martinss01
blissfully stupid
jwinslow;614100; said:why is a UM laurinaitis photo paired with a troy fiesta bowl scramble?
cuz the fiesta bowl was his first start?
Upvote
0
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
jwinslow;614100; said:why is a UM laurinaitis photo paired with a troy fiesta bowl scramble?
Matt Hayes said:With Tressel at helm, Ohio State isn’t losing
No. 1 Buckeyes have plenty of talent and won’t be outcoached
We were so giddy and giggly at the mere thought of it all. No clear leader, no one team to chase — pure pandemonium.
And Ohio State had to go and ruin it.
It took the Buckeyes all of three weeks to become the undisputed lead dog in a national title race that had looked deliciously crowded and convoluted. (As for our preseason pick, Notre Dame? Pfffffffft.) We're a quarter of the way into the season, and there's one thing even more unexpected than a male voice on The View: No one is beating Ohio State. At least not in the regular season.
"They have very few flaws," says Texas safety Michael Griffin.
Damn Buckeyes. Make that damn Big Ten. As September winds down and October brings key conference games, there is no more disappointing league. Forget about Michigan or anyone else in the Big Ten sideswiping this train. Not only is Ohio State clearly the elite of the league, the Buckeyes have one other key component to a championship run: a coach who knows how to win a big game.
This is a players game. But when the talent gap is minimal, when there is no real difference in speed and athleticism, you better have a guy in a headset who knows what he's doing.
One of the most overlooked factors in the game today: When all things are equal — and sometimes when they're not — no one is a better big-game coach than Jim Tressel.
Pete Carroll looks like a genius with all that talent at Southern California. Mack Brown validated his elite status riding Superman Vince Young. Tressel? He won a national title with Craig Freakin' Krenzel.
The guy can flat-out coach in big games — in games that matter. In five-plus seasons in Columbus, he's 3-0 in BCS bowl games and 4-1 against bitter rival Michigan. One of those BCS wins (Miami, 2002) was against the most talented college football team in the past two decades.
And now Tressel has superstar quarterback/Heisman Trophy front-runner Troy Smith. He has wideout Ted Ginn, the game's most exciting player. He has Gonzo and Beanie and Antonio Pittman and a "revamped" defense that 100-some other Division I teams would trade theirs for.
He also has — after winning yet another big game two weeks ago at Texas — an incredibly easy road to the national title game. The Big Ten schedule includes road tests at Iowa (did you watch the Iowa-Syracuse game?) and, and . . . that's it. The Buckeyes get Penn State in Columbus on Saturday, don't play occasional thorn Wisconsin and finish up at home against Michigan.
Don't even start, Blue Boy. For the Wolverines to win The Game, Lloyd Carr would have to outcoach Tressel. And that ain't happening.
"He's not a loud, look-at-me kind of coach," says Cincinnati coach Mark Dantonio, the Buckeyes' most recent victim, of Tressel. "What he has done there and what he can do kind of gets lost in that."
Until, that is, he ruins our party.
osugrad21;620751; said:Link
President Tressel a hit with mom
COLUMBUS -- Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel has always carried himself like a high-ranking politician, with the tiny American flag conspicuously pinned to the lapel of his tailored suits. That was Cynthia Robiskie's first impression, anyway.
Her son, Brian, was all set to play for the Miami Hurricanes until Tressel swooped in. He won over mom and landed the son, whose 37-yard touchdown catch in Saturday's 28-6 win over Penn State has been one of the biggest highlights of OSU's 4-0 start.
"The very first time coach Tressel came to my house, I wasn't even home," said Terry Robiskie, Brian's dad and Cleveland Browns receivers coach. "I was sitting in the office, and my wife called and said, 'Honey, there's a guy that just got out of the car in the driveway that looks like the President of the United States.' That was her first experience with coach Tressel.
"For three days, she was beaming because she couldn't believe this guy was a football coach ... with his scarlet and gray on, his white shirt on, his suit on, his American flag (lapel pin) on. She'd been married to a football coach all her life, but she was used to seeing (me) in a sweatshirt, blue jeans and tennis shoes. She didn't know football coaches could look like coach Tressel."So what better guy to look up to as a role model than that guy?"
Brian Robiskie, a first-time All-Ohio receiver at Chagrin Falls, remembers his mom having a long conversation with Tressel at school.
"She came out of there and said, 'Coach Tressel is a pretty cool guy, maybe you should talk to him,' " Robiskie said.
Chalk up another loss for the 'Canes.
Tressel has no time for an opinion on clock rule
JASON LLOYD, Morning Journal Writer
10/01/2006
IOWA CITY, Iowa -- The new rule change in starting the clock sooner has succeeded in reducing the number of plays, ultimately shortening college football games. While notable coaches like Texas' Mack Brown and Michigan's Lloyd Carr have blasted it, Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel doesn't have much of an opinion, except for one caveat:
''The way the game is in 2006,'' Tressel said. ''Each play is more valuable.''
Under the new rules, the clock begins when the 25 second play clock starts on first down. Also, the clock begins with kickoffs, not when the opposing team touches the ball.
Tressel will hold off forming an opinion until after a full season is played and the data can be reviewed. Of course, entering last night's game at Iowa, Ohio State hadn't really been caught in a close game that went down to the final seconds.
''It will be interesting to study it after the season,'' Tressel said. ''My eyes aren't great, but I can see how much time is left and the score and I know what we've got to do.''
Big Ten Commissioner Jim Delany, in attendance last night, said the length of games is growing every week. The games were under three hours the first week, but have progressively gotten longer, to the point last week's games averaged 3:15.
Under the old rules, games typically took 3:30 or longer.
''The number of plays we've lost is getting smaller and smaller, so I think coaches are getting used to the tempo of the game,'' Delany said.
To save valuable seconds, offensive coaches are getting the plays into the huddles quicker, allowing plays to get started a little quicker than last year. Delany said most teams are losing, on average, about one possession per game.
The bigger picture in all of this is to offset the additional toll on the players for adding a 12th game.
By losing eight to 10 plays per game, the idea is to limit the physical toll on the players. Over 11 games, that adds up to between 88 and 110 plays, which nearly equals the number of plays in the additional game.
''People are adjusting to it,'' Delany said. ''And really, the time saved is modest.''
Running men?
Ohio State entered last night 10th in the Big Ten in rushing, averaging 139 yards a game on 31 carries. Tressel joked this week that the fact OSU is 10th in rushing has filled up his inbox.
''I got one saying ?Get rid of that shotgun and start running the ball down their throats,''' Tressel said. ''And the next one was, ?I can't believe you're running so much.''
Even though the offense is ranked 56th in the nation, Antonio Pittman is still among the best in the Big Ten. Tressel said the shorter games also play a factor in the running statistics. Over the last six minutes last week against Penn State, Ohio State did not have an offensive snap.
''We probably haven't run it enough,'' Tressel said. ''I wish we would have run it more, but that doesn't mean I wish we would have passed it less. That's just the way it is.''
Extra points
Chris Wells' 19-yard run in the second quarter was a career long. His previous high was a 12-yard run against Northern Illinois ... Former defensive back Shaun Gayle served as honorary captain last night. Gayle played safety and cornerback for the Buckeyes from 1980-83.
[email protected]