Wayne High alums reunited at OSU
COLUMBUS — Ohio State’s Marcus Freeman has found a friend, mentor, spiritual adviser and No. 1 fan in senior receiver John Hollins. But on the field, the chumminess stops.
Although the Wayne High School graduates openly pull for each over, Freeman, a freshman linebacker, promised to show no mercy if the two should cross paths in practice.
“I’m going to take his head off,” Freeman said within earshot of a laughing Hollins. “If he comes across the middle and I’m at linebacker, I’m going to try to hurt him.”
Freeman, an early enrollee, landed a solid hit on Hollins in spring practice, making him wince. But the wily veteran settled the score.
“In the spring game, he told me he was going to get me back — and he did,” Freeman said. “He made a nice juke and I missed the tackle.
“I guess we’re even now.”
The two have known each other since childhood, having grown up in the same Huber Heights church. And how Hollins has managed his disappointment as a Buckeye has made a lasting impression on Freeman.
Hollins, a former first-team all-state pick, was red-shirted as a freshman and caught just one pass the next three seasons.
“It’d be easy in John’s position to be very frustrated and want to transfer,” Freeman said. “But with the faith he has in God and his work ethic, he doesn’t quit. And now I see him getting rewarded. From what I’ve seen in practice, I expect a lot of balls to be thrown his way.”
Freeman sacrificed senior prom and post-graduation frivolity to pursue his dream of starting as a freshman. Although the Buckeyes appear set at outside linebacker with juniors A.J. Hawk and Bobby Carpenter, Freeman has moved up to second string and could log meaningful minutes.
“I like Marcus,” defensive coordinator Mark Snyder said. “He came in early, which really helped him. I put him in a different category than the other true freshmen, because he’s been here.
“I’m very pleased with Marcus. He can run.”
New receivers coach Darrell Hazell said there could be room for as many as six players in his rotation, which should leave ample room for Hollins.
“He’ll definitely help us,” Hazell said. “He’s a very mature kid. He understands it’s going take a lot of work, but he’s willing to do it. I love coaching the guy. He’s always like, ‘Coach, what else can I do to make myself better?’ “
Hollins’ level-headedness has been a boon to Freeman, who gets constant reminders to go to class, avoid trouble, play with reckless abandon and, above all, remember what they learned in church.
“He has a good relationship with God,” Freeman said, “and at times, I see myself falling off.
“He always makes sure spiritually I’m on the right path.”