buckeye247
# 33
I wish we were playing at the metrodome again. Ginn seems like he runs faster on artificial turn.
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buckeye247;644321; said:I wish we were playing at the metrodome again. Ginn seems like he runs faster on artificial turn.
He is not injured, and there is no overt issue with discipline as he has been getting in games - just not a lot.CleveBucks;643688; said:Might have already been covered, but I missed it...
What the heck happened to Alex Daniels? He started the opener at tailback and ran for around 150. Is he injured, demoted, playing a different position?
OHIO STATE VS. MINNESOTA Ohio Stadium, Saturday, 3:30 p.m., WEWS Ch. 5
With starting units working against each other, Buckeyes get used to top competition
Friday, October 27, 2006
Doug Lesmerises
Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus -- Some of the greatest Ohio State plays of the season, and some of the toughest matchups the Buckeyes have faced, no one has seen.
Receiver Ted Ginn Jr. working against cornerback Malcolm Jenkins. Linebacker James Laurinaitis tracking running back Antonio Pittman. Center Doug Datish blocking defensive tackle Quinn Pitcock. Defensive end Vernon Gholston chasing quarterback Troy Smith.
Ohio State's first-team offense goes against Ohio State's first-team defense every week in practice, even this deep into the season. Not every team does that, but if you're looking for a reason why the Buckeye defense has surpassed expectations, facing the Heisman front-runner almost daily has to be part of the answer.
"This is the first place I've been where we do it all year long," Ohio State safeties coach Paul Haynes said. "It's a rare thing. It only helps us because we're going best against the best, and you don't see much better once you get out there on Saturday."
Most teams work their first-team offense against the second-string defense and vice versa. That can boost the confidence of the starters, if they can have their way with the backups, and it allows for better execution of the game plan that's being put in place. But Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said he started putting the starters head-to-head at Youngstown State in 1989. Coincidence or not, he noticed that his teams were 14-20 his first three years with the Penguins, and then from 1989 to 1994, they were 70-13-2.
"We picked that up from Florida State," Tressel said. "We went down and visited their spring practice, and it was like a war. I came back to my guys and said, 'They're not bad, maybe we ought to take a little tip from them.'
"We've never backed away from it and we haven't, knock wood, gotten injuries. I think the thing is when you're going full speed and full intensity, I think there's less chance of injury."
The matchups between the Ohio State receivers and defensive backs can be especially electric, the defenders knowing if they can cover Ginn and Anthony Gonzalez, they can cover anyone.
"We get great practice against great players," OSU cornerbacks coach Tim Beckman said. "So if you're a senior defensive back that's trying to choose what school you want to go to, why wouldn't you come where you're playing against the best guys?"
Asked for season highlights from practice, neither Tressel nor Haynes could name one, because they say they happen all the time.
"There's a lot of things that happen really fast," Tressel said. "I know there's a lot of plays people would like to see, because of the speed at which it's going on.
"That's what we like about it. The guys are jawing the whole way, and they like going against one another. We don't go full tackle right now, like we do in the spring or preseason, but the speed is every bit the same."
It shouldn't be a surprise then that some players feel that the moment of truth for the defense came in the jersey scrimmage this fall, when going first team vs. first team, and second team vs. second team, the defense defeated the offense. Smith and Ginn and friends are a heck of a measuring stick.
"We were trying to do these things we were good at doing and we were kind of getting stuck in the mud a bit," Datish said of the offense that day. "It was frustrating, but at the same time, we were like, 'They're pretty good here.'
"I think we were good at offense at the time, and if we would have beaten them by 100 points, I'd have said, 'Wow, we need to score 1,000 a game to win this season.' But we didn't do that, and they're playing great."
The competition runs both ways. Tressel pointed out how much Smith has gained by working against defenders such as A.J. Hawk and Donte Whitner in previous years.
"Troy Smith, in five years, he's gone against some folks," Tressel said. "If he's fortunate enough to be in the NFL, he's seen a lot of those guys. Defensively, I think it's the same thing."
Michigan looms as a probable No. 1 vs. No. 2 game for the Buckeyes in 22 days. Before then, the first team facing the first team will give the No. 1 team in the country the best preparation possible.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
[email protected], 216-999-4479
OHIO STATE INSIDER
<H1 class=red>Last year's Gopher onslaught left impression
</H1>
Friday, October 27, 2006
Doug Lesmerises
Plain Dealer Reporter
Columbus -- The reminders are taped inside the lockers of the Buckeyes this week: 578 yards allowed against Minnesota last season, the second-most yards ever given up by an Ohio State defense, with 396 of those yards coming through the air.
"It reminds us you'd better be ready to go," Ohio State linebacker James Laurinaitis said. "Last year we came in saying that if we stopped the run, we'd be all right, and they put up almost 400 yards throwing."
The quarterback (Bryan Cupito) and two of the five leading receivers (Logan Payne and Ernie Wheelwright) return from that effort, but the Buckeyes are catching a break with the absence of tight end Matt Spaeth. He's the Gophers' second-leading receiver this season, but will be out Saturday with an injury. Minnesota is averaging 359 yards of offense per game this season (49th in the country), and gained just 249 yards in a 10-9 win over Division I-AA North Dakota State last week.
"We've fallen off the map offensively," said Minnesota coach Glen Mason, who also took no pleasure in last season's big stats. "When you start looking at statistics, it doesn't mean anything unless you win the game. We gained the second-most yards in Ohio State history on that defense, but it doesn't mean anything."
Still the Buckeyes are somewhat haunted by the aerial display that took place inside the Metrodome last season in a 45-31 Ohio State victory, especially since Minnesota's receivers are coached by Luke Tressel, the nephew of Ohio State's head man.
"My daughter said last year she hoped that we would win and that Minnesota's receivers would have a great game," Jim Tressel said, "and I told her, This year you'd better not have the same wish, because they had too great a game.' "
Uncle Tressel:
This is the second time this season an opposing coach might be yelling "uncle" when Ohio State gets done with his team. It's Luke Tressel this Saturday, and earlier this season, Ohio State faced Mike Tressel, the linebackers coach for Cincinnati.
Both young Tressels are the sons of Ohio State running backs coach Dick Tressel. The sons informed their mom, Connie, that she doesn't have to be conflicted on game day.
"Both sons have come to a realization, and they told their mom, You're allowed to cheer for the Buckeyes because we can't be national champions and they can be,' " Dick Tressel said. "How's that for a fair deal?"
Could have been a Gopher:
Laurinaitis, the only Minnesota player on the Ohio roster, was close to being a member of the visiting team in this game. He originally committed to the Gophers, or so some people thought, and Ohio State didn't recruit him until his senior year of high school
"It was a communication thing," Laurinaitis said. "It was taken as a commitment and that's how it went. After I had my visit here, it was a no-brainer for me."
Laurinaitis has several friends on the team, including his best friend, Minnesota starting safety Dom Barber, who's the younger brother of former Gopher running back Marion Barber. So he doesn't think the team he almost played for or his home state is out to get him.
"I don't think there's any hard feelings," Laurinaitis said. "Lots of people said they were happy for me rather than hating on me for leaving and coming here."
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
[email protected], 216-999-4479