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Football: The players of the week for the Purdue game have been announced, and the big winner is Chimdi Chekwa.
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Chimdi Chekwa [/FONT]
Chekwa has been named not only the Buckeye defensive player of the week, but the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week as well for his 10-tackle performance against Purdue.
Earning the OSU player of the week on offense award was offensive lineman Alex Boone, while fellow offensive tackle Kirk Barton was named the Jim Parker Offensive Lineman of the Week. Shaun Lane was named the Special Teams Player of the Week, and Marcus Freeman was tabbed as OSU's Attack Force Player of the Week.
Earning recognition on the scout teams were Scott Sika on offense, Tom Ingram on defense and Donnie Evege on special teams.
cincibuck;953278; said:What! After the game James (call me Jimmy) Claussen had against UCLA they've got the nerve to list Chekwa and Barton?
I don't care if we're not officially a part of the Big 10, we've played more Big 10 teams than anyone else in the country this season and this game was huge. This was the Heisman breakout game for Pickle (call me ostrich) Claussen and he had to do it with just a teeny little TV window because the Big 10 owns all those TV stations, newspapers, cable companies and shit like that.
And what kind of a name is Chekwa anyway? It's not American like Zibijhian, or Irish like Weiss and Schimardjianiski.
lvbuckeye;953342; said:LOL!!!!1 CREMEPUFF!!1111! CHARLIE AND THE FOURTH DOWN FACTORY11!!!11!! I'M GOING TO HAVE AN ORANGE CREME MARGARITA1
By the Numbers - Purdue
By Jeff Amey
The Ohio State Buckeyes travelled to West Lafayette, Indiana to take on the Purdue Boilermakers in the second of what will be three night, away games this season. The Buckeyes throuroughly dominated the Boilermakers and left the game as the last undefeated team left in the Big Ten.
The final score of the game was 23-7, but the score didn't accurately reflect how far apart these two teams were on the field. Purdue's offense was made one dimensional by the Ohio State defense (they couldn't run the ball), and only broke 200 yards passing in the second half of the fourth quarter when the second and third team defenders started seeing the field on a regular basis. They also scored their lone touchdown with ten seconds left in the game.
Cont'd ...