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Game Thread Game Nine: #1 tOSU 44, Minnesota 0 (10/28/06)

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This trend in ripping off helmets must end. I don't know if this one was called for a face mask or not, but I don't think so.
 
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westbrock;646460; said:
Did anyone else see Mason more or less snub Tressel after the game?

Yes, in fact I watched the game with my brother and we both looked at each other and I said "wow, that was pretty crappy then wasn't it?" But then again if I had just gotten my ass handed to me like that I think I would have been frustrated too. I'd like to think I could have at least reached down and mustered up some sportsmanship from somewhere but oh well.

Great game on both sides of the ball. It's amazing to me how deep this team is on Offense and Defense. I really think once C. Wells starts playing every down, he's going to be a monster. You can see it now, he has shades of excellence. I'm not trying to make excuses for the fumbles but I think he will work his way through those and we will all forget about those some day. I mean the way he was "dragging" those piles of Minnesota defenders down the field was simply amazing.

Again, TS looked outstanding as always and like others have said it was nice to see Zwick in there for a few plays at the end.

Can't wait for the game!

Go Bucks!

:osu:
 
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ABJ

Buckeyes badger Gophers

OSU defense intercepts three passes and yields just 182 yards to Minnesota

By Marla Ridenour

Beacon Journal sportswriter

COLUMBUS - As far as the Ohio State defense was concerned, the play of the day wasn't an interception or sack.
It was the tackle by Ross Homan and Joel Penton on Minnesota quarterback Bryan Cupito on a fourth-and-one sneak from the OSU 15 with 9:40 remaining.
Freshman linebacker Homan and senior tackle Penton stuffed the play for no gain to preserve the Buckeyes' first shutout since Sept. 23, 2003. While No. 3 USC fell from the ranks of the unbeaten, No. 1 Ohio State romped 44-0 Saturday to run the nation's longest winning streak to 16 games.
``It was important,'' sophomore middle linebacker James Laurinaitis said of the shutout, which ended a drought dating to a 20-0 victory over Northwestern. ``We tried to get it last week. Every game it's our goal.''
A crowd of 105,443 at Ohio Stadium reveled as legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus dotted the ``i'' in Script Ohio at halftime. But the Buckeyes were still the featured attraction.
OSU (9-0, 5-0) played without arguably its best defender, senior tackle Quinn Pitcock, an All-America candidate who was sidelined with a concussion suffered last week against Indiana.
In Saturday's game, the Buckeyes lost receivers Anthony Gonzalez and Ray Small (concussion). Gonzalez didn't play in the second half with what may have been a concussion, while Small was helped off after a punishing second-quarter tackle that appeared to knock him out. Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said Gonzalez and Pitcock should be fine for Saturday's game at Illinois.
Even without those three, OSU didn't appear to miss a beat. Following a 44-3 triumph over Indiana, the Buckeyes recorded their first back-to-back wins by 40 or more points since 1996. Ohio State has outscored opponents 161-17 in the past four games.
This time, the weapon of choice was the running game. Junior tailback Antonio Pittman of Buchtel High School rushed 21 times for 116 yards and two touchdowns. Freshman Chris ``Beanie'' Wells of Garfield High School added 90 yards and a TD on 15 carries.
Senior quarterback Troy Smith carried six times for 43 yards, including a 21-yard score that included a masterful juke of linebacker Deon Hightower. OSU finished with 266 rushing yards, just off its season high of 270 last week.
Defensively, Ohio State held Minnesota (3-6, 0-5) to 182 net yards, 47 rushing. In 2005, the Cupito-led Gophers piled up 578 yards, the second most OSU has ever allowed. ``That was a big thing coming into this game,'' senior defensive end Jay Richardson said. ``We were all upset about what they did to us last year.''
Sophomore cornerback Malcolm Jenkins said: ``We had some swagger. We all had fun. We were fun and focused at the same time. We felt dominant coming in.''
The Buckeyes, tied for third in the nation last week with 15 interceptions, got three more. Senior cornerback Antonio Smith, sophomore free safety Jamario O'Neal and Jenkins (now tied with Laurinaitis for the team lead with four, all at home) each had one to help offset the Buckeyes' loss of three fumbles.
Wells bobbled away his third of the season, this one at the Minnesota 9 early in the second quarter. Playing behind thesecond-team line, Smith followed suit on the next possession when defensive end Steve Davis sacked him. Teammate Neel Allen recovered at the OSU 38. Jenkins, returning punts for the first time, took his eyes off one in the fourth quarter and Minnesota pounced on the ball at the OSU 36.
``It is distressing. We're not going to be as good a football team as we'd like to be if we continue to fumble,'' Tressel said. ``Chris has got to work to make sure that doesn't happen anymore. Just like Troy had one, we can't let people come around our edge. But Chris is going to be one of our running backs, and I'm sure he more than anyone else wants to make sure he does what the team needs.''
Wells didn't touch the ball again until late in the third quarter, but racked up 51 more yards. He had a 3-yard TD run in the fourth. ``I didn't make a pocket when Troy handed me the ball,'' Wells said of his fumble.
``I kind of cocked it. I was disappointed, but halftime came around, and all the coaches told me to get it out of my head because I was going back in. Coach Tressel always shows a lot of confidence in me by putting me back in the game.''
Each time OSU lost the handle, the defense came to its rescue.
``That's the identity of our defense. We love to be out there playing,'' Richardson said. ``We're almost excited to get back out again.''
 
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Dispatch

O-fer for Gophers
Buckeyes take pride in first shutout of year

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Ken Gordon
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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Brian Hartline of Ohio State grabs a pass against Duran Cooley. Hartline led the Buckeyes with four catches for 69 yards.
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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."
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

Gophers? problems getting deeper as defeats pile up

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Scott Priestle
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH




As a football fan, Dominic Jones is looking forward to the Ohio State-Michigan game on Nov. 18.
With each week, the Buckeyes and Wolverines separate themselves from the pack, appearing more and more like the two best teams in the nation.
As a leader on the Minnesota defense, Jones is merely looking for a sign of hope. With each week, the Gophers fall farther from their recent run of bowl appearances. They can use an early offseason.
"Honestly, I think guys are mentally tired right now," Jones, a Brookhaven graduate, said yesterday, after a 44-0 loss to the Buckeyes dropped them to 0-5 in the Big Ten. "I think there?s a side of them that really wants to believe, but at the same time, there?s that little man on your shoulder that?s bringing you down."
Minnesota quarterback Bryan Cupito, who shredded the Buckeyes for 396 yards last season, declined to talk to reporters yesterday. Coach Glen Mason waited about 30 minutes after the final whistle, then met the media with a look of exhaustion and resignation.
"We?re not very good," he said. "What else can I say? Very, very disappointing."
The Gophers gained only 182 yards from scrimmage, including 47 yards on 26 carries. Twice they were stopped on fourth-and-1. Cupito threw three interceptions, and Ohio State converted two of them for touchdowns early in the third quarter to put the game away.
Whatever enthusiasm the Gophers mined out of the opportunity to upset the No. 1 team in the nation was methodically beaten out of them.
"We knew what we were going to face," Jones said. "It was a matter of respecting them but not fearing them."
It is a fine line the Gophers struggled to straddle ? one of many areas where they struggled yesterday.
"Any time you go through what we?ve gone through," Jones said, "psychologically some guys are not there."
Minnesota played without its best offensive player, tight end Matt Spaeth, who suffered an undisclosed injury last week. Cornerback Trumaine Banks, an Eastmoor grad, suffered a broken arm two weeks ago, and his season is finished.
The Gophers were coming off a disappointingly close win over Division I-AA North Dakota State.
In short, there was barely a speed bump for the deep and talented Buckeyes, and the Gophers limped away impressed.
"It seems like all the stars are lined up for Ohio State and Michigan right now," Mason said.
He did not want to compare the teams, but Jones did, calling them "mirror images."
He said he has friends on both teams, "so I?m just going to sit back and be a fan. Whoever goes to the national championship, I?ll root for the Big Ten."
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

MINNESOTA NOTEBOOK
Brookhaven?s Jones hits OSU head-on

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Scott Priestle
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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Brookhaven product Dominic Jones brings down Ted Ginn Jr. with an open-field tackle. Jones led the Gophers with six solo tackles.


On Ohio State?s third play yesterday, Ted Ginn Jr. took the ball on a reverse and had mostly open field in front of him.
Minnesota cornerback Dominic Jones was the only player in view, and he has seen enough of Ginn to know how that movie often ends.
Jones, a Columbus native and Brookhaven graduate, wrestled Ginn to the ground after a 7-yard gain. It set a tone of sorts: Minnesota might not be able to stop Ohio State, but Jones was not going to stop trying.
"It doesn?t necessarily have to be a pretty tackle, you know," he said with a smile. "One move here, one move there, he can take it the distance. I don?t think there is anybody who can catch him if he gets in the open field. I don?t know many people in the nation who can catch him."
Though Ohio State cruised to a 44-0 win, Ginn finished with only 29 yards from scrimmage. Jones recorded a team-high six solo tackles, including one for loss when he flattened OSU receiver Roy Small late in the first half, knocking Small out of the game with a concussion.
That hit figures to earn Jones some time on the highlight reels, but Minnesota coach Glen Mason was more impressed with the rest of Jones? game.
"I wouldn?t trade D.J. for anybody," Mason said. "He gives you everything. He?s a football player.
"He might be the best football player on our team. ... He?s as tough as they come."
Change on the line

Brookhaven graduate Alex Daniels moved from running back to defensive end last week in practice and saw considerable time there yesterday. Minnesota also moved seldomused offensive linemen John Jakel and Otis Hudson to the defensive line.
"We talked about it and I said, ?Let?s move ?em all,? " Mason said. "Let?s move them all and see what happens, because we?ve had trouble holding up."
It did not help yesterday. Ohio State ran for 266 yards and gained 484 in all.
Turf burns

Mason rattled off a number of things Ohio State does well, covering offense, defense and special teams.
Then he laughed and said, "If they have a weakness, they have a lousy field."
The turf was replaced in late September, and in recent weeks players on both sides have complained about poor footing. Numerous players slipped yesterday.
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

OHIO STATE
Minnesota can?t dent OSU defense

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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Ohio State's Ross Homan (51) and Jamario O?Neal tackle Minnesota receiver Jack Simmons.


Last season, Minnesota torched Ohio State for 578 yards, but at two key moments in Ohio Stadium yesterday, the Golden Gophers couldn?t gain one. Talk about turnabout.
"Even though we won last year, defensively our stats were so terrible; after giving up the secondmost yards in Ohio State history, for us on defense that was kind of a loss," defensive end Jay Richardson said. "So we used that as motivation for this year, that we?ve got to come back and really get them back for what they did."
So on the way to a 44-0 win, the Buckeyes beat the Gophers back yesterday, especially on three plays that could have changed the game. OSU lost three fumbles, two in a row by Chris Wells and Troy Smith in the first half, but all three times the defense stopped the Gophers.
That?s nine times opponents have gained turnovers this year, and nine times the Buckeyes have kept them from scoring off them.
"Our coaches always stress sudden change, to go out there with confidence and just make the play," safety Jamario O?Neal said. "They always stress the next play is the most important play."
Nothing stood out more, though, than those fourth-and-1 plays, because each followed a turnover in OSU territory.
On the first, at the OSU 29-yard line, O?Neal, blitzing off the edge, and Richardson, ripping in from the end, clamped running back Amir Pinnix for no gain. It came with 7:56 left in the second quarter and the Buckeyes leading 10-0.
"You?ve got to go be a playmaker," O?Neal said. "That?s what my coach (Paul Haynes) stresses to me and the whole secondary. Be a playmaker, and make the plays you?re not supposed to make, and I think that was one of those plays."
The second one followed Malcolm Jenkins? fumble on a punt return that Minnesota grabbed at the OSU 36 midway through the fourth quarter. On fourth-and-1 at the 15, Gophers quarterback Bryan Cupito was stood up for no gain by freshman linebacker Ross Homan. "It?s hard to stop somebody fourth-and-1," much less do it twice, defensive coordinator Jim Heacock said. "Yeah, I?m excited about what they?re doing, but realistically I also know we?ve got to go to Illinois, we?ve got to go to Northwestern ? we went up there a couple of years ago, and you know ? " Northwestern upset OSU in 2004 in Ryan Field. "I remember all those things, so I don?t get too carried away with things right now," Heacock said. Yet the OSU defense limited Minnesota to 182 total yards, almost 400 short of what the Gophers gained the year before. "Our guys played hard, and the best thing about them is they?re a team," Heacock said. [email protected]
 
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TelegraphForum



Quote:
Defense was star of the show
By Michael S. Johnson
NNCO

COLUMBUS -- It had been more than three years since Ohio State's defense pitched a shutout. The Buckeyes emphatically ended that drought with Saturday's 44-0 win over Minnesota at Ohio Stadium. In the last two weeks, the Buckeyes have blown away their opponents, 88-3.
Through the first nine games, only two opponents have scored more than seven points on the OSU defense. Northern Illinois managed 12 and Iowa tacked on 17 points last month. Eight of nine opponents have been held to a touchdown or less, and Ohio State has allowed only two rushing touchdowns.

"It's the ultimate goal of any defense to not allow any points," said sophomore linebacker Marcus Freeman. "It's a really good feeling, but as a defense we still have a lot of work to do."
It was a huge turnaround from last season's game, when Minnesota quarterback Brian Cupito passed for almost 400 yards and the Golden Gophers piled up 580 yards of offense -- the second most against Ohio State in 117 years of football.
These Buckeyes shut down the Gophers, allowing just 182 total yards -- Minnesota had four more yards punting than in total offense -- and forced Cupito to throw three interceptions.
"It feels really good," said senior cornerback Antonio Smith, who had one of those picks -- the second of his career. "It feels good when you see that your opponent has zero points on the board. It kind of makes the game complete."
Jamario O'Neal and Malcolm Jenkins had the other interceptions for the Buckeyes.
It wasn't a bad performance, considering the Buckeyes were playing without senior defensive tackle Quinn Pitcock, who missed Saturday's game with a concussion.
Still, Ohio State managed to sack Cupito three times for minus-16 yards.
Sophomore linebacker James Laurinaitis, who grew up in Minnesota, had one of those sacks. "It was another Big Ten win," he said. "It was also a rewarding win because it was cool to play against guys I played in high school and have some ammo against them. It was important for our defense to get a shutout because we were so close the past two games. With our defense, we don't panic when we have our backs against the wall."
 
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CPD

NO. 1 OHIO STATE 44, MINNESOTA 0


Blank statement

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Doug Lesmerises

Plain Dealer Reporter

Columbus- Ohio State's defense left its mark Saturday - on the home crowd, on the rest of the nation, maybe on future foe Michigan a little bit, too. Because the Wolverines don't have a shutout this season. Undefeated West Virginia doesn't have a shutout. Last year's Buckeyes didn't have a shutout, and neither did the Ohio State national champions of 2002.
The No. 1 team in the country, and the No. 1 scoring defense, wanted a shutout.
"We kind of saw it coming," defensive tackle David Patterson said. "That's what we always strive for."
Saturday, it happened, the Buckeyes smothering Minnesota, 44-0, one year after giving up the second-most yardage in Ohio State history to the Golden Gophers.
BUCKEYES
 
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CPD

Bests from the OSU-Minnesota game


Sunday, October 29, 2006


Best run


Troy Smith ran for 11 touchdowns a year ago, but the scores this season have gone to running back Antonio Pittman, who scored twice Saturday to raise his season touchdown total to 10. But Smith picked up his first rushing touchdown of the season on a 21-yard scramble that included a juke at the 15-yard line that froze Minnesota linebacker Deon Hightower.

"That was great to see," offensive coordinator Jim Bollman said. "Those guys did a great job protecting him, and he didn't like what he saw throwing the ball, so he took off, and he made a great move down the field. I thought it was a big spark to us at the start of the second half."
The score with 12:41 left in the third quarter put Ohio State ahead, 24-0.


Best run II


Chris Wells fumbled for the third time this season and briefly took a spot on the bench, but when he came back in the game, he showed again why he's so attractive as a short-yardage back. On third- and-1 late in the third quarter, Wells got such a push from the offensive line, with tackle Kirk Barton helping to shove the pile ahead, that he picked up 8 yards on a simple plunge up the middle.

"The offensive line did great, and on that particular play, I was just excited to get back in the game," Wells said.

He followed that three plays later with a 15-yard gain on what looked like simple dive up the middle on third-and-2. He must have been excited still. And he held on to the ball.


Best decision


Quarterback Troy Smith started the game wearing gloves, but they came off after he fumbled early in the second quarter when he was hit from behind.

"We can't let people come around the edge," coach Jim Tressel said. "And when they come around the edge, a quarterback's got to keep it tight."
Maybe the gloves weren't the cause, but they were gone anyway. And quarterbacks just look better with bare hands.

"As I got into the game, it wasn't cold anymore," Smith said. "So I wanted to really get a feel for the ball. As a quarterback, that's what you rely on, getting a feel for the ball. Some of the passes in the beginning weren't bad passes. We had some completions, and I could have played the rest of the time [with them], but chose not to."

Best moment


It was the hit Minnesota cornerback Dominic Jones made on Ohio State receiver Ray Small - not actually the hit itself, but what happened afterward, when Small got up and was helped off the field.

"It was horrific," Minnesota coach Glen Mason said of the hit. "I always overreact to that type of thing, but when I saw our orthopedic surgeon run out on the field, I knew something was wrong. The best thing I saw today was when that kid was able to get up and walk off."

The 6-0, 175-pound Small caught a pass in the flat and barely had time to turn around before Jones, at 5-8 and 190, leveled him with a body-to-body hit right under his chin. Ohio State announced that Small suffered a concussion, and Tressel said he was unsure of Small's status for next week.


Best moment II


Golf legend Jack Nicklaus became the fifth person invited to dot the "i" in Script Ohio, joining Woody Hayes, Bob Hope and two others, and though he didn't high- step his way out there like the sousaphone players do, he found his proper spot on the field.

"I'm always an emotional guy, and this is an emotional day," Nicklaus said on the sideline just after his halftime moment. "Ohio State means so much to my life. . . . It means so much to me - the fans, everything."

Nicklaus took the field in a red jacket and a black cap with a red block O.
"I had to have my Woody hat," Nicklaus said. "I was a great fan of Woody's. I was here at the Horseshoe when Woody did his. It was really neat."

- Doug Lesmerises
 
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CPD

OHIO STATE INSIDER
Patterson plays, Pitcock prevented


Sunday, October 29, 2006

Bob Roberts
Plain Dealer Reporter

Columbus- They are running out of dates for sharing jarring tackles and humbling sacks.
Tackles David Patterson and Quinn Pitcock, senior captains of Ohio State's defense, haven't played together the past three weeks. Patterson, from Warrensville Heights, returned to play in Saturday's 44-0 spanking of Minnesota, but Pitcock was out of action, the result of a concussion suffered in last week's win over Indiana.
"Before the game, Quinn and I were talking," said Patterson, who had been out since spraining a ligament in his right knee in the Oct. 7 Bowling Green game. "We love playing together. It's kind of sad that we only have two more halves in this stadium [against Michigan on Nov. 18]. We love every moment that we're out there together. We're looking forward to getting out there this week."
OSU coach Jim Tressel paid Patterson and Pitcock the ultimate compliment.
"As far as I am concerned, they are the best two defensive tackles in the country," Tressel said.
Patterson underwent arthroscopic surgery to repair his knee. Playing Minnesota was his first true test of the ligament.
"I felt great out there," he said. "Coming into the game, I was nervous that this brace would slow me down a little bit, but it didn't. I felt great moving around on my knee. I didn't have any pain."
Said OSU defensive coordinator Jim Heacock of Patterson, "He doesn't like that brace. But I think he was good today. I don't think he lost a whole bunch. He really went to work after the surgery with conditioning. And David is very driven and really wants to play his final year. He was anxious to get back. I think he was 100 percent."
As for Pitcock, Tressel said he should be ready to play against Illinois on Saturday.
"With Quinn, we pretty much knew the whole back half of the week that he wasn't going to play. For sure, we knew on Thursday."
Even though the Buckeyes were without Pitcock, who leads the team in sacks with seven, Tressel was satisfied with the effort.
"Our defense did a heck of a job handling the tempo of the game." he said. "It starts up front with our veteran guys, Patterson, Quinn, Joel Penton and Jay Richardson. They were the returning guys, and everybody was wondering how the rest of the group was going to be. They have raised their performance and done a great job of leading the new guys."
Patterson echoed his coach.
"I was really pleased with the effort," he said. "Guys were flying around, going to the football."
Zwick on the money:
OSU backup quarterback Justin Zwick scored the game's final touchdown on a 1-yard run late in the fourth quarter. It was his first score of the year. The fifth-year senior from Massillon lost the No. 1 job to Smith two years ago. Nobody was happier to see Zwick score than Smith.
"It really touched me," said Smith. "It was one of the things he probably needed. Any person, when you are in a situation where things are not going the way that you want them to go, you get a chance to get a breath of fresh air. As soon as he crossed the goal line, I really felt it for him, and if anybody was going to be there to meet him, I was."
"I thought [Zwick's] whole drive was good," said Tressel. "Troy jumped up in the air higher when Justin scored than anyone."
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
[email protected], 216-999-4661
 
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CPD

In case you didn't hear, breezy wind and easy win


Sunday, October 29, 2006

Bill Livingston
Plain Dealer Columnist

Columbus

- The edge isn't the wind's razor, although the gales slashed around Ohio Stadium and sang their wild song Saturday, as dark and the Minnesota Golden Gophers fell.
"Illinois is the windiest place in the Big Ten," said Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, referring to next weekend's likely victim. "And then we go to the Windy City to play Northwestern."
The edge isn't in the numbers, although 105,443 saw the top-ranked Buckeyes thrash the Gophers, 44-0.
Michigan Stadium is bigger. But it's quieter in Ann Arbor because of a difference in architecture.
The Big House doesn't crowd down on the visitors, as though the eaves were literally going to drop, the way they do here. The pitch of the stands isn't as steep as at the Horseshoe, and the noise has other places to go besides boring into the earholes of the other team.
It's also quieter because of a difference in ardor.
Michigan's opponent isn't usually cast in the role of the human sacrifice at the volcano's lip, although when Woody Hayes coached at Ohio State and Bo Schembechler at Michigan, it was close to that way. After Woody, it was hard to play at Michigan for the same reason it was hard to play at Indiana's Assembly Hall when Bobby Knight was the coach. The home team was very good.
Ohio State has lost only four times at the 'Shoe in Tressel's tenure in Columbus, which will be six years old after two rubber stamps in Champaign and Evanston, plus a fairly widely anticipated home meeting with Michigan.
The presence of the nation's top-ranked college football team at the seismic heart of the thunder is only part of the reason for the dominance.
In the second quarter after Troy Smith lost a fumble at his own 38-yard line, OSU leading only 10-0, Jay Richardson and Jamario O'Neal slammed the door on fourth-and-1.
"I think, emotionally, anytime you stop someone on short yardage, especially a fourth-and-1, our crowd is tremendous," Tressel said. "You can feel the energy. I'm sure that took a little emotion from the Golden Gophers."
The crowd took a touchdown away from Penn State in the closest call of the season. On fourth-and-1 from the OSU 1, Penn State, its lineman dazed by the hurricane of sound coming from the south end zone, jumped before the snap. The Nittany Lions kicked a field goal to cut the lead to 14-6. A touchdown would have changed the game's dynamic considerably.
"The noise level is part of it," said sophomore linebacker James Laurinaitis. "You can see the offensive tackles, just a few feet away from the center, signaling that they can't hear."
The Michigan game in three weeks is shaping up as the biggest one ever in the nation's biggest college football rivalry. It will be played here, where the stands look like scarlet cliffs, where the sonic avalanche can bury unwary visitors.
One drawback, however, is the resodded field. Dust devils still dance on its tattered surface in the wake of players making sharp cuts. Frankly, the new turf looks as though Jack Nicklaus, who dotted the "i" in Script Ohio at halftime, had taken a few divots out of it with his irons.
"Slipperier" and "not as good as it used to be" said OSU's top burner, Ted Ginn Jr., in midweek.
"I thought it was a little better today," Tressel said.
Uncertain footing would negate Ohio State's advantage in speed over Michigan.
But it will be played here. There are, of course, more underpinnings to the rivalry than a treacherous field. The game begins with the Ohio State players running to their sideline through the "Tunnel of Pride," a human channel of former players, from the '50s to those who made newer memories.
"You know what a special place this is, " Laurinaitis said. "You know you are representing all the great players that went before you."
"We only have two halves left to play in this stadium," said OSU senior defensive tackle David Patterson.
They will remember them forever. In Columbus, you can always hear the echoes of the once-loud roars.
To reach Bill Livingston:
[email protected], 216-999-4672
Previous columns online:
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