They're a team behind the count in the Big Ten play, and any team you face that's behind the count in league play is going to play lights out. So we're looking forward to a tremendous challenge as we go up there.
We need a great week of practice. We need to do a great job of studying who they are and what they do and make sure that we're at the top of our game as we head back on the road, because you have to play flawless football on the road to win this league. Questions?
REPORTER: Jim, could you maybe elaborate on David Patterson? You said after the game, maybe day-to-day this week --
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, and as of this day, our trainers and doctors have said, not this week.
REPORTER: Any update on Kirk Barton at this point?
COACH TRESSEL: He won't practice today, but we're expecting him to be full speed tomorrow.
REPORTER: After the game, I think you said if Patterson missed, it would probably only be one, is that --
COACH TRESSEL: That's still what we have as a goal.
REPORTER: As you've studied the films of Michigan State, whenever they were ahead of Notre Dame, 31 to whatever, and then since then, Notre Dame came back on them and they've lost the last two weeks, what has happened? What have you seen that has caused their three-game losing streak when they pretty much had things going pretty well up to that point?
COACH TRESSEL: The thing that happened in that particular game, I think, was twofold: They turned it over a couple times, once on their 30-some yard line, and once for a touchdown. Two, Notre Dame kept their poise and hung in there and didn't panic and chipped away at the lead.
What's happened since then, Illinois hit a couple big plays, fumbled snap by the quarterback, he picked it up, threw a 69-yard touchdown pass to Lenny Willis' son, as a matter of fact, you remember Lenny, and they did a nice job, hit a couple of real nice special plays, they hit a reverse that was good, they hit a halfback pass for a touchdown and all of a sudden Michigan State loses a tough ball game in the league.
Illinois really executed from that standpoint, and when you get in this league, it's tough, and they traveled over to Ann Arbor, and Michigan hit a couple homeruns early, and you get behind a good team like them, Michigan didn't make any mistakes, you get behind a team and they don't make mistakes, it's going to be hard to catch up and I think that's what they ran into in Ann Arbor.
REPORTER: Coach, I saw Michigan State is fairly injured themselves, I saw some running backs that will be out, what have you seen of their second-tier guys? I think the quarterback might be an Ohio kid too, the one past Stanton. Talk about what you've seen from them and their back-ups. Are those kids capable of being first teamers?
COACH TRESSEL: When Stanton got banged at the Illinois game, I don't know if it was first down or third down, I don't know if it was a touchdown or first down or what, but he can throw it in there. We had him at youth camp. He's a good football player.
As far as the back-ups, they've had some receiver injuries. Their corps of receivers is so deep, so fast, it's just a matter of who they put out there. They lost Javon Ringer during the Illinois game, I thought that was significant. I don't think he's scheduled to play this week from what I gather, but you never know. Sometimes when an Ohio kid gets a chance to play against Ohio State, there's a lot of healing that goes on. But that's significant -- he's a great kid and a great back -- anytime you lose a guy.
Caulcrick, I don't know how many yards he's got, but it's a lot, and he's a 240-pound back or whatever he is, I don't know, but Michigan State has got, I think, depth. They've got speed. Every guy they put in on the defensive front, they're just like everyone else, they roll in eight guys, and the guys they roll in, it's not like they say, number so and so is in there, so we'll do this, that's just not the way it is. They're very sound and they have solid back-ups.
REPORTER: How do you know what you're going to get from a team like that? They've played so well so early and struggled so much so late, you know what I mean?
COACH TRESSEL: The only thing you know for sure is you are going to get a team that's going to come out and they're going to be playing their rear ends off. They're going to be playing hard and fast and tough, so that you know for sure. Now, what are you going to get from an execution standpoint? That's what you don't know. But I don't know what we're going to get. That's why you play the game. And the team that executes the best is going to win because both teams are going to be playing at it hard.
REPORTER: Jim, some of the guys and yourself have mentioned story lines, like I don't know if it's something you introduce to players at a certain point in the week, talking about the history of the series, how do you set up talking to the team about the opponent? Do you start right after the game or --
COACH TRESSEL: No, we usually, on Sunday, the only thing we talk about is correcting our game, and then on Monday they're off. And then on Tuesday, we meet as a team and we talk about the game, the opponent as a whole, and then we break it off into offense, defense, special teams, but that's typically a Tuesday discussion.
REPORTER: Is that kind of a -- what is that? Is that like a theme for the week, kind of how you introduce the opponent, here's who they are, here's what they've done against us?
COACH TRESSEL: You'll have to try out for the team to find out what that is.
REPORTER: Will you mention that a couple prominent teams in the past have been number one where Michigan State were underdogs and Michigan State won the game?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, I think you talk about a lot of things when you talk about understanding the difficulty of the challenge and you go all the way back in time to the greatness both teams have had and how that relates to where we are today, but it's nothing that you fabricate. I think what's important is you point out the facts, and the facts are, when Ohio State and Michigan State get together, whether talking about the year we were number one and got knocked off, or last year when we're down 17-7 getting ready to be 24-7, I think perspective is very important in this game, in life, of course, but in this game it's very important.
REPORTER: Coach, your counterpart in Michigan State, he's probably one of the more vulnerable coaches in the nation, as far as being on the hot seat; can you sympathize with that or do you feel it's deserved?
COACH TRESSEL: I was just asked that question on the Big Ten media call, and the thing that no one will ever convince me is that John L. Smith is not a winner. The guy won 131 games or something, I read something Steve gave me just before we came in. There's not that many people that have coached this game that have won that many games and the number of different venues that he's been in, and when you say, do you feel for him, I feel for anyone that coaches in this league. This is a tough league. And to compete week to week with high expectations, 11 teams have high expectations, maybe some teams have even higher, and not all 11 are going to meet those expectations. So, no, you certainly have great respect for anyone that does that particular job, and especially who's done it with the success ratio that he has.
REPORTER: You guys seem to be dramatically different, he's hard on the sleeve, emotional guy, outspoken guy, where you're a little more conservative. Is there anything you share in terms of coaching similarities when you actually get out there and kick it off?
COACH TRESSEL: Coaching similarities? Both want to win bad. The thing that I guess you could say we share is we both kind of started at a smaller level and had to prove we could, where some people start at a higher level and maybe sometimes have to prove they can't. So I guess we would share that.
REPORTER: Jim, do you think there's too much made over the lost lead against Notre Dame? It seems like it's all been pinned on John L. Smith, do you think sometimes that's --
COACH TRESSEL: He didn't throw any of those balls, but John L. knows, and I know too, that ultimately everything that's done on the field, off the field and so forth, our job is to try to make it right. And when it doesn't go right, he has broad shoulders and I have broad shoulders and you work to make it better the next time. And what I do know about John L. is he'll go to work. And probably those types of discussions you're hearing here, he's not even involved in. He's involved in working to get better, and that's the way it should be.
REPORTER: Have you ever been involved in a scenario where you have such an emotional game and a collapse and how hard it is to pick yourself up?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, gosh, I don't know. I've coached so many games. I've lost plenty of them. They were all emotional. But there have been times when we've been ahead and didn't get it done and those hurt especially when you think you could have gotten it done, and those are the hardest ones to lose.
REPORTER: Jim, do you have any recollection of that '74 game up there, Ohio State goes up there as number one in the country and Levi Jackson scored and --
COACH TRESSEL: That was my senior year at Baldwin-Wallace and I was focused.
REPORTER: In other words, you weren't aware of that.
COACH TRESSEL: I wasn't aware.
REPORTER: '98, what's your recollection?
COACH TRESSEL: My only recollection of '98 is we played earlier in the day and we went down to this little Italian place to have spaghetti at the MVR and turned the game on and got to see the last 10 minutes or so and about had a heart attack. That was a tough one.
REPORTER: Jim, have you had moments in your career where you felt like you were on the hot speed?
COACH TRESSEL: Since January of '01. Every day. Right, Coach?
REPORTER: But you know what I mean, obviously some coaches reach a situation where maybe the pressure from the outside, that talk, that builds, can you really personally relate to that at all or do you feel like you haven't ever had to face that?
COACH TRESSEL: If it was going on, which I'm sure it was, I didn't know it, because I was too busy. That's probably the way it is with anybody in the country, you're not sitting around worried about what people are saying, you're worried about what your team is doing.
REPORTER: How important was that comeback for you guys last year, the Michigan State game, when you look back on the season, I think you were 3-2 at the time, down, if you lose that, it's a completely different season, I think.
COACH TRESSEL: It's huge. Every Big Ten game is huge. Most especially if you're down by 10 and you come back and find a way to get it done, I'm sure that gave our guys some confidence and I don't even know who we played after that, but every time you succeed, every time you see, hey, here's what you've got to do to succeed and you learn a little bit more, I think that's huge.
REPORTER: You mentioned Drew Stanton in your opening comments. What, as you watch him and play in games against him, what stands out that has made him blessed the last two or three years?
COACH TRESSEL: He's so competitive. Just watch him play. The way he plays, he throws his body around. He's one of those guys you can just see. He's got an aura about him that, hey, guys, follow me, we're going to go down the field and you admire guys like that. You see him get hit and he's right back up and he's there for the next play. He's just a tough guy. And you know how I feel about toughness in quarterbacks, that's the one thing you better have and he's got it.
REPORTER: A year ago, you didn't run an offensive play on their side of the field until there was a little over five minutes left in the game and also you were down 17-7, and they were threatening, as you know, on the field goal, what do you remember about that game? It was really such an odd game.
COACH TRESSEL: It was. Our time of possession was small. Our number of plays was small, but we averaged 9.5 yards or something per play. Crazy. But big plays are a part of the game and fortunately we made them.
REPORTER: Was last week one of the more dramatic examples of teams kicking away from you?
COACH TRESSEL: It really was. For them to kick so short out of bounds, I think there were four of them in the 20s, which, you know, I've never seen that one. And finally they got tired of that so they kicked it and Teddy took it back a little bit. I think their net punt was in the mid 20s. So that was significant, because you're hoping as a team to have roughly a 40-yard net punt and you've had a great day, to have a 25-yard net punt is not a great day and it was good for us.
REPORTER: Did you get as much out of that if Teddy returned it --
COACH TRESSEL: Unless he returned it for a touchdown. Right, right.
REPORTER: Why is it so hard to do that? Hardly in the NFL do you see somebody kicking away and doing it well.
COACH TRESSEL: It is hard. Because it's something you don't practice as much and all of a sudden you start practicing it and I think you take too much time lining yourself up to do it and all of a sudden when the real guys start rushing and so forth, you've got to get it off in 1.9 and you haven't been under the gun doing it as much. Just like A. J. Trapasso, his one poor punt that went into the end zone, he's knocked that thing down inside the -- all we ask for is down inside the 15. We don't want to get greedy, and if we get inside the 10 it's a bonus. He hit it through the end zone, and you just don't do that one under duress as often as you do the others, that's why I think you're not quite as good at it.
REPORTER: Jim, in the times that we get to talk with T.J. Downing, he seems like a guy that's got kind of an edge to him; is that a fair assessment of what kind of guy T. J. is on and off the field?
COACH TRESSEL: An edge? I know this, he's a physical player and he's an excitable guy. He's a vocal leader up front there. Doug is kind of the cerebral leader and T. J. is kind of the vocal leader up there. I don't know if that defines an edge. Jim Lachey's an old lineman, is that an edge or what?
LACHEY: If it works for him.
COACH TRESSEL: Okay.
REPORTER: Do you have to earn the right to have a Mohawk or could a freshman walk in and have a Mohawk on your team or do you have to be someone who's earned the right to do that to your hair?
COACH TRESSEL: Our hair rule is as long as it's well groomed, and we flunked that one last year, not that I didn't try, and your facial hair needs to be lined up, so those are broad definitions of both. They tell me that what we had last year was fashionable, but I don't know. Coach Bruce, would you have allowed that hair that we had last year?
COACH BRUCE: I'm not going to say.
REPORTER: How did you feel about some of the guys that came in for both Kirk and David on both sides of the line? How did you feel that played out?
COACH TRESSEL: Tim Schafer got to play 60 some snaps. He got to play left guard, which he does all the time, right tackle, left tackle, he got a lot of valuable snaps. Timmy's kind of the valuable guy that can go anywhere for us. I think he did solid. I don't know if he graded a winning performance, but it wasn't too bad. Jon Skinner got a lot more snaps than he has, and that was valuable for him.
I thought Bowling Green did a nice job of changing their looks, making our guys think on the run, plus they did a lot of movement things. They were a little bit smaller and a little bit quicker than what we face typically, so I thought that was very valuable for them. I don't know that any of the replacements graded out winning. I thought it was valuable.
REPORTER: Is there a drill that Troy Smith does throwing the ball that he's just an extreme example of his accuracy or ability to put the ball certain places?
COACH TRESSEL: We have a little net that Coach Daniels uses that has three pockets in it, and as the guys do sets, Coach Daniels will tell him which pocket he wants it in. They don't hit the pocket very often, quite frankly, but they hit the net, so they work hard on accuracy. But I think his command of what's going on and his comfort allows him to be as accurate as he can be, and again, I say it a million times, it starts with protection. It's easy to be accurate when no one's in your face. When someone's in your face, now being accurate's tough, and he's had pretty solid protection all year.
REPORTER: Who moves in with David Patterson out?
COACH TRESSEL: Joel, Todd Denlinger, and Doug Worthington has been working inside and played inside this past weekend and Doug will join that group.
REPORTER: Is Worthington, do you see him there down the road, too, in that area?
COACH TRESSEL: He's gotten so big and we're looking for places to try to give him an opportunity, and he's really done a nice job in there. You don't know what he's going to grow into. Sometimes, though, I like a big guy on the edge to -- I don't want those tackles to get used to nothing but speed rushes, I like them to get bowled over occasionally too. So I think Doug's the kind of guy that's going to be able to do both.
REPORTER: Is there a fine line between confidence, having a team that's very confident and a team that borderlines on maybe a cocky attitude, because it seems like your guys are very complimentary to the opponent. You hear them in the press conference, hats off to Bowling Green, they're very sharp in that aspect. Is that something you talk about or this team has just embraced the team attitude unlike some others?
COACH TRESSEL: I think they believe that. As I said at the beginning of the spring, I was hoping one of our strengths would be 16 or 17, I forget what the number is, of fifth-year guys that I was hoping that that would be, that we would be the kind of team that would have a little more maturity than the norm because we're older. Thus far, I think that's been true, but what's most important is what comes up next. But I think our guys truly believe that.
I think they watch film, they study people, they compliment their guys that they practice against. They enjoy having a good look against one another, and I think they appreciate the way people attack Ohio State. People want to beat Ohio State. That's circled on Bowling Green's calendar, Iowa's, Texas', everyone's. I think our guys respect that.
REPORTER: And respecting your opponent is a way to just maybe avoid getting caught up in your own hype and your own --
COACH TRESSEL: I think that's proper perspective. If you don't think Bowling Green can stop your run or beat you on a pass rush or throw a touchdown on you, then you're in trouble. If you don't think Michigan State can wax you, you're in trouble, because they can. So you better, first and foremost, understand the difficulty of the task, and again, those older guys have been through so many difficult tasks, that I think they understand that, and you hope they're teaching the younger guys how hard this is, because the Big Ten is a tough group to get through.
REPORTER: Winning the right way, Coach, I'm guessing you don't have to tell these guys that there's no place for planting the flag after a win?
COACH TRESSEL: No, you don't need to mention that because we've talked about how we like to win and how it doesn't include things of that nature.
REPORTER: Jim, with basketball practice starting this week, I was curious if you felt like the football program, whether it's high school basketball players coming to a football game as part of a recruiting visit or just having the Ohio State name out there, do you think the success of the football team has any carryover to something like basketball and maybe trying to help that program?
COACH TRESSEL: I think Thad has told me many times he enjoys it when he brings his guys to our games. He's had all those guys to our games. I remember they were all down in the end zone a year ago during the Texas game and Thad talks constantly about just that energy, that electricity that's in Ohio Stadium, just like I love bringing those guys when the rafters are shaking at the Schott. That tells you a little bit about the place you're considering.
REPORTER: Have you ever met Greg Oden?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, he's tall. He's tall.
REPORTER: Has Thad returned the favor of the text messages that you were sending to him during the season?
COACH TRESSEL: A couple times he's sent some very worthwhile thoughts to us and we've shared them.
REPORTER: Football thoughts or --
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: James Laurinaitis, after the game, wondered if you'd approve of his lateral.
COACH TRESSEL: No. And he knows that. His mother didn't approve of it. Mother grabbed him and said, you're lucky that worked out.
REPORTER: You all talked about it last week, Malcolm and them urging him to do it.
COACH TRESSEL: I know, so really I blamed it on Malcolm. Just ask him. I said, that's poor peer pressure. And Jamario, I'm told, I didn't hear it, was calling for the ball. So believe me, we've got plenty of work to do. I think we have Quinn and Rory here. Oh, Marla, I'm sorry, my bad.
REPORTER: You never really hear much about what Jay Richardson does because Gholston is kind of more of a -- just what has he been doing this year?
COACH TRESSEL: Jay's been real solid. Jay plays a different position than Vernon and Jay ends up with two people blocking him a lot, he plays to that tight end side and so forth. But Jay's been very solid. I think his play has been very, very good, and he and Lawrence Wilson have been sharing that duty over there and that gives us a chance to roll in fresh people and some of that pressure you've seen just generally applied and people making poor throws maybe occasionally is in part to Jay Richardson.
REPORTER: Have you ever met his mom?
COACH TRESSEL: Have I ever met Deborah? Deborah is the best. Deborah used to be the student body president here. She's the best. She's the president of our football parents' association.
REPORTER: Ever hear from Vernon Mangold anymore?
COACH TRESSEL: Vern is out of office. We'll end it on that.
Football Quotes (Oct. 10, 2006)
Oct. 10, 2006
Rory Nicol, sophomore tight end
On Michigan State
"They are a good team and have a physical defense. There are some big guys. They have a linebacker who is really fast and they are a very sound football team. They play a tough game; their record is 3-3. We just want to come out and play hard. Michigan State is going to scratch, fight and claw their way. It's going to be a physical game."
On Michigan State head coach John L. Smith
"He is a fiery coach, but that is not a bad thing. He looks like the type of guy who likes fire under all his players and probably gets them all riled up to go out and play."
On studying the history of games
"Over the years and years that football has been played, the same factors predict the outcome of the game. I don't even have to see the score to know what the outcome is. More than anything, it usually comes down to special teams."
On winning offensive lineman of the week
"It is humbling. I've been working hard all year and every week I can go out and get better. The season is starting to slow down and I'm starting to figure out my role on offense."
On playing on the road
"To have already played in two games on the road where each had a hostile environment is huge. To be successful in both games is great, as well. We are not going to fall apart under what is ahead of us."
Quinn Pitcock, senior defensive tackle
On Michigan State quarterback Drew Stanton
"He (Stanton) is a great quarterback. Pressure is going to be key. He is a senior, he is experienced and he is the team leader. The pressure we put on him is going to make the difference."
On learning from last year
"Michigan State is a great team. It is a game of inches and mistakes. Certain situations, like a field goal, can make the difference. We have learned that history has a tendency of repeating itself and we are going to learn everything we can from our mistakes."
On David Patterson
"David being injured is a key loss. He is a great player. At the same time, we have Joel Penton and Todd Denlinger who have been in the line-up all year and will be great players for us."
On Drew Stanton
"He is a great quarterback because he is a veteran senior. He can throw any kind of ball. He can throw deep or across the field. He is very mobile and can get away from tackles. He will throw on a dime and reads coverage very well. The defense is going to have to put a lot of pressure on him and try to get him frustrated."
On Jehuu Caulcrick
"He (Caulcrick) knows he is a big guy and he will use it to his advantage. He has great speed and he will try to run over you. The defense is going to have to get low and tackle him."
On Michigan State
"It is very tough to play a team who is batting 500. It is difficult to play a team who's back is against the wall. They have nothing to lose. They are going to be at home with their fans behind them. It will be a tough game."
Translation:Jim Tressel said:As you watch them on film, I think they're a lot like their coach. They're tough. They're courageous. They go as hard as they can possibly go. They don't care what anyone thinks about their chances. They just play and play and play. And it's fun to watch them on film because they do it with great effort.

Coach Tressel said:So the disappointment in not getting to see it, my daughter who's away in college in New York, I mean, she's -- what do you mean it's not going to be on? So, sorry, and, no, I won't buy you that subscription or whatever, but, you know, people love to watch their Buckeyes.
