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QB/WR Terrelle Pryor ('10 Rose, '11 Sugar MVP)

Talking Camp: Terrelle Pryor
Pryor was 9-1 as a freshman starter in 2008.
Courtesy: OhioStateBuckeyes.com
Release: 08/21/2009

Buckeye Bits: Terrelle is a dynamic quarterback who continues to grow within the Buckeye offense ... experience has helped him understand the game and hone his decision-making ... can make the big throw ... speedy and shifty as a ballcarrier ... conscientious in wanting to improve every facet of his play.

Last Season (Freshman): Terrelle was 9-1 as starter as a true freshman ... Big Ten freshman of the year ... 100-165 (60.6) passing for 1,311 yards and 12 scores... efficiency rating of 146.50 led the Big Ten ... rushed for 631 yards and six TD ... 52 yards rushing, 18-yard TD in opener with Youngstown State ... alternated snaps with Todd Boeckman at USC ... made first career start vs. Troy, only the second (Art Schlichter) true frosh to start a game at quarterback for OSU ... threw four TD and rushed for 66 yards in that win ... TD passes were a single-game OSU freshman QB record ... rushed for two TD and passed for another in Minnesota win ... 13-19 passing for 144 yards at Wisconsin, and scored the game-winner on an 11-yard run after a 12-play, 80-yard drive in the last six minutes of the game ... 10-14 passing for 97 yards, plus 27 yards rushing, vs. Purdue ... totals at Michigan State were 7-11 for 116 yards passing with a TD, 72 yards rushing with a 17-yard score ... 226 yards passing (16-25) against Penn State ... 9-14 passing for 197 yards and three TD at Northwestern ... rushed for 110 yards and a 1-yard score at Illinois, while adding 49 yards passing and a 20-yard TD pass on a blustery day ... 5-13 passing for 120 yards and two TD in Michigan win ... rushed for 78 yards in Fiesta Bowl and scored on a 5-yard reception from Boeckman ...offensive champion: Troy, Northwestern, Illinois ... outstanding first-year offensive player by OSU coaches ... US Army All-American Bowl alumni award.

Some things you may not know about Terrelle:

* If I had a superhero power, it would be: flying
* When I was younger, I dreamed of being an: NBA player
* If I were part of a circus, I would be a: lion
* Favorite international cuisine: Mexican
* Favorite vacation spot: Miami
* Favorite candy: gummi bears
* Favorite holiday: Christmas
* Class you surprisingly liked: criminal justice

Talking Camp: Terrelle Pryor - The Ohio State Buckeyes Official Athletics Site - OhioStateBuckeyes.com
 
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Not that I don't love practice updates, but given the news in the threads on Boren, Moeller, Spitler, and Homan, everytime a players' thread jumps to the top of the forum with a new post, I'm scared to click on it.
 
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Dryden;1520536; said:
Not that I don't love practice updates, but given the news in the threads on Boren, Moeller, Spitler, and Homan, everytime a players' thread jumps to the top of the forum with a new post, I'm scared to click on it.


Oh, I see what you did there. By posting that in TP's thread, you're acknowledging that you just scared the crap out of all of us for no good reason. Pieced that together all by myself I did...
 
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In an interview on Chris Spielman's radio show, Jim Tressel said that TP is an even better athlete and "...ten times the quarterback he was a year ago..." He went on to describe the difference in understanding the scheme and defenses as "... night and day..."
 
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DaddyBigBucks;1520551; said:
In an interview on Chris Spielman's radio show, Jim Tressel said that TP is an even better athlete and "...ten times the quarterback he was a year ago..." He went on to describe the difference in understanding the scheme and defenses as "... night and day..."

Uh, oh! Only ten times better? But Tate Forcier is 100 times better! Oh, noes! TSUN fans are right. We are afraid.
 
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DaddyBigBucks;1520551; said:
In an interview on Chris Spielman's radio show, Jim Tressel said that TP is an even better athlete and "...ten times the quarterback he was a year ago..." He went on to describe the difference in understanding the scheme and defenses as "... night and day..."

:smash: They have the wrong show up on their site. The first hour is right but they have some old show for the 2nd, which is the one Tressel was interviewed during. If anyone finds a working link, please post it.
 
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OregonBuckeye;1520587; said:
:smash: They have the wrong show up on their site. The first hour is right but they have some old show for the 2nd, which is the one Tressel was interviewed during. If anyone finds a working link, please post it.

Go to iTunes.com and subscribe to the podcast. The podcast has the right show. The interview with Tress starts at about the 10 minute mark (of, as you mentioned, the 2nd hour of the show)

For those who do go and get the Podcast, the Cris Carter interview from yesterday was fantastic and is worth a listen.
 
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DaddyBigBucks;1520628; said:
Go to iTunes.com and subscribe to the podcast. The podcast has the right show. The interview with Tress starts at about the 10 minute mark (of, as you mentioned, the 2nd hour of the show)

For those who do go and get the Podcast, the Cris Carter interview from yesterday was fantastic and is worth a listen.

Thanks. Just trying to read between the lines he seems excited about Pryor, the WR's, and the LB's. Sounds like our OL is still a work in progress though and our corner play will have a drop-off(which is to be expected).
 
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Terrelle Pryor's development amazes Jim Tressel: Ohio State Football
by Doug Lesmerises, The Plain Dealer
Friday August 21, 2009

medium_Terrelle-Pryor-drops-back-to-pass.jpg

Terry Gilliam, Associated Press
Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor steps back to pass in practice on Aug. 11, in Columbus.

COLUMBUS -- When he takes the field at Ohio Stadium this morning for the Buckeyes' jersey scrimmage, two weeks before the season opener against Navy, Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor will do it in nearly unrecognizable form compared to a year ago, at least the way OSU coach Jim Tressel tells it.

"It's like he's two different people right now," Tressel told Columbus radio station WBNS FM/97.1 on Friday, the coach's first interview since the Buckeyes started hitting in practice this week. "He's the same athlete he was, maybe then some, but he's 10 times the quarterback he was."

The scrimmage should include about 160 plays and give Pryor his greatest test before he opens a season as a starter for the first time. He took the job in the fourth game a year ago, but during the preseason was getting about 15 percent of the practice repetitions while Todd Boeckman served as the No. 1 quarterback. And a year ago, the jersey scrimmage was closed, leaving it to teammates to tell stories about the new quarterback on the block.

"He showed great comfort, he showed poise," OSU linebacker James Laurinaitis said a year ago. "I think he knows when he has the ball in his hands he can make something special happen on every play."

That "something special" was part of Pryor's repertoire last season. The expected improvement now comes in the mundane -- reading defenses, repeating his throwing motion, running a team. An attribute like his arm strength always was there, but as Pryor said earlier in camp when talking about last season, "I didn't know where I was going with it sometimes."

"I didn't know too much," Pryor said, explaining his journey from a freshman hitting campus last June to a preseason backup to a starter by the end of September. "I just jumped in and I came here in the summer and had no time with the coaches, no one-on-one to learn the defenses and stuff like that.

"Now I know the defenses like that," Pryor continued, snapping his fingers.

Though closed to the public, reporters will be allowed to watch today's scrimmage, so an unvarnished assessment of where Pryor stands will be available to an anxious fan base. Pryor was OK in the spring jersey scrimmage, throwing an interception in the end zone, but then impressed the Ohio Stadium crowd in the spring game, following a good final week of spring practice by completing 13 of 18 passes for 191 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions.

"You saw today, and the world saw, that I can throw the ball," Pryor said then.

Terrelle Pryor's development amazes Jim Tressel: Ohio State Football - cleveland.com
 
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Pryor will run, but how often?
QB wants to polish passing, but his legwork still needed
Sunday, August 23, 2009
By Ken Gordon
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

20090823_pryor200.jpg

FILE PHOTO
Terrelle Pryor on the run during the 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.


It's Sept. 12 and Southern California is in town. The score is tied, fourth quarter, and Ohio State is facing a third-and-10.

The Trojans have good coverage on the Buckeyes receivers, and the protection is breaking down around quarterback Terrelle Pryor.

What will Pryor do?

Last year, the answer would have been obvious: run. Thrust into the starting job during his freshman season, Pryor was sometimes slow to read defenses and more comfortable using his legs.

In his nine starts, he averaged 11 rushes and 15 passes.

This season, though, might be a different story. Pryor came to Ohio State intent on developing into a pro-style quarterback -- it was part of the deal when he committed and a big reason he chose the Buckeyes over spread-option offenses such as at Michigan and Oregon.

"He's got to get into a system that is going to develop him to be an NFL quarterback," said Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Charlie Batch, who was a Pryor confidante during the recruiting process.

Now, Pryor has had a full offseason to watch game video and break down his techniques. And he's clearly using criticism of his passing as motivation.

After throwing two impressive touchdown passes in the spring game, Pryor said, "The world saw today that I can throw the ball. I'm working to be a leader and I'm working to be a great pocket passer, and I will be both of them."

BuckeyeXtra - The Columbus Dispatch : Pryor will run, but how often?
 
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Pryor sets pace -- literally -- for Buckeye football
BY JON SPENCER ? CentralOhio.com ? August 29, 2009

COLUMBUS -- Humans who stand 6-foot-6 and close to 240 pounds aren't supposed to be able to run 40 yards in 4.33 seconds. Then again, Donna Silvis never has known Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor to be human when it comes to sheer athleticism.
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So excuse her if she wasn't as floored as OSU coach Jim Tressel by Pryor's fab 40 in a summer conditioning drill.

You better believe the sophomore's 4.33 has the Naval Academy on red (Scarlet) alert for Saturday's season opener with the sixth-ranked Buckeyes despite her ho-hum reaction.

"When I heard what he ran I was like, 'Oh well, OK,'" said Silvis, Pryor's sprint coach during the two years he ran high school track in Jeannette, Pa. "I've known him since sixth grade. When he came into my gym class that year I was like, 'Wow.' He was always taller than the other kids and I never saw him go through an awkward stage. And what a nice kid, so super to work with."

When asked about his 4.33 at OSU's media day, Pryor basically paraphrased former Buckeye blur Ted Ginn Jr., who once made light of one of his feats as "ain't no big biggie."

Did you surprise yourself?

"Nah," Pryor said. "I've been running that all through high school."

Pryor sets pace -- literally -- for Buckeye football | chillicothegazette.com | Chillicothe Gazette

Hey, Doug: Doug Lesmerises answers your Ohio State questions
by Doug Lesmerises/Plain Dealer Reporter
Saturday August 29, 2009

Hey, Doug: Could you tell us how much Terrelle Pryor's passing skills have advanced since spring? -- Jeff Casey, Newark, Ohio

Hey, Jeff: The arm was always there, the footwork is better and the release point looks more consistent and natural. Just like in the spring, he looked better late in camp than he did in early in camp, but from what I saw, I thought he was good, not great.

He throws behind guys at times and he's not great on the deep ball, but I think the Buckeyes want to use their checkdowns more this season, and throw the ball to the backs and tight ends, so the deep ball may not matter as much as it did with Todd Boeckman. In those short passes, he will still misfire at times, but he looked to be improving there when we saw him in practice this week.

The most important part of his passing is his decision making and understanding of the defense, and that's where Pryor said he has changed the most. He was careful with the ball last season, which is what Jim Tressel wanted, but he sometimes almost was too careful. Pryor needs to know the defense and trust himself, and if he doesn't do that, it doesn't matter what kind of ball he throws.

Hey, Doug: Doug Lesmerises answers your Ohio State questions - cleveland.com
 
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