OrangeRoughy;1554638; said:
Look, it's the dumbest statement of Tressel's career, and, combined with throwing for a TD with 1:00 left, has Illini fans across the state questioning why they were cheering so wildly for tOSU in the USC game.
Let me say this ... Tressel has been absolutely hammered in C-Bus the past month for not having the killer instinct; for not dropping the hammer. OSU was up 29-14 on Navy with less than 5:00 to play and let them back in it. Also, quite frankly, Pryor's management of the red zone offense really needs A LOT of work, and the conditions Saturday didn't give him many opportunities to pass. If it were 43-0 then I can concede the point, but it was 23-0.
Also, OSU fell every week in the polls, twice after wins, and once after a loss. So, to be honest, JT should get style points wherever he can get them, and 30-0 looks more convincing in the Sunday morning paper than 23-0.
Lastly, I think Illinois jumping on the 'O' in 2007 had something to do with it.
OrangeRoughy;1554638; said:
But then Tressel threw for a TD (what happened to "I'm mad at Herron for scoring against Northwestern"??), and then comes out with the most obtuse statement I've ever seen: "He wasn't defenseless". Really? All kinds of dumb.
You don't see it that way? This wasn't so far out of character for JT that it left you scratching your head?
If the referees didn't think the act was so egregious as to toss Coleman from the game, than I think it's fair to criticize whether the Conference is doing this according to their own mandate, or if they're doing this in response to Dick Rod whining about Mouton's suspension two weeks ago. The play was not over and Coleman left his feet before McGee was completely down. The whistle didn't blow for nearly a full second until after the hit. The still pictures are incriminating, sure, but at full speed players don't always think completely through.
As for your blog post wondering why Coleman, a senior safety and captain was still in the game, as JT explained yesterday, it was because OSU was already short two safeties due to injury, and at least one vet needed to stay on the field to help all the other young pups get aligned correctly once the mass substitutions started.