Ohio State freshman Tony Pittman got his first inkling of what he didn't know about college football when defensive end Simon Fraser came barrelling around the end of the line.
It was midway through the Buckeyes' 14 spring practices and instincts told the young tailback from Butchel to bash the onrushing 6-foot-6 senior in the numbers.
Pittman, known as Antonio in high school, quickly found out that wasn't the best idea.
``I told him, 'Don't try to hit him in the chest. You've got to chip him. Go low and he'll go down like a big tree,' '' OSU running backs coach Dick Tressel said. ``Tony said, 'I don't know how to do that.'
``In high school you can't block below the waist. Now all of a sudden he's got to block Simon Fraser.''
The example given by Tressel, brother of Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, shows what Pittman must learn and the transition that he must make to gain playing time when OSU opens the 2004 season Sept. 4.
Pittman proved last weekend that he can handle the biggest responsibility of the position.
At the spring game in Ohio Stadium, Pittman carried 21 times for 105 yards and led his Scarlet team to a 13-0 victory. He took over for senior Lydell Ross in the second quarter after Ross scored the game's only touchdown on a 1-yard run.
``I came back to my old self, what I did my junior year.'' Pittman said. ``I was running on two good legs instead of one.''
His senior year was marred by a turf toe injury, but Pittman still totaled 1,300 yards and 17 touchdowns. As a junior, Pittman rushed for 2,235 yards and 35 touchdowns.
To get a head start on his college career, Pittman graduated from high school in January and enrolled at OSU, taking three classes this quarter. He figured that he had to make all that worthwhile with a splashy debut April 24.
``I had to come out and show my ability and that I was going to be helpful to the team,'' he said. ``I was getting kinda discouraged in practice, like when I couldn't take this rep. In the spring game, it all paid off.
``I don't think I took anyone by surprise. They wouldn't have brought me here.''
Jim Tressel was cautious with his praise after what was essentially a scrimmage. He will have two seniors returning in Ross and Maurice Hall, sidelined this spring with knee problems. Senior fullback Branden Joe proved in the Fiesta Bowl that he deserves some carries, and freshmen Erik Haw and Dennis Kennedy will arrive in August.
``I thought Tony had a good spring,'' Jim Tressel said afterward. ``He didn't have winter conditioning, and when he got here, he didn't know much about what we were doing. But he stepped in and he learned. The hardest thing for a young back to do is pick up the blitz protections.
``But I think we feel good about the way he played. I'll say this, Tony Pittman heads to the goal line.''
Dick Tressel said Pittman's big day didn't muddle the backfield picture.
``It just makes it better,'' he said. ``It's like you're looking at a picture, going from three colors and adding a fourth. This is great.''
Dick Tressel said the most impressive thing Pittman showed was explosiveness.
``Tony's strength is he recognizes his opportunity and bursts to that opportunity,'' Dick Tressel said. ``He's got pretty good vision and tremendous acceleration. If there was a crack, he was able to get through it before the defenders were able to respond.
``That's one thing you can't develop. That comes from God-given ability and a bunch of repetitions.''
Pittman had been excited for his chance the whole week before. On Saturday morning, he woke up at 3:30 a.m. and couldn't go back to sleep, so he came to the Woody Hayes Athletic Center at 8:30 a.m. for a 1 p.m. game.
``That's happened before but not in a long time,'' Pittman said of his sleepless night. ``Probably not since my first game at Buchtel. But I wasn't nervous about the situation.''
Pittman said the OSU coaches introduced the offense to him in stages so he didn't feel overwhelmed.
``He learned quickly and paid attention, so it didn't surprise me he was able to run the ball that well,'' Dick Tressel said.
Pittman said one of the day's highlights was turning his jersey over and seeing his name on it for the first time. Another was running down the tunnel to the field, something he had been waiting for since his official visit last season.
Even as the feelings of awe start to subside, Pittman knows there is still much to learn.
Getting comfortable with the receiving duties that might be expanded for OSU's tailbacks doesn't appear to be a problem. Pittman took a screen pass for a 25-yard gain that was called back by a holding penalty.
``He's had less difficulty showing us he can catch,'' Dick Tressel said. ``It's the intricacies of the patterns we run moreso than his ability to catch it and take off.''