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at any rate, we're talking about the potential starters in '07, '08, '09, etc. right now, which is WAAAAYYY too far ahead for me... :p
I just hope they dont hand over the reins to Boeckman ... while i like the guy, Schoenhoft and Henton both have vast superior physical tools...
Smith's dream: '05 Bucks plus Clarett
QB says Ohio State would be 'much, much more powerful team'
By Doug Harris
Dayton Daily News
PHOENIX | — The clash between Ohio State and Notre Dame is being dubbed in some circles as the "What If Bowl," a reference to how close the two schools came to beating Texas and Southern Cal, respectively, and playing for the national title themselves.
But while players and fans alike still agonize over the missed opportunities, the "What If" scenarios rummaging around in Troy Smith's head have nothing to do with the Longhorn loss.
The fourth-year junior quarterback has led OSU on a satisfying trek this year, including a comeback win over Michigan, a Big Ten co-championship and a coveted Fiesta Bowl berth. But he'll always wonder what the program could have accomplished if it hadn't experienced a few unforeseen casualties, chief among them Maurice Clarett.
Smith and the enigmatic tailback came in together as freshmen in 2002 and were roommates at the Fiesta Bowl while the Buckeyes won a national title. But Clarett's downward spiral began during that trip when he called OSU officials liars for refusing to let him return home for the funeral of a murdered friend.
Although he scored the winning TD in the victory against Miami, a series of ill-advised decisions led to NCAA trouble and his ultimate dismissal.
"I think about him all the time," Smith said, adding that he's confident Clarett will be tuning in for Monday's game.
Sophomore tailback Antonio Pittman ended two years of dismal production at the position by rushing for 1,195 yards this season, and he needs only 43 more to top Clarett's freshman total.
Still, Smith said: "We would have been a totally different team with (Clarett). I'm sure Pittman would still play. But having Maurice to lead him, that would have made him a better back than he is now — even though he's a great back.
"Maurice asserted himself that first year. And the year after that, he was the front-runner for the Heisman. He'd be one of the vocal leaders now. And I'm sure everybody would have followed him if he was still here, because he's a guy that would lead you into battle — he was that kind of back, a game-time back.
"It's sad. You can't do anything about it. But if Maurice was here, we'd be a much, much more powerful team."
Smith ticked off a few more names of disgraced Buckeyes before stopping to lament the squandered potential of tight end Louis Irizarry.
One of the nation's top 2003 recruits, the Youngstown native played just one season before being dismissed after a committing a series of crimes, including the felony robbery of a fellow student.
"Louis Irizarry, my God," Smith said. "People would have had to watch out for him. There's no doubt in my mind he would have been the best tight end in the nation.
"The talent we would have had with those guys would have skyrocketed through the roof."
Smith is no stranger to trouble himself, having been caught accepting $500 from a booster last year. But unlike Clarett, who compounded his problems by lying to NCAA investigators, Smith fessed up and did his penance.
"I guess for me, as a person, I had to do what I needed to do to get back with the team," he said. "I was willing to do whatever it would take."
Smith has appeared contrite since his two-game suspension, doing everything the Buckeyes have asked of him — and more. He's spending as many as 25 hours each week in the film room, and the extra effort has paid off.
He's completed 66.4 percent of his passes during the current six-game winning streak with a 230.5-yard average and 11 TDs.
"I think any time you have to live through something where maybe you didn't do it exactly as you'd like, shame on you if you didn't learn from it," OSU coach Jim Tressel said. "I think he's handled things very very well, and I'm sure he's learned a lot."
Contact Doug Harris at 225-2125.
Troy Smith's surge
<TABLE style="CLEAR: right"><TBODY><TR><TD class=tablelabel>Stat</TD><TD class=tablelabel>Games 2-5</TD><TD class=tablelabel>Games 6-11</TD></TR><TR><TD>Avg. passing yds</TD><TD>139.3</TD><TD>230.5</TD></TR><TR><TD>Comp. percentage</TD><TD>.555</TD><TD>.664</TD></TR><TR><TD>Touchdowns</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>11</TD></TR><TR><TD>Interceptions</TD><TD>2</TD><TD>2</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
"But if Maurice was still here I definitely believe this would be a much, much more powerful team."
Taking charge
Winning drive against Michigan shows Troy Smith can run Ohio State’s offense, not just the ball
Saturday, December 31, 2005
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
<!--PHOTOS--><TABLE class=phototableright align=right border=0><!-- begin large ad code --><TBODY><TR><TD><TABLE align=center><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle></IMG> </TD></TR><TR><TD class=credit width=200>CHRIS RUSSELL | DISPATCH </TD></TR><TR><TD class=cutline width=200>Quarterback Troy Smith avoids Michigan linebacker Dave Harris before delivering the key pass to Anthony Gonzalez. </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
TEMPE, Ariz. — As the quarterback drove his team to the winning score, it was obvious something special was taking place.
There was a confidence in the huddle that the team was going to get it done. For those watching from the sideline, there was the same sense. And all of that karma was emanating from one person:
The quarterback.
You’ve seen it at least twice in the past year, and against the same opponent.
Vince Young took Texas to its come-from-behind win over Michigan in the 2005 Rose Bowl, the victory that launched the Longhorns toward the national championship game this season. And you watched in November as Ohio State’s Troy Smith ran once and mostly passed to lead the Buckeyes on the winning drive in a come-from-behind victory over the Wolverines.
‘‘One thing I was feeling, and the other 10 guys in the huddle were feeling was the same thing: ‘We can’t lose this game,’ " Smith said. ‘‘ ‘Regardless of wherever it is, we cannot lose this game. Flat out. That’s it.’ "
The drive marked the coming of age of the Ohio State offense and its steadily improving quarterback, and it propelled them into the Fiesta Bowl on Monday against Notre Dame.
ABC analyst Gary Danielson, who will call the Fiesta Bowl and called the Michigan game, said he saw a change in Smith as the season progressed.
‘‘It was his willingness to run the system, to run the offense," Danielson said. ‘‘I think at first he was trying to prove he was a quarterback. I think now he has proven to everybody he can be Jim Tressel’s quarterback."
It was not unlike the maturation of Young at Texas a year earlier. Then in the Rose Bowl, Young and the Longhorns simply refused to lose.
"That feeling came from Vince," Texas tight end David Thomas said. "He wasn’t going to let us lose, and we all bought into it."
Ohio State players spoke of having the same feeling as Smith drove them to the winning touchdown at Michigan.
"He wasn’t going to let us lose, and we all felt the same way," receiver Santonio Holmes said.
In that setting, the pressure was enormous.
"I really think the game is on me . . . that’s when I put all the weight on my shoulders, that’s when I put the burden on myself," Smith said. "In crunch time, even like when I was a young guy and we were down a touchdown playing pickup football or something like that, I always wanted the ball in my hands.
"It’s carried over to now. I feel the same way."
What stood out was he didn’t try to do it himself. It was Smith’s passing that made the difference. It was his feign of a run before spinning out and hitting Anthony Gonzalez with a pass to the Michigan 4-yard line on the key play.
Maybe last year Smith would have just kept running. But in that instance, he used the threat of making something happen with his feet to set up the chance to make something happen with his arm.
"From my perspective, I think Troy is becoming more of a Donovan McNabb-type player," Gonzalez said. "He can take off and run at any time, no doubt about it. But he is also extremely intelligent with his arm, and he is making all the right reads as of late.
"He’s really taken ownership not only of his position but of this whole offense."
Without that drive, that ownership might be in doubt. But Smith, who led the Big Ten in passing efficiency, said there’s no doubt what keeping cool and taking care of business meant for the team.
"It means everything in the world," he said. "Because throughout life in every situation, if you are able to stay even keel, if you are able to stay the course, and not treat every situation as if you have to have a certain attitude in it but are able to stay levelheaded, I think that says a lot.
"And I’m not talking about just one person, but 11 guys on the field working together as a group in a calm and collected way. I think that says a whole lot."
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