O-fer for Gophers
Buckeyes take pride in first shutout of year
Sunday, October 29, 2006
Ken Gordon
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Brian Hartline of Ohio State grabs a pass against Duran Cooley. Hartline led the Buckeyes with four catches for 69 yards.
Defensive end Lawrence Wilson jumps over Minnesota quarterback Bryan Cupito after a sack by linebacker James Laurinaitis, not pictured.
Their work appeared to be finished, the hay safely in the barn with Ohio State leading 37-0 early in the fourth quarter.
OSU?s defensive starters went to the sideline and the backups came in to play out the string.
But then the Buckeyes fumbled a punt back to Minnesota, giving the Gophers the ball at the Ohio State 36-yard line.
The Buckeyes had come close to posting a shutout several times this season, and they wanted one badly. The starters prevailed upon defensive coordinator Jim Heacock to go back in.
He complied.
"Did we (put the starters back in). Yeah, we probably did." Heacock said, a bit sheepishly. "(The shutout) was a goal of these kids, and I mean, give them an opportunity. It?s what you shoot for."
The defense responded. Minnesota reached the 15 and faced a fourth-and-1. Quarterback Bryan Cupito was stuffed for no gain, and the Buckeyes defenders ran off the field jumping for joy.
They got their shutout, 44-0, the first since a 20-0 whitewashing of Northwestern in 2003.
"That?s always a big motivating factor," defensive end Jay Richardson said of the shutout. "Everybody has a good time knowing we put a goose egg up there."
The shutout was the one statistic that made yesterday?s game stand out from a string of mind-numbingly similar Ohio State victories this season.
The Buckeyes (9-0, 5-0 Big Ten) extended their win streak to 16, longest in the nation. Their average score this season has been 36-7.
Yesterday?s win was preceded by a 44-3 trouncing of Indiana and a 37-7 win at Michigan State in which the backups gave up a touchdown in the final two minutes.
OSU outgained Minnesota 484-182, including a 266-47 edge in rushing yards. Four different Buckeyes players rushed for touchdowns, led by Antonio Pittman (116 yards, two TDs).
On a windy, cold day, quarterback Troy Smith didn?t post huge numbers (14 of 21 passing, 183 yards), but he threw for one TD and rushed for 43 yards and another score.
Eight different receivers caught passes.
The Buckeyes lost three fumbles, a shocking total considering they had just six turnovers all season coming in. But three interceptions of Cupito (15 of 23, 120 yards) balanced the ledger.
The Gophers (3-6, 0-5) have lost five of their past six games.
"Today we faced an incredible football team," Minnesota coach Glen Mason said. "We have had many problems, and we continue to have problems."
OSU?s defense was tested early with the score 10-0. Smith lost a fumble and Minnesota faced fourth-and-1 at the Ohio State 19. Richardson penetrated and tripped up Amir Pinnix, and safety Jamario O?Neal finished him off for no gain.
"Emotionally, any time you stop someone on short yardage, there?s an effect," OSU coach Jim Tressel said. "I?m sure that took a little emotion from the Golden Gophers."
The Buckeyes responded with a 10-play, 71-yard drive capped by a Smith scoring toss on a perfect fade pattern to Brian Robiskie. The lead was 17-0 at the half.
Any doubts about the outcome were erased when OSU converted third-quarter interceptions by Antonio Smith and O?Neal into touchdowns for a 30-0 lead.
The Buckeyes now have forced 20 turnovers this season and scored 86 points off them. Their opponents have forced nine turnovers and not yet converted them to any points.
"We?re getting better," Tressel said. "We understand we have more tests to go, but you have to feel good about the progress."
OSU?s defense missed tackle Quinn Pitcock because of a concussion suffered last week, but welcomed back tackle David Patterson, who had missed two games after arthroscopic knee surgery. But its performance was redemption for last year?s Minnesota game, in which the Buckeyes surrendered 396 passing yards and 587 overall, second most in school history.
"They put up so many yards on us last year, to come out here and shut them down like we did, it?s kind of a pride thing," said cornerback Malcolm Jenkins, who recorded his fourth interception of the season. He also pointed out the obvious, that posting a shutout "almost guarantees a win. ?We?re very excited and happy about it, and we?ll keep trying to get some more."
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