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Game Thread THE GAME: #1 Ohio State 42, #2 Michigan 39 (11/18/06)

Dispatch

Tressel, Carr not exactly buddies
Theirs is a relationship that?s typical among coaches
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Ken Gordon
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
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Jim Tressel leaves the field with Lloyd Carr after Michigan?s win in Ann Arbor in 2003, Tressel?s only loss to the Wolverines in five tries.
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Two years after "Bomb-Sniffing Dog Gate," relations between Jim Tressel and Lloyd Carr have returned to normal. Of course, for anyone who coaches Ohio State and Michigan, "normal" is defined as somewhere between cool and tepid. As Tressel?s No. 1 Buckeyes and Carr?s No. 2 Wolverines prepare for their game Saturday in Ohio Stadium, it?s clear that the intensity of this rivalry affects the relationship between the coaches.
Certainly, there?s not the level of animosity that can exist between rival fans. But the extreme pressure on Tressel and Carr to win The Game has an effect. Their jobs are on the line, and coaches already are competitive by nature.
It?s just the natural order of things. Lions don?t lay down with lambs.
"I think we?ve always had an extremely professional relationship," Carr said of Tressel. "But I do think that the rivalry is so intense ? sometimes you have closer friendships than others. I don?t think you?re going to see the Ohio State and Michigan coach going to parties together."
Former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler said of the two, "I don?t think they?re friends."
They don?t have to be, of course. Like Carr, Tressel described their relationship as professional, limited to meeting several times a year at Big Ten functions and shaking hands before and after their teams play.
During their pregame confab in 2004, Carr complained to Tressel about the Michigan contingent being stopped as they came into Ohio Stadium and having their bags subjected to a security search by bomb-sniffing dogs.
Former athletic director Andy Geiger said the search usually was done at the visiting team?s hotel, but the Wolverines were running late and had to be searched at the stadium.
Carr said he found the search, "extremely disrespectful at best," and "at worst, a violation of our individual rights."
He said he asked Tressel about it before the game.
"He said, ?Well, I didn?t know anything about that,? " Carr said. "If he told me that, I?d have to believe him."
Last year, Tressel said, "Obviously, we regret if there were any surprises a year ago. They certainly were not intended."
Carr shouldn?t worry about that this year. Ohio State officials said security procedures have been changed.
Tressel said he has great respect for every coach in the Big Ten, but he didn?t have many personal feelings about Carr.
"There might be a little bit more understanding on my part, knowing exactly what he?s living every day, because the expectations are tremendous, just like ours are," Tressel said. "So there might be a little bit more feeling from that standpoint, but no, we?re so busy we don?t have a whole bunch of time to feel."
John Cooper coached against three Michigan coaches in his 13 seasons with the Buckeyes: Schembechler, Gary Moeller and Carr.
"Obviously, being an intense competitor, you want beat them the day you play them, but after that you can be friends," Cooper said.
"Just because the guy coaches Notre Dame or Michigan, you don?t hate him. You want to beat his ears back, but you?ve got to be a good football coach to coach at Ohio State or Michigan, so you have great respect for someone in that capacity."
Schembechler coached under Woody Hayes at Ohio State before taking the Michigan job. From 1969 to 1978, the two met in what became known as "The Ten Years? War."
During that time, Schembechler said their friendship "was dormant. It did not change, it was just dormant."
But in the ultimate proof that the rivalry?s hard feelings stopped at the sideline, Schembechler said once Hayes? coaching career was over, Woody had no problem with helping his friend.
"Once he retired, we got together quite a bit and talked quite a bit," Schembechler said. "I used to have him talk to the Michigan team. He?d be up here on a speaking engagement and I?d say, ?Come on over, talk to the team.? And he did.? "
 
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Dispatch

No telling when rivalry turned into hate-fest
Thursday, November 16, 2006
TODD JONES
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Legend has it that the Hatfield-McCoy feud began in 1878 because of a dispute over the ownership of a hog.
No one knows for certain why Ohio State and Michigan first started firing buckshot at each other in a rivalry dating to 1897.
They hate each other because, well, they hate each other.
Or because ?
"Their helmets. Their place is a dump. Generally, they?ve got to get someone from Ohio to beat us," said John Hicks, the 1973 Lombardi Award and Outland Trophy winner as an offensive tackle for OSU.
When his tongue-in-cheek routine is done, Hicks is like all current and former Ohio State players and coaches who in unison speak reverently about the respect they have for the opposition.
Listen long enough and you?d expect the undefeated teams to gather at midfield Saturday, join hands and sing Kumbaya before they battle for control of the Western Hemisphere.
Ohio State coach Jim Tressel went so far with the respect blather this week to say he liked both teams when he grew up in Ohio. Seriously.
If he weren?t 4-1 against the Wolverines, that comment might have caused fans to demand the Senator be stripped of his sweater vest.
Or at least had his couch set afire.
You don?t need to know that OSU?s wins over Michigan have occasionally turned Columbus into a scene from Lord of the Flies to understand that fans in our fair state treat the Wolverines as if they?ve burned down an orphanage.
You can see the lack of respect in the "M" painted in some urinals throughout central Ohio.
Michigan fans like to think they?re above the rivalry?s fray, but in the 1970s they had toilet paper rolls with Woody Hayes? face on them and the caption: "Put Woody Where He Belongs."
Wolverines fans have their own Internet place to vent against Ohio called OhHowIHate.blogspot.com.
So where does all this hate come from? What was the Fort Sumter moment in Ohio State-Michigan?
Theories abound, but no specific moment is agreed upon.
Some suggest the hatred between the contiguous states dates to 1835 when their militias nearly fought because of a disagreement over the proper location of Ohio?s northern border near Toledo.
Sorry, but a land dispute isn?t why Lloyd Carr once described his Michigan team?s game-day bus trip near Ohio Stadium this way: "People are screaming, yelling and little old ladies are making obscene gestures."
And 1835 has nothing to do with why OSU fans think Carr is a whiny curmudgeon who eats rocks for breakfast.
Neither did Michigan?s 34-0 win in that first game in 1897 light the hatred cannon?s fuse.
"The game was hard-fought from start to finish and entirely free from slugging and objectionable features," the game account in the Ohio State Lantern read.
There were objectionable features in 1902 when OSU coach Perry Hale dismissed the Wolverines? 5-0 record by saying, "Michigan has never played a hard team."
Michigan then beat the Buckeyes 86-0. One newspaper?s game account said, "Lincoln, Ohio?s big left guard, was ruled out for smearing his fist over Carter?s nose."
Sure that wasn?t Woody doing the smearing? Hayes, ever paranoid of "The School Up North," is the one who stirred the rivalry?s cauldron into today?s bubbling hatred.
Once asked about the hatred Michigan fans have toward him, the former OSU coach said, "It doesn?t hurt my feelings at all. It?s the greatest compliment I could have."
Hayes has been dead for 19 years and Bo Schembechler hasn?t coached Michigan in 16 years, but the two men?s "Ten Years? War" still rages.
No one knows who fired the first pepper spray in the Ohio State-Michigan feud, but everyone knows who is Hatfield and who is McCoy.
And both sides agree: I hate, therefore I am.
 
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Dispatch

Quiet Henne finally has taken the reins
Fourth-year starter is more aggressive, demanding of team
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Jeremy McLaughlin
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
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DARRON CUMMINGS ASSOCIATED PRESS Michigan quarterback Chad Henne, calling an audible against Indiana, says he?s identifying defenses and anticipating throws better this season.
ANN ARBOR, Mich. ? Michigan quarterback Chad Henne is not a talkative soul. He speaks mostly in a monotone and keeps his comments brief and to the point.
In many ways, the manner in which Henne talks describes his demeanor on the field during the 2004 and 2005 seasons. He was not a rah-rah sort, one who leads cheers or draws attention to himself. Rather, he was still the quiet kid from Pennsylvania who spoke up only when he was calling plays in the huddle and making adjustments at the line.
The other stuff ? things that define a leader such as taking charge in the locker room or giving out criticism, good or bad ? was left to others.
"When you?re 18 years old and you come into a program where there are a hundred other people and you don?t know any of them, you don?t come in and shoot your mouth off," Michigan coach Lloyd Carr said. "You come in and try to execute the position and the responsibilities you have, and he did that."
Henne?s on-field conduct has changed since Michigan lost to Nebraska in the 2005 Alamo Bowl. After the game, he realized the time had come for him to step up and take command. The Wolverines needed him if they were to rebound from a 7-5 season ? their worst since 1984.
His transformation into a team leader this season has led Michigan to an 11-0 record and No. 2 ranking heading into Saturday?s game at No. 1 Ohio State. A Big Ten championship and a spot in the BCS national championship game are within reach.
"You see him being more aggressive vocally, grabbing a couple guys, just being very positive with it," senior right tackle Reuben Riley said. "Not jumping on guys making them feel bad, but just saying, ?I need you; we need you.?
"When you have a guy, a quarterback, as far as an offensive lineman?s standpoint, saying I need you, that?s all you need to say. You have me, and we?ll get the job done together."
Henne tried to do it alone sometimes last season. He completed 58.4 percent of his passes and threw for 210 yards per game with 23 touchdowns. But with running back Mike Hart in and out of the lineup, Michigan?s ground game struggled, putting more pressure on Henne to win games with his arm.
When the wins didn?t come often, blame was aimed at him and Carr.
"Criticism is always out there as a quarterback," Henne said. "As a player you let it go in one ear and out the other. If you let that affect you mentally, you?re not going to be where you need to be as a player."
Hart is back this year, and so is Michigan?s running game, which leads the Big Ten. As a result, Henne?s passing attempts and yardage have decreased slightly, but his completion percentage has risen. So has the number of wins.
"For me, it?s not about stats; it?s how he manages the game, how he executes the position," Carr said. "I think this year he?s having a great year. He?s tough, he?s intelligent, he?s competitive. He?s got a great arm and he studies the game. He?s an unselfish guy. I like everything about him."
Henne feels comfortable now because he can identify defensive formations and anticipate throws. Last year, he would "have to figure out what the defense was and just go and react," he said.
Yet for the improvements Henne has made and the leadership he has developed, he might be under fire again if Michigan doesn?t beat Ohio State. Henne is 0-2 against the Buckeyes. He plans to do as much film study and preparation as necessary ? even joking that he would put a cot in the film room ? to avoid a third consecutive loss.
"It?s all about the finish mentality for us," Henne said, "because in the previous two years we didn?t finish our season like we wanted to."
l
 
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Dispatch

OHIO STATE NOTEBOOK
Pitcock supplies laughs while also earning respect
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

If it?s Thursday of an Ohio State game week, it?s time for the stylings and musings of Quinn Pitcock.
The senior defensive tackle might be the last person on the top-ranked Buckeyes who would be fingered as a standup comic. But according to his teammates, the publicly reserved Pitcock has been a hit.
"I have always had the entertainment part in me, it?s just feeling comfortable around the people I?m with where I can just kind of open up and kind of act outside the box, I guess you could say," Pitcock said. "Really, the inspiration came from (former Ohio State safety) Donnie Nickey when I was a freshman in 2002. He was that guy whose antics were over the top, kind of Jim Carrey-like comedy, with body (movements) and everything.
"From that, it just stuck an image in my head and got me going for the game, even though I wasn?t playing that year. So I just feel like it is time for me to pass it on to somebody else and keep it going, because it really gets everybody ready."
Senior safety Brandon Mitchell said Pitcock "is good. He?s real good."
Pitcock wouldn?t say what he has in mind this week.
"I?ve been doing some research ? and asking some players here and there so I can see what they would think about this and that," Pitcock said.
A test audience is important, he indicated, because it would be awful to bomb on the biggest week of the season.
"I have been told Texas week was probably my best," Pitcock said. "The problem is I came out fighting so hard the Northern Illinois and Texas weeks that it?s a tough act to follow, as they say."
His schtick can include photos, jokes, mimicry, "just having fun," Pitcock said. "It?s a play, I guess you could say ? a one-man show."
It has the desired effect.
"When the seniors talk on Thursdays it gets real serious. Especially with the time winding down we talk about we want to stay No. 1 and things like that," Mitchell said. "And with Quinn speaking last, it really loosens us up."
A private affair

As has been the case since Jim Tressel?s first year in 2001, the team?s annual senior tackle will be private. The session, during which the 19 seniors will hit the blocking sled for a symbolic final time, will take place Friday, a team spokesman said.
? What was that ??

Barring a full-scale catastrophe outside the walls of the Woody Hayes Athletic Center, Tressel indicated he and his coaches won?t be paying much attention to anything but video of Michigan, game-planning, meeting with the team and practice this week.
"We?re pretty insulated, which we?re insulated every week," he said. "That?s the life we live, it is one of insulation."
Not that they are oblivious to the electricity in the air.
"It?s exciting. You can feel it, you can feel the energy about it," Tressel said. "It?s fun. And so we?re a part of it, too, we just have a different part of it."
 
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Dispatch

Bo still barking about OSU?s dogs
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Rob Oller
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

ANN ARBOR, Mich. ? The news caught Lloyd Carr off guard. The Michigan coach thought Bo Schembechler would address the media later in the day, but the former Wolverines drill sergeant had already said his piece.
Carr cringed at the thought of it.
"I hope he didn?t say anything that will screw this game up," he said.
Uh, too late.
Schembechler was his animated self this week, spewing diatribes like a fountain statue spews water. One of his most entertaining harangues came while discussing the episode outside Ohio Stadium two years ago when Michigan players and coaches stepped off the team bus only to be subjected to a search by bomb-sniffing dogs.
It didn?t sit well with Carr then. It doesn?t sit well with Schembechler now.
"I?ll tell you this, and I?ll tell you publicly," Schembechler began. "If they embarrass the Michigan team like they did two years ago, somebody ought to do something about it. When they made them get off the bus and unload all their gear and have dogs sniffing and all that, thinking that they?re carrying stuff in there ? they didn?t do it to any other team and they haven?t done it to any other team this year. So by God they had better not do that to Michigan ? and you can take that back to them."
Tell us how you really feel, Bo.
A more cooled-off Carr was more diplomatic.
"You have to move on," he said. "There are some things in the course of a season and in the course of a rivalry that happen, but you?ve got to move on."
Injury updates

Linebacker Prescott Burgess, who missed the Indiana game Saturday because of an ankle injury, will play against the Buckeyes, Carr said. The status of backup running back Kevin Grady is less certain. Grady has been nursing a sore shoulder and could be a game-day decision.
The news on sophomore receiver Antonio Bass was even less optimistic. Bass, already sitting out the season as he recovers from a knee injury, will not return anytime soon. He had a second surgery two weeks ago that will result in a lengthy rehabilitation that could extend into next season. His status is uncertain, Carr said.
Hash marks

Schembechler does not expect to attend The Game, citing health concerns. He recently had heart surgery. He does plan to watch the game on a 50-inch plasma TV he just purchased. ? Tom Slade, a former Michigan quarterback, died Sunday after fighting leukemia. He was 54. "A flawless guy, a good, honest Christian man," Schembechler said. Slade, who lived in Michigan, started the 1972 Rose Bowl game against Stanford.
 
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Dispatch

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Pittman is big-game hunter
Often overlooked OSU running back performs in clutch
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
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Antonio Pittman scores the winning touchdown against Michigan last year in Ohio State?s 25-21 victory in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Defenses can fall asleep on Ohio State tailback Antonio Pittman if they desire, but he plans to be wide awake Saturday when Ohio State plays host to Michigan.
He?s almost forgotten in an offense led by Heisman Trophy front-runner Troy Smith, but his record shows he is always alert and ready to score a clinching touchdown in a big game.
For example, he scored the winning touchdown on a 3-yard run in the final minute last season at Michigan, with Stan White Jr. making a key block. Pittman also had a 60-yard touchdown run with 1:46 left that closed the door on Notre Dame in a 34-20 win in the Fiesta Bowl.
"Those are the two biggest touchdowns I?ve had so far," Pittman said. "Those are ones that I won?t stop thinking about, and nobody else will."
Why?
"Because those are big games, and those are big touchdowns to finish up a game. It?s what was needed."
Plus, they fit his credo.
"You?ve got to deliver in big games," said Pittman, who also had a clinching touchdown in a 24-7 win at then-No. 2 Texas in September. "To get the respect and credit each player feels he deserves, you have to come through in these types of games."
Whether he has gotten the respect and credit he deserves in this special season is up to conjecture. But the junior from Akron has become the fifth running back in Ohio State history with back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons. He is at 1,032 after a win Saturday at Northwestern.
"He is a tremendous workhorse for us, he never complains, never says anything," center Doug Datish said. "We?re just blessed here to have so many great players and guys that make plays that, maybe he is the forgotten guy, but he?s certainly not the forgotten guy for us on the team."
Yet when Michigan defenders and coach Lloyd Carr were asked about the game Monday, Pittman?s name was never mentioned by them or reporters. Perhaps it?s because, with the Wolverines leading the nation in defense against the run (29.94-yard average), the Buckeyes? running game and Pittman aren?t expected to be major factors. That?s even if Pittman rushed for 85 yards against the Wolverines last season.
"That kind of stuff motivates me a lot; I like it," Pittman said. "Hopefully, you know, they don?t stack the box, they just go ahead and play it out. We go from there."
It motivates his teammates, too, especially the linemen.
"Antonio Pittman is the best tailback in the country," right guard T.J. Downing said. "So if we open some holes for him, we should be able to run all day. It?s up to us up front."
[email protected]
 
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Buckeye fans,
WE'RE READY for the greatest rivalry in college football.
THE GAME is finally here; this is what we have all been waiting for. Not only is this a moment for us to shine, it's a moment for you, THE FANS, to shine.
Let's show the nation what the BUCKEYES are all about. On Saturday, be loud and proud, but at the same time respect our opponent and their fans. Act with class and dignity.
The nation is watching. Show everyone in college football you are the BEST FANS IN THE LAND.
Go Bucks!
Troy Smith
Doug Datish
Quinn Pitcock
David Patterson
Ohio State Team Captains

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I didn't see this one posted.....

Link


Area Buckeyes remember the rivalry
By JOSH HACHAT
Sports Writer

Matt Calhoun will be on the field before Saturday's Ohio State-Michigan game for "The Tunnel of Pride" and then in the stands the rest of the afternoon for the historic matchup between the No. 1 Buckeyes and No. 2 Wolverines. Calhoun will be there with his father -- an early birthday present to the father -- but it surely doesn't mean he won't be a little uneasy.
I'm a lot more nervous watching," said Calhoun, the former Heath and Buckeye standout. "I remember during the 2002 season I would catch myself biting my fingernails. I'm more nervous now than I ever was playing." The nerves wouldn't be there unless "The Game" didn't mean as much as it does. There's no doubt this year's edition is big.

In fact, several locals that played at Ohio State said this year's game is the biggest one yet.
"The whole atmosphere, I can't imagine what it's going to be like," said former Buckeye quarterback Scott McMullen, a Granville graduate. "It's a great position to be in for them. I'm excited for these guys playing now. It's awesome."
McMullen said he'll be on the field before the game as well, but will give his regards to the current players today or Friday. He was there for Troy Smith's first two years, along with several other current players, and plans on calling several during the next two days.
"It's been fun watching a guy like Troy (progress) from where he was to where he is now," said McMullen, whose team went 2-3 against Michigan in his five years.
Calhoun, who played for the Buckeyes from 1992-96, has been sold on this team for a while.
"I work out (at the Woody Hayes facility) in the morning at 6 to 6:30 with coach (Luke) Fickell and to see the number of guys working out then is impressive," Calhoun said. "The dedication and discipline was impressive. I knew it was a special group of guys back in the winter."
Another local who played with Calhoun at Ohio State is former Newark Catholic standout Rob Kelly. He flew in from California on Wednesday for one sole purpose.
"(The game) is exactly why he's flying in," said Kelly's mother, Rose. "He's really enthused for it."
Kelly and Calhoun didn't exactly have rosy memories of this game, though. The Buckeyes entered both the 1995 and 1996 games undefeated, but lost each one. They lost 31-23 in 1995 thanks to a 313 rushing yards from Tim Biakabutuka and fell 13-9 in '96 when Tai Streets caught a long touchdown pass.
Those memories still haunt Calhoun.
"It was excruciating," Calhoun said. "My sophomore year, we beat them for the first time in a long time. It was one of my best memories followed by two of my worst. That pain will always be there for me."
But it also speaks of the magnitude of the game.
"It's a special, special game," Calhoun said. "It's like Christmas' it's that exciting. I can't imagine it could be any bigger than this year. What a dream it must be to play a game of this magnitude."
One player who had Smith- and Jim Tressel-like success against the Wolverines is local resident Ken Kuhn. He went 3-0-1 against the Wolverines from 1972-76 and still recalls several fond moments.
"There's a lot of good memories. There's no game like this one," said Kuhn, whose son, Jake, was a Watkins Memorial lineman in 2005. "You don't forget about teammates and the special moments you had. It's always an emotional and great event."
As for this year's game, McMullen said the outcome hinges on who wins the turnover battle, but he took Ohio State by four. Calhoun didn't predict a final score -- "I wouldn't touch it with a 10-foot pole" -- but said Smith gives Ohio State an extra advantage.
Kuhn, meanwhile, predicted a 21-17 Buckeye victory, speaking with confidence about Saturday's matchup. "Troy could be the greatest quarterback in OSU history when we win this game," Kuhn said. "The home field will be an advantage, and Tressel has done a tremendous job. It's going to be unbelievable when they win. It will be a phenomenal thing."
 
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I don't know if anyone else saw, but Cold Pizza just had a segment about what Michigan fans shouldn't do at the game Saturday. Including drive in cars that have Michigan plates, wear school colors, walk on high street and so on. I don't know the guys name, but somebody from the school paper said that the University was scared because of how bad Ohio State fans are. He said to watch out for empty glass bottles, as Ohio State traditionally throws them at people. Walk in groups, as you could get hurt if you walk by yourself.

In a nutshell he just pretty much said that Ohio State fans are the worst in the country, and they can't even be trusted so just watch out. Plus the guy was a weirdo. I don't know if anybody else saw this. At first I thought it was a joke, it was pretty offensive and biased.
 
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I saw it and it was slanted but you have to use common sense. Every fan base has their douche bag fans and will do stupid things like destroy personal property, throw bottles, etc. It happens in Ann Arbor as well, so that dude needs to get off his high horse.
 
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