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Game Thread Purdue at tOSU, Sat. Nov. 9th, 12pm ET, FOX

Actually surprised, as blow-outs are the toughest games to call. If it's close, then there are 'quickie' analyses to make, but with lopsided scores, then the announcers need to come up with interesting fillers (to fill the time). Usually these clowns talk about 'the way things were' back in the day, that the only ones that care about are them. Sorry, an individual bias here. (and mostly happens during a bang-bang play in basketball, which are not covered at all). Anyway, I didn't notice, as wifey and I spoke about things we gotta do before pilgrimage back to C'bus for turkeyday. Great win, and all areas excelled. PS, thought it was great idea to try 'new' things with defensive schemes to see how well worked in a live ammo drill. Don't think we saw anything new from Chip, same-old, same-old, just more polished. Go Bucks! PSS, didn't bet the game, as figured Day would pull the starters early in third, and play the #2's and #3's on O and D, and Pur-don't would sneak in a garbage time TD. Did I mention Go Bucks!
 
Photo Galleries:


Ohio State vs. Purdue State 11/9/2024



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Ryan Walters Calls Purdue’s 45-0 Loss to Ohio State “Disappointing,” Wants to See Boilermakers Compete “At the Highest Stage” With Buckeyes


“We wanted to get points on the board and come away with some momentum. We thought it would be an easy chip shot to guarantee some points. Obviously, in hindsight, you would have loved to get points there.”

“When you play against the No. 2 team in the country, and you don’t come away with points in the red area, you allow a blocked punt while you’re backed up, you have a fumble returned for a touchdown, and you go 2-of-12 on third downs, you’re not gonna give yourself a chance to win at the end of the game. It’s disappointing.”

“I’m not in it to find silver linings and moral victories. I didn’t come here for that. I came here to win games. I came here to compete at the highest stage. We’ll buy into how to do that. We’ve set a foundation here, especially with some of the younger guys and then some of the guys that have been here and won games like this. I think the culture in the locker room is still high. We just got to find a way to win on gamedays.”
 
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Soft Ass Program: Purdue Threatens To Revoke Student Section Membership To Anyone Who Chants Mean Things About Their 1-8 Football Team


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Obviously, this message is in regards to Purdue's wildly inept football team, and their head coach Ryan Walters. Walters, in his first season with Purdue in 2024, finished 4-8. Now, in his second season as head coach, he's an abysmal 1-8. Their only win came in Week 1 against Indiana State. Take away the Indiana State game, Purdue's team point differential is 113-340. They are a bad football team.



So bad that Gus Johnson doesn't even raise his voice when they let up a defensive touchdown.


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Snap Counts:


Offensive Linemen​

Seth McLaughlin: 52
Tegra Tshabola: 52
Josh Fryar: 52
Donovan Jackson: 50
Carson Hinzman: 50
George Fitzpatrick: 16
Luke Montgomery: 14
Ian Moore: 14
Joshua Padilla: 14
Austin Siereveld: 13
Toby Wilson: 3

Ohio State used the same starting lineup on the offensive line as it did against Penn State with Jackson starting at left tackle and Hinzman starting at left guard. Hinzman left the game for Ohio State’s final two plays of the first half after suffering an apparent knee injury and was replaced by Siereveld, but Hinzman returned for the start of the second half. Jackson came out of the game at the start of the fourth quarter – two plays before the rest of Ohio State’s starters – and was replaced by Fitzpatrick at left tackle after he was slow to get up on Ohio State’s second-to-last play of the third quarter.

Fitzpatrick remained in the game for the entire fourth quarter with the second-team offensive line, which also consisted of Montgomery at left guard, Padilla at center, Siereveld at right guard and Moore at right tackle. Wilson, a self-described glue guy, saw his first offensive snaps of the year when he replaced Siereveld at RG for the game’s final series.



And how they graded:



Offensive Ratings By Position​

Quarterbacks​

Will Howard: 80.6 (34 snaps)
Julian Sayin: 59.3 (8 snaps)
Devin Brown: 55.1 (6 snaps)

Running Backs​

TreVeyon Henderson: 78.7 (27 snaps)
Quinshon Judkins: 65.1 (27 snaps)
James Peoples: 64.9 (12 snaps)
Sam Williams-Dixon: 57.1 (3 snaps)

Wide Receivers​

Jeremiah Smith: 65.9 (53 snaps)
Carnell Tate: 70.2 (43 snaps)
Mylan Graham: 60.0 (2 snaps)
Brennan Schramm: 60.0 (2 snaps)
Damarion Witten: 60.0 (1 snap)
David Adolph: 54.5 (14 snaps)
Emeka Egbuka: 53.1 (35 snaps)
Bryson Rodgers: 52.1 (24 snaps)
Brandon Inniss: 29.7 (23 snaps)

Tight Ends​

Jelani Thurman: 70.2 (18 snaps)
Bennett Christian: 62.7 (16 snaps)
Patrick Gurd: 59.6 (9 snaps)
Max LeBlanc: 56.7 (5 snaps)
Gee Scott Jr.: 44.9 (35 snaps)

Offensive Line​

Seth McLaughlin: 70.5 (52 snaps)
Josh Fryar: 69.8 (52 snaps)
Carson Hinzman: 67.1 (50 snaps)
Ian Moore: 64.2 (14 snaps)
Tegra Tshabola: 62.2 (52 snaps)
Austin Siereveld: 60.7 (13 snaps)
Luke Montgomery: 59.9 (14 snaps)
George Fitzpatrick: 59.8 (16 snaps)
Joshua Padilla: 59.1 (14 snaps)
Donovan Jackson: 57.1 (50 snaps)

Defensive Ratings by Position​

Defensive Ends​

JT Tuimoloau: 91.7 (25 snaps)
Joshua Mickens: 73.5 (7 snaps)
Jack Sawyer: 73.1 (25 snaps)
Dominic Kirks: 68.3 (2 snaps)
Caden Curry: 65.1 (35 snaps)
Kenyatta Jackson Jr.: 62.0 (26 snaps)
Mitchell Melton: 56.8 (4 snaps)

Defensive Tackles​

Will Smith Jr.: 76.3 (4 snaps)
Kayden McDonald: 67.3 (21 snaps)
Hero Kanu: 61.7 (11 snaps)
Jason Moore: 59.2 (4 snaps)
Ty Hamilton: 55.8 (28 snaps)
Eddrick Houston: 53.0 (27 snaps)
Tywone Malone Jr.: 49.9 (16 snaps)

Linebackers​

Payton Pierce: 66.5 (11 snaps)
Sonny Styles: 61.1 (37 snaps)
Garrett Stover: 60.8 (1 snap)
Arvell Reese: 59.7 (22 snaps)
Cody Simon: 59.4 (35 snaps)
Gabe Powers: 58.7 (9 snaps)
C.J. Hicks: 50.0 (16 snaps)

Cornerbacks​

Jordan Hancock: 75.5 (35 snaps)
Davison Igbinosun: 63.3 (32 snaps)
Jermaine Mathews Jr.: 62.0 (40 snaps)
Denzel Burke: 61.2 (27 snaps)
Bryce West: 54.4 (6 snaps)
Aaron Scott Jr.: 44.4 (15 snaps)
Lorenzo Styles Jr.: 41.6 (24 snaps)

Safeties​

Lathan Ransom: 90.1 (38 snaps)
Malik Hartford: 73.0 (17 snaps)
Caleb Downs: 63.3 (43 snaps)
Jaylen McClain: 62.6 (17 snaps)
 
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