UNLEASH BARON BROWNING: OHIO STATE'S SENIOR LINEBACKER NEEDS MORE PASS-RUSHING OPPORTUNITIES IN 2020
As Ohio State’s players slowly walked off of the indoor practice field at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center following the second spring practice in March, Baron Browning hung around.
He had to get in some reps as a pass-rusher before heading back to the locker room.
It was as though his pregame routine from the 2019 season had translated into a post-practice routine. In the hour-and-a-half before just about every game last fall, Browning spent a few minutes working on his standup pass-rushing technique.
Ahead of the Indiana and Nebraska game, he worked on his pass-rush moves with former defensive line graduate assistant Kenny Anunike, and before the Maryland beatdown, he got reps in with the rest of the defensive linemen then spent a couple of minutes with Anunike and Teradja Mitchell working on their outside rush. Browning had the same routine in the leadup to facing Penn State, then he worked on his pass-rush with Tyreke Smith, K’Vaughan Pope and Mitchell, getting pointers from Larry Johnson, Al Washington and Anunike in advance of the Fiesta Bowl.
It’s easy to get overwhelmed with what Ohio State does ahead of a game. From the team’s perspective, it’s a regimented, well-thought-out process. From an outside observer’s point of view, it can be chaotic. Scattered throughout one side of the 100-yard field, Ohio State’s entire team goes through their weekly process, everybody in motion at a rapid pace. Players and coaches move with a purpose, knowing what they have to accomplish, yet in doing so it’s often hard for someone watching to pay attention to one player or position group for too long. Eyes tend to wander.
But every time Browning got some work in as a pass-rusher, you couldn’t help but watch.
He’s a physical specimen. Listed at 6-foot-3 and 240 pounds, nobody has to do any deep dive into his film to see why analysts once rated him as a five-star prospect and the best linebacker in his class. Back in high school, he clocked a 4.56-second 40-yard-dash time, which helped him play nearly 750 defensive snaps over his first three seasons at Ohio State.
And as a pass-rusher, he’s a natural.
“I feel like Baron, if he wanted to, he could go play the edge right now and be dominant,” Shaun Wade said in August.
In 2020, Ohio State has to figure out how to unleash Browning as a pass-rusher off the edge more than ever before. He deserves the opportunities, and the Buckeyes – who lost Chase Young – would benefit from his impact in that area of the game.
Do you know who else agrees? The soft-spoken senior linebacker from Texas.
“Hopefully something more,” Browning said when asked in March whether he was working on third-down pass-rushing moves after practice or preparing for a larger role. “We'll definitely see. I'm just not sure yet. Just working on it so when it comes time I'll be ready.”
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