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Jim Tressel (National Champion, ex-President, Youngstown State University, CFB HOF)

Canton Rep

[FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Conley has high praise for Tressel[/FONT]
Tuesday, September 12, 2006 [FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]By Todd Porter REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER[/FONT]

COLUMBUS - Over a long coaching career, Bill Conley has played for and coached with the best Ohio State football has to offer.
According to the former Buckeye assistant, OSU fans are watching a special era unfold. Ohio State Head Coach Jim Tressel, Conley said, is the best game-day coach he?s seen come through Columbus.
And that?s saying something, since Conley played for Woody Hayes and coached for Earle Bruce, John Cooper and Tressel.
?One of Jim Tressel?s real strong points is game-day coaching,? Conley said Monday. ?The guy is able to make adjustments and get a great feel for the game. Look at what Ohio State did this weekend.?
The Buckeyes got a head start on a national title push with a 24-7 win at previous No. 2 Texas. Ohio State?s offense took apart the defending national champion?s pass defense. Quarterback Troy Smith was on target, and receivers Anthony Gonzalez and Ted Ginn Jr. always seemed to get open when OSU needed a big play.
Part of Tressel?s game plan was to take the Longhorns out of theirs. Ohio State?s offense was aggressive early. The weakness of the Texas defense was the secondary, especially with starting cornerback Tarell Brown out with a one-game suspension.
When Smith and Ginn hooked up on the second play for a 46-yard gain, the plan was being executed to perfection. OSU took a quick 7-0 lead and that helped exploit Texas? weakness: Redshirt freshman quarterback Colt McCoy.
?What Jim did was very smart,? Conley said. ?You make the other team play to their weakness, and you play to your strength. The Texas offense with great running backs, even last year, has had the potential to be a high scoring offense. Jim kicks his offense into high gear and took them out of their plan.
?Texas hasn?t had to play catch-up much over the last couple of years. They?re not used to it, especially with a rookie quarterback.?
McCoy hung in there, but at halftime Smith had 219 yards passing. McCoy had 75. The Longhorns converted just three of 10 third downs.
The OSU offense, the strength of this team, indirectly aided a young Buckeye defense.
Another part of Tressel?s plan was to play as many players as he could in the first quarter. There were two reasons for this. He wanted to get a look at players still trying to earn their major college football stripes. And he wanted to keep his team fresh in the final half in the humid Texas air.
Tressel?s game planning may surprise some. He came from Division I-AA Youngstown State to a Top 25 program and made the transition without much of a problem.
?Just the athletes are a little bit better at this level,? Conley said. ?The thing that has impressed me about Jim Tressel?s game-day coaching is he?s won with different style quarterbacks. He won with option quarterbacks, sprint-outs and pocket passers. He does a great job knowing what his kids do best.?
The game plan, Conley said, doesn?t come together by accident.
OSU coaches spend a long Sunday and Monday in their offices to put together a plan. The dry-erase boards have hundreds of plays scribbled over them. They talk through the plan. They look for the other team?s weakness, their own tendencies and change the system every week.
?He leaves no stone unturned in those meetings,? Conley said. ?Every aspect, every situation you may be in is brought up. They talk about down-and-distance, what part of the field on down-and-distance and what plays work best. He?s a very-detailed man.
?Sunday and Monday are all long days. You can throw in Tuesdays, too. You get in at 6 in the morning and you?re there until midnight. Those meetings are where the coaching staff earn their money.?
Reach Repository sports writer Todd Porter at (330) 580-8340 or e-mail: [email protected]

CINCINNATI
AT OHIO STATE
Saturday, noon
Ohio Stadium,
Columbus
TV Channel 43
 
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osugrad21;603894; said:
Canton Rep

[FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Conley has high praise for Tressel[/FONT]
Tuesday, September 12, 2006 [FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]By Todd Porter REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER[/FONT]

COLUMBUS -

...The thing that has impressed me about Jim Tressel?s game-day coaching is he?s won with different style quarterbacks. He won with option quarterbacks, sprint-outs and pocket passers. He does a great job knowing what his kids do best...

Reach Repository sports writer Todd Porter at (330) 580-8340 or e-mail: [email protected]

CINCINNATI
AT OHIO STATE
Saturday, noon
Ohio Stadium,
Columbus
TV Channel 43

It's more than just different styles of quarterback...

This quote from the Daily Texan Online, posted by grad of course, spoke volumes to me; "Texas outrushed Ohio State 172-79, making it the first time under Brown in 73 games they lost while beating their opponents on the ground."

Think about that: Texas played their game. They won the battle that they need to win to play their game. Tressel like to win that battle too; but he'll sacrifice his "queen" to clear a path to your "king". Check-mate bitch.
 
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Just posted this in the Troy Smith Thread, but it belongs here too; albeit with a different emphasis.

Tress & co. attempted 10 passes on first down in the first half against Texas. Six of those were completed, for 107 yards and a Touchdown.

How many do you think they attempted on first down in the second half? No cheating by looking in the Troy Smith Thread.

ONE

One pass on first down in the second half.

For 20 yards.

Yes, it was on the TD drive that put the game away. I guess JT smelled blood.

Tresselball is still tresselball. It works even when the offense is awesome.
 
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Jaworski comments on Tress

Figure Jaworski to be conflicted next week, too, when Penn State travels to Columbus to take on top-ranked Ohio State, whose head coach is Jim Tressel, who won four I-AA national championships at Youngstown State during the 1990s. Tressel took over at Ohio State in 2001 and won another national title with the Buckeyes in 2002.

"I know coach Tressel very well and supported the program in the '90s as well as I do now," Jaworski said. "When the opportunity came for him to go to Ohio State, I made some calls to people I know to endorse him because I felt he was the right man for the job.

"Jim didn't only win football games; his players graduated. He ran a first-class program all around. As disappointed as we were to lose him at Youngstown State, we knew it was great for him, great for Ohio State and great for the state of Ohio. I am not surprised one bit by the success he's had at Ohio State."


http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/15524147.htm
 
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ABJ

Ohio State football

Tressel sends in subs in waves

Texas heat is a reason, but four starting jobs open; linebackers, offensive line, running backs rotate

By Marla Ridenour

Beacon Journal sportswriter

COLUMBUS - Perhaps the most stunning thing about Ohio State's victory last weekend at Texas was not the 24-7 score.
It might have been that OSU coach Jim Tressel used 52 players in the first quarter against the nation's then-No. 2 team.
Part of that strategy was precipitated by the heat -- 85 degrees at the 8:17 p.m. kickoff. Part of it was prompted by the fact that going into the Big Ten season, four starting positions for the top-ranked Buckeyes remain up for grabs: left guard, strong- and weak-side linebacker, and the boundary cornerback.
Going into today's noon home game against Cincinnati (1-1), Tressel and his staff are expected to continue thesomewhat-intimidating practice of rolling players in and out like hockey lines.
Against Texas, OSU substituted backup linebackers Curtis Terry, Larry Grant and Ross Homan en masse. In the first quarter, Tressel inserted the second-team offensive line after cornerback Donald Washington's fumble return to the 50; OSU needed just five snaps to score its first touchdown.
``That was probably my favorite part of the game,'' junior slot receiver Anthony Gonzalez said. Center ``Tyler Whaley, who's done more than his fair share, to see him in the end zone with you after a touchdown, that makes it all worth it... to celebrate with the guy you've worked with so long and so hard.''
Quarterback Troy Smith did not need to exhort the second-team linemen in the huddle.
``If it gets to the point where I have to rile and rev everybody up, then we're not in the game the way we were supposed to be,'' Smith said. ``It's business. As soon as they got in the game, they had the mind-set and focus on what they were supposed to do.
``It's a credit to the whole offensive line, whether it be five, seven, 10, 13 deep, that everyone can get in at the drop of a dime and start things the way we finish them.''
Junior tailback Antonio Pittman (Buchtel) was spelled by freshman Chris Wells of Garfield and sophomore Maurice Wells. Against Texas, Pittman got 16 of OSU's 29 carries and finished with 74 yards -- 48 in the second half. With 185 yards in two games, Pittman is on pace for 1,110 yards, down from 1,331 a year ago.
``I play, like, a quarter less with the rotation,'' Pittman said. ``But it's fine because later on in the season, I'll be a lot fresher while a lot of defenses are worn down.''
Pittman, though, seems torn with the plan. Asked if he'd rather be spent after 35 carries or feel like he had a quarter left in him at the end of a game, Pittman said: ``I'd rather be worn out.''
It will be a long grind as OSU tries to make a run to the BCS national championship game Jan. 8 in Glendale, Ariz., and the running back rotation might be part of Tressel's plan. So might be the rotations of Tim Schafer and Steve Rehring at left guard; John Kerr and Homan at weak-side linebacker; Marcus Freeman and Terry at strong-side linebacker, and Antonio Smith and Washington at boundary corner.
The play of sophomore Brian Robiskie -- deemed a ``pure receiver'' by Smith this week -- in place of injured split end Roy Hall also has also been encouraging.
``I think it's going to continue all year because we have six good linebackers who can go in there, and you won't lose a step,'' Freeman said of the rotation.
``It gives the coaches more confidence in some other players,'' Gonzalez said. ``They don't have to worry about whether so-and-so will be ready. A lot of times, the games and practices are two totally different things -- quicker, faster, harder -- and our guys responded.''
Tressel hasn't said how long this strategy will continue, especially when it could compromise building a starting lineup's chemistry.
But, he said, ``We're a long way from being as good as we want to be. We want a two-deep that's ready to be as good as the next guy.''
 
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Tressel Vessel

Be sure to stop by Coach Tressel.com's tailgate with the Tressel Vessel which is parked in the RV lot just west of Bill Davis Stadium. Lots of cool giveaways and fun times with other Buckeyes. Check out this week's featured poster giveaway! Last week's feature poster was Troy Smith/James Laurinaitis (also seen below).

Poster_web.jpg


Web_72dpi.jpg


HAYN
 
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E-Mail from Tressel

Received an e-mail from Coach Tressel today (they must be worried about the students response to this big game):




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Buckeye Students,[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]This is an exciting weekend for THE Ohio State University. We open the Big Ten season by hosting a very good Penn State team and WE NEED YOUR SUPPORT.[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Wear RED, and once the game starts we need you to cheer loudly for your BUCKEYES.[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Be loud and proud.[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Remember, too, it is important to act with CLASS and DIGNITY at ALL times. Treat our opponent and their fans with RESPECT.[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Let's show everyone in college football why we have the "BEST FANS in the LAND."[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Jim Tressel[/FONT]
[FONT=PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif]Head Football Coach[/FONT]
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Probably been said already but:
I am so glad to have Jim Tressel as our coach. He is not only a great role model but an amazing coach. He gets the right peopl around him and helps them succeed and get better jobs. He does everything a mentor and friend should.
That said, what I really like is that he's an ohio guy. Ohio State should NOT be coached by someone outside of Ohio. We have too many coaches in Ohio not to be able to grab one of them. (Hopefully he won't leave for a long time though). Not only is he an ohio guy, he recruits ohio unlike cooper. We truly are representing the state of Ohio again.
I love it! And I don't care if he loses 4 games in a year. I hope he stays as long as he wants to.
 
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jking222222;614180; said:
Probably been said already but:
I am so glad to have Jim Tressel as our coach. He is not only a great role model but an amazing coach. He gets the right peopl around him and helps them succeed and get better jobs. He does everything a mentor and friend should.
That said, what I really like is that he's an ohio guy. Ohio State should NOT be coached by someone outside of Ohio. We have too many coaches in Ohio not to be able to grab one of them. (Hopefully he won't leave for a long time though). Not only is he an ohio guy, he recruits ohio unlike cooper. We truly are representing the state of Ohio again.
I love it! And I don't care if he loses 4 games in a year. I hope he stays as long as he wants to.

I agree, good post. Make sure you send Andy Geiger a thank you note. :) (and thank him for Thad Matta while you are at it!)
 
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