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.
GatorinOhio Lord Gator Posts: 1704 12/4/06 10:20pm ; said:Quote
Reply
Re: OSU LB Laurinitis wins top defender (Nagurski) award--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have seen a few OSU games and I personally think he is overrated. Very good player, but I can think of at least 10 other defensive players in the country I would take over him. He is not great at stopping the run but he is good at pass coverage. I don't think he is that much better than Siler either.
BRONKO NAGURSKI AWARD
Laurinaitis named top defender in college
Tuesday, December 05, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
JOHN W . ADKISSON CHARLOTTE OBSERVER Ohio State’s James Laurinaitis with the Bronko Nagurski Trophy.
James Laurinaitis
James Laurinaitis found himself in somewhat of a bind at lunch yesterday, hours before the Bronko Nagurski Award ceremony in Charlotte, N.C.
As the Ohio State sophomore linebacker took his assigned seat, he found Florida safety Reggie Nelson on one side of him and Michigan cornerback Leon Hall on the other.
In front of him were inquiring minds.
"Somebody asked me who I would rather play in the national championship game," Laurinaitis said by telephone before the award was announced. "I just told them they were both great programs and it would be an honor to play either of them."
Laurinaitis’ diplomacy proved he’s getting the hang of the big stage. Besides, he turned out to be the star of the show, even in absentia.
Laurinaitis left early to catch a flight back to Columbus — he has a couple of exams today before he heads to his next awards ceremony — before the Charlotte Touchdown Club named him the nation’s best defensive player.
His credentials, which include leading the Buckeyes in tackles (100) and interceptions (five), match up well with his competition, but Laurinaitis said Ohio State’s success, in particular the rise of the defense, put him in the spotlight.
"I look at this as a direct compliment to our great defensive line and the rest of the guys on our defense," he said. "We played well together as the season went along, and that line especially allowed a lot of us other guys to make plays. I feel very fortunate in that respect."
With that said, former Ohio State linebacker Bobby Carpenter predicted good things for Laurinaitis months ago. In the spring, when Carpenter was asked about the prospects for a Buckeyes defense that lost nine starters, he told everyone to keep an eye on Laurinaitis.
"I just remembered watching his freshman season last year, and the way he worked, the way he picked up things," Carpenter said by phone yesterday. "It takes a little time to adjust to the physical nature of college football, but you could tell he was going to be a good one."
By the end of the week, Laurinaitis could be one of the more decorated sophomore linebackers in history. He also is up for the Butkus Award, with the winner to be announced Thursday night.
Andy Katzenmoyer, the only OSU player to win the award as the nation’s top linebacker, also did it as a sophomore, in 1997.
Laurinaitis belongs among the candidates, said Carpenter, who is now with the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys and has kept tabs on the player who replaced him one play into last year’s Michigan game after a broken ankle ended Carpenter’s season.
"His stats really speak for themselves," Carpenter said. "He was on a great defense, and he was a focal point of that defense. And his big plays, most of them came at crucial times that really turned the tide.
"He’s very deserving. Plus, I am rooting for him 100 percent to win that Butkus. A.J. (Hawk) kind of got messed over when he didn’t get that award last year."
Penn State’s Paul Posluszny won the Butkus last year and is a finalist again, along with Laurinaitis and Patrick Willis of Mississippi.
"I would like to make amends for A.J., but I have to tell you, Paul is a great person and a great player — it’s too bad they couldn’t have given two of those last year," Laurinaitis said. "Just to be associated with all of these great players is an honor in itself."
[email protected]
On BN II -- nicknamed Little Hawk?? Methinks they have mucked up Hegstrand & Laurinaitis.Laurinaitis, nicknamed "Little Hawk" in reference to his professional wrestling father, "Road Warrior Hawk," is the first sophomore to win the award, which is voted upon by the Football Writers Association of America and sponsored by the Charlotte Touchdown Club.