Certainly our receivers will have to produce in order to soften up the defense. We seem to pass just enough to enable us to run the ball the rest of the time. OSU will probably stack the line of scrimmage against the run (if they feel they need to) and dare us to throw (well that's what I would do). Normally we're effective throwing the ball when that happens but not always.
I expect Wolfe to break a few fairly long runs but will also get stuck in the backfield with no place to run. He needs at least a little bit of room, fortunately not too much though.
I personally hope we don't "dare you to throw".
As many have observed, OSU typically runs a vanilla offensive game plan against a sub-top-25 opponent when a top 5 opponent is looming. The fact is, we also run fairly vanilla coverage on defense in that situation.
Stacking the line of scrimmage, with a vanilla coverage behind it is not a recipe for success against a good offense; not even when you're Ohio State. Your QB is better than some people think, and it's not uncommon for opposing QBs to have great days against OSU (see Minnesota last year).
OSU did very well against Northwestern last year by playing to stop the pass first. We held them to 153 yards through the air. Their back, Tyrell Sutton (very similar to Wolfe BTW) had a decent day (93 yards); but it wasn't nearly enough. They scored on their first possession and didn't sniff the end zone for the rest of the game.
Don't be surprised if we try something similar with NIU. Your quarterback is very well respected among people who know the game; and we may find him easier to stop than Wolfe.
But then, Tressell does have a well known predilection for making teams play "left-handed". In your case, that would mean keying on Wolfe and letting the speed of our DBs take out the passing game. That would be risky IMHO; but if it's what Tressell/Heacock decide to do, I would bet that it works.
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