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OC/WR Coach Brian Hartline (National Champion, HC at USF, Buckeye OC for this postseason)

Which Buckeye had the greatest impact on the Ohio State history of the position he played?

  • Brian Hartline

  • Other (This is the wrong answer)


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Overall I was satisfied after the first playcall.

Every ingredient was there to invite Day and his past OC's into the phone booth. Today we threw on the first play of the game and kept throwing enough to make them feel us.

It's the THTGDB offense and when you have Sayin, Smith and the rest no one can handle it.

No one.
 
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Yep. The fumble isn't his fault. Hell.....it wasn't even a fumble. But the decision to go soft with 2 mins left in that spot is minorly annoying. Should've been at least 20-7 at half.....maybe 24-7.
I didn’t like the play call either but saying it was “going soft” in that moment is a little off, IMO.

A lot of play callers call a similar play in that situation, hoping defense is playing pass and you pick up a decent chunk of yards on 1st down to set-up a manageable 2nd down.

Assuming he doesn’t fumble, they take play clock down, and likely look to throw on 2nd down but have used a chunk of game clock so if 2nd down goes poorly, you stay conservative on 3rd, punt, and take it to half up 17-7 which isn’t terrible.

But if that play goes for 5-6 yards, they’d have gone tempo knowing they had 2nd and 3rd down to pick up a manageable distance.

Anyways, the run game hasn’t been great…CJ’s momentum had been stopped and I also don’t believe it should’ve been a fumble, had officials blown whistle properly. That said, u can’t lose the rock there….its the last thing you can do in that situation.
 
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I didn’t like the play call either but saying it was “going soft” in that moment is a little off, IMO.

A lot of play callers call a similar play in that situation, hoping defense is playing pass and you pick up a decent chunk of yards on 1st down to set-up a manageable 2nd down.

Assuming he doesn’t fumble, they take play clock down, and likely look to throw on 2nd down but have used a chunk of game clock so if 2nd down goes poorly, you stay conservative on 3rd, punt, and take it to half up 17-7 which isn’t terrible.

But if that play goes for 5-6 yards, they’d have gone tempo knowing they had 2nd and 3rd down to pick up a manageable distance.

Anyways, the run game hasn’t been great…CJ’s momentum had been stopped and I also don’t believe it should’ve been a fumble, had officials blown whistle properly. That said, u can’t lose the rock there….its the last thing you can do in that situation.
In a vacuum, I agree. You go with a run or a Trevyeon Henderson screen to see if you can get anything worth a shit with the rest of the time you have. But in that moment with this team against that dumpster sludge team.....run the offense like normal and try to at least get into FG range. Running CJ "my next broken tackle will be my first" Donaldson on first down better not be part of the normal offense.
 
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In a vacuum, I agree. You go with a run or a Trevyeon Henderson screen to see if you can get anything worth a shit with the rest of the time you have. But in that moment with this team against that dumpster sludge team.....run the offense like normal and try to at least get into FG range. Running CJ "my next broken tackle will be my first" Donaldson on first down better not be part of the normal offense.
I get it….CJ is also known for pass protection so I honestly think they thought they could get a “free” 5-6 yards but as we’ve seen, nothing is “free” in this run game.

I truly think the thought process there, is we get at least 5 on 1st we’re getting aggressive on 2nd and 3rd and looking for a TD (at a minimum they go tempo to push pace).

1st down goes poorly we’re working game clock, and at most looking for a FG. They’d have worked the clock close to a minute left and still had 2nd and 3rd down. The fumble obviously wrecked that plan.
 
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I get it….CJ is also known for pass protection so I honestly think they thought they could get a “free” 5-6 yards but as we’ve seen, nothing is “free” in this run game.

I truly think the thought process there, is we get at least 5 on 1st we’re getting aggressive on 2nd and 3rd and looking for a TD (at a minimum they go tempo to push pace).

1st down goes poorly we’re working game clock, and at most looking for a FG. They’d have worked the clock close to a minute left and still had 2nd and 3rd down. The fumble obviously wrecked that plan.
I like this except it doesn't account for my personal hatred of those assholes, and I don't know why Ryan Day hasn't made it clear to the entire coaching staff that BuckeyeNation27 wants 199-0.
 
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College Football writer dispels Brian Hartline rumor just before The Game in Week 14

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Ohio State Buckeyes offensive coordinator Brian Hartline has been the subject of rumors linking him to the Penn State Nittany Lions and UCLA Bruins this season. The Nittany Lions rumor is more prevalent, though, given the geographical proximity to Ohio.

As the architect of making OSU the modern-day WRU, Hartline is being coveted for his recruiting chops and development. There's nowhere he lacks as a coach. No weaknesses to exploit for opposing coaches in their negative recruiting. Besides previous experience.

College Football HQ's James Parks believes the rumors of a jump to Penn State have no merit, though. Parks predicted Hartline's loyalty, keeping him in Columbus for the time being, though he did acknowledge he may not wait for Ryan Day to move on since it may take a while.

"Is this a real possibility? It would be very, very surprising if it were, to say the least," Parks wrote.

"Hartline is clearly very deeply rooted at his alma mater, where he has built a strong reputation and talent pipeline as an elite recruiter and positional coach."

"Leaving a very stable, upward-trending role inside a major program for a rival would be a major career leap, but one that feels too risky given his lack of prior head coaching experience."

"Penn State is far more likely to target a proven program leader rather than a first-time head coach yet to turn 40 who is still in the very early stages of his ascent."

Brian Hartline could become highest paid offensive coordinator

If Hartline really wants the chance to build his own coaching staff, there's probably nothing Ohio State could do to stop him. If not, though, there is historic money awaiting him as potentially the highest-paid offensive coordinator in college football.

Given OSU's investment in Day, through a massive extension and yearly rev share spend, there's no reason for the school not to pay whatever it takes, within reason, to maintain his coaching staff. Hartline has long been the talent guy on the offensive end, where Day's reputation is staked.

The Buckeyes can make life a lot harder by not showing Hartline the money and risking him becoming a highly compensated OC somewhere else. There's no need for that. Ross Bjork almost certainly understands that and should act accordingly.

Just sayin': I just hope this guys knows what he is talking about. I do believe that Harline's success at recruiting and developing WRs requires, at least in part, require the recruitment and development of a QB too. At great QB gets the ball to the WRs making them more productive; and likewise, great WRs make the QB more productive by catching more passes. Just look at the QBs Ohio State has had to throw to Hartline's WRs: Haskins, Fields, Stroud, McCord, Howard, and Sayin. Four are currently on a NFL team, another probably would be had he not of died, and another will be (in a couple years) after he is done playing at Ohio State.
 
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