Elephant
Heisman
AP went 9 for 9 buts thats the only info i have been able to find. Score was 27-24!!
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cool, thanks for sharing. We've got two good young kickers... Pettrey might have the strongest leg yet under Tress. We'll see how they do in the shoe vs NIU.AP went 9 for 9 buts thats the only info i have been able to find. Score was 27-24!!
August 23, 2006 7:00 PMFootball: Redshirt sophomore place kicker Aaron Pettrey kicked a 47 yard field goal to give his team a 27-24 win in the kick scrimmage held today in Ohio Stadium. Pettrey was nine-for-nine in the scrimmage. Ryan Pretorius also had a decent day but did have some misses.According to the players and coaches who were on hand, Malcolm Jenkins, Brian Hartline, Ted Ginn and Brian Robiske all had good kick returns though there were no touchdowns scored in the scrimmage. It was also reported that both Pettrey and Pretorius were able to boom their kickoffs for touchbacks consistently.
OHIO STATE FOOTBALL
Pettrey gets leg up on Pretorius in competition for kicker’s job
Thursday, August 24, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
<!--PHOTOS--><TABLE class=phototableright align=right border=0><!-- begin large ad code --><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE align=center><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle></IMG> </TD></TR><TR><TD class=credit width=200>JEFF HINCKLEY DISPATCH </TD></TR><TR><TD class=cutline width=200>Coach Jim Tressel watches Ryan Pretorius hold on a kick by Aaron Pettrey during a recent practice. </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>![]()
On an afternoon when Aaron Pettrey and Ryan Pretorius needed to be nearly perfect, only Pettrey was.
The No. 1 kicking job likely was on the line in the Ohio State kick scrimmage yesterday. Pettrey made 9 of 9 field–goal attempts, including the winner from 47 yards. By Pretorius’ calculations, he was about 12 of 17.
In the world of kickers, Pettrey was the one who left Ohio Stadium feeling good about his effort.
"I think I have improved my status, if anything," Pettrey said.
He thought he entered camp behind Pretorius in the race to replace last year’s starter, Josh Huston, who is now with the Chicago Bears. But Pretorius, a 27-year-old rugby player turned kicker, had a feeling things changed. The tears that rolled down his cheeks on the walk back told the story.
"I felt like crying, yeah. I’m man enough to admit it," said Pretorius, a sophomore from South Africa. "Not on the field, but when I was walking by myself. It was my big day to shine. I’d had two amazing kick scrimmages or three before this, and I was like, ‘Why today?’ when I had worked harder than I ever have."
With the season opener against Northern Illinois nine days away, he and Pettrey think a decision by the coaches could come at any time.
"They still might have Ryan in that (starting) spot, but hopefully I’m standing out there with him," said Pettrey, 20, a redshirt freshman from Raceland, Ky. He added later, "I’m happy being where I’m at right now. … I’m not sure who has a leg up or anything."
It was obvious that Pettrey was on yesterday, said long snapper Drew Norman, who didn’t even have to see the kicks.
"There is a definite sound when the ball comes off the foot, and Aaron had that today," Norman said, describing it as a thud. "You could tell every time he struck the ball he struck it square. As a snapper, when you hear it struck good, you have a pretty good feeling about it."
Coach Jim Tressel usually makes the call on the kicker, and he did not speak with the media after the scrimmage. It appeared from the start of camp that he wanted Pretorius and Pettrey not only to compete, but to bond. He put them in the same room in the team hotel.
"At first I was a bit surprised by it; you don’t expect that," Pretorius said. "But (Pettrey) is a great guy. We realize it’s a competition, but we’re both gentlemen and we’re both friends off the field.
"We’ve gotten to know each other a lot better, which is a great thing because during practice you’re always competing."
At night, "We talk about kicking and how we did that day and what we thought we did wrong," Pettrey said.
Which is why if the decision goes Pettrey’s way, Pretorius said it would be bittersweet.
"I’ll work my butt off and try to get (the starting job) back," he said. "But obviously on game day we’re a team, and we want to win a national championship, and if (Pettrey is No. 1) I will be behind him 100 percent."
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