Ginn4Heisman20
I'm a universal constant
buckeye247;605970; said:Yeah,
I also think so but, was that english?
If you want to be critical of somebody's english you might not want to use a comma splice.
Upvote
0
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
buckeye247;605970; said:Yeah,
I also think so but, was that english?
How un-Favre-ian of him.DaddyBigBucks;606078; said:I just want to remind everyone that Troy has thrown 121 passes since his last interception.
As you were.
On so many levels, OSU quarterback oozes cool
Friday, September 15, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
</IMG>
Jim Tressel doesn?t hesitate when asked what he looks for first in a quarterback.
"Is he tough?" the Ohio State football coach asks.
Beyond a great arm, quick feet, decisiveness and command of the huddle, there are other matters. Can he take a hit from the blind side one play and keep his attention downfield the next? Can he take a hit headon and still step into his next pass? Can he miss on a sure home run ball, then grease it in there the next chance he gets?
Troy Smith did all that Saturday in a 24-7 win at Texas. In a hostile atmosphere, before the largest crowd to see a football game in the state of Texas, and in the face of a blitzing Longhorns defense, he went about his business. He did so despite three sacks, including a vicious hit by 275-pound defensive end Brian Robison.
Smith learned his senior year at Cleveland Glenville High School that he has what it takes to play the position. The hit in the back knocked the wind out of him.
"From that point on, there was an understanding, because I saw the look in his eyes once I got up," Smith said. "I couldn?t let him know he?d gotten the best of me. As soon as you do that, I think you let up. And I think that gives them even more incentive to take advantage of your weakness."
In other words, never let ?em see you wince.
Smith certainly didn?t invent that ethic. Effective quarterbacks have undeniable toughness regardless of their running ability, arm strength or other passing skills, Tressel said.
"Tom Brady is tough, Joe Montana was tough, and all those guys look different," Tressel said. "You look at Matt Leinart, and you might say, ?He?s not a Troy Smith (in running ability),? but he?s tough. The guy has been through umpteen knee surgeries, and had to fight to get the job. He?s tough."
At Ohio State, Smith?s toughness has won his teammates? admiration, and their respect stems far beyond his ability to run and/or throw. Receiver Anthony Gonzalez recalled a summer team get-together of "midnight madness," a marathon of soccer, softball and other games pitting offensive players against defensive players.
Smith showed another kind of toughness.
"In soccer, he was going around tackling people, throwing people into the wall, all kinds of stuff, just to get the ball because we were down by a goal," Gonzalez said. "It?s little things like that. He is not going to allow anyone to get the best of him, and that?s what I love."
Gonzalez saw the same thing the other night at Texas, when Smith popped up from being tagged by Robison and later led the top-ranked Buckeyes on the clinching touchdown drive in the fourth quarter.
"I think a lot of it just stems from being competitive; you don?t allow yourself to stay down because you want more than anything in the world at that particular moment to win whatever it is you?re competing at," Gonzalez said. "And you really don?t have time to be hurt."
Or as Smith put it, "I think it?s just having that understanding and that will and that determination to know that just a physical hit can?t take you out of a game."
[email protected]
Ohio State QB Smith passes on the run
A productive air attack is keeping the junior in the pocket more.
By Doug Harris
Staff Writer
Saturday, September 16, 2006
COLUMBUS ? Ohio State's Troy Smith remains a dual-threat quarterback, even though he's made only a few token runs for negative yardage this season.
Oh, he's still carving up opponents with his gifted arm. But instead of hurting foes with his feet, he's now beating them with his smarts.
"To be an NFL quarterback, you have to be able to stand in the pocket and deliver the ball," junior wideout Ted Ginn Jr. said. "It's not about running. It's about trusting your receivers to get open. He's trusting his receivers and delivering the ball."
Smith has completed 35-of-51 passes (68.6 percent) for five touchdowns with no turnovers in two games. And with junior tailback Antonio Pittman on pace for another 1,000-yard season ? and freshman Chris Wells and sophomore Maurice Wells chipping in ? the Buckeyes' ground attack hasn't suffered at all.
Asked about shedding his image of being primarily a runner, Smith said, "A quarterback makes plays with his arm and with the mental part of his game, and being a leader all the way around."
Alarmed by Smith's 611 rushing yards and 11 TDs last year, opening foes Northern Illinois and Texas crowded the running lanes with extra defenders. But that gave Ginn and fellow receiver Anthony Gonzalez ample room to roam, and the Buckeyes picked up yardage through the air as if they were plucking food from a buffet line.
And if coach Jim Tressel has his way, opponents will seldom get a free shot at Smith.
"We've got a lot of guys that can run better than him," Tressel said half jokingly. "I hope he doesn't hear me. But with Teddy and Gonzo and Pitt and Chris and Mo, I'd rather have those guys run with the ball."
We scored the field goal as a result of that strip, not Miami.chasing down Miami's Sean Taylor and stripping him of the ball, forcing the Hurricanes to settle for a field goal during the Buckeyes' epic 31-24 Fiesta Bowl win.
Revisionist history. Smith was always going to play in that game, and Troy struggled after his first possesion, just as much as Justin did. Neither quarterback "almost pulled off the win". Well documented missed opportunities, when both quarterbacks were in the game, were what cost us the victory.It was just over a year ago when Justin Zwick, the super-recruit who was supposed to have the potential to be among the best Buckeye quarterbacks ever, was starting in the showdown in Columbus against Texas instead of Smith. But when Zwick wasn't panning out, Smith put his suspension behind him, came off the bench, and almost pulled off the win over the Longhorns.