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Football Press Luncheon Thread

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Oct. 24, 2006

COACH TRESSEL: It was good to get a Big Ten win. The first three or four minutes of the ball game, five, six minutes, whatever it was, weren't exactly the way we wanted them and hopefully learned some lessons from that. But I thought from the time our defense took the field, when they were back against the wall for the second straight week, which we've got to quit doing, they stepped up and held them to three and then unfortunately we were three and out and had to punt. Defense stopped them again and the rest, I thought we did a little bit more consistently.
I think offensively we had a dozen or better guys grade winning performance and nine or 10 over on the defensive side, we had some good winning performances from the special award winners. Our special units player of the week was Brian Hartline for the second straight week, I think, in a row. Brian made the big hit on the kickoff, kind of gave a little energy to everybody, and made another hit on the kickoff. Did very well in his other special teams units and was the special teams player of the week.
Defensively, Antonio Smith made a lot of plays out in the open, so of course everyone saw all the good things that he did, but he just continues to be a tremendously smart football player, a good leader back there. He's in a group of young guys in the back that we were all talking about -- wondering how they would do, and I think both he and Brandon Mitchell have done a nice job of helping those guys come along and obviously they have some tough tests down the road here, but I think they keep getting better and a lot of it's because of Antonio and Brandon and Antonio was the defensive player of the week. Troy Smith was the offensive player of the week and the thing that impressed me most about Troy's performance was he misfired on his first three balls, they weren't great throws, and he didn't get shook, he didn't get rattled, he didn't worry about anything, other than getting things right, and then the rest of the game was very, very consistent, both throwing the ball, making decisions, getting us in and out of the right plays, making big plays, and just a very, very solid performance, graded winning performance, which is difficult at that position and was our offensive player of the week.

Jim Parker offensive lineman of the week was Kirk Barton, and Kirk continues to gain momentum, I think, because he feels much better than he did for a year or so, and I think he'll keep getting better and he did an excellent job, graded in the high 80's, which is tough for a lineman and I think he was our Jim Parker offensive lineman.

The attack force player of the week was James Laurinaitis. James was very productive, did a good job of getting us where we needed to be and continues to get better and better at both the base defensive things and the nickel defensive assignments he has and if he'll keep improving, we're going to have a good linebacker there.
The Jack Tatum hit, we had three nominees this week, I don't have the answer to who the winner is, because that's left up to the team and we didn't see them yesterday and they'll vote today, but Jay Richardson had one, Brian Hartline had one, and Antonio Smith had one. So we'll see who wins that popular vote when we do that this afternoon.
We had some excellent work on our scout teams, as always. De'Angelo Haslam was the scout special teams player of the week and he's Antoine Winfield's first cousin and just bleeds scarlet and gray and does whatever you would want anyone to do and did a great job and was awarded this week. Ryan Lukens was the scout defensive player and Ryan, too, is a Buckeye born and bred and his dad bill Lukens and uncle Joe Lukens, he's trying to become a veterinarian just like his dad and just a special kid and plays linebacker and does it well. And he was our scout defensive player. And Danny Potokar was our scout offensive player. Everyone knows Ed Potokar and unfortunately, on the last play of team Thursday, he got banged and reinjured himself again, so we might not have Danny for a few weeks, but we really appreciate the effort that he gives.
As we head into the Minnesota challenge, I guess what everyone wants to talk about first and foremost is where are we health-wise and David Patterson will be back full speed, which is a real plus for us. Teddy Ginn does, indeed, have a knick on a foot there, but that didn't affect his play Saturday and I'm sure won't affect his play this Saturday, but people do see him walking around with a little boot on.
Lawrence Wilson left the game and should be in good shape. We'll know a little bit more Tuesday and Wednesday, but for the most part, we continue to be pretty healthy and Anderson Russell continues to make great progress in his post-surgery, and so we've been real fortunate from a health standpoint and we need to be, because the thing that impresses me about Minnesota is, number one, they've got 17 guys on their team from Ohio and half their coaching staff and you know they're going to not even need an airplane to come to Columbus, and they always play everyone that they play physical, they're very well schooled on every side of the ball. I don't think in the last 10 years anyone has run the football better than they have over the course of time and they're throwing it a little bit more than they have in the past few years, I think because they have the outstanding quarterback, Cupito is in the top three or four in passing efficiency. He's in the top two or three career-wise in Golden Gopher history. He's an Ohio guy that's just very disciplined, just does a great job with the football, knows their offense inside and out, knows what they want to be in, and has been throwing to a great group of receivers. That tight end is special and the wide-outs, Logan, Wheelwright, those guys have all done a tremendous job, so I think they're probably a little more balanced than they've been, but they're never going to stop being the physical run team, which is really their signature.
Defensively they fly around and they're led by a guy in the secondary from right here in Columbus who's also a great punt returner, kickoff returner, he's got a 99 yarder for a touchdown and a couple other ones way out there and just a firey, physical guy and he's played both safety and corner, so it will be interesting to see which way they deploy him this week. But I think they run well to the ball. I think they're pretty simple. And usually when you see a simple defense, that means they know what they're doing. They're not going to be out of position. They fly around to the football.
What has impressed me most about this Gopher team is you watch the Penn State game, which they clearly could have won. You watch the Michigan game, and they were toe to toe throughout the game from a physical nature, got hit by a couple big plays and that was the difference in the game. They're a team that they could win any football game they're in and they're going to progress every day as they go and you know they're going to be excited about coming in here.
From our standpoint what's critical is obviously it's our homecoming. It's our captain's breakfast, which is a very proud tradition here where we'll have close to 70 captains back who will share our pregame meal with us, and be here. Jack Nicklaus, the museum we're standing in, is "Dotting the I," which is something not many people have done in this long, long history. And we still have a lot of work to become better and I think our guys are focused on what they need to do today and they're not afraid to look at the film and say, here's where we need to get better and I'm sure our guys are going to watch our film from a year ago against Minnesota closely because we certainly didn't have the best defensive game we've ever had and so there's a whole bunch of things from our standpoint, but what's most important is we attack today to get better today so that we'll be ready to go on Saturday.

REPORTER: Do you not feel the need to rest Teddy or --
COACH TRESSEL: To rest him?

REPORTER: He's playing?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, yeah. I'm not the doctor. I'm the coach. He's playing. I can be trumped by the doctor, but, no, all indications are he'll be fine.

REPORTER: Jim, talking about the scout team play, is that a place where those young guys aren't just getting you ready for the next game, but maybe they're developing some chemistry that's going to pay off when those guys are two, three years down the line, the guys who are out on the field?
COACH TRESSEL: I think you learn a lot if you're paying attention on scout team. There's two different types of scout team players, there's the ones that just look at the cards and go through the motions, and then there's the guys that look at the cards and see why we're blocking something the way we're doing or why we're running a blitz against this look and so forth and they learn from it.
There are guys that take a tremendous pride in that being their role to help the football team. There are other guys that, woe is me, I'm on the scout team. I would go along with your thought that, it would help guys down the road if they will pay attention to scout team as they should. And we've been very fortunate. Guys take a lot of pride. You hear them talking post-practice meetings about Antonio Henton did this and we'll say so and so on the defensive field did that, and in fact, we have a grade sheet which quite honestly is new. A couple of our guys over on the defensive side created, Chris Hauser and Doug Phillips created a grade sheet for the offensive scout team with comments and grades and this and that and that's just been tremendous for the coaches, because when we see something written, so and so did this down there or he needs to get better at this technique or whatever, it gives us a chance to coach up a guy when we weren't, perhaps, at the drill. So it's something that we try to become as good as we can at it.

REPORTER: Have you seen Henton, on those sheets, have you seen Henton make progress?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.

REPORTER: What have you seen him become better at since he's been here?
COACH TRESSEL: I think early on he wasn't doing anything other than looking at the card and saying, where do you want me to throw it and so forth, like any young kid. And I think now he's trying to learn the concepts of what people are doing to try to attack defenses and I think he's always had the ability, they've said from day one in practice when we began scout teams, which isn't until the season begins, that he could really make things happen and keep things alive.
Now they're talking a little bit more like, not only does he pose that threat, but he has got a handle on what each team is trying to do conceptually against us. So again, I just think he's paying good attention.

REPORTER: A year ago, going into this game, Pittman hadn't scored a touchdown all last season and then he started a streak of like 12 straight games. What happened there? Do you have any idea?
COACH TRESSEL: It would be too simple to say he scored a touchdown.

REPORTER: No, was there pressure there, do you think?
COACH TRESSEL: I think your buddies always give you the jabs and the raspberries and I'm sure more than we even know. So, yeah, perhaps his buddies were telling him, hey, I thought you were a running back, and don't running backs score touchdowns and all those things. But Pittman, to me, has always been a quiet, determined guy, that he's not going to worry about whether he scores touchdowns or whatever.
In fact, we were talking to him that last scoring drive in the Indiana game, that we took him out pretty early, you know, only 16 carries and we said, don't worry, when we get down there, if it gets in the goal line area, we'll give you another chance to keep your streak alive. Then Beanie broke the one for 12 yards, and that didn't bother Pitt. He was happy for Beanie.
So he's pretty focused on doing what he can do and playing a great role on our team and I've been impressed with him this season because not unlike Minnesota, Minnesota's probably thrown more than they're accustomed to, Ohio State probably has too. And again, it's because they've been efficient doing it, thus far we've been efficient doing it, and the runningbacks at Minnesota aren't getting as many carries, nor at are the ones at Ohio State at this moment.

REPORTER: Did he have to show you something to earn your trust for goal line carries, because it seemed last year Troy got most of the carries around inside the 10 and inside the 5 and Antonio is getting most of those this year.
COACH TRESSEL: Most of the carries Troy got inside the 10 were option plays, he just took the option to carry it. And we teased him a little bit in practice. I remember one time Pitt not having the greatest option course, and I said, hey, Pitt, you need to have a little bit better
phase and he kind of gave me a look like, you mean, like he's going to pitch it or something? Just different things have evolved and Antonio's always had our confidence.

REPORTER: Coach, what does homecoming and homecoming week mean to you in this football program?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, probably haven't spent as many hours on it as you have being the chairman of the homecoming committee, is that accurate?

REPORTER: Pep rally chair.
COACH TRESSEL: He sent me a script for the homecoming pep rally and I thought, I'll print this off and give it to the guys who were going, it was 44 pages long, the copy machine broke and the whole deal.
Homecoming, when you talk to high school kids, we get to talk to high school kids all the time, the first thing they'll bring up is, hey, this is homecoming. And it reminds you of there's something about that word that's important, and it's something about it's the day, it's your stadium, a lot of alumni, if they don't get a chance to get tickets for every game or have the time to get back for every game, they make it back for homecoming, and you have a little bit more festivities going on with the parade and the pep rally and those types of things, and there's just an increased energy.
When you go into play at Ohio Stadium, there better be a lot of energy, period, but it just turns up a notch at homecoming. And I think in our particular case, it's also the day that the captains come back and our guys get to meet so many former captains, which is like a homecoming for them, so all of those things put together, we don't have a 44-page script for our homecoming day, but it's a pretty special day.

REPORTER: Jim, you've got Jack Nicklaus coming back, and I know you're not a big golfer, but he's a big football fan. Has he had any communication? Have you talked at all about this football game or about this event that you will that's coming up.
COACH TRESSEL: Haven't really talked about that. The last time I saw Jack was at the dedication of the golf course. He's been busy since then, I'm sure and I have as well. I don't know exactly when he's getting back to town. If he happens to get in on Friday, I mentioned to Mr. (Gene) Smith that I'd love to have him stop over to the golf course because we'll be there for dinner.
Now, I don't know his travel plans are, I'm sure, very, very busy, but I know he loves Ohio State football and I know he gets to a couple or three games a year and doesn't make it real public and doesn't make a big hoopla about it, but I am sure having grown up right here in Columbus and been to that Horseshoe as many times as he's been, when he gets that chance to dot that I, he's had a chance to do a lot of neat things, but this one will be pretty special, I'm sure.

REPORTER: Coach, you're leading the conference in scoring, you're leading the conference in points given up, 35 and 8. Now that you're eight weeks in, are those the kind of numbers that you were foreseeing before the season that you would like to keep opponents to under 9 a game, that you could imagine?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, our goal each week is to hold our opponents to 13 points or less and you've done a good job if you can do that. So to hold them to 8 or 9 is excellent. But again, we're in the middle of the discussion. So thus far, I guess, that's what we'd hoped for, but we've got to make sure we continue to get better and keep scoring points like that and keep holding them to points like that, and it becomes more difficult as time goes. And what I think has been a good thing is there's been a good compliment of one another, and you help one another, defense doing a great job and getting us good field position, the offense doing a good job outside of the last two games of not having possessions begin on the wrong side of the 50, the special units doing their part, and to me there's been a pretty good mesh of consistency.
Now, I think you really are rolling the dice if you start a third game in a row giving them the ball 30 or closer, because you can't do that and become the best you want to believe. But pure numbers, those are the kind of numbers you like.

REPORTER: Coach, obviously Minnesota coming off a game where they were very fortunate to win against a I-AA team, in your study of that visit what did you find that led you to think maybe why they struggled in that game or are they just a really good I-AA team?
COACH TRESSEL: North Dakota State is good. They went down a week ago to Georgia Southern and won like 35-10 at Georgia Southern and I've been down there. I mean, that's a heck of a job. On the film, they look very good. 35 guys or something on their team are natives of the state of Minnesota, so those are kids that couldn't wait to get to that Metrodome and they played lights out. And I think it will be a great thing for Minnesota.
They got exactly what they needed, which was a win, and they also had another reminder like we all have at times that every play, every day, you better be at your best, but I'm sure that I don't know what Minnesota has to say about North Dakota State, but I was very impressed.

REPORTER: With as much as you've substituted early in the year and the margins of victory lately, how much depth have you been able to develop and did you envision having as much as you've had?
COACH TRESSEL: You never envision things like that. You envision going down to the final snap of every game. And I think we've had good reason to envision that, because that's happened a lot. This has been a little unusual. I hope it pays dividends. A lot of the guys that have gotten reps haven't necessarily got them when the fire's real hot and the game is on the line and I don't know that you know totally about someone until they're in that situation, just like I don't know if you know about a team, we're talking about numbers from a team, we're eight games in, we're only two/thirds of the way, and the fire is heating up. But hopefully, that time will give them a little head start so that when and if they get thrown in the fire, just like James Laurinaitis last year, who would have envisioned him getting thrown in and played the whole Michigan and Notre Dame games, and he didn't get many of those kind of reps last year, but he was prepared, and I hope the guys are prepared and I hope this experience has helped them, but you never know until you're really tested.

REPORTER: You said something last week, you actually sounded concerned that some of your starters may not be playing enough. Is that actually a concern at times?
COACH TRESSEL: When you're used to having those games that are 75 snaps for both sides, 70 to 75 and all of a sudden guys are getting 40, yeah, that's a little concern to me. I don't know, we'll find out. I know this, Quinn Pitcock mentioned to me and I don't know if I'm repeating myself, but he mentioned to me that he was really tired at the end of that ball game, chasing that quarterback. I mean, the number of times we had to run around and he broke contain, and Quinn said he was tired and sore at the end of that ball game, so we'll see, I hope that we're getting the seasoning we need, but we'll find out.

REPORTER: Jim, when you look at Minnesota, do they miss those three offensive linemen they lost as far as their running game goes or do they miss Laurence Maroney and of course they lost the kid grade-wise, runningback wise, what do you think they miss there?
COACH TRESSEL: Gosh, do we miss Santonio (Holmes) more or Nick Mangold? I hope we're carrying on without either of those guys. As you watch Minnesota, they're pressing on, that's college football, guys graduate, guys leave early. Sometimes when you go from lots of experience at quarterback to next to none, you see a more dramatic change, unless a guy really evolves quickly, but those two or three linemen that they lost and the back that they lost, those are significant.
But Pinnix looks good to me. There's only one ball and you give it to one back, and they've been giving it to him and he's been doing a good job, but you might have to ask them which they think they're missing the most, but they're still doing those things that give you problems. They make you put a lot of people in the box to stop them and they do a great job with play action, which we knew firsthand last year and everyone else has known every time they've played them. So they're still who they are.

REPORTER: Will Ray just had a one-game hiatus, coach-imposed.

REPORTER: Coach, can you talk about Stan White and the Draddy award and how that reflection on your program?
COACH TRESSEL: The Draddy award is like the Heisman Trophy award is to the academic sector and to have anyone mentioned for that is extraordinary. Stan, the curriculum he's taking, the accelerated he's taking and to see what he's taking now, he'll be close to having his MBA at the time he's done next spring. I don't know exactly where he'll be, but that's pretty impressed. So I would think Stan's bio of his academic excellence, his community service efforts, the fact that he was a very good member and contributing person on the football field, I think he lines up very well to have high consideration and I haven't seen any pared-down list or anything. I think a couple of the ones came out, like the Butkus and Lombardi and so and so list, but I have not seen that list come down yet, maybe it has, but I haven't seen it.

REPORTER: I think there are 160 semi-finalists, but he's one of them.
COACH TRESSEL: 160? Great. Very deserving.

REPORTER: There was a column in Sunday's Plain Dealer that floated the idea that you could be the next Browns' coach.
COACH TRESSEL: Did you write it? Did Doug write it?

REPORTER: I just wondered if you had a reaction.
COACH TRESSEL: I've not spent one day playing in the NFL or
Coaching in the NFL and I've got my hands full doing what I'm doing, so that's my reaction.

REPORTER: But it indicated they could lure you with money and a long-term contract.
COACH TRESSEL: I've got money and I've got a contract, so --

REPORTER: Is there any way you could foresee, what would it take for you to give the NFL a shot?
COACH TRESSEL: Don't know. Can't think of a thing.

REPORTER: Not to belabor this point, Jim.
COACH TRESSEL: No, I can tell. Antonio, are you here yet? He was there every time I needed him Saturday, and now he's not here.

REPORTER: Do you feel like who you are as a coach and the way you coach fits better in college than it would at the professional level?
COACH TRESSEL: I think it does simply because I don't know anything about fitting at a different level. I don't know how I'd do coaching high school, teaching math five periods and then coaching them. I don't know how I'd do coaching in the pros where it's a whole different world. So I hope I fit well in this environment. And I do consider myself a teacher, and love the collegiate environment, I've been in it virtually my whole life. We moved to Baldwin-Wallace when I was five, so nearly 50 years I've been in this environment and happen to like it.

REPORTER: Would you be satisfied saying at Ohio State for the rest of your coaching career?
COACH TRESSEL: Absolutely.

REPORTER: All right. I'll switch topics.

COACH TRESSEL: Thank you, Ken.

REPORTER: What did you think of the turf? Some of the players said it was kind of falling apart already.
COACH TRESSEL: It wasn't as good as we'd like it. But don't get me in trouble. I've got groundskeepers that work their rear ends off doing their best, but it wasn't as good as we'd like it.

REPORTER: What did you think of Michigan jumping to two in the BCS?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, didn't really study it that close. From where?

REPORTER: From three.
COACH TRESSEL: From three? The Big Ten should be on top.

REPORTER: Is there a part of you that understands human nature, like even a couple of guys mentioned last week, yeah, we're focused on Indiana, but hard not to notice that Michigan is ranked third or second or whatever, is there part of you that understands the human nature that your guys, I'm not saying they're looking ahead, they're focused on each game, but that November 18th is out there and it looks like as big as it always is, it may be bigger than normal.
COACH TRESSEL: I think they think about that one all year long, even in spring practice where you tell them to be focused on today's practice, I think there's a little part of them that that's the reason they came to Ohio State or that's the reason they went to Michigan was to play in games like that.
So, yeah, humans sometimes ask themselves why they're up at 6:00 in the morning working like mad and things flash through your mind like games like that. But then quickly you need to say, okay, I've got to get back and have proper technique on this set of squats, but I think humans do that, we all do. Antonio here yet? Okay. I've got one question left and then tell them we're ready. Marla?

REPORTER: I'm just curious of what you've seen in Beanie Wells. I saw he got quite a few carries last week, has he grown a lot this season?
COACH TRESSEL: I think Beanie came here as a very good ball carrier and has become an even better ball carrier. I think his ability from a pass protection standpoint, which is usually the slowest thing that comes with a back, because there are so many things going on, and they get the last choice.
The linemen decide who they block and then they're supposed to handle the rest. I think he's done a good job of growing in that area and I think he's a solid receiver. We haven't had him out wide, but we have had him swing out of the back field and he knows where to go. Every receiver, every running back, has to know where his check-down spot is according to the routes that are being run by the other people and he knows it cold. So I think Beanie has come along very well and at the pace we'd hoped and I've said many times if we can continue to have three guys progress, that that is going to pay dividends and, knock on wood, we're still sitting at that point. Thank you.
 
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COACH TRESSEL: Most of the carries Troy got inside the 10 were option plays, he just took the option to carry it. And we teased him a little bit in practice. I remember one time Pitt not having the greatest option course, and I said, hey, Pitt, you need to have a little bit better phase and he kind of gave me a look like, you mean, like he's going to pitch it or something?
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Transcript From The October 31th Football Press Luncheon

Previewing Ohio State at Illinois

Oct. 31, 2006
COACH TRESSEL: That group that just visited with you from our turf science have been working like crazy. It's been a difficult battle and the weather has not been the greatest and they have worked like crazy and we certainly appreciate their efforts and they're going to get us the best possible surface to play on that we can get in these situations and we appreciate their work. So it's been tough on them because they're out there night and day and I feel for them.
Our guys were pretty solid on Saturday. I think we had about 21 guys with a winning performance. Minnesota, I felt, was a little banged up, and that's tough when you go on the road to start with, and when you're banged up, to take the next step is even more difficult. And we had a chance to get out there and get some guys playing and we did have some outstanding performances.
Our special units player was Drew Norman who has been a solid snapper all along. He had seven field goal snaps on Saturday, which every single one of them was in the perfect window, which is a little unusual. Occasionally you'll get one in or outside or whatever, and he just had an extraordinary week and was the special units player.
The defensive player was Antonio Smith who continues to grow and be a great leader and a great production guy from his position. He plays various positions, and just does an excellent job. Antonio Pittman was the offensive player of the week. Did a good job receiving the ball. Did a good job running the ball. Did a good job pass protecting. And I just think he's one of the best backs in the country and we're awfully happy to have Antonio Pittman.

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Our Jim Parker offensive lineman was T.J. Downing, and he had the highest grade on the offensive front. The attack force player was Marcus Freeman, who had a very productive day, was flying around the field and continues to grow in the various roles that we have for him.
We didn't have a Jack Tatum hit of the week. They might have had one, but we didn't have one, and Ray will be fine. He probably won't play this week, but he seems to be getting along just fine. It was just one of those things that happens, but he's just doing fine.
The scout team players that did a good job preparing for us on the special units, Will Crall, a youngster from Bexley, Walter Dublin was our defensive scout player from Sarasota, Florida, and Ryan Franzinger was our offensive scout player, a senior from Cleveland St. Ignatius and just a great kid. I marvel sometimes at the time and effort that those scout team kids put in to make sure they give our guys a great look and I know our coaches appreciate it and they do an excellent job there.
The most important task at hand as we flip the calendar over to November is to make sure we're playing our best football in this month. You do a lot of work prior to November, but the month of November really is the legacy that you leave. There have been a lot of good teams at Ohio State over the years, the ones that are considered great teams are the ones that played great in November and that's just the way football is. And I suppose in the NFL, it's December. So we have to make sure that as we take the practice field today, one last time in October, that we're preparing ourselves to have great performance in November.
We have a tremendous challenge as we travel over to Champaign-Urbana, because I think Illinois is a good football team. They've had some tough situations occur. They're ahead of Wisconsin, very well could have beat them. They played Penn State right off their feet and was nose to nose and I think the score ended up one thing, but it was 17-12 game, was really what it was, and an on-side kick was returned for a touchdown. I think Penn State rushed the ball for 40 yards and Illinois rushed it for over 200. If you really watch the film, you can see that conceptually they're starting to understand what a new coaching staff a year ago was establishing, and you can see the culture they're trying to create, a very aggressive defense that puts a lot of pressure on you, and has to have guys in right position so that things work properly.
Offensively, they spread you out all over the field. They're a big play team. I think the freshmen quarterback, Isiah Williams has got over 60 yards throwing. He does a great job with his feet as well. He's a guy we recruited very hard and he's a student of the game, he's a good football player, he can make things happen. I think they have a good stable of runningbacks, they have a couple good old guys and a young one there. Their receivers are solid. Lenny Willis' son, if you remember Lenny who played here and was on our staff here, his son has just done a tremendous job and I think, too, their field goal kicker may be one of the one or two best in the conference.
So I think they've got all the pieces and I think they're trying to put all those pieces together and things don't happen overnight, but you can see the progress, for sure. And our guys know when you go on the road, it's difficult. They know the importance that November has in the course of a college football season, so I think they'll go to work this afternoon pretty darn hard. Questions?
REPORTER: Jim, you mentioned Ray (Small). How about some of the other guys, I guess Gonzalez, Mo Hall, Pitcock?
COACH TRESSEL: Mo Hall.
REPORTER: No, Wells, sorry.
COACH TRESSEL: Mo Hall will be our honorary captain, he's fine as far as I know.
REPORTER: Too many Halls and Wells.
COACH TRESSEL: Mo Wells, Gonzalez, who else did you mention?
REPORTER: Pitcock.
COACH TRESSEL: Mo Wells, Gonzalez, I would say for sure, unless the unforeseen happens. The only two I would call questionable would be Pitcock and Alex Boone. And I suppose you could say Derek Harden is still out, he was a special teams guy for us. But outside of that, we're at pretty full strength. I would like to think we'll know by Wednesday or Thursday on those guys that aren't going to practice for a couple of days in hopes of being just fine, but David Patterson came out of it well, played 40 some snaps, 47 maybe, and graded well and played well and felt good. So I think for this point in the year, going into game 10, I feel good about our health.
REPORTER: Alex Boone has what, Coach?
COACH TRESSEL: I don't know, am I allowed to say? I don't think so. He won't practice today.
REPORTER: You guys got off to a little rough start, stopping the run the first couple of weeks and quietly crept up to I think two in the Big Ten and top 20 nationally in stopping the run. Is there something you see differently or was that just the backs you faced early on or what's been different?
COACH TRESSEL: I like to think we've gotten better. I think that's something that you better ask one of the defensive staff, but from my vantage point I think we've gotten better. I think, too, when you have some sacks, all of a sudden that is reflected on your run defense, and we've been ahead of some folks and all of a sudden maybe they're throwing more, and so I think there's a little effect there.
And thirdly, I would say to you that the good backs that you mentioned that we faced early were good backs. And maybe at this point in time, when we've had a little more progression, we would do better, but we don't get another chance, but I think our guys are coming along.
REPORTER: How was the Main Event last night?
COACH TRESSEL: I thought it was good. I was only there for about 20 minutes, it was so dark, I couldn't tell how many people were there, but Joel Penton told me this morning there were estimates of nearly 12,000 people and I know how hard he worked on it and his buddies and they sure seemed enthusiastic and it was a neat thing.
REPORTER: How much of a challenge, talking about the run defense, does Illinois pose, their numbers, rushing-wise, and how are they getting those yards? Does Williams have a lot to do with that?
COACH TRESSEL: I think when you have to account for the quarterback as a runner, that is always a huge impact on your run game. If you took our run numbers over the years and extracted the quarterback yards, it wouldn't be nearly as good as it was and I don't know if it was extraordinary, but it was okay. So, yeah, whenever you have to account, especially in those offenses where they have the little spread and all that stuff, you better account for them, but I think they have good backs and they have a good offensive line, so I just think they're solid at what they do and it's evolving and they have the runs and the passes that complement one another, they do a good job.
REPORTER: Jim, Coach Zook went to that freshman quarterback several games ago and is paying dividends for certain. How much of a tough moment is that for a coach, though? I don't know if you've ever done that in the past where you make up your mind, that's the guy, and you have to live with the good and the bad when that happens.
COACH TRESSEL: I think any age, when you make a change, when you change a sophomore over a junior or a freshman over a senior or whatever, anytime you've felt one way and then it didn't play out that way and you have to be honest and objective and do what's best for the team, it hurts a little bit because you hate to see the disappointment. Sometimes it's not all that person's fault, but that's just the way it is and sometimes change has to be made and I'm sure they were seeing in practice that Juice is going to be special and how could they not do what was best for their team, and there wasn't much productivity prior to him, quite honestly, and the productivity since has been excellent.
REPORTER: When you're limited by the number of games you've got left, is it easier to keep a team focused on the team at hand or is it harder when they have just so few games left?
COACH TRESSEL: That's a good question. I think it's in proportion to what the team you're getting ready to play looks like on film. And the good news and the bad news, I guess, both, is that when you turn the film on, Illinois looks good, and our guys who watch them, they take the time, they study it and so forth, they're going to see when they turn the film on that Illinois is a good team.
Plus we've had Illinois in our cross-over film. When we were getting ready for Michigan State, they'd just played Illinois. When we were getting ready for Indiana, they had just played Illinois. Who did we play last week? No, I guess they hadn't played Minnesota yet, but we'd seen them a couple times and saw some good things that they'd done. So I would like to think, if you're paying attention at all, your focus will be enhanced when you turn the film on.
REPORTER: Jim, you said you had recruited Williams pretty hard. Did he just pick Illinois over Ohio State?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: Or did you guys decide to go a different way or --
COACH TRESSEL: I think he was an early decision, stay in his home state, the need for the quarterback thing, and Illinois is a great school. They did a good job recruiting him and painting the picture of good things could happen and the picture they painted was accurate.
REPORTER: What stood out about him when you were looking at him in the recruiting process?
COACH TRESSEL: You know, he really enjoyed studying the game. He loved to compete. He obviously had a good arm and great athletic ability and he just looked like a guy that, man, this guy's going to become something, and he has.
REPORTER: Speaking of your own quarterback for a moment, there was a lot of talk earlier in the season that he was almost hesitant to run, it seemed like a lot of people were saying that, maybe that's true or untrue, but he certainly, it seems through the week, has become more aggressive in tucking it and running and of course he got a touchdown out of it Saturday. Is that just part of his progression in terms of moving into the offense and allowing himself that extra dimension?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, I don't know if he was hesitant to run, he just had some guys open. We always told him, get it to those guys that are faster than you, and if one of those guys isn't open and the right decision is to step up and go, let's go.
We probably haven't run as many design quarterback runs as we had in the past. I think you could trace that to a couple things. One, I think we're a little deeper at tailback than we were. There was a time where we were all banged up at tailback, Troy's first year starting in '04 and he was our runningback at times because we were hurt, because that's what the team needed. And as the receivers have grown and so forth, he's been able to throw the ball more from that position. But I don't think he's hesitant. He looked excited when he scored that touchdown to me.
REPORTER: Can you talk about Malcolm Jenkins, what makes him such a good cornerback at this early stage in his career? He's still only 18 years old.
COACH TRESSEL: Malcolm comes from a highly competitive program in high school, Piscataway, New Jersey won three straight state titles when he was there, and the expectations of learning the game at Piscataway are high. He came in here with a lot of understanding of the game of football, locked in to study it even more as to how we used our terminology, has a lot of confidence, and I think Malcolm Jenkins is going to keep getting better and better and be a very outstanding corner.
REPORTER: Jim, of the second-year either sophomores or redshirt freshman and a few of the freshman, have you been surprised by how much they've contributed to this group or was that going to be needed as you looked at your roster going into the season, some of those guys to really step up?
COACH TRESSEL: They had to. Two things had to happen, the older guys had to do a good job leading because they'd experienced so much, they had so much to offer, and there were going to be some other guys that were going to have to step up and be ready to be college football players and you take guys like James Laurinaitis and Ross Homan, Donald Washington, Andre Amos, Jamario O'Neal, Malcolm had played significantly, but Vernon Gholston, who hadn't played a whole bunch was going to need to evolve, and what I like about this group is everyone seems to want to do what the team needs done.
Now, what the team needs done right now is to have a great practice today and enter November with the proper mindset as to how good we have to be. But thus far, they've been very willing to do what needs to be done.
REPORTER: Jim, you guys have continued to play that second offensive line for a series each game. Why is that important for you guys to continue doing that at this late stage in the year?
COACH TRESSEL: I just think it became one of those things that, hey, that's what we're going to do. I'm not sure it has that much science to it. Unfortunately, Saturday, we fouled up their drive because we fumbled on the first play of their drive, but I just think we're comfortable with it and sometimes if you don't make yourself do something, you won't do it and you'll turn around and say, oh, gosh, the game's over and we had some opportunities to get guys in. And as I mentioned to this group going into the Texas game when we were first planning on doing it, is that Jim Bollman kind of grew up that way when he was at the university of Virginia, he was forced to do it. That's what George Welsh made him do.
So he had done that before, and he had never been willing to decide to do it here until it became a little bit of a heat discussion, and then all of a sudden, they did pretty well and I think he got a little bit of confidence in it and we've just continued to do it some.
REPORTER: Is it maybe odd at all to put faith in five back-ups to protect maybe the best player in college football?
COACH TRESSEL: Certainly if he got hurt, I'm sure I'd get asked that question. I think if you ask them to do what they can do, on the other hand, I'm sure you could have the argument that, hey, if you didn't ever put those guys in and someone turned their ankle on the first group and, say, was that responsible not to give anyone some time that was going to have to some day be in there and protect the top quarterback in college football, so, you know, you just hope you're not at the wrong end of those discussions.
REPORTER: A lot of times you'll hear coaches stumping for players for Heismans and that type of thing, and last week Lloyd Carr said something about Hart being one of the best players in football, do you feel the need to do any stumping for Troy to come out and make a statement like he is the best player in the country, any of that type of thing?
COACH TRESSEL: No, because as I've mentioned all fall, what I've enjoyed about the evolution of major awards is they've started to go to the teams who are doing the most as a team, and I think that's when good things happen. I don't think things happen with stumping. I think things happen with doing, and if you do, things will happen. So, no, I don't think -- I don't think we need to do that. Now, maybe after our season's over and there's nothing left to do and the only thing left is stumping, maybe you stump, I don't know, but we've got stuff to do.
REPORTER: Jim, you've done that linebacker rotation and I thought Marcus Freeman was supposed to be kind of a passing-down guy, but he's on the field an awful lot, and his contributions, if you can talk about that a little bit?
COACH TRESSEL: He's moved around a little bit and probably been at three different spots, and he's a pretty flexible guy because he's been here three years and he's had some experiences at a lot of different positions, but his contribution, I think, starts with knowledge, then it goes to speed, then it goes to production.
One of the things I hear Luke Fickel talking a lot about is really what it's all about at that position is to produce, and he's done a good job producing. He's probably, on our production board, he may be second or third right now behind Laurinaitis, maybe Antonio Smith's in there somewhere, I'm not real sure.
REPORTER: Coach the players are going to be playing for the Illibuck trophy this weekend, what does playing for that trophy mean to the guys?
COACH TRESSEL: That's really only one of the trophies that we have to play for, in fact, our guys get to see it, it started back in the '20s and used to do it with live turtles and didn't work out too well in climates like Champaign-Urbana or Columbus, so they went to the big turtles with the scores painted and our guys have a chance each year, we hope each year to see it, if it's not here, we don't, but I think our guys like to compete in anything. You put out something to compete for, and they'll compete. And so as if we need to add anything else, but here we are in November, playing a Big Ten opponent, playing on the road, one more little item on the plate, if you will, is the Illibuck trophy, and that's the ultimate thing would you want done this week is to earn the right to keep it.
REPORTER: As focused as your team seems to be playing right now, do you still find the need to talk to them about possible upsets and do you go through series and history like Illinois, and then USC loses at Oregon State, do you still do that? Do they still need to hear that?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, I think you need to educate and discuss on the same vein each week. If you only do it certain weeks, it doesn't have the teaching progression. What's the situation today? The situation is we're going on the road in the Big Ten. And what's the situation, it happens to be the Illini. Let me tell you about the Illini. And the more you know about your opponent, maybe Chris Wells needs to hear a little bit about Eddie's (George) tough day against the Illini, and understand that that was something that was distasteful for him and so forth and so on, but I think as much education as you can get every week is important.
REPORTER: If you put this team on the field against your 2002 team, who would emerge? Who's better?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, Troy was their scout team quarterback against that team and did okay.
REPORTER: I mean against your National Championship.
COACH TRESSEL: Right, he was the scout team quarterback against that team and did pretty well. I don't know if he could have beat them, heck, I don't know.
REPORTER: Coach, what lessons did you learn from that season that have been part of the team, what one or two important lessons from that National Championship season?
COACH TRESSEL: The biggest lesson that I'd relearned because I'd been at it so long, sometimes you relearn things, is that never underestimate the intentions of a group of people. And Mike Doss and Donny Nickey and that group of people had some intentions that were not going to be denied.
There are 15 or 16 guys that were freshmen at that time, playing on the scout team, hopefully they learned a little bit, but outside of that, that's like ancient history.
REPORTER: So you don't go back to any of those experiences?
COACH TRESSEL: Not really.
REPORTER: Have you told Chris Wells any of the stories about Eddie's day at Illinois yet or is that still to come?
COACH TRESSEL: Not yet with every little detail, because I really don't know that story with every little detail, but he seems to know about it.
REPORTER: Is there something, though, you can do for a young guy when he's having these problems?
COACH TRESSEL: Tell him to hold tighter. It's got to be the most important thing in the world at that moment is to hand that ball to the official. If that's the most important thing in the world, then maybe you have a chance to do it.
REPORTER: If this was --
COACH TRESSEL: She gets three questions this week and then we're done here.
REPORTER: If this was November 17th, could you play him against the Wolverines?
COACH TRESSEL: Who?
REPORTER: Chris Wells
COACH TRESSEL: Absolutely.
 
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Transcript From The November 7th Football Press Luncheon
Previewing Ohio State at Northwestern
Nov. 7, 2006

COACH TRESSEL:
Today we have Antonio Smith and Anthony Gonzalez, is that right, here? There's two guys here.

STEVE SNAPP: Antonio's tonight, I think.

COACH TRESSEL: Oh, David Patterson. As always, you guys know more than I do, or know before I do.

Going on the road to Illinois was a battle, just like we'd talked about it and the fact it was going to be physical. I thought we got prepared and I thought we came out and did what we needed to do to begin the game and really even to begin the second half. I don't think we finished like you need to finish and most especially on the road against a team that's going to battle all the way down to the end and that's what Big Ten teams do. I thought our first 40 minutes or so were solid and the last 20 were less than that and because of that, we didn't have near as many winning performances. I think we had three on the defense and maybe two on the offense. And we did have some outstanding performances. Aaron Pettrey was the special units player. Did an excellent job kicking off, obviously, with that good, solid wind, he hit them very, very deep and unreturnable. Against the wind, he drove the first one real good, in fact, it was real hard to handle, they almost fumbled or they did fumble and had to fall on it on the 6 or something. And then of course his extra points were perfect and his 50-yard field goal was true and his stroke was very good and so Aaron Pettrey was the special units player of the week.

Defensively, it was James Laurinaitis and James continues to be productive, continues to grow in the subpoena, continues to grow in leadership and did a heck of a job and was named the defensive player of the week. Offensively, the offensive staff did not name a player of the week based upon the consistency that wasn't demonstrated and nor did they name an offensive lineman of the week. So I guess be happy that Coach Bollman is not the expert because he might growl at you or something.

Defensively, the attack force player was Lawrence Wilson, and Lawrence Wilson really, we think, is coming along every day and has been very productive. He was a little banged up in the preseason and I don't know that he began the season like we hoped he would have, and then really this last month or so, we think he's come along. And if he'll keep improving at the rate he is, it's going to be great for the Buckeyes, and he was the attack force player of the week.

We did not have a Jack Tatum hit of the week. We did have excellent special teams preparation. In fact, Marcus Williams was the scout special teams player and through his work on the scout special teams, kind of getting his battlefield commission onto a couple roles on the back-up groups of the special units and will indeed make the travel squad as we go.

The scout defensive player, Mike Dougherty, strong safety, did an excellent job with the scout D, and then the scout offensive player was J. D. Larson. J. D. kind of came to Ohio State in a different way than some, he came because his sister was a great athlete on our track program and occasionally we'll mention to him that he's not quite the athlete that his sister is, but we're sure glad he's there and he's going to be a good player. He's a tight end and a good athlete, and was the scout team offensive player.

From a health standpoint, Quinn (Pitcock) played, I think, 40 plays or better and just did fine, did well, didn't have any problems. David Patterson, knock on wood, continues to feel very good from a health standpoint and so we're pleased about that. Kurt Coleman got a little banged right at the beginning of the game and he, I think, is on the questionable list Alex Boone probably is another week away. Ray Small will be back. As of Wednesday, he's allowed to go full-go. I'm trying to think of who else. Is there anyone else? I think that was it. So again, outside of losing Mike D'Andrea for the whole year and Anderson Russell for three quarters of the year, we've been very blessed from a health standpoint. And we've had some guys miss some practice time and when Quinn missed some time and Gonzo missed a little practice time and Teddy missed a little practice time, that will kind of end as well. It just reminds you, in fact, Anthony Gonzalez said, Quinn and I were talking, he said, it really makes a difference when you don't get as many reps in practice and that's the best affirmation of practice we could ever get from anyone that, that's true. That's why we talk about practice being so important.

So I think we'll be in good stead from a practice standpoint as well as we move to Northwestern, all you have to do is turn the film on from that and we say that every week, but it seems like we get to play people at the time they're playing their best and I felt that way about Illinois as they were coming in. I feel that way about Northwestern. You put on the Iowa film and it was a decisive win. A year ago, they beat Iowa and they had to score two touchdowns in the last five minutes and they upset them. This year, they didn't upset them. In fact, Northwestern's defense held Iowa to about 60 or 70 fewer yards than we held Iowa's offense to and Northwestern's offense outgained how many yards we had against Iowa.

So you need not look any further than that football game, and I think a transition has been made from their standpoint with their quarterback situation, they're settling in on who they are and what they're doing and to me, that's the best thing they've done is that they've decided, okay, here's what Bacher does best and we'll keep our core business with Tyrell Sutton who's fantastic, and what we do and so forth, and then we'll tie the rest of the program around what Bacher does. And to me, that's the mark of good coaching. Sometimes it takes some experimenting. They had other quarterbacks in the game earlier in the year and went through some ups and downs and so forth, and they've gotten to the point now where they really know who they are and what they want to do and you can see it in their play.

Defensively, they started out the year a little bit young. They've grown a little bit as time as gone, and if you watch their game against Iowa, they looked fundamentally and conceptually as sure of themselves as I've seen them all year. Again, when that's the case, when you have you've settled open who you are and what you're going to do and how you're going to attack people and here's what my guys do best, I think you play your best football. Their special teams have been very good. Their kickoff coverage is probably the best we've seen. It's ranked first in the Big Ten and they do a great job from that standpoint. And they've always done a great job of rushing punts and returning punts and all of those types of things. So we're playing Northwestern when they're playing their best. What I'd like to think is we'll have ourselves prepared so that Ohio State's playing its best and when we go on the road in the Big Ten, it needs to be that way and we're anxious to begin that preparation.

REPORTER: Coach, Pat Fitzgerald, have you seen him grow as a head coach just in the game film that you've watched? Have you seen him mature into that role that he got obviously under tragic circumstances?

COACH TRESSEL: I'm not sure when you watch a film if you can see head coaching growing or not growing, because you really don't know what they're doing. Everyone does their head coaching duties different. Some guy's the defensive coordinator, some guy's the offensive coordinator, some guy watches from afar. Frank Beamer runs the special teams and Pat was a defensive guy. I think it would be a little hard for me to tell because every decision the head coach makes, like they talk about, boy, that was a good decision they called timeout when they did, or, oh, man, they blew it. You've got lots of help, hey, Coach, what do you think about a timeout or do you think we should do this or so and so is limping, we've got to get him out of the game, so knowing Pat the little bit I do, which I don't know him much, he's a guy that obviously is very open to growing and learning from his staff and input and everything else, he just seems to be a very humble guy, and I'm sure he'll get better every day.

REPORTER: Coach, some people say that this last weekend was a good thing for the Buckeyes to get tested, a growing experience, but is that necessarily the case because now that the players have -- maybe we're not so invisible, maybe we're not so dominant anymore, is that a good thing to have a wake-up call like this?

COACH TRESSEL: I've always been a believer that reality is the best teacher, and if you win a decisive game, you need to know why, and here's what we did to win a decisive game. If you win a game that's not quite as decisive, why? What was it that we didn't do as well? When you lose a game, what was the reason? Or what were the reasons? So I don't know if there's such a thing as a magical wake-up call, but I think reality is very important, and the biggest reality you have is that you go to someone else's place, you better play 60 minutes because I don't want to infer that we didn't play well at all there, because if you turn the film off at halftime, it doesn't look much different than any of the four or five games prior to it. Turn it back on, we didn't do the things you need to do. So will it be good for us? If we learn from the reality.

REPORTER: How much of the offensive line's problems was due to the fact that Boone wasn't there?

COACH TRESSEL: Probably one/fifth and that's to be -- I don't mean to be a smart alec, but it's not like he was the only guy on the line. And it's not like Tim Schafer didn't do a solid job. Tim Schafer graded out very similar to the rest of the group. So would Alex have graded 95 and then the rest of them grade what they did? I'm not sure we would have been much different. And again, if you turn the film off at the end of 40 plays, you'd probably have five lineman grade winning performance, but that's not football. You have to play all the plays. I think we had 40 plays at the end of the half and ended up with 60, 61, 71, whatever. It wasn't great. So sure, you'd like to have all of your personnel, but if anyone thinks that they were the difference, they're missing the point of this game.

REPORTER: Jim, what do you think it was, the last 20 minutes offensively especially, because they really kind of stopped your running game?

COACH TRESSEL: I think the fact that we weren't running the ball consistently, we probably weren't as balanced as we could have been, because like I've said to you folks many times is you start -- whenever you start evaluations, you start them internally and then you reach out. I'm not sure we were as balanced with our attack as we could have been and we didn't execute on early downs, and then we got behind the count and we let them come storming the castle pretty good. One thing leads to another and all of a sudden your momentum has changed.

REPORTER: Out of balance meaning passing?

COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, run/pass.

REPORTER: Is that play selection or --

COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, probably play selection.

REPORTER: When you see your offense struggling, do you as a play caller change what you do at that point based on, hey, this isn't working well, let's do this and how much of that do you --

COACH TRESSEL: Sometimes. And sometimes it works when you change and sometimes you don't change and it works that you didn't change because you just needed to do some things better, and then on the other hand, sometimes when you don't change, it doesn't work, but I think we lost a little bit of our balance. That would be my first thought from the coaching standpoint.

REPORTER: Jim, did you feel like with the line that it was -- was it more physical or was it mental breakdowns, I thought maybe on one play it looked like maybe there was a bad line call and one of the defensive tackles came in free on Troy, was there any of the defense where you doubted it physically?

COACH TRESSEL: No, I would have to say most errors, especially in pass protection occur mentally, very seldom does a guy run over a guy and hit the quarterback, as long as you've picked the right guy you've got a chance. I think we got a little bit tentative because we missed something and then all of a sudden you start thinking about, well, what if they do that again. And I think not unlike the group losing their momentum, I think we as individuals lost our momentum of doing our tasks, but, no, I don't think it was a wearing-down factor. There are so many timeouts now and stuff like that, that it's hard to get tired.

REPORTER: Were they a different looking defense than you all had seen on tape?

COACH TRESSEL: Not really. They've done a nice job over a two-year period of building their concept of who they want to be and how they do it and bringing kids along and they've got good athletes and got headed in the right direction from a momentum standpoint. Two things, I think, really helped them. One, when we were going to make it 21-0, we fumbled, that certainly helped them. And two, when we're going down the field at the beginning of the third quarter getting ready to make it 24-0 or 20-0 if we don't get a field goal, and then we don't execute a couple of things. Now, they probably didn't have anything to do with the first thing we helped them with. The second thing, you have to give them credit, they kept us out of the end zone, but, no, they didn't really change what they did.

REPORTER: Coach, Chris Wells had another fumble against Illinois, what concerns do you have about that being an issue and how is that going to affect his playing time the rest of the season?

COACH TRESSEL: Well, how concerned am I? You know, tremendously concerned. Whether it's Chris or anyone doing any job that isn't getting done the way we need it as a team. I'd like to think that he'll, one day, get that under control and I'm hoping it's this day and I said after the game and I still believe today that if we're going to become a very good team, then he's going to have to be a part of it, because I think bringing at them the ability to come in with three running backs, and I think he's come along in so many phases of the game, he's come along running the ball, he's coming along in his pass, coming along in his receiving responsibilities, he can add a lot to this team. Unfortunately, just like a quarterback who can add a lot to the team if they throw it to the other guys, can you afford -- what's the risk versus reward component there? So I'm hoping that he'll be a big, positive part of what we do these next two weeks through the regular season and on into the bowl game.

REPORTER: You said last week he just has to hold on to it tighter. Is there anything as coaches you guys can do or is this something he's got to fight through and figure out on his own?

COACH TRESSEL: I think it's one of those things that about the only thing coaches can do is have someone sit down and think about it, but to me, there's a certain length of time that makes sense. He had a chance to think about it through the second half of the game, but I don't know if there's anything drill-wise beyond what we do and I've always said that turnovers are all about how deep is your belief of the importance of the possession of that ball, whether you're the quarterback getting ready to throw it to somebody, you're the running back or the wide receiver who's got it in their hands or you're the linebacker who's got it right in their sights where he can intercept it, do you understand how important that is, and that sometimes takes time.

REPORTER: Why are freshman more prone though, all of us remember Maurice Clarett and Northwestern losing three, Eddie George had two against Illinois, why is it you think freshmen are more prone?

COACH TRESSEL: I don't think that freshmen have the game slowed down as much as older guys. When you come from the high school game, I don't care where you play, to the college game, the world is buzzing by you. And you have so many things going on in your head and physically going on. All of a sudden, you're a junior, the game slows down, you can do a better job taking care of everything you need to do, just like in life, when the world slows down, you've got a better chance.

REPORTER: Is the thing Saturday, though, with his fumble, he wasn't hit, it looks like he was actually trying to get a better grip.

COACH TRESSEL: It looked to me like he was switching it from one hand to the other, he saw this gigantic hole and sometimes that shocks you too. That might have been something new for that day.

REPORTER: Is this week an audition for him?

COACH TRESSEL: Audition, no, it's too late in the year for auditions. This is the real deal.

REPORTER: If he fumbles again, will he play again?

COACH TRESSEL: Oh, gosh, I don't know. Give me the rest of the scenario. Am I the next tailback in the game? Then he's playing.

REPORTER: What about Mo Wells?

COACH TRESSEL: Mo Wells, he's fine.

REPORTER: Coach, is that a practice situation too, did he show that in practice or just game day?

COACH TRESSEL: No.

REPORTER: Just game day.

COACH TRESSEL: I think he had one in the spring if I'm not mistaken.

REPORTER: Was there an element at all in the second half that maybe a one percent or five percent, whatever the figure is, that maybe players might have thought they had the game under control?

COACH TRESSEL: Oh, I'm sure. They're human and we kept them out of the end zone and there's about, what, eight something to go, nine something to go in the third quarter and they're starting down on their own 4, and you can get comfortable, and I'm not saying that can only happen with players, I'm sure it happens with players and fans. I mentioned to someone, the interesting thing, it reminded me of how important it is you have to do it, all of us have to do it for 60 minutes. We had a great crowd at Illinois. It's amazing how many people went over there, I don't know how many lived in that area or whatever, it was fabulous. I don't know how many. But it wasn't a crowd all riled up like sometimes when we're on the road and they're wired into it, and now, did they get comfortable, and I'm not blaming anything on them, but I'm just talking about reality, did they get comfortable, and they're humans too. So, yeah, I think, I don't know, rusty, what percentages you had there, one percent, three percent, five percent, it might be more, I don't know, but that's real.

REPORTER: You mentioned that you sat Chris Saturday and gave him some time to think about the fumble. You had not done that, I don't think, against Michigan State or Minnesota. Has he returned now to back-up to Pittman or does he need more time to think about it and be behind Wells Saturday at Northwestern?

COACH TRESSEL: Well, if he practices well, he'll be in good stead to go in and carry the ball like any other time, but you have to demonstrate.

REPORTER: Was it just we tried showing confidence in him by putting him back in the game when he fumbled and Saturday, let's try giving him some time to think about it, was that --

COACH TRESSEL: You know, it was probably neither. It was probably, right now the best thing for the team is to have Antonio Pittman in there as opposed to, we don't sit around and say, now, let's let him think about this a little longer. There was none of that discussion.

REPORTER: Coach, I've asked you about him before, but Antonio Smith today was put on the top ten list for the Thorpe Award can you again talk about what he has accomplished here as a walk-on and being in the top ten as a defensive back.

COACH TRESSEL: It's a great reminder of when people believe what they can accomplish, because if you would have told me two years ago that Antonio Smith would be starting, I'd have said, oh, boy, I respect your football intellect, but I can't agree. If you'd have told me that this August, I'd have said, you know, I'm not sure. But he believed he could play to that level, and that's what's most important. And it wasn't that anyone disbelieved, but I don't know that anyone was sure, but he was. And that's just the way he is. He's sure he will he'll have that mechanical engineering degree, whether he needs to study until 4:00 in the morning, but he's going to get it. And I remember this spring, we were done with a meeting and this and that and I said, anything else, Antonio, you'd like to talk about? And he said, you know what one of my goals would be is to be -- and I can't remember which video game he talked about, to be in the starting line-up on what is it, Madden or something, whatever the video game is, and I said, well, I don't know if I can help you with that, because they've never called me and asked me who should be starting on their video game, but that's the kind of visualization that he has. He just has belief in goals and things that he wants to do and the fact that he's a finalist for the Thorpe Award is a testament to his production, because I'm sure he was not on anyone's watch list, but he produced, and obviously someone noticed him and I don't have a vote for the Thorpe Award, and people have noticed and that's special, and I think Quinn Pitcock is one of the final four for the Lombardi.

REPORTER: Should Laurinaitis be on that Thorpe list? He kind of plays like a defensive back.

COACH TRESSEL: Again, no one ever asked me about the Thorpe list so I don't have a vote. I think Thorpe is DB though, isn't it? I think the line backers are allowed to be on Butkis and Lombardi, and I knew it was a joke, but I'm trying to play through it.

REPORTER: With the five interceptions, did you see that quality in him during the season? We've seen great defensive backs here that finish the season with no interceptions and for a linebacker to get five, that's kind of --

COACH TRESSEL: He has good ball skills and he has good awareness, and maybe most important, he has good guys in front of him putting pressure on, and you add all that together, if you're in the right place and you can catch, and the people in front of you are creating a little bit of problems for the guy with the ball in his hands, you have a chance. Now, five's a lot, and I've seen guys go one season with seven and the next two seasons with none. Sometimes it's luck, but he's -- I don't know that he's dropped any, so he's been there.

REPORTER: You talk about the human factor and getting complacent or thinking you have the game in control, what do you do as the coach now and how do you handle your team the rest of the way as far as having a lead or is there anything tangible you can do to affect the human factor of not becoming complacent during a game?

COACH TRESSEL: I think the only thing you can do is experience it. Now, we've experienced it. Now, did we learn the lesson that 60 minutes is what it takes to win on the road in the Big Ten? Do we truly understand that? Not unlike the question about Chris, now, does he truly understand that there's nothing -- those 17 extra yards he could have gotten on that play if he switched his hand and was able to hit with his other arm and all that stuff aren't as important as that ball. Now, does he understand that? Do we understand that 60 minutes is what is needed and that's how deeply do you understand, that's the key to anything. Did we learn? I don't know. Can I help them learn that? We can talk about it and so forth, but I have to be reminded too, so I'm learning on the job as well.

REPORTER: So your half-time talk may not have been as emotional as maybe you wanted it to be?

COACH TRESSEL: Well, the problem is we did exactly what we needed to do when we came out after the half. We kicked, started driving right down the field, not that the half-time talk has ever worked, but I'm sure that half-time talks don't get it, knowing that I've got to do it every second, that's the key, and we'll find out if we've learned it, because we're back on the road.

REPORTER: How important is it, for everyone, to vote today? You've gotten behind some school bond issues and been politically active in some sense.

COACH TRESSEL: I don't know about politically active, but I do enjoy causes.

REPORTER: You were called senator for a while, you didn't embrace that.

COACH TRESSEL: Right, okay. I did vote, even though I don't have my Rusty Miller badge, I voted, but I did absentee because I can't wait until 6:30 to go to work. But I think it's important. If you don't think your vote is important, then you don't really understand the system because your vote is important.

REPORTER: Would you be energized to run at some point down the line?

COACH TRESSEL: No.

REPORTER: Never?

COACH TRESSEL: To run for election.

REPORTER: Sure.

COACH TRESSEL: No.

REPORTER: You're sure of that?

COACH TRESSEL: Yeah. I guess we're done, Steve. Wait a minute, we've got Marla.

STEVE SNAPP: You may want to run out of here.

COACH TRESSEL: We've got Marla. We can't go without Marla.

REPORTER: If you broke your leg like Joe, would you be working this week?

COACH TRESSEL: You know, I only got run over once, and I didn't get hit that bad, I got a hyperextended knee and I'll tell you what, I was 30 some, and I coached the rest of the year with a knee brace, but when you're a coach and you're in the middle of something, I don't think you ever stop and he got banged. You just hate seeing that. Sidelines are dangerous. I mean, especially when you back up and you hit a wall of people and you've got nowhere to go. I feel awful for him, but he won't stop coaching. He's in the middle of the stream.

REPORTER: Are you working on your fitness?

COACH TRESSEL: I can't answer that question because it would break our jinx here.

http://ohiostatebuckeyes.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/110706aaf.html
 
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Buckskin86;655068; said:
REPORTER: You mentioned that you sat Chris Saturday and gave him some time to think about the fumble. You had not done that, I don't think, against Michigan State or Minnesota. Has he returned now to back-up to Pittman or does he need more time to think about it and be behind Wells Saturday at Northwestern?

COACH TRESSEL: Well, if he practices well, he'll be in good stead to go in and carry the ball like any other time, but you have to demonstrate.

You have to wonder if Tressel didn't actually say "Wells" under his breath. That would certainly turn the reporter's question on its head. Thanks!
 
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Official Site

Transcript From The November 13th Football Press Luncheon

Previewing Ohio State vs. Michigan

B2012026.64;dcadv=1134329;dcove=o;sz=1x1;ord=7771103
Nov. 13, 2006
COACH TRESSEL: Well, it's finally here, what you've been talking about for six weeks. We're excited to be at this point, to have the privilege of being in the Ohio State-Michigan game and having it right here in our stadium and the whole world will be watching two outstanding football teams. I think point number one is we have to make sure we do a great job of putting on the event, great sportsmanship by all involved and we've got to have great effort. I'm sure the kids are going to be so excited and it's going to be a special day, especially in terms of our seniors. We've got 19 seniors, of which 18 of them are fifth-year guys and they've invested countless hours and effort and I think represented this group tremendously well. I saw -- Steve mentioned, I think they've got 54 wins in those five years they've been here whether they were playing on scout team or playing in the game, making big plays, whatever it happens to be. This has been an outstanding group and this is their last opportunity to play in Ohio Stadium, this is their last opportunity to play in the greatest game that there is, and we're excited.
We're playing against a great football team, everyone knows that. That's why the room is so full. Michigan is an outstanding football team. What I like about them is that they have tremendous depth. You can see that they're very mature, lots of Veterans in virtually all places they play with great effort, they play with great toughness and they do all the fundamental things so well. They block well. They tackle well. They're so competitive along the lines. They have a great senior kicker. You can start with the defensive side of things, I think their front is as good as any front we've seen the entire year. Their linebackers are veterans with Crable and Burgess and Harris and those guys that have been there forever and doing a tremendous job. Their secondary, they roll in about seven different guys that are very, very talented both as tackles and cover guys is what is impressive to me.

And if you flip it over to their offensive side up front, I think they're powerful, they play low. What do you say about Hart? Just an outstanding guy, both as a runner and as a pass receiver. Their fullback, to me is underrated. He's a guy that there's not much glory in playing full back these days and he keeps pounding up in there. And of course their corps of receivers are outstanding, great skill, great size, great blockers. I think when you watch the film, you can't lose sight of the fact what a great job they do blocking and they're led by a veteran quarterback and he does a great job. He's highly efficient, ranked in the top two or three in passing efficiency in the conference and he just does an outstanding job there. Their tight ends are big and strong and across the board, that's why they're 11-0, they're an outstanding football team and our guys are anxious to compete with them and it's exciting to be apart of this week. I suppose I should have mentioned last week's game, but we haven't thought much about it and so just being honest.
REPORTER: Jim, Troy always seems to step up in the bigger games. What is it about him or players like him that are able to do that?
COACH TRESSEL: Troy Smith is highly competitive. Joe Daniels and I were sitting in the office watching film early this morning and he came in with his -- I don't know what he had on, I don't want to give a commercial out but he came in with whatever breakfast food he had there and came in and says, what are we looking at and almost grabbed the clicker to take over. He just loves competition. He's got great respect for the guys he's playing against because he's played against them before and he has great respect for what they've accomplished and I think he just gets excited about competitive situations.
REPORTER: Why don't you think a Big Ten quarterback has won the Heisman, I think in the modern era, does that say how competitive the conference is.
COACH TRESSEL: Gosh, I didn't know that, the modern era.
REPORTER: Yeah, Les Horvath, I guess.
COACH TRESSEL: You know, I don't know. That's a good question. The Big Ten has had a lot of good quarterbacks. There are some good ones playing in the NFL and I don't know the answer to that.
REPORTER: Can you talk about what Troy Smith does well, what you like about him, maybe some comments or words that come to mind when you think of Troy Smith?
COACH TRESSEL: When you think of Troy, the first thing that comes to my mind is leadership, probably the second thing is competitiveness, and maybe the third thing that jumps up to me about Troy is his hunger to be in command of what's going on. He wants to know, we might have been sitting there this morning talking about a coverage and he'd say, you know, that was nickel, that wasn't just cover whatever, that was nickel cover whatever. And he's just got a hunger for knowledge.
REPORTER: Jim, what's he been like in fourth quarter of the last two Michigan games, though, on the sidelines when you're talking to him and stuff? What's been his demeanor.
COACH TRESSEL: Kind of like, hey, get a play called so that I can go out there. He wants to have the ball in his hands. He wants to make a difference. He cares and maybe the first word that should have popped into my mind because I think it's so true is that he cares so deeply for his teammates and he wants something good to happen for them. And I guess that's the leadership part, but he wants the ball in his hands and he wants to get going.
REPORTER: You've won four of five against Michigan, are we reading too much into that, that you might have some answer that other coaches have not had or --
COACH TRESSEL: I was watching film this morning. I don't have any answers at this moment, I'll tell you that. No, there's -- Troy Smith spins and runs 46 yards, now come on, I don't have any answers. I think our guys play hard. They have for however many years. The Ohio State-Michigan game has gone on and sometimes you come up on the good end, sometimes you don't. But if anyone pretends to think they have the answer, they've got a problem.
REPORTER: Can you let that get to you if you're the team that's losing. I know Ohio State went through that period during the '90s where it seemed like no matter what they did they came up three or four points short. After a while, does that play in your mind that you're expecting something bad to happen?
COACH TRESSEL: I don't think so. You're so engrossed in the situation and you're so busy trying to figure it out and trying to do what's best for your players in terms of how can we put them in the best position and I don't even think you have time to -- whether it's going good or whether it's going bad, you're always nervous about how is it going to go, so --
REPORTER: Talk about the role of coaches in this series, obviously coaches' names or coaches' reputations have been made and broken here all the way back to Woody, are coaches given too much credit or too much blame either way?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, I'm sure that's true. Not unlike the quarterback sometimes gets blamed for things and maybe there wasn't good protection or a ball was dropped here or there, and the same as with a coach. And I know that it's about our role is what our staff does, and then there's a role that all the players have and there's a role that the scout team guys have and so forth. What I hope that we can do as the staff is play our role the best we possibly can and get our guys in the best position and give them a chance, but we're probably given too much credit when all goes well.
REPORTER: Also isn't it also the coach's role to set a tone for the big games?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, it can be, certainly. I'm sure there are times when we thought that we had things perfectly, you know, the tone set just right and the right ideas and so forth and you look out there and say, hey, they're not playing that defense or they're not running those routes, so you throw away those thoughts and tones, but we do have a role in setting the tone because our young people look to us for guidance, they look to our seniors for guidance, and those senior guys set the tone probably more strongly than we do as coaches, because they hear our sermons constantly, but when Troy Smith or Brandon Mitchell mentions something in the DB room, those guys are glued in, because he's out there doing it.
REPORTER: Do you remember the first time that you really might have had a recollection of a Michigan-Ohio State game.
COACH TRESSEL: The first time you mean watching it or being in it.
REPORTER: Watching it, let's say.
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, I've mentioned a number of years here of my dad being a coach in the Division III level, we were typically done by the time that the Ohio State-Michigan came to be it used to be about the first time I saw my dad in the light of day. And we got to watch the game and he was a huge Buckeye fan and probably the most important thing to me was I got a chance to be with him and watch it, and of course here he was rooting for his team so that became my team.
REPORTER: What's it like coaching this game? You've had five games, what's it like being out there? It's got to be an unbelievable feeling, can you talk about that?
COACH TRESSEL: It's a tremendous feeling. You can feel the electricity and the energy and you can't quantify it, but you can feel it. I remember my first game as an assistant thinking I was preparing for just another game as a coach, and then all of a sudden you got into the environment, and I've mentioned before, I wasn't worth a hoot probably the first quarter because I was just in awe of the feeling. I probably wasn't worth a hoot in the fourth quarter either, but it's just a tremendous feeling to be a part of something that so many people are excited about and so many people count it special, I don't know who else gets to sit at home with their dad and watch that game, I got an email from a guy that he's flying to Las Vegas to watch the game with his son because he couldn't get tickets to the game, and flying home that night, but he just wants to be with his son and I can relate to that and it's special.
REPORTER: What's the feeling about being 4-1 against Michigan?
COACH TRESSEL: It has nothing to do with 2006, that's the biggest feeling.
REPORTER: Jim, you mentioned earlier, Troy spinning away and making a play, that kind of thing, against a defense this good, how often does it come down to a player maybe making plays that aren't designed a certain way but it's a guy creating on his own under duress and finding a way?
COACH TRESSEL: I think a lot of battles happen that way, that somebody's going to break a tackle, somebody's going to go up and grab a ball in the air that maybe wasn't perfectly thrown or the coverage was perfect, but someone makes a play. I think that happens a lot when you're getting in a battle like this one.
REPORTER: Do you find yourself, though, almost counting on that when you've got Troy Smith? I know you X and O, but those are really --
COACH TRESSEL: You know, you really don't. Everything you X and O about you think might have a chance, and some of them do and some of them don't. But you do know the thing about Troy is that he's going to be careful with the football and he has the capability of making something happen with the football that you had no design involved with. Now, the thing that you like about him is that he doesn't go under center with that thought in mind, he goes under center, he's going to read the progression of what's going on and if it was a bad call, who knows, he might think under his breath, boy, this is a great call, and I might have to do something, but you don't ever sit back and say, well, you know, Troy's going to do something or Pittman's going to break three tackles on this play so who cares who we block it. But it is part of the game, you've got to -- if you want to win the game, somebody's going to have to make some special plays, and when you talk about legacies, there's lots of people on both sides of the rivalry that are remembered by the plays they made in this game.
REPORTER: Jim, talking about Troy again, the wrap he's been wearing on his thumb, do you think that's affected him at all in games or do you think -- have you done anything in practice to limit his reps at all?
COACH TRESSEL: No, he hasn't missed a rep at all. I don't know that it's -- from Troy, you can never get whether or not -- to him, it never bothers him. He gets it wrapped, it's obvious, but I think there will be so much adrenaline and so much flowing through his thumb down to his big toe that he's not going to feel anything.
REPORTER: Chris Wells, did he pass a test from you, perhaps, this past weekend and how important would he be against a great rushing defense like the one you're going to face?
COACH TRESSEL: I think Chris Wells is a big part of who we want to be and our chance of succeeding, because he's a guy that's very talented. He's gotten to the point now where there's not anything that he hasn't experienced. He's experienced some of the passing game. He's experienced being in big games, Big Ten games, going through the test of time that endure of going every week and learning a different game plan and here's what they do defensively. Until you experience it once, you don't know what's going to happen the next week, but I'm counting on Chris Wells to be a great contributor.
REPORTER: Do you have to run the ball effectively in order to win the game?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, I think you do. Anytime. It's one of the things we talk about every week is who wins the battle of the trenches and the rush yards and the rush defense is the greatest indication of that and that's why you have to be so impressed with Michigan. Just look at their numbers. You don't even have to look at their film, look at their numbers.
REPORTER: What concerns you the most about them of all the concerns you have? Is there one that sticks out when you're playing this game.
COACH TRESSEL: What concerns us the most about Michigan? Oh, they're good. They're not going to give you anything. You're going to have to earn every inch that you get. You're going to have to play tremendous gap control defense and you better cover every zone and the whole thing. You better be spotless. But that's not a concern, that's something that you know. I don't think there's anything that concerns me about this game, we've just got to get excited to be out there and play and we've got to play well because Michigan's going to play well.
REPORTER: Jim, you talk about the numbers, giving up 30 yards a game on the ground and you talk about the importance of developing your own running game, how do you game plan for a defense that that's solid against the run.
COACH TRESSEL: That's what we're doing right now.
REPORTER: I know it's a secret, but give us some indication.
COACH TRESSEL: No secret. If I even told you I had some of those secrets already. This is Monday, and that's what we're working on and that's what you have to come up with is a way you're competing against people and the ones we're playing against are the best.
REPORTER: Do you sense Alex Boone will be back Saturday?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, yeah, I think so.
REPORTER: Is Kurt Coleman?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah, Coleman, Boone, and Brandon Smith is still out, Anderson Russell is still out, D'Andrea, of course. Quinn Pitcock's okay, David Patterson is fine. We're in game 12, 12 games in a row, I have no complaints.
REPORTER: Jim, with the magnitude of this game, how gratifying is it to be playing it in Columbus?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, it's special for our seniors. When you have this many guys that have played this long and toiled so much and they've done so many things, so many of them have already graduated, so many of them have already made an impact in the community, they've done so much while they've been here and for their senior year to have this game here, it's real special.
REPORTER: How much do you think the home field advantage of playing at Ohio Stadium will help the Buckeyes?
COACH TRESSEL: Well, I hope the home field advantage helps a great deal. I hope our crowd is tremendously loud. I hope it provides the energy that can raise us up to the level -- in a game like this, you better play better than you are. And if our crowd can help raise us up playing better than we are, I think that's a great advantage and we're looking forward to that.
REPORTER: Jim, you mentioned earlier how important Chris Wells is to the running game. Do you feel after he was under much scrutiny last week with the issues as of late, do you feel he's back on track? And also, how important is Mo Wells?
COACH TRESSEL: I think all three of those guys are important. Pittman would get the most carries in a perfect world, with good health and so forth. Chris would probably get the next most and Mo the third most, but when you say is he back on track, I hope so. I thought he did a good job running. I teased him a little bit Sunday about stumbling a little bit because he could have had one to the house, but he's a good back and he's going to be even better as time goes and we need him to have a great game.
REPORTER: Jim, after losing so many starters on defense, what was your expectation for your defense coming into this season and how would you assess them?
COACH TRESSEL: My expectations were knowing the defensive staff that we have, knowing the type of kids that we have, is that I expected them to roll their sleeves up and try to get good at their craft. And I knew they'd have good leadership, Quinn Pitcock and David Patterson and Joel Penton up front and Brandon Mitchell and Antonio Smith, you can't mention the progress we've had in 2006 without mentioning Antonio Smith. With that leadership kind of surrounding the rest with their sleeves rolled up going to work, I think they've progressed.
REPORTER: As much as Laurinaitis has meant to the defense this year, in retrospect, how big was it that he got thrust into the Michigan game the last two years because of Bobby's injuries?
COACH TRESSEL: I think anytime you get experience like the opportunities James had against Michigan and then got to play the entire bowl game, that's huge. Practice, we can get as close to game-like as humanly possible, but it's not the game. We try to have fast tempo and we try to make it as life-like as it can be, but getting that game opportunity, tremendous.
REPORTER: How much better is he now than he was then?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, he's significantly better. He's experienced so many things. He's played 11 more games now and 40, 50, 60 snaps a game over 11 games, he's learned a lot.
REPORTER: Are you somewhat insulated or do you choose to be insulated from some of the stuff that goes on this week leading up to the game, there's so much hysteria out there, and words bantered about, do you get involved in that or do you just tell people, hey, keep this stuff away from me?
COACH TRESSEL: We're pretty insulated, which we're insulated every week. That's the life we live is one of insulation. It's exciting. You can feel it, though. You can feel the energy about it. It's fun. And so we're a part of it too, we just have a different part of it.
REPORTER: Woody and Bo seemed to have a great rivalry but there was also a psychological gamesmanship, is it like that with Lloyd Carr, or is it just straightforward when you meet him before the game?
COACH TRESSEL: You know, we've only met a few times at games and obviously I've known him for years in the profession and we have opportunities to be together in meetings and that type of thing and I don't see any gamesmanship on his part, I would hope he doesn't see any on mine. We're both trying to run programs to be the best they can be and he's done a pretty good job.
REPORTER: Jim, along that line, the relationship between Ohio State and Michigan is different, I suspect, than anyone else on your schedule. Is it natural that the relationship between the coach at Ohio State and the coach at Michigan is different than any other relationship you have with any other coach?
COACH TRESSEL: Not really. I don't get any more time with Coach Carr, I don't get any less, and I have great respect for every coach in our league and every coach that I happen to know over these many, many years and there might be a little bit more understanding on my part knowing exactly what he's living every day, because the expectations are tremendous. Just like ours are. So there might be a little bit more feeling from that standpoint, but no -- we're so busy, we don't have a whole bunch of time to feel. But the thing that I do know about Coach Carr and one of the kids in this class, I remember way back when we were both recruiting him, and I'll never forget this, because it was like my second recruiting year, I remember Coach Carr, I didn't hear him say that, but the youngster told me five years ago, he said, you know, one thing you want to make sure you do is you want to go to one of these two schools because this is the greatest rivalry in college football and you want to be a part of that. And that was my first time being in this seat and him in that seat and I was tremendously impressed with his feeling for what Ohio State and Michigan are both all about.
REPORTER: Will your future be based on how you do in this game?
REPORTER: Did you have any rematches or how did you feel about those.
COACH TRESSEL: Rematches.
REPORTER: When you had a 1-AA playoffs, did you have to play a team you'd already played in the regular season?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: The whole dynamics of it.
COACH TRESSEL: I felt good about it because we were at the third round and we were still in there. I felt even better about it when we won in the last play of the game.
REPORTER: Who was it against.
COACH TRESSEL: Eastern Kentucky.
REPORTER: Did you beat them during the season?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: Was it more difficult to prepare for a second time? Did you feel like they had the psychological edge or anything?
COACH TRESSEL: Gosh, I don't know. When we won and they won, we didn't spend any time figuring out if it was difficult, we went to work. They were a great team, but it's always difficult playing great teams.
REPORTER: Jim, should a coach's future be based on his success or lack thereof in this game?
COACH TRESSEL: In part, your success in everything you do, dictates your future, so I guess the obvious answer to the question is yes.
REPORTER: What makes the rivalry singular to you?
COACH TRESSEL: Singular.
REPORTER: Unique.
COACH TRESSEL: It's the one I know the best. Growing up with it, having been an assistant coach within it, and now being a part of it, I can't fathom anything else being like it, from my perspective.
REPORTER: Jim, watching that rivalry as a kid, then, did you not only like Ohio State, did you really dislike Michigan?
COACH TRESSEL: No, I liked them both, but I just liked Ohio State better.
REPORTER: You can really like both Ohio State and Michigan?
COACH TRESSEL: I think if you like the game of football, you can.
REPORTER: Once you knew you wanted to follow in your dad's footsteps, did you envision yourself coaching in this game before it became a reality?
COACH TRESSEL: No.
REPORTER: You mentioned the electricity that you can generally feel during the week, is there any difference, given the fact that the stakes are a Big Ten championship and a trip to the National Championship game this year 11-0, or is the game, Ohio State-Michigan enough? Is the game extra electricity or --
COACH TRESSEL: The only electricity I feel at this moment extra is the fact that I've known these fifth-year seniors for so long and seen what they've done on our behalf. So really to me what it's about is it's about those guys and this game and what happens after that seems like a long way from now, because what's important is it's the last time they get to step out there and it happens to be in this game.
REPORTER: You mentioned that you liked them both and every year we hear both sides, coaches and players, former players, talk on and on about the respect that they have for each other and that's all valid, but the fact is, outside the football programs, there's a real hatred out there. Why do you think people in Ohio hate Michigan so much?
COACH TRESSEL: You know, I think it's kind of a nice release to be so passionate about something. I don't know if dispassionate is a word, about something else, but that's your team and that's who you're rooting for. I guess, I don't know.
REPORTER: With your single-minded focus, have you thought about the ramifications of a victory, outright Big Ten title, National Championship game, also that you probably are going to go to a BCS bowl win or lose, are any of those things in your mind or is it all Michigan-Ohio State.
COACH TRESSEL: Right now it's all Ohio State-Michigan and a bunch of seniors who -- my mind just whirls back to the fact that, I remember when we were recruiting them and I remember when they were on the scout team and I remember when they got their first little bit of playing time, when the light went on on certain things and you just kind of -- when you get to the end, that's the beauty of -- I've always said, there's two things that make this game so important, one is it's Ohio State-Michigan, and two, it's the last regular season game and there's something about that. So here we are at the last time for these guys and the bowl is a whole different world. That's a different season unto itself, but this is the end of this season and to me, that's what it's about.
REPORTER: While your mind is whirling, think back to 2002 about that game and what that game meant?
COACH TRESSEL: While I've got my mind open.
REPORTER: Yeah, I read that was the greatest Ohio State victory in this game and stuff, but I'm just wondering, do you remember what you felt coming off the field that day? I don't know if satisfaction, completion, obviously you were going to the National Championship game, but what did you feel?
COACH TRESSEL: Boy, that was such a hard fought battle, it ends up with one second left on the clock, you know, I don't know. I can't remember what I felt.
REPORTER: With everything at stake, where does the outright Big Ten title fit in, in terms of what you can achieve?
COACH TRESSEL: Oh, that's huge. We haven't had an outright Big Ten title since 1984 and we've had a number of co-championships and so forth, but that's huge. Now, where does it rank in comparison to the real things? Below them, but it's big.
REPORTER: When you have a place with such --
COACH TRESSEL: We have an anarchy here or whatever with my open mind, this is tough. Go ahead.
REPORTER: When you have a place like this where there's such history and such tradition, do you find that each team seems to find their niche in that history in winning an out right Big Ten title or going wire to wire as a number one possibly would be something that this team could do that not many other or no other Ohio State teams have done?
COACH TRESSEL: I think all teams or all individuals have a goal that they would like to be remembered and they would like to leave a legacy and primarily from one another, because they know everyone has worked so hard together, but also from themselves. They like to be able to say, hey, I was on that whatever, 2002 team or I was on that '68 team, so absolutely people desire to leave a legacy.
REPORTER: Just following up, do you think to play in the National Championship game a team should have to win their conference?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: Just philosophically?
COACH TRESSEL: Yeah.
REPORTER: Why, because there is a very real chance the loser in this game could finish second in the Big Ten and play for the National Championship?
COACH TRESSEL: The thing we say as we go into every year, if you want a chance to play for the National Championship, you better make the assumption that you need to win every game in college division I-A conference and be a champion and that's the way we enter it and hadn't thought about it, but you asked the question so I gave you the short answer, I guess.
REPORTER: Is there something you can do to help your team alleviate the pressure? Has this ever been bigger? Or is this kind of what's inside them that --
COACH TRESSEL: I think all the kids will handle it differently. The guys playing for the last time have a different set of circumstances. The guys younger who might not even be getting into the game, they'll probably be just staring around the stadium. There's such a broad view of how they'll handle it, but I promise you this, every one of them will remember it, and you talk about a privilege to play in a game like the Ohio State-Michigan game, forget our records, and then to play in one where the records are as they are, I think every one of the kids will remember it forever and everyone will handle it differently, but it will be an exciting day for all of us.
 
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Link contains a long press conference for JT. For those that don't recall, Laurinaitis's Mom was a bodybuilder.

And apparently the last question I'm copying came from Southern Florida. :tongue2:

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Head coach Jim Tressel meets with the media during the BCS Championship Game media day.

...

Q. Would you have wanted to play Boise State after watching them last Monday night?

COACH TRESSEL: Boise State is awfully good. I watched them for about ten minutes. I have been watching Florida for hours and hours and hours so I'd rather play them.

...

Q. If you were one of us asking you questions, what would you ask you?

COACH TRESSEL: What would I ask me? You know, kind of like the question that came up about is this different being a championship game than a Bowl experience because to me that is important for our kids to have a Bowl experience and not just another game that happens to be for the championship.


And to me, that keeps it a little bit in the perspective into what we are trying to do. I suppose I'd ask, Hey, Coach, your school started Wednesday, what adjustments have you made from that standpoint, because that's important as well.
Again, I wasn't trained to ask questions. I wasn't trained to answer them either, by the way.

...

Q. Coach, can you talk about Laurinaitis's development from, I think, just one start in a Bowl last year to this year.

COACH TRESSEL: The thing about James Laurinaitis from the day he got there was that he was going to pay close attention and study from the right people. He would follow A.J. Hawk and Bobby Carpenter and Anthony Schlegel all around, into the weight room, into the film room. He was going to pick up things from the right people. He was going to surround himself with the right people off the field and make good decisions.


Academically, he was going to get around the people to whom academics were very important. So he was an excellent decision maker from the day he walked in the door, and you couple that with his extraordinary talent and he is going to end up being a very good player.
Q. His dad ever say, You don't play him, I am going to body slam you, or anything like that?

COACH TRESSEL: He didn't mention that. But I would listen more to his mom anyway.

...

Q. Coach, what are the NFL personnel people saying? What are some of the things you are hearing?

COACH TRESSEL: I think NFL people want the same thing we do, they want guys to win. They want guys to compete. The thing that I continue to say and I haven't heard anyone disagree is that Troy can make every throw and there are some people who are excellent quarterbacks, they can't make every throw.


We really haven't had the traffic through in December like you have during the fall and they don't bug us. Where they will really start rolling through is in February and March with their opinions and then after you hear all their opinions, the draft will go some opposite direction.

But I think they like Troy.
Q. Do you think his height is overrated?

COACH TRESSEL: Well, at five foot nine, I feel the same. Right, you agree? The rest of you (waving).


There have been plenty of guys who have played the game at six foot and done well. Is it one of the measurables? Yes. And so people put all the things they can measure, game film, vertical jump, height, all that.
They think they can measure when they go out there and do all the throwing tests. But that's a fact that he is six foot and there will be some teams that shy away. But all he needs is the right team.

...

Q. (Indiscernible)?

COACH TRESSEL: I was looking all over for the flag and then it sailed out there and I said hallelujah.

Q. Did you expect to see fireworks?

COACH TRESSEL: I needed to find the flag.
 
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An interesting comment by JT about tOSU's first offensive formation in his first game as head coach in the 'Shoe, against Akron in 2001.

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Transcript From Coach Tressel Weekly Press Conference


REPORTER: Knowing how much you like to reflect on past games, Akron was your first opponent when you were an Ohio State coach. Can you kind of compare and contrast what it was like for you six years ago and what it is now?

COACH TRESSEL: It's interesting, to show you how disorganized we were, the first time we were down by the goal line, we called a wristband play, and our guys came lined up in a formation that wasn't a formation on the wristband. And we were screaming and yelling, you're wrong, Steve (Bellisari), get them moved or whatever and he throws a touchdown, comes off the field, say, what -- he had Thursday's wristband on, he didn't even have -- we didn't even have the right wristbands on our guy.

So I think we're further along with what we're doing. We're a little more comfortable and we've experienced some things and I think anytime you take on a new situation, first and foremost, you have to figure it out. Thank goodness we had good players that even if we had the wrong plays, they could score touchdowns.
How is it different today? You feel a little more comfortable, but on the other hand, it doesn't feel any different preparing today for Akron than preparing for Akron back in 1987 when we played them or whatever. It's -- game preparation is kind of the fun of the whole thing and that doesn't change.

Cont'd ...


REPORTER: J. D. Brookhart took himself off of being offensive coordinator because he didn't want his defensive players to be slighted. You're an offensive-minded coach, is that something you've ever tried to compensate so your defensive players didn't feel like they were being left out?

COACH TRESSEL: You're the first person that's ever said I was offensive-minded. That's pretty nice. Most of the guys in here say I have two plays I like. But I think you have to do what you think the group needs and we're all very involved in special teams here. Very seldom do I stick my nose in from a defensive scheme standpoint, but I do stick my nose around the defenders. So if there's ever a point in time where I feel as if -- and I think what J. D. felt is that he didn't have enough interaction, but our special teams are full of defensive guys and I'm in every one of those meetings and talking out of turn and everything else, so I have never felt detached. I think J. D. felt a little detached the way he talked about it this summer, because J. D.'s a lot more of an offensive minded guy than I am, but he felt that's what his team needed. That's why he's been successful as a coach as he's always done what his team has needed and I think he's done a tremendous job there and he's got a good program.
 
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Transcript from the weekly press luncheon for Washington.

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COACH TRESSEL: We've had two opportunities to play in our stadium and came away with two wins and maybe more importantly a lot about who we are and what we've got to do to become better and some experience for some guys that haven't been in the game a whole lot, and so we're excited about moving forward. And we did have some good performances in the ball game, I think 12 or 13 of the defensive guys graded winning performance and three or four of the offensive guys did the same.

The special teams Player of the Week was A. J. Trapasso. A. J.'s first punt wasn't a great one, had good placement, so forth, good hang time, and then it bounced backwards, unlike their first couple punts that seemed to bounce just right. But after that, he averaged over 46 yards and netted over 44 yards and really, that's going to be a critical component of this football team, if we can have an excellent punt unit, because as the battles get tougher, the field position becomes even more important and A. J. Trapasso will be an important part of this along with the snapper and protectors and all the rest, but he was the special units Player of the Week.

The defensive Player of the Week was James Laurinaitis for the second week in a row. I think he had 11 tackles, unassisted and four assists. He had a tackle for loss and a quarterback sack and really continues to be a good leader of this defense and continues to work hard on his game and study the game and has a lot of goals in mind as to how good he would like his defense to become and how good he would like to be as a contributor.

The Player of the Week on offense was Jimmy Cordle and Jimmy was just in his second game as a center and his second game happened to be against a front that he had to make a lot of decisions and he did a good job of making those decisions, plus he had a nose man on him the entire game which puts a little additional strain on a center and really Coach Bollman thought he made excellent progress and was the offensive player of the game.

The Jim Parker offensive lineman of the game was tight end Jake Ballard. Jake continues to grow as an excellent tight end. We think he can become a great blocker and an excellent receiver as well. And the way that he's playing, it gives us an opportunity at times to have two tight ends in the game and some depth in our one tight end situations and Jake Ballard continues to get better and better.

The attack force Player of the Week was Doug Worthington. Doug is a young guy that's gotten in and had a chance to continue to grow and really works hard on his technique. He has a lot of pride in how he plays the game and he had an outstanding performance, not just as our attack force player of the game but he also won the Jack Tatum hit of the week as voted by the team. There were four nominations and he was the landslide victor in the applause meter for the Jack Tatum hit of the week and did an excellent job there.
We continue to have great work from our guys that don't get to play on Saturdays, those guys that work those special units, and I marvel sometimes at how much time and study they give to the opponents and Donnie Evege was the discount unit special player of the week. He's a young guy that's going to be a very, very good player. He's tuned in, studies it, all he does is study the team. Brian Rolle was the defensive scout team player of the week, he's a full-speed guy all the time, loves the game of football, whether he's running down the kickoff or going to block a punt or playing on the scout team or playing defense, he does it fast and he enjoys it and he's going to be an exciting member of our football team. And then the scout offensive player was J. D. Larson, tight end from out in California, and just a good, young guy that gives a lot of effort, and those three guys were the work horses on those special teams, and we'll continue to get great scout team play because of the character of our young guys and they do a great job.

cont'd ...
 
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Transcript from yesterday's press luncheon for Northwestern.

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COACH TRESSEL: Oh well. Our guys had, I think, an excellent experience traveling out to Seattle. Only three of the travel squad had ever been there, so it was great experience for those 67 guys who had never been to the city, and again because school was not in session, we had the luxury of going out early and allowing them to spend some time walking around the sites and seeing fish thrown at them and it's part of what they do. I thought they handled it well. I thought they traveled well and represented us well, and played hard.

Washington was a physical team. That was a physical game. You could tell the next day, guys kind of limping around, and part of it, you get on a plane after a physical game like that and travel back across the country, we didn't have any flight problems, which was a good thing. We were back at the Woody Hayes at 2:00 a.m. That was pretty darn good. And I thought our guys did a good job, and some of which, that was the first time traveling with a collegiate football team.

I thought they played hard. I thought we progressed. We know there's a lot more to go and we've got to get a lot better in many, many areas but, again, it was a good challenge against a good team. I think all of you who watched know that that quarterback of theirs is going to be special and I'm glad we played him as a red-shirt freshman and not a red-shirt senior because he's going to be darn good.

We're proud of the way our kids played across the board, offense, defense, special teams. It wasn't perfect, but we did some things with each unit that gave us a chance to win.

A. J. Trapasso was the special teams player of the week. We struggled a little bit with our long snapping, and fortunately A. J. did a good job of handling those, and I thought one of the key plays in the game, you're at a stadium like that, and those of you who were there know that that place can get loud and really get behind their team. We were up by 13 and we needed to punt them down in, and we punted up to the 4 and that was a huge play in my mind, to take a little bit of the wind out of their sails, and A. J. did an excellent job and was the special units player of the game.
[URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1059348"]Donald Washington[/URL] was the defensive player of the game. He continues to get better and better, did a good job playing his assignment, still mad at himself, felt like he could have broke on one, made a pick, but really played a good football team, graded out extremely well, and if he'll continue to improve, he's going to be a very, very good player.

The offensive player of the game was Chris "Beanie" Wells and Beanie graded out from a technique standpoint better than he has. As we mentioned after those first couple games, he had missed so much practice time that maybe he wasn't where he'd like to be, but his technique grade was much improved and obviously he carried it for 135 yards or something and caught a ball and did a nice job on his pass protection and so forth, and he was the offensive player of the game.

The Jim Parker offensive lineman was [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1059468"]Jake Ballard[/URL]. Jake continues to give us an ability to be in there with two tights and really has done a nice job in what we call our silver personnel with two tights and two wides and just one back and gives us a little different look with the run and the pass, and Jake continues to get better and better all the time.

The attack force player on defense was [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1059421"]James Laurinaitis[/URL] and you probably know his stats better than I do. He had a couple interceptions, a couple quarterback sacks or TFLs, and 10 or 11 tackles and just continues to be an excellent leader, an excellent producer, great awareness, and he was our attack force player, plus I think he was the co-defensive player in the Big Ten for the week.

The Jack Tatum hit of the week was a tightly contested match that [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1059309"]Trever Robinson[/URL] had a big hit on the kickoff return and [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1151220"]Cameron Heyward[/URL] had a big hit on their quarterback and we needed to call for like three or four extra votes and it ended up being an executive decision by dare relate Hazell, and finally we had to go to executive decision and he picked Trev Robinson. And Cameron won't speak to him at this point, but Trev did a good job and made the big hit there.
And then as is typically the case, our scout teams did a great job of getting us ready. We had a couple guys from up in Trumbull County who were recognized, [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1152509"]Zach Willis[/URL] from Hubbard was the scout special units player, Danny Herron from Warren Harding and Brent Daly, senior defensive end was the scout defensive player and that shows you the type of unselfishness a guy like Brent has, he's a senior, graduates here in December, willing to do whatever the team needs. He's found himself a role to fight for on the field goal protection team, but continues to work hard on the scout team and was recognized as the scout defensive player of the week.

Cont'd ...
 
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Jim ... always the kidder.

REPORTER: Back to the previous question, the Akron game you were up 3-2 at the half, Saturday you were down at the half, this is kind of a youngish team, what did they prove to you in the last two weeks about --

COACH TRESSEL: I guess that they could overcome our game plans.
 
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JT started off today by talking about the Indians.

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COACH TRESSEL: How about that Tribe (Cleveland Indians)? All right. Well, it was the end of a two-game night road stand for us, we knew it was going to be a challenge going in and I thought our kids prepared extremely well for it. And the atmosphere over in West Lafayette was great, and I was amazed at how many of our people found their way. I understand we filled both end zones, but I don't know how in the heck they got those tickets on the sides, but the Buckeye fans are unbelievable, and the energy that they provided was extremely helpful and I thought our kids came out of the gate and started with what might seem a little bit insignificant, but a kickoff through the end zone making Purdue start on the 20 instead of starting on the 30 like they'd been starting most of the time, 30 or better. I think they were third in the nation in kickoff returns going into the game.
It was very significant. And our defense went to work and seized the tempo of the game and really never let that tempo go. Offensively, we scored two touchdowns early. I was disappointed we didn't score more touchdowns than that, but it was a heck of a thing that [URL="https://admin.xosn.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87743&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300&ATCLID=1059342"]Ryan Pretorius[/URL] banged three field goals through there because points are critical, especially on the road.

...


REPORTER: Are there common denominators in those big upsets do you think, as you look at them? Is there a trend that we can draw from all of this?

COACH TRESSEL: Turnovers. That's just a guess. Wouldn't you say, Coach Bruce?

COACH BRUCE: Yeah, I'd say that, and then coaching.

COACH TRESSEL: Strike that from the record. You guys would have more fun if Earle was up here.

Cont'd ...
 
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