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.
spitler roughing the punter tooHartline dropping a sure touchdown was a killer in that game.
Well, I want some returners where appropriate. I want the entire OL back to hopefully keep progressing, the alternative is worse. New blood at WR and RB is coming, QB is another that may be best.Didn't know where to place this:
I know some fans want returners from this team. I want a blood letting. Weak schedule next year, and it's time to purge. Get a new crop of hungry kids for the 2024 season. Day will get a fresh restart next year. Bring in a couple new coaches. Start back. Perfect schedule to even break in a frosh qb if need be.
Time to move on.
This has been 3 years with many of these same players with consistent critiques about their intensity during the season and especially The Game.
I agree with most of this post as someone who remembers all of the JT years with a little skin to shred from my Cooper memory years (I just fondly look back at Eddie George, Germaine, Katzenmoyer, and Boston for those years). When JT was fired, it felt like Hogwarts after Dumbledore died is how I put it in the Lantern article I wrote, which is a very millennial way to describe it. We were devastated and the campus had zero life to it until Sully, Aaron Craft, etc. coordinated a flash mob in the Oval to get spirits back up. If you were not on the campus then, it is impossible to describe really but we all loved JT when he had to leave.This is revisionist history from someone who was likely a child during the Tressel era. You are showing your age by what you're leaving out.
The wins against Washington State (#10), Miami (#1), Washington (#17), Philip Rivers' NC State (#22), Kansas State (#8), Notre Dame (#5), and Texas (#2) were all big deals. People forget that 41-14 came as such a shock because Tressel seemed invincible in big games with preparation.
The paranoia that enveloped the OSU fanbase and, it must be said, the program itself, during the latter Tressel years came as a result of one game: the debacle in the desert. That debacle was itself caused by the tremendous success his teams had in big games until that point. The key players on the roster thought they could just show up and the coaching staff failed to provide the reality check the team needed.
You can divide the Tressel era into two, before that disaster and after. Everything about what came after was colored by memories of that game. The loss against LSU only hurt because of its proximity to the year before. OSU literally should not have been in that game; it took the craziest year of college football in all of our memories for that to happen. LSU was the better team at every position except running back and the team played as well as they could against a simply superior opponent.
There was then one blowout loss to USC, which increased the paranoia, and close losses to USC and Texas. Big game wins against Oregon (#7), Miami (#12), and Arkansas (#8) were clear signs of another turning point. After the Oregon win, you could feel the exhalation in the fanbase and in the WHAC. That was the first time 41-14 was really forgotten.
Two blowout losses (41-14 and USC), the first of which still stands as the biggest aberration game of my lifetime and the second caused by huge recruiting disparities between the two programs. I suspect your age lines up with that terrible, terrible game in Glendale because of your inaccurate recollections. It is a shame the younger fanbase takes for granted Tressel era.
LSU lost to 2 8-5 teams that ended the year unranked. Ohio State lost 1 game to a 9-4 Illinois team that finished the year at #20 Yes, we got dropped after the loss, but who else would you say deserved to be in the game with LSU?The exhalation in the WHAC was palpable after the Oregon win. The 2010 team played more freely than any team since The Game 2006, because the atmosphere around the program had changed. You could feel it in the buildings.
As to the LSU game, compare the draft talent on that LSU squad to the OSU team. If it's not for young Cam Heyward and young Malcolm Jenkins, OSU doesn't have any NFL success represented in that starting line-up. To say that OSU ''had every right to be in that game'' is a technicality. It took the craziest two week stretch of college football to even get the team in that game. OSU had one position better than LSU: RB. You can talk about the Hartline drop or the Spitler roughing call, but LSU made plenty of mistakes too and still won. That's what happens when you have a better roster top to bottom. That 2007 OSU roster had almost complete turnover from the year before and suffered from some serious under recruitment in the years 2004-06. There is nothing to be embarrassed about that game in retrospect, but it felt horrible at the time because of what happened the year before.
He cut Michigan off from their traditional route to success and it took until now for them to figure out an effective response to it.
Finally got around to reading this. Mercy…that was good reading (and a bad feeling).Fear and Loathing
Ryan Day entered the 2022 Michigan game with a plan to beat the 2021 Wolverines. Having learned nothing, he entered the 2023 Michigan game with a plan to beat the 2022 Wolverines.www.elevenwarriors.com
Really good post, probably a GPA if we still had that function. I remember JT's first speech after he became coach when he said his team would make the fans proud in the exact number of days until we played *ichigan. I got a chance to interview him after the national title win and asked him how many days until we beat *ichigan. He said "beating *ichigan is a privilege, but we play them in ___ days". I forget the amount of days but he was one day off because I saw the countdown clock in the WHAC weight room. After the camera cut I told him he was a day off, and he demanded the we re-shoot that part of the clip. I told him the shoot wouldn't run for about a week from then and he let it go, but every year at OSU camp he remembered me and constantly asked how many days until we beat *ichigan. If I was wrong, I had to do 50 pushups. By my senior year I had the days until The Game saved in my phone so I wouldn't disappoint JT, I knew he was going to drill me on it by then. I wasn't even in serious consideration for an offer at OSU for football, but he really enjoyed the whole routine. That is the shit right there that we are missing when we play that team at the end of the year, a coach that gets it.Tressel was hired to do two things: win the Big Ten and beat Michigan. He implemented a strategy of prioritizing Ohio recruiting to suffocate the Big 10 and especially Michigan of talent. He augmented the recruiting strategy by cultivating an ethos around the program that emphasized peaking in November and playing the best game of every season against Michigan. What is lost in these retrospective accounts from people who did not live the Cooper years is that Tressel forced the decline in Michigan, and the Big 10 at large, and did not simply benefit from it. He cut Michigan off from their traditional route to success and it took until now for them to figure out an effective response to it.
There were undoubtedly negative consequences to that approach. For one, the expectations shifted because of his success. It was no longer enough to beat Michigan and win the Big 10. It became normal to expect national championship contention every year for the first time in OSU history, an expectation which has not gone away and has made this fanbase pretty miserable. In addition, shifting demographics made national recruiting vital and he was slow to adapt to that, although I think he was deliberately slow because he recognized that every national recruit he brought cost an Ohio recruit a roster spot.
But you saw the shift occurring already with the 2008 ''Brew Crew'' class that brought TP and Florida talent to the roster. The wins over Oregon and Arkansas were extremely satisfying and the third or fourth period of the Tressel era was gelling. You saw what happened when you took him out of the equation in 2011. His recruits were the foundation of the 2012 team. What would have happened without the tattoo fiasco will never be known, but there is a definite strain of revisionist history at work in younger fans to minimize the sea change Tressel effected. To some extent this is already beginning to happen to Meyer, too, whom I personally have never liked and still do not like but whom I recognize as an incredible football coach.
No one should defend Day by minimizing the achievements of his two predecessors. It is bad for the program, makes fans look petty and Day weak, as if he cannot stand on his own accomplishments, and most of all it is factually wrong. It requires a distortion of what it took these past two decades to get Ohio State to this point.