Lions’ bite worse than Bucks’ bark?
By JON SPENCER
Call me crazy, but I think Ohio State is walking into an ambush Saturday night.
Santonio Holmes to this reporter: You’re crazy.
OK, those weren’t his exact words, but when I mentioned the Buckeyes will be facing pretty much the same Penn State defense that held them to one offensive touchdown last year in the ’Shoe,
Holmes didn’t even blink.
He spouted something about a conservative gameplan.
He’s correct. After going up 14-0 in the first quarter on a Ted Ginn (remember him?) punt return and a Tyler Everett interception return,
Jim Tressel closed up shop on his offense. Quarterback Troy Smith, making his second career start, went the distance but only attempted eight passes, completing six, in the 21-10 victory.
Holmes is correct, too, when he said, “We have to believe we can go deep and that we can throw well on these guys.”
You won’t know unless you take off the seatbelts, right Tress?
The Buckeyes should run more streaks and deep post patterns, taking advantage of the speed Holmes and Ginn and Anthony Gonzalez give them on the outside.
What works for the supposedly stodgy JoePa — have you seen the young Lions he’s turned loose in opposing secondaries? — should work for Ohio State.
That said, there’s a fine line between believing you can pass on the Nittany Lions and dismissing their defensive backs as so many paper lions.
Holmes came dangerously close to crossing that line when asked to respond to Tressel’s comment that Penn State’s Anwar Phillips and Alan Zemaitis might be the best set of cornerbacks in the Big Ten.
“To be honest, I don’t care about them ... I know we can beat them deep,” Holmes said. “Their technique is sound and they’ve earned respect, but we can bring them down to reality.”
And that is?
“Reality is, you can’t live off the hype of what you’ve done in previous games,” Holmes said, referring to the 5-0 Lions. “You’ve got to play every game. With this week, you’ve got three, four, five great receivers coming in (to State College), so you’ve got to be ready.”
Maybe it’s Holmes who needs a shot of reality. And running back Antonio Pittman. Emboldened by his 171-yard, 28-carry performance against Iowa, Pittman didn’t seem all that impressed by Penn State’s 44-14 rout last week of then-No. 18 Minnesota.
“They’ve got a great defense, but Minnesota is basically a straight run team,” Pittman said. “You stop the run, you shut down the whole team. With us, we’ve got so many weapons.”
Comments like that feed my fear that Ohio State is feeling a wee bit too good about itself and has had way too much time to gloat about its last outing — a 31-6 pasting of Iowa on Sept. 24.
Here’s reality guys: You’re walking into a hostile 107,000-seat arena, where the fans haven’t been this jazzed about a game in three years.
More reality: You’ve lost night road games after bye weeks after victories the last two years.
Still more reality: OSU is 2-4 in Beaver Stadium since the Lions joined the Big Ten in 1993 and those two wins were great escapes by teams arguably better than this year’s edition.
“Even when they’ve had tough years, the games with us have been close,” safety Nate Salley said. “This year, they’re finding ways to win.”
Some see wariness as a sign of weakness, but I’m convinced most of the Buckeyes — Salley excluded — aren’t wary enough.
Prediction: Penn State 16, Ohio State 13
OSU football writer Jon Spencer can be reached at
[email protected].
Originally published October 7, 2005