What I will remember
by Staff reports Saturday September 20, 2008, 9:08 PM
If this was Terrelle Pryor's coming-out party, then two things will stand out. The first was a beautiful pass to senior receiver Brian Robiskie, who strangely tried to one-hand the catch, left-handed, when it appeared a two-handed reception in stride would have led to an 89-yard touchdown.
"I dropped it," Robiskie said.
No . . . he didn't try to catch it.
The second was actually two running plays by Pryor in the second quarter. Twice he ran the ball and appeared to gain little or nothing, yet both times, once the ball was spotted, the chains moved 4 or 5 yards. At 6-6, two strides from Pryor will cover a lot of ground, even when it looks like he went nowhere.
-- Elton Alexander
I remember how quiet 102,989 fans were at Ohio Stadium were as Troy, with its interchangeable look-alike, play-alike players in a five-wideout set marched from its own 15 to the Ohio State 24 in the third quarter.
This is exactly the kind of offense that gives Ohio State fits -- spreading out the Buckeyes, making them cover slippery, quick opponents in space, negating with a quick tempo of play-calling their ability to substitute and use their depth.
Ohio State's season began to slide away when running back Beanie Wells hurt his foot in the opener. It threatened to go off the rails entirely had Troy sprung the biggest upset since John Cooper's Buckeyes lost the Liberty Bowl to Air Force on Dec. 27, 1990. That game, however, wasn't at the Shoe.
But after a Troy penalty, OSU strong safety Kurt Coleman leaped high for an interception at the Buckeyes' 7 on second down, spiking himself on the head as he fell. The crowd roared, but it was with more relief than triumph.
This is a season when Ohio State is 3-1, the loss coming without their best player to the No. 1 team in the nation, and everybody keeps expecting the worst.
-- Bill Livingston
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