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Semantics, I'm sure he means the spring drive and such. Either way, those writeups are outstanding.gregorylee;1228623; said:"Give them your $" makes us sound like a pay site, and shows a bit of a lack of homework from this dude...
On Pryor, though, I had no idea he was previously a Pitt verbal. Interesting.
Oh8ch;1228934; said:It was basketball and it was before he or anyone else knew he was Terrelle Pryor.
svm;1228994; said:The author also mentions possibilities for Pryor even under the I-formation. He mentions the QB Trap as a possibility and, while I'm not optimistic, the thought of Pryor running that play with Boren pulling and bulldozing a middle linebacker got me excited. How much I-formation do you think Pryor runs if he starts?
svm;1228994; said:The author also mentions possibilities for Pryor even under the I-formation. He mentions the QB Trap as a possibility and, while I'm not optimistic, the thought of Pryor running that play with Boren pulling and bulldozing a middle linebacker got me excited. How much I-formation do you think Pryor runs if he starts?
Pryor Could Add Final Piece to Buckeye Puzzle
Should Ohio State be pitted against another SEC power in the BCS Title, why might they have the better hand? Frank Therber looks at why this could be the 'Bucks' (and Big Ten's) year.
by Frank Therber (Analyst)
1 comments 63 reads
August 13, 2008
Ohio State football fans have seen the same thing over the last two years in January when it comes to their team's postseason results. In 2006 and 2007, the Buckeyes ended the season with blowout losses in the BCS National Championship game at the hands of two SEC powers in Florida (2006), and LSU (2007).
Blame it on what you may, whether it is the month-and-a-half layoff period between the Michigan game and the national title, or just flat out being out prepared by their SEC opponents due to playing in a tougher conference.
This year, the tide could turn should the 'Bucks play in a third straight national title game. No, Ohio State is not playing four SEC teams for the non-conference portion of their schedule. The answer could lie in the hands of freshman quarterback Terrelle Pryor, who just this spring chose to play for the Buckeyes over Michigan.
Pryor, also a highly recruited basketball player, comes into Columbus as the top-rated player and quarterback in his class. While Ohio State coach Jim Tressel has not concretely stated what Pryor's role will be, one has to think he will be in the mix because of his athleticism and ability to run the Ohio State spread offense.
Take a look at what Florida and LSU had that Ohio State did not in those title games, and the answer, aside from sheer athleticism, is depth. Florida's two quarterback system in 2006, ran with senior Chis Leak and then-freshman Tim Tebow, allowed the Gators to take advantage of defenses' weaknesses by using the appropriate quarterback.
Cont...