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Extra points - Detroit News FB

Extra points

By Angelique S. Chengelis / The Detroit News


'Dog-gate' revisited

It has almost been a full year since "Dog-gate," but Michigan has not forgotten.

As the players entered Ohio Stadium before the game, they were stopped while bomb-sniffing dogs checked their bags.

Michigan coach Lloyd Carr called the security check "extremely disrespectful at best."

"They were just trying to get in our heads," Jake Long said. "We didn't know what was going on. They told us to drop our bags, and everyone was yelling at us."

Carr said there would be no retaliation Saturday.

"I think there is a difference between gamesmanship and respect," he said.

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said last year's security check was just that -- a check.


No to Ohio

Michigan outside linebacker Shawn Crable has, after a slow start, become an important factor in the Wolverines' defense. Crable also is one of 11 players on the roster from Ohio.

And that decision by Crable didn't sit too well with some of his friends in Massillon.

"I lost a lot of people who were talking to me before that," Crable said. "They stopped talking to me. People had a lot of things to say behind my back about how I was going to drop out, (that) I wasn't going to make it."


For the defense

A.J. Hawk gets most of the attention at Ohio State, but Anthony Schlegel and Bobby Carpenter team with Hawk to form one of the most impressive linebacking groups in the country.

Hawk has 102 tackles, including a team-leading 12 for losses. Schlegel is second with 65, and Carpenter is fourth with 49 and a team-high eight sacks.

Grant Mason and David Harris lead Michigan with 72 apiece.


Catch this

Jason Avant has accounted for nearly half of Chad Henne's 2,033 passing yards. Avant has 900 receiving yards on 70 catches. He has scored seven TDs.


Level playing field

This is the 102nd meeting in the series, and the Wolverines lead 57-38-6.

In the last 50 games, however, the series is 24-24-2.


Big-play Wolverines

• Steve Breaston likes big numbers. He has the longest touchdown pass reception (52 yards against Iowa), punt return (72 yards against Eastern Michigan) and kickoff return (95-yard TD against Minnesota).
• Avant has the longest reception (54 yards against Notre Dame), but it was not a scoring play.
• Mike Hart has the longest run (64 yards against Michigan State), but that too did not go for a TD.


Coaching facts

• Carr is 6-4 against Ohio State (4-1 at home). He also is 15-5 against teams ranked in the top 10. The Buckeyes are No. 9.
• Tressel is 3-1 against Michigan. The Buckeyes are favored by three, and Tressel is 16-9 in games decided by six points or less.


To the air

• Henne has 44 career TD passes, fourth in Michigan history. John Navarre is No. 1 (72), followed by Elvis Grbac (71) and Rick Leach (48).
• Smith, a dual threat for the Buckeyes, has accounted for 23 TDs -- 13 passing and 10 rushing. He has passed for 1,640 yards and rushed for 508.




Key players - Detroit News FB

Key players

By Angelique S. Chengelis / The Detroit News

Mike Hart
Running back, Michigan

Hart, a sophomore, has missed the last two games after spraining his left ankle against Iowa. Michigan didn't need him in those two victories. But the Wolverines need him now. Ohio State coach Jim Tressel referred to Hart as "one of those electric guys." In six games, Hart has averaged 95.5 yards and 4.7 a carry.

A.J. Hawk
Linebacker, Ohio State

Hawk, a senior, has been described as tough, smart and relentless. He's a finalist for the Lombardi and Butkus awards. He leads the Buckeyes with 102 tackles, including 12 for loss. "Consistency is always a great measure of performance, and he certainly has done it for a long time," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "I'll be glad to see him leave."

Chad Henne
Quarterback, Michigan

Henne, a sophomore, is about to make his 23rd career start and his second in "The Big Game." He is 15-6 as a starter and has rebounded from a shaky start this season. His poise and ability to face the heat that most certainly will come from the Ohio State defense is absolutely key.




Matchups - Detroit News FB

Matchups

Detroit News staff

Big Ten rankings in parentheses

• Ohio State running game (4) vs. Michigan run defense (4): TB Antonio Pittman has given the Buckeyes a boost in recent weeks. He has gained 100 yards or more in four of the last five games and has scored all five of his touchdowns in the last three games. QB Troy Smith can't be overlooked, either. He had 145 yards against Michigan last season and is averaging 56.4 yards this season. The Wolverines, too, have gained steam -- their last three opponents averaged 97 yards rushing. Gabe Watson has become a force at nose tackle, and LB Dave Harris has been consistent.

EDGE: MICHIGAN

• Michigan running game (7) vs. Ohio State run defense (1): This isn't just the Big Ten's best rush defense, it's the No. 2 rush defense in the nation (78.7). Michigan's backs will see plenty of No. 47 -- A.J. Hawk, who leads the team with 102 tackles. The return of TB Mike Hart gives the Wolverines a boost. It will be tough finding room to run, though.

EDGE: OHIO STATE

• Ohio State passing game (10) vs. Michigan pass defense (2): Smith is not known for his arm, but he isn't shabby. He has terrific receivers in Santonio Holmes and Ted Ginn Jr., but Michigan's secondary has gained confidence in recent weeks. Ohio State has a balanced offense but has spent the last few games establishing the run.

EDGE: MICHIGAN

• Michigan passing game (7) vs. Ohio State pass defense (1): Michigan has a talented group of receivers and quarterback, but the passing offense has not always clicked this season. QB Chad Henne must have his best game of the year against an aggressive defense. SS Donte Whitner has 60 tackles, most among the Buckeyes defensive backs, and he leads the team with six interceptions.

EDGE: OHIO STATE

• Ohio State offensive line vs. Michigan front seven: Ohio State's line, anchored by C Nick Mangold, has helped rejuvenate the running game. But Michigan's front seven has been aggressive and intense the last four games, unlike the early part of the season. The Wolverines will rotate players frequently to stay fresh against the Buckeyes. EDGE: MICHIGAN

• Michigan offensive line vs. Ohio State front seven: Facing this defensive front is a tough task for any offense. Michigan has been battered and bruised all season, and its most important cog, RT Jake Long, left last week's game with an injury. Michigan has not played a defense this fast, this anticipatory, this aggressive all season. Ohio State's linebackers are, arguably, the best in the nation.

EDGE: OHIO STATE

• Special teams: A healthy Steve Breaston means plenty to Michigan in the return game, which has, in recent years, played a big role in the rivalry. Breaston averages 12.9 yards on punt returns and 26.9 yards on kick returns. Ohio State, however, has two strong returners -- Ginn is the primary weapon, but Holmes is every bit the threat Ginn is. Josh Huston has made 85.7 percent of his field-goal attempts for Ohio State, while Garrett Rivas has made 74 percent.

EDGE: OHIO STATE

• Prediction: It has been a wonderful run for the Wolverines, who were 3-3 before winning the last four. But Ohio State's defense, particularly against the run, is too stifling and dominating. Michigan's defense will challenge Ohio State's offense, which has gained confidence the last few weeks against mediocre defenses.

OHIO STATE 17, MICHIGAN 10




Watch out for: Ted Ginn, Jr. - Detroit News FB

The Big Game: 2-Minute Drill
Watch out for: Ted Ginn, Jr.

By Angelique S. Chengelis / The Detroit News

ginn_stats.jpg


Getting to know ... Ted Ginn, Jr.
Position: Flanker/return specialist
Height: 6-foot
Weight: 175 pounds
Class: Sophomore
Birth date: March 12, 1985
Hometown: Cleveland
High school: Glenville

Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith ripped the Michigan defense apart last season to lead the Buckeyes to a stunning upset.

But look no further than Ted Ginn Jr. as to who puts the most fear into the Wolverines.

Ginn, with his track background and 4.3 speed in the 40-yard dash, is a game-changer.

As a freshman last season, Ginn scored eight touchdowns on 55 touches. He returned four punts for scores, including an 82-yarder that all but knocked out Michigan in the third quarter.

"He has speed, which creates problems for the kickoff team, the punt team," Michigan receiver Carl Tabb said. "But to be honest with you, one man doesn't make or break a unit.

"If you look at the kickoff-return team that Ohio State has or the punt-return team that Ohio State has and ask, 'Does Ted Ginn make that team?' ... you are neglecting the other 10 people on that team because without those 10 people, Ted Ginn would not be a name that you would know. With that being said, we have to focus not only on Ted but on the actual unit because if we overlook any one person on any team, that could be detrimental to our team."

Ginn presents too much speed to be overlooked. He was the national champion in the 110-meter high hurdles as a junior in high school and has been timed at 10.5 seconds in the 100-meter dash.

This season, Ginn leads the Buckeyes in all-purpose yards (134.5 avg.). He has scored on a punt and kickoff return and is third in the Big Ten in punt-return average (12.3), just behind Michigan's Steve Breaston (12.9), and second in kick returns (33.8).

"One thing about Teddy is he has fun playing the game, and when you have fun playing the game, you play it fast," coach Jim Tressel said. "The people that are uptight playing the game, you know, they don't play it quite as fast and I think what Teddy brings to the game is a fun, fast-playing guy that believes every time he touches it, he can go the whole way. I think he just brings excitement."






Stating their differences - Detroit News FB

mega_UOM_OSU.jpg





Oh, how we hate Ohio State - Detroit News FB

Oh, how we hate Ohio State
Maize & Blue aim to make blasted Buckeyes red with embarrassment

By Bob Wojnowski / The Detroit News

ANN ARBOR -- Uh-oh, here they come again, loaded for beer, spittin' passion. According to my sources in law enforcement, Buckeyes began streaming across the border at midweek, clogging rest areas and hourly rate motels. At this very moment, local convenience stores are calling for emergency supplies of Slim Jims and pickled eggs.

Perhaps you've seen them around town, their eyes as glazed as their doughnuts. If so, approach with caution, because these are not the beaten-down folks of a few years ago, back when Michigan regularly drummed Ohio State in a rivalry we truly love, and occasionally fear.

The Buckeyes are back. That's a statement, and also a warning. They've beaten the Wolverines three of the past four years and are favored to do it again Saturday at Michigan Stadium.

Listen. Nothing in the sports world matches Ohio State-Michigan for high stakes, unfiltered intensity and pure pageantry. I mean, there's no greater spectacle than when the Ohio State marching band clambers onto that field and desperately tries to spell out script O-H-O-I.

But let me be honest with you, just this once. I'm concerned some people take the rivalry a bit too far. (Not me!)

For the purposes of this column, I loosely define "some people" as "drunken Buckeyes."

You might recall Ohio State once had a fine coach by the name of John Cooper who won lots and lots of games. But astute Buckeyes fans noticed he was 2-10-1 against the Wolverines and demanded he be fired.

Cooper was replaced by Jim Tressel, who somehow is 3-1 against Michigan's Lloyd Carr despite wearing the geekiest sweater vest you've ever seen. We're never sure if Tressel is coaching football or teaching fifth-grade math. Put a sweatshirt on, man.

Almost immediately, Tressel swiped some of Michigan's trademark arrogance without even asking. When he arrived, he began counting down the days to Ohio State's first visit to Ann Arbor. Then he had the audacity to win that game. Later, he hired, er, signed a running back by the name of Maurice Clarett and won a national title.

Quickly, the Buckeyes' obsession returned, and things really got nasty last year in Columbus (city slogan: "$#@& Michigan"). Before the game, in an incident I'm not making up, bomb-sniffing dogs were set loose on Michigan's equipment truck. Michigan coaches and players were searched before security let them in, confident they weren't hiding a creative game plan.

It was stupid and patently disrespectful, and Ohio State officials knew it, once it was explained to them what "patently" meant. I have no idea what retaliation Michigan is planning, although I've heard rumors of rubber gloves and needle-nosed pliers.

Maybe it's time for the Wolverines to crank up the gamesmanship before Carr gets turned into Cooper before our eyes. The Buckeyes long have treated this rivalry more rabidly than the Wolverines, going back to the days when Woody Hayes refused to mention Michigan by name, calling it, according to my memory, "that far superior school up north."

I'm not sure why this passion deficit exists, but it does. Maybe Michigan fans simply have other distractions in their lives, like dealing with Michigan State fans or running major corporations.

Now don't get me wrong. The Wolverines relish the rivalry and are hardly blameless in fostering ill will. While Buckeyes take pride in making Ohio Stadium the noisiest, most profane place imaginable, Michigan fans have been known to violently shush people. Michigan officials even introduced this week something called "Values for the Victors," a sportsmanship initiative designed to squelch bad behavior, on the field and in the stands.

(Note to our Buckeyes friends: This has nothing to do with your visit this week. Noooo. Nothing at all. Please drop the broken beer bottle and step away.)

(Note to everyone else: When they're riled, it's best to Taser them in the buttocks.)

I know, I know. I sound like a biased whiner. Hey, it's my job. But for more evidence of poor behavior, I found numerous stories of Texas fans complaining about mistreatment in Columbus, after the Longhorns beat the Buckeyes this season. Ohio State's president (yes, they have one) even apologized. One of Ohio State's own, tight end Ryan Hamby, said he received hate e-mails after dropping a potential touchdown pass in the game.

Speaking of that, to stem the deluge of perky messages from Buckeyes fans, the address at the end of this column will accept e-mails only from those who affix 37-cent stamps. So don't even try to send one without the postage! Also, before you ask, I'm not nearly limber enough to put my head where you think it belongs.

I'm here to study the Buckeyes, not denigrate them. Remember, this whole Michigan-Ohio battle started way back in 1835 when the states actually fought over Toledo, true story. Ohio won but took Toledo anyhow. In exchange, Michigan got the Upper Peninsula, Charles Woodson, Desmond Howard and four free passes to Cedar Point.

It's really not surprising that so many Ohio youngsters, such as Heisman Trophy winners Woodson and Howard, dream of coming to Michigan. This year's Michigan roster lists 11 kids who escaped Ohio, while Ohio State has one from Michigan. We won't mention his name in case his family doesn't know.

To be fair, when the Buckeyes got sick of losing, they did turn to quarterback Craig Krenzel, from Michigan's Utica Ford High, to lead them to that completely untainted national title. See, we can help each other, once we understand each other. That's why I'm here, to educate.

For instance, in case Ohioans didn't know, these are the three biggest industries in Michigan:

• Making automobiles.

• Pretending to fix the roads.

• Repossessing automobiles.

In case Michiganians didn't know, these are the three biggest industries in Ohio:

• Giving out speeding tickets to Michigan drivers.

• Recycling tobacco tins.

• Fixin' their trucks.

There. Doesn't it feel like we're getting along better already?

As for the game itself, well, it's still huge, even though Michigan spent the first half of the season playing patty-cake with opponents. Now, if Michigan wins and Michigan State does its big brother a favor and somehow doesn't lose by nine touchdowns to Penn State (ha, good one!), the Wolverines (7-3) become Big Ten champs.

After years of Wolverine dominance, we do find the Buckeyes (8-2) and their newly frothing passion fascinating, if a bit startling. But historically, this rivalry is more about the underdog than the bomb-sniffing dog. For the sake of neighborly peace, it'd be best if Michigan restored order.

Pick: Michigan 23-20.
 
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Beating Ohio State crucial to Michigan's Mason - MLive (Ann Arbor News) FB

Beating Ohio State crucial to Michigan's Mason

Friday, November 18, 2005

BY JOHN HEUSER
News Sports Reporter

Grant Mason wants to avoid that awful, pit-of-the-stomach feeling.

The one that sticks with any University of Michigan football player who finishes his career with a defeat to Ohio State.

"This is my last game as a senior, and at home here at Michigan Stadium,'' Mason said. "I've talked to a lot of guys. (Former Michigan linebacker) Sam Sword - he's one of our coaches now - his last game as a senior he lost. He always tells us you don't want that feeling.''

Mason's role in creating positive memories from his final game against the No. 9 Buckeyes (8-2, 6-1 Big Ten) will be pivotal for No. 17 Michigan (7-3, 5-2) on Saturday.

As a starting cornerback - and the only senior in the defensive backfield -

Mason will be tasked with containing two of the Big Ten's most dangerous wide receivers.

Together with fellow cornerback Leon Hall, Mason will match wits and speed with Ohio State's Santonio Holmes and Ted Ginn Jr.

A second-team All-Big Ten player last season, Holmes, a junior, leads the Buckeyes with 42 receptions and averages 18.6 yards per reception. With nine touchdown catches, Holmes ranks second in the Big Ten.

"It's big when you play guys like Holmes to be real fundamentally sound in everything you do,'' Mason said. "Because you know if you get out of position, they'll make you pay for it.''

Although Ginn is just a sophomore, Michigan got a taste of his talents last season when he caught five passes for 87 yards, including a 42-yarder, in Ohio State's victory. This season, he's averaging 16.1 yards on 34 catches.

"One thing about Teddy is he has fun playing the game,'' Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "And when you have fun playing the game, you play it fast.''

A first-year starter, Mason said he's been having a great time this year, too, with teammates he truly enjoys.

Mason's performance also has been a pleasure for Michigan, as he leads the team with 71 tackles. He's also tied for the team lead with two interceptions and seven pass breakups.

"Grant Mason has had a wonderful year,'' Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "We don't have many guys who transfer in here. It's unusual and I think Grant Mason has done an unusual job.''

Mason came to Michigan from Stanford, where he played receiver. A Michigander who attended Orchard Lake St. Mary's High School, Mason now concentrates on shutting down wideouts, something he'll try to do in Michigan Stadium for the final time Saturday.

"This game means a lot to us and it means a lot to our season,'' Mason said. "Being a senior I think it would mean the world to me to beat Ohio State in this game.''
 
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Ohio State-Michigan: The Game is not just a game for some - Akron Beacon Journal (AP) FB

Ohio State-Michigan: The Game is not just a game for some

LARRY LAGE
Associated Press

ANN ARBOR, Mich. - Don't tell Santonio Holmes the Ohio State-Michigan matchup is just a game.

"This is what you live and die for," the Buckeyes' standout receiver said. "You want to be in the biggest rivalry. You want to be in the spotlight. And you don't want to be on the losing end."

One team will have its season made, the other broken, when No. 9 Ohio State plays the No. 17 Wolverines on Saturday in one of college football's great rivalries before about 112,000 fans at Michigan Stadium.

Even Michigan coach Lloyd Carr, not known for spouting hyperbole, acknowledged it was a make-or-break game. Ohio State safety Nate Salley agreed, sharing an assessment to which players on both sides could relate.

"When you come here, you have to understand what you're getting yourself into," Salley said. "That makes it fair."

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who assured fans they would be proud of the Buckeyes against Michigan when he was hired in 2001, is 3-1 against Carr.

Ohio State (8-2, 6-1 Big Ten) and Michigan (7-3, 5-2) have gained momentum after their national championship hopes were dashed early in the season. The Buckeyes have won five in a row following a 3-2 start. The Wolverines have four straight victories after sputtering to a .500 record through six games.

"They're rolling, and we're kind of rolling right now," Salley said. "I don't think either team would have it any other way."

The winning streaks will be all but forgotten by the loser - and its fans - of the 102nd installment of the rivalry.

If Ohio State wins, it will clinch a share of the Big Ten title and will claim the championship outright if Penn State loses at Michigan State later in the day.

If Michigan wins, it needs help from a bitter rival 65 miles away, to forge a three-way tie with the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions. In that scenario, the Wolverines would earn the Big Ten's automatic Bowl Championship Series bid because they would have beaten Ohio State and Penn State.

"I don't want to talk about that too much. I just want to worry about Ohio State," Michigan fullback Brian Thompson said. "But, yeah, we'll be rooting for Michigan State."

To have any chance of winning, Michigan will have to do a much better job of slowing quarterback Troy Smith. Smith ran for 145 yards and a touchdown and threw for 241 yards and two more scores in last year's 37-21 win over the Wolverines.

After Michigan's defense was embarrassed again in its next game - by Texas' Vince Young in the Rose Bowl - the Wolverines were determined to do a better job against mobile quarterbacks.

The Wolverines fared better this year against Penn State's Michael Robinson and Michigan State's Drew Stanton, but they said Smith will provide their toughest test.

"He's similar, but out of all of them, I think he's the best athlete," Michigan defensive tackle Pat Massey said. "And he's going to be the one who wants to run it the most."

With running back Antonio Pittman and receivers Holmes and Ted Ginn, Smith has plenty of options when he doesn't choose to run.

The Game is often decided on special teams, and both teams have game-breakers - Ginn and Michigan's Steve Breaston.

Michigan expects to get a boost with the return of perhaps its most valuable player, running back Mike Hart. He hasn't played since Oct. 22 at Iowa because of a sprained ankle after being slowed earlier in the year by another injury. In the four games Hart has played extensively, he has rushed for at least 100 yards while providing an emotional boost no other Wolverine seems to match.

Star linebacker A.J. Hawk will lead the attack against Hart, with plenty of help from aggressive linebackers, run-stuffing linemen and speedy defensive backs.

"I've watched him on film, and he just won't go down," Ohio State defensive tackle Marcus Green said. "He's superhuman."
 
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The Game - Hattiesburg American FB

The Game

Few college football rivalries can match the intensity associated with the blood feud between Ohio State and Michigan. And only alumni from both of those universities truly understand the disdain they hold for one another. Today, staff writers Kareem Copeland (Michigan) and Reuben Mees (Ohio State) bring that hatred to life.

How can you fear a Buckeye?

By Kareem Copeland

Oh, how I hate Ohio State.

Let me count the ways.

First off, let’s start with the name. The university calls itself The Ohio State University.

THE, pronounced thee, Ohio State University.

What kind of arrogant Ohioan came up with that idea?

That’s like me walking around introducing myself as THE Kareem Copeland.

(Seems like a pathetic way to make yourself sound important. But maybe that’s just me.)

No. 2: The “traditional” dotting of the I.

At every home game, the Buckeye marching band spells out the word Ohio in cursive letters at the end of their pregame routine.

The crowd loses its already feeble mind as the final tuba player does an effeminate march out to the top off the “I” and then takes off his headgear and bows.

Gives you goose bumps, doesn’t it?

Actually, no it doesn’t.
(And how impressive can a band be when its uniforms are black with white dressings and a red beret that look like a pitiful knock-off of Napoleon’s French Army? Oui, oui! We are THE Ohio State University.)

No. 3: Its nickname.

The Buckeyes? Really instills fear in your heart, doesn’t it?
Actually, no it doesn’t.

How can I take a football team seriously when it’s named after a nut?
Brutus the Buckeye looks like something I accidentally stepped in last week.(But hey, good for the fine folks of Columbus. That didn’t sound sarcastic did it? Anyway ...)

No. 4: Its hero, Woody Hayes.

Congratulations for his 238-72-10 record, 13 Big Ten titles and eight Rose Bowl appearances.

Too bad the first thing people think of when his name is mentioned is the fact that he punched out Clemson linebacker Charlie Bauman after an interception in the 1978 Gator Bowl.

Bauman ended the runback out of bounds on the Ohio State sideline, promptly meeting Hayes.

But hey, he’s a class guy.(Oops, there’s that sarcasm again.)

I could go on like this all day, but I don’t want Reuben waiting outside the crib when I get home. But as an OSU grad, I doubt he could read directions to get there. (My bad. That was uncalled for. Poor Buckeyes. Come on now, that sounded sincere didn’t it?)

Anyway, THE Buckeyes (8-2, 6-1) are not strutting into the Big House on Saturday afternoon and leaving with a victory.

If the Wolverines lose, it will be the fourth loss in five years (2001-2005).

The last time Michigan lost four of five in the series was between 1961-1965.

It’s just not going to happen.

The Victors Valiant have been flying under the radar after a few early losses to Notre Dame, Wisconsin and Minnesota. But Michigan lost all three of those games by a combined 13 points.

The Wolverines weren’t as good as their No. 4 preseason ranking, but they are not as bad as a 7-3, 5-2 record sounds.

And that’s how we operate in Ann Arbor. Three regular season losses is an average season. Some call us spoiled, but we just have high standards. (And since when is it wrong to have high standards? That’s what I thought.)

Oh, one other thing.

The Maize and Blue are angry.

They do not want to lose to the Buckeyes twice in a row, especially in their own building.

And once again, they’re being underestimated.

We like it like that.

Go blue!

Kareem Copeland is a sports writer for the Hattiesburg American. He is a 2003 graduate of the University of Michigan. He can be reached at [email protected] or at 601-584-3107.



‘State up north’ will lose again

Football is serious business in Ohio – and nothing tops a good rivalry.

Whether it’s the Cincinnati-Cleveland matchup in the NFL or the Bellefontaine-Urbana high school contest in my hometown, there’s nothing better than having someone to hate.

But this weekend is the big daddy of all the big-time Midwest showdowns as Ohio State squares off with “that state up north,” as Ohio State coaching legend Woody Hayes referred to the not-so-great state of Michigan.

But at no time in the year is the hatred more palpable than the week in November when “The Game” comes around.

No one knows exactly why the rivalry that has lasted 108 years cuts such a vitriolic divide between the two states, but it does. And nothing makes that more evident than the saying born of the rivalry “screw blue.”

I can’t particularly say why I hate Michigan’s Wolverines. Maybe it’s their complete lack of anything resembling a tradition or maybe it’s the unscrupulous game play that has marked the state’s athletic programs.

Or maybe it goes back to that day in elementary school when – forgetting or not recognizing the importance of Scarlet and Gray Day – I wore my favorite yellow sweatshirt with blue jeans. (Repressed memory surfacing.)

Or maybe it’s just the good sense The Ohio State University had to woo me with scholarships and deeply discounted season passes in the boisterous Block O student section.

Regardless, it has become an ingrained part of my subconscious.
Now to get down to the facts.

The Wolverines don’t have a chance in this year’s much-hyped matchup in Ann Arbor.

Despite the Wolverines’ home field advantage, stats typically don’t lie – take OSU’s 8-2 record and ninth place ranking compared to Michigan’s 7-3, 17th ranking – but that’s all out the window come game day.

In this year’s contest, the Buckeyes’ No. 2 ranked rush defense will have no problem sending overrated Wolverine running back Mike Hart back to the spot on the bench he has been warming most of this season.

But OSU coach Jim Tressel also takes a big psychological advantage into the game with a 3-1 record over Michigan’s Lloyd Carr. Carr just doesn’t have the coaching talent to match wits with an OSU coach who could be on his way to a spot beside Hayes in Buckeye history books.

But once again, it all comes back to the rivalry.

Nearly two-thirds of Ohio State’s players hail from the home state while nearly two-thirds of the Wolverines were recruited from out-of-state.

Quarterback Chad Henne, a Pennsylvania native, just doesn’t get it.
Maybe no one in the rest of the United States really gets it.
But if you’ve ever lived in Ohio, O how you know.

Reuben Mees is a Hattiesburg American staff writer and 1997 graduate of The Ohio State University. He hails from Bellefontaine, Ohio, deep in the heart of Buckeye country.




Truth & Rumors: Nov. 18, 2005 - SI On Campus FB

Truth & Rumors: Nov. 18, 2005

Ohio State seniors all remember the bus ride. Five hours back from Ann Arbor, Mich., in total silence. For Ohio State coach Jim Tressel and his seniors, that 35-21 loss in Michigan Stadium on Nov. 22, 2003, is the only blemish on their record against the Wolverines. Tressel wouldn't let his players forget 2003. Senior linebacker Anthony Schlegel said Tressel put up a board asking what went wrong in that game and "all the guys put their two cents in."
-- Akron Beacon Journal

The Fiesta Bowl is considered a lock to exercise its option on revived Notre Dame, which would play in a BCS game for the first time since the 2000 season, when it got clobbered by Oregon State 41-9. This time, the Irish figure to be more competitive. Their likely opponent is Ohio State. Virginia Tech and Oregon also are candidates, but the muscular wallets of traveling Buckeyes fans should be the trump card.
-- Chicago Sun-Times




Buckeyes to Honor Fallen Marine Saturday - CSTV (AP) FB

Buckeyes to Honor Fallen Marine Saturday

Ohio State will wear a decal on their helmets for former Buckeye wrestler, Marine Corps Major Ray Mendoza

Nov. 18, 2005

COLUMBUS, Ohio: The Ohio State football team will wear a special decal on its helmet at Saturday's Michigan game in honor of former Buckeye wrestler, Marine Corps Major Ray Mendoza, who was killed in action in Iraq earlier this week. Mendoza, who graduated from Ohio State in 1995, is believed to be the first Ohio State student-athlete to be killed in Iraq. He was a company commander with the 1st Marine Division and was in his third tour of duty in Iraq.

The helmet decal will be the size of the Buckeye Leaf decal that the Buckeyes wear on their helmets. It will be a clear background with the initials R.M. on it.

Mendoza, a native of Blairstown, N.J., was a two-year letterman for the Buckeyes and was runner-up in the heavyweight division at the Big Ten championships in 1993.

Major Mendoza is survived by his wife, Karen and their two children, a daughter Kiana (12) and a son Aleksandr (8). Mrs. Mendoza is from Upper Arlington, but she and the children live in San Diego.
 
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Rivalries left in shadow of BCS - Cincinnati Enquirer FB

Rivalries left in shadow of BCS
Conference stakes have been made secondary

Dustin Dow
Enquirer staff writer

So the Big Ten standings tell us Saturday's Ohio State-Michigan game in Ann Arbor is a big one, huh?

At 7-3 overall and 5-2 in the Big Ten, Michigan still could claim a share of the conference title Saturday with a win and a Penn State loss. Ohio State, 9-2 overall and 6-1 in the Big Ten, is still capable of claiming an outright or shared Big Ten title and berth in the Bowl Championship Series.

There's something wrong when an Ohio State-Michigan game can't be big just because it's Ohio State-Michigan for the 102nd time. That used to be enough.

Now we've got the BCS, which trumps everything and actually makes Ohio State-Michigan devoid of high stakes unless the Buckeyes can package a win with a BCS bowl bid.

Texas coach Mack Brown said it best in September when the Longhorns were about to visit Columbus (now, that was a big game).

Brown said then that major nonconference showdowns between teams such as Texas and OSU slowly would fade away as teams put more emphasis on trying to earn a spot in the BCS championship game. His point was that we wouldn't see many more nonconference matchups of that caliber. The lasting message is that when so many resources are put into trying to get to one game in January, it undermines the novelty of the games in late November.

TURNAROUND COMPLETE: Imagine for a moment first-year Indiana coach Terry Hoeppner turning the woeful Hoosiers program into one that not only wins but also competes for national championships, seemingly on an annual basis. Ten-win seasons as the norm. Imagine him doing this all in the next five years. Possible? Yes.

Probable? Well, it's more probable than what Bill Snyder did at Kansas State. Snyder, 66, announced his retirement this week, effective after Saturday's home game against Missouri. This final season, which the Wildcats will finish with their second straight losing record, is hardly indicative of Snyder's success at Kansas State.

He took over a disaster of a KSU program in 1988 and slowly but steadily made it elite. Ten years after he arrived, Kansas State made it to the Big 12 championship game, and the Wildcats won the league title in 2003. Snyder never won a national championship, but the Wildcats were frequent contenders.

Snyder will leave Kansas State with the program far better than he found it.

And he'll leave hope for some other coach somewhere who has to turn around a dead-end football program.

SHAKE ON IT: Instead of rumbling, Clemson and South Carolina players will shake hands before their game Saturday. It's their way of apologizing to fans for last season's massive pregame brawl between the Tigers and Gamecocks players.

That fight was one of the ugliest sports brawls in recent years, and it resulted in both teams forfeiting bowl bids.

Getting the players back together in a respectful manner by shaking hands might be only symbolic, but the gesture will help heal some of the scars left on the Clemson and South Carolina programs.




OSU and Michigan loyalties run deep - Cincinnati Enquirer FB

OSU and Michigan loyalties run deep
Bengals notebook

By Mark Curnutte
Enquirer staff writer
ADVERTISEMENT

Years can't thaw the rivalry experienced by former combatants in the Ohio State-Michigan game.

Former Wolverines linebacker Larry Stevens and former Buckeyes quarterback Craig Krenzel have set a wager neither will reveal on the winner of the game Saturday in Ann Arbor, Mich.

And former Michigan running back Chris Perry - the third Bengals player to have participated in college football's greatest rivalry - is doing a lot of talking.

"Now they're more representing me," Perry said. "Last year, you're just out, and all your homeboys are still there. Only a couple of your homeboys are there. There's more disconnect. So now they're representing you more. Krenzel is scared. They don't want to see me, see us. There's too many of us, 112,000."

Michigan Stadium, otherwise known as the Big House, seats 112,000.

Krenzel said he wasn't intimidated by playing at Michigan Stadium. He said he found Wisconsin's Camp Randall Stadium a more difficult place to play, in terms of disruptive noise making communication difficult.

"The way it's shaped, it doesn't get as loud," said Krenzel, who went back to Columbus for the Buckeyes game last week, which coincided with the Bengals' bye.

"Obviously, most of the guys I was real close with are gone," he said. "There were a lot of guys I didn't recognize. I couldn't tell you what position they played."

Krenzel is a second-year NFL quarterback. The Ohio State-Michigan game still means a great deal to him, but not as much, he said, as the Bengals game Sunday against the Colts.

"There's still a lot of pride," Krenzel said. "Having played there and having been part of the program, you always want to see them do well and play for a share of the Big Ten title. I'd love to see them get that. As long as I'm on a team with Michigan guys, it means something extra."




Ohio State Buckeyes at Michigan Wolverines Preview - Real Football 365 FB

Ohio State Buckeyes at Michigan Wolverines Preview
By Darrell Laurant ; 11/18/05

"It's kind of a season in itself," says Ohio State Buckeyes football coach Jim Tressel about the annual season-ending clash with the Michigan Wolverines.

And this year, maybe a post-season, as well.

If 9th ranked Ohio State can escape the "Big House" in Ann Arbor with a victory on Saturday (game time 1 p.m.) and Penn State beats Michigan state, the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions will tie for the Big Ten crown. In that scenario, Penn State wins, because it beat Ohio State earlier in the season.

Should Penn State lose and No. 17 Michigan upend OSU, however, the Wolverines will take the crown (and the top BCS bowl berth) by virtue of having beaten the other two members of what would be a three-way tie.

Despite the disparity in rankings, the Michigan Wolverines are a formidable final obstacle to the Ohio State Buckeyes' title run. Lloyd Carr's team handed Penn State it’s only loss on the final play of the game (a pass from Chad Henne to Mario Manningham) and is just 13 points away from being 9-0.

Sophomore QB Chad Henne, who slipped under the national radar following a slow start, has thrown for 2,033 yards and 19 touchdowns. His favorite target, Jason Avant (70 catches, 900 yards) will be on a lot of All-America teams, and Manningham is a dangerous second option. And finally, RB Mike Hart and DE LaMarr Woodley, two of the Wolverines' top players, will be back this week after recuperating from injuries.

Ohio State will counter with a versatile offense led by QB Troy Smith (1,640 yards, 13 touchdowns) 1,000-yard rusher Antonio Pittman and receiver Dantonio Holmes (42 catches, 781 yards, nine TDs) Two of OSU's linebackers, A.J. Hawk and Bobby Carpenter, will probably be first-team All Big Ten, Hawk first-team All-America.

The game will also match two of the top return men in the college game in Ted Ginn Jr. of Ohio State and Steve Breaston of Michigan.




Super Saturday - Real Football 365 FB

Super Saturday
By Zack Jerome ; 11/18/05

As the season draws neigh, only archrivals stand between teams and the bowls of their destinies...

No. 9 Ohio State at No. 17 Michigan

The 102nd meeting between these storied programs pits two teams that gained momentum after slow starts. Michigan (7-3, 5-2) has rolled off four straight victories since a 3-3 start. Ohio State (8-2, 6-1) suffered a heartbreaker at the Horseshoe, dropping a game they had a strong chance of winning with No. 2 Texas. Also, Ohio State lost to Penn State, giving JoePa the hallmark win he needed to return to the spotlight (and the BCS, most likely).

The key to this game will be how effectively Mike Hart and the Michigan O-Line can move the ball. Linebacker-slash-Terminator A.J. Hawk will be trying to stuff the run, and tying him up with a relentless running attack could open up the airways for their talented core of skill players, namely Steve Breaston, Jason Avant, and Tim Massaquoi. Spread the field and spread the wealth.

Ohio State will need to use their big time D to stuff Michigan and give Antonio Pittman the rock. Just as is the case for Michigan, the Buckeyes need to find a way to get Santonio Holmes and lightning-rod Ted Ginn, Jr. in open space.

Oh, there’s one other big factor in this game: it’s being played in Ann Arbor at The Big House. That’s tough for anyone to come into.

Zack’s Pick: Michigan 28, Ohio State 24




Preview: Ohio State (9) at Michigan (17) - Covers (AP) FB

Preview: Ohio State (9) at Michigan (17)

Associated Press
Fri, Nov 18, 2005

As usual, this year`s Ohio State-Michigan matchup contains Big Ten championship and BCS berth subplots.

As important as that is, Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel doesn`t want his team to overlook the singular importance of playing in one of college football`s most storied rivalry games.

Tressel and the No. 9 Buckeyes (8-2, 6-1) go for their sixth straight win and look to clinch at least a share of the conference crown Saturday when they travel to Michigan Stadium to face the No. 17 Wolverines (7-3, 5-2).

Oddsmakers have set the Buckeyes as 3-point road favorites, the total is set at 44.

``When guys come back for reunions, they talk about the guy that made the big play in the Ohio State-Michigan game,`` said Tressel, 3-1 against Michigan. ``That`s just the legacy that`s left and I`m sure the same thing goes up there when people come back and talk about the great pride they have in their program.``

The 102nd meeting includes a shot at the Big Ten title and a BCS berth for both squads.

Ohio State can clinch the Big Ten outright with a victory and a Penn State loss later in the day at Michigan State. Michigan, winner of four in a row, can earn a share of the crown with a victory over the Buckeyes and a Nittany Lions loss.

If that happens, Michigan would earn the conference`s automatic BCS berth because of head-to-head victories over Ohio State and Penn State. If the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions both win, Penn State would get the BCS spot by virtue of its 17-10 defeat of Ohio State on Oct. 8.

Michigan coach Lloyd Carr knows the season hinges on this game.

``Yeah. Yeah. And I think for both teams,`` said Carr, 6-4 against Ohio State but 1-3 against Tressel. ``I think this season will be a major disappointment with a loss. I can`t think of anything less, because there is a lot at stake and I think that`s what this game is.``

That the Wolverines still have a chance at the title is a testament to their impressive turnaround. Four weeks ago, Michigan sat at 3-3, its worst start since 1990.

``People didn`t give us much hope,`` tight end Tim Massaquoi said. ``They really cast our season away.``

The Wolverines` last-second win over Penn State, the Nittany Lions` only loss, changed everything, sparking the four-game winning streak that has Michigan alive in the conference race.

Michigan should get additional help Saturday from the expected return of leading rusher Mike Hart. The sophomore tailback, who missed the previous two games with a sprained right ankle, has averaged 122 yards in six games this season.

Ohio State finds itself needing help to win the Big Ten crown, even though its two losses came by a total of four points to No. 2 Texas and then-No. 16 Penn State.

The Buckeyes, though, have outscored opponents by an average of 42-15 during their winning streak and own the fifth-ranked defense in the country as they look to lock up a share of the title against their archrivals.

``This is it. What else do you have left?`` Ohio State defensive end Mike Kudla asked. ``It`s a month before your next game in the bowl and ... our season rides on this. We need to get a share of that Big Ten title or that`s it. It kind of means everything for us.``

Michigan leads the series with Ohio State 57-38-6, but the teams have split the last 50 meetings 24-24-2.

Ohio State won last year`s meeting 37-21 in Columbus.




TICK ... TICK ... TICK: Time now for U-M to solve OSU - WZZM FB

TICK ... TICK ... TICK: Time now for U-M to solve OSU

BY MARK SNYDER- FREE PRESS SPORTS WRITER

Saturday's game against No. 9 Ohio State has everyone on edge on the Michigan football team.

Player availability was limited to seniors at Monday's news conference, and the players said practices would be more intense this week.

Big surprise.

That's the way it always is when U-M plays the Buckeyes.

Coach Lloyd Carr acknowledged Saturday that he doesn't "ever stop thinking about them."

Though he tries to shield his players from the annual Ohio State barrage, the questions arrive in the preseason and during the season. And after a loss, the questions continue year-round.

This is the first week U-M players can truly feel comfortable answering.

"My brother lives in Columbus, so every once in a while he'll send me an e-mail with a link," co-captain Pat Massey said of his older brother Jim, who played at Ohio State in 1997-2001. "It's hard to not be thinking about Ohio State at times."

For Massey, this is a particularly intense week. He grew up in Brecksville, Ohio, in suburban Cleveland, and he and his two brothers were split in the rivalry. Younger brother Mike is a redshirt freshman tight end at U-M.

"I've always been a Michigan fan growing up," Pat Massey said. "My neighborhood at home - drive down the street and there's always this weekend (when) you would have an Ohio State or a Michigan flag hanging off your front porch. Growing up, to me it was always the epitome of college football."

Saturday's game at Ann Arbor might decide the Big Ten title and the conference's automatic berth in the Bowl Championship Series. The No. 17 Wolverines will tie for the league championship if they win and Penn State loses at Michigan State.

But this rivalry is one of the nation's best, no matter what's at stake.

For many players, few days have passed without a memory of last year's 37-21 loss at Columbus.

"For me, this is my last game as a senior and at home here at Michigan Stadium, and I've talked to a lot of guys," cornerback Grant Mason said. "Sam Sword, he's one of our coaches now, his last game as a senior he lost, and he always tells us that you don't want to have that feeling about your last game against Ohio State.

"He won all the games previous to that" against Ohio State, "but he lost the last one. I don't want my last one to be a loss."

This week is different because players want to make their feelings known, like senior tight end Tim Massaquoi, who addressed the team Sunday, talking about his memories and the importance of this game.

It was a speech that felt perfectly appropriate to his coach.

"For the guys that are going into it for the first time or the first time they're going to play in this game, there's a lot of things that they don't know yet and they're going to find out in a hurry," Carr said.

"Obviously, there is a sense of urgency about this week that's very special, that perhaps is different."
 
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Unblanced Line: Buckeyes-Wolverines might be best rivalry - NH Union Leader FB

Unblanced Line: Buckeyes-Wolverines might be best rivalry

By JOHN TUCKER
Union Leader Staff

WHAT MAKES the Ohio State and Michigan football rivalry so uniquely great, besides its history, is the Buckeyes’ and Wolverines’ propensity to share, equally... In the glory of victory and the agony of defeat.

Especially over the past 50 years.

Ohio State has spoiled, or at least scathed, Michigan’s football season 24 times. The Wolverines have reciprocated... 24 times. Twice they played to a draw.

That makes “The 100-Yard War” Saturday in Ann Arbor the rubber match of the past half century.

Over that period, each has taken great joy in ruining its hated rival’s unbeaten season on more than a few occasions. Each has killed the other’s national championship hopes several times, with pleasure.

Neither is unbeaten this time. No national title hopes to destroy.

But this is Michigan and Ohio State. There’s bad blood. They don’t need any greater motivation than to beat their hated rival.

It just so happens both are still playing for a share of the Big Ten title, and the Buckeyes still have a chance to win it outright if they beat Michigan and Penn State loses to Michigan State later Saturday.

If Ohio State and Penn State win, they’d be Big 10 co-champions. Penn State would get the automatic BCS bid by virtue of its 17-10 victory over Ohio State last month.

Michigan could win a three-way share of the title with a victory over Ohio State coupled with a Penn State loss. The Wolverines would also get the BCS bid because they would have beaten the Buckeyes and Nittany Lions.

Voters in an ESPN.com poll chose Michigan and Ohio State as the greatest rivalry in sports.

Football fans in the great state of Alabama who’ll be watching the “Iron Bowl” Saturday in Auburn would beg to disagree, for sure. As would most die-hard Yankee and Red Sox fans.

But a historical synopsis of “The 100-Yard War,” its epic victories and devastating upsets would probably sway the average, impartial sports fan.

The football rivalry between Michigan and Ohio State began 108 years ago. It was said to be heated even in the early days, some suggest because of the general feeling of bad blood between the states stemming from a land dispute.

By 1922, both were established football powers. That’s the year Ohio Stadium opened, and Michigan crashed the party with a 22-0 victory in Columbus.

But that loss must have paled in comparison to the pain Buckeye fans had to endure in 1969. That’s the year Bo Schembechler, a one-time assistant to legendary Ohio State coach Woody Hayes, took over as the Michigan coach.

Hayes was notorious for his hatred of Michigan, which he’d recognize only as “the state to the north.” And, he made a point of letting everyone know, he “despised” losing.

In 1968, his No. 1-ranked Buckeyes were beating Michigan something like 42-14.

In the final minutes, they scored another touchdown. Hayes decided to go for two instead of kicking the extra point. When asked why after the game, Hayes said, “because I couldn’t go for three.”

It must have darn near killed Hayes when Schembechler’s 1969 Wolverines stunned his undefeated and No. 1-ranked Buckeyes, 24-12, in Ann Arbor. It cost Ohio State a chance for a second consecutive national championship.

You know what they say about payback ...

From 1970-1975, Michigan came into the game undefeated each year. The Wolverines won only one of the six games.

In 1972, Michigan was 10-0 and ranked No. 3 in the country. The Buckeyes, who were 8-1 and ranked ninth, made two goal-line stands, twice keeping the Wolverines out of the end zone on fourth and goal from the one. Ohio State won, 14-11.

In 1973, No. 1-ranked Ohio State had pounded its opponents 297-27 en route to a 10-0 record. The No. 4 Wolverines were also 10-0, having outscored their opponents, 235-48. They played to a 10-10 tie.

The Big Ten’s athletics directors voted to send Ohio State to the Rose Bowl, even though the Wolverines won the statistical battle decisively. Schembechler was said to have been driven into a frenzy.

Michigan got its revenge in the 1990s.

The Buckeyes were 9-0-1 in 1993, 11-0 in 1995 and 10-0 in 1996 before facing the Wolverines. Michigan won each time.

It may seem that the team with the most to lose always loses, but that’s not always the case.

In 1997, Michigan held off Ohio State, 20-14, and went on to win a share of the national title. Five years later, the Buckeyes held off the Wolverines, 14-9, and went on to capture the national championship.

Who has more to lose this time?

Michigan. Ohio State.

So who wins the rubber match?

Michigan. Ohio State.

Ohio State. Michigan.

Oh... Michigan.




Shortcoming by Cox shortchanges viewers - NC Times FB

Shortcoming by Cox shortchanges viewers

By: JOHN MAFFEI - Staff WriterJohn Maffei

It's one of the more intriguing college football games of the season ---- a regular David vs. Goliath matchup. But the majority of viewers in San Diego County won't see it.

Fox Sports West 2 will televise No. 16-ranked Fresno State's game against No. 1 USC on Saturday night. The problem is Cox Communications ---- the largest cable provider in the county ---- does not carry FSW2. But Cox does carry Fox Sports West, so Cox subscribers in that time frame can look forward to an NHL game featuring the L.A. Kings and Colorado Avalanche.

I have nothing against the NHL. In person, hockey is a great sport, but it loses a lot in translation to TV. I won't watch the Kings on Saturday night, but I would tune into Fresno State-USC if I could. And I don't think I'm alone. FSW has a contract to carry the Kings, so one of the more interesting college football games of the season takes a back seat in San Diego.

The only way to get this changed in the future is to let officials at Cox know that you want FSW2 added to its expanded cable package.

In addition to Fresno State-USC, FSW2 also will carry the Washington State-Washington and Oregon-Oregon State games. Meanwhile, FSW has a month-old boxing match and the tape of a USC-Arizona women's volleyball match.

Start dialing.

Cartoon shuffle
ESPN has a strange schedule Saturday. It will carry the opening of the Virginia Tech-Virginia game at 9 a.m. but an hour later will switch to No. 9 Ohio State vs. No. 17 Michigan in the California, Oregon and Washington markets.

Sounds like a great game, and it's a chance to see former Vista High standout Leon Hall play for Michigan. But the Big Ten isn't playing in the Rose Bowl this season, so there is no real reason to beam this game to the West Coast.

ABC will send the Buckeyes and Wolverines to 70 percent of the country, but the network can't show it on the West Coast because of government limitations on the number of times ABC's Saturday morning children's programming can be preempted. That's the reason for the switch to ESPN here.










Saving the best for last - AZCentral FB

Saving the best for last
Michigan-Ohio State tops big rivalry games

Andrew Bagnato
The Arizona Republic
Nov. 18, 2005 12:00 AM

The Ohio State-Michigan rivalry - or Michigan-Ohio State, depending upon one's loyalties - has always generated ill feelings.

But last year's game at Columbus may have set a new, and lower, standard of relations between the ancient Big Ten rivals. As the Wolverines disembarked from their bus at Ohio Stadium on game day, they were greeted with a security force befitting a military checkpoint.

"I don't know what that was all about," Michigan offensive tackle Jake Long told the Detroit News recently. "They were just trying to get in our heads. We didn't know what was going on. They told us to drop our bags, and everyone was yelling at us."

Wolverines coach Lloyd Carr remains upset over the reception. "Certainly, I don't think we would ever treat any host school like we were treated at Ohio State," Carr told reporters on the Big Ten media teleconference Tuesday.

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel acted this week as if he didn't understand the fuss.

"That's just the times we live in," Tressel said. "Obviously, we regret if there were any surprises a year ago. They certainly were not intended."

Michigan's bags made it through security, but the Wolverines' defense didn't. Ohio State prevailed 37-21.

The episode provided more fuel for a rivalry that has lost a bit of luster on the field this season. Down through the decades, Ohio State-Michigan has been pivotal in determining the national title, but this year it won't even decide the Big Ten championship unless Penn State loses to Michigan State later in the afternoon.

"It's a game that, if you win it, you look at it as an excellent season," Carr said. "If you lose it, it's probably a disappointing season."

The same can be said for a number of games across the country as college football's most excruciating and exhilarating Saturday kicks off. From Clemson-South Carolina and Auburn-Alabama in the South to Cal-Stanford and Utah-Brigham Young in the West, this is when old friends say hello - and other things.

No. 9 Ohio State at No. 17 Michigan
When: 11 a.m., Saturday.
Where: Ann Arbor, Mich.
TV: ESPN.

Story line: This game is often the highlight of the Big Ten season, but this year it's shaping up as a sideshow. The Buckeyes and Wolverines won't know the precise stakes in their game until hours after it ends. That's because Penn State, which kicks off later in the afternoon, controls its own destiny. If the Nittany Lions beat Michigan State, they will claim the Big Ten's automatic BCS berth. If Penn State loses, the bid would go to the Ohio State-Michigan winner. There's a strong possibility that the Big Ten champion could be headed to the Orange Bowl, but the Fiesta remains an option.
 
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