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tOSU at Rutgers, Oct 2nd, 3:30 ET on BTN

Rutgers 2021

1. Here's a lesson in spin....

a. Ohio State went 25 minutes and 21 seconds without scoring a single point, it's longest scoring drought of the season.
b. During the aforementioned scoring drought, Ohio State ran 16 plays for 71 yards, or 4.44 yards per play.
c. Add in two holding penalties for -20 yards, and the Buckeyes ran 18 plays for 51 yards, or 2.83 yards per play.
d. During the scoreless stretch, Buckeye QBs completed 1 out of 4 passes for 3 yards, with a sack and a fumble.
e. While Ohio State's offense was completely ineffective, Rutgers ran 40 plays for 209 yards and scored 7 points.
f. On the other side of the ball, the Buckeye defense recorded only one sack and gave up a 75-yard touchdown.
g. Once again, certain Buckeye linebackers were often out of position, slow to the football, and displayed poor tackling.
h. TreVeyon Henderson was once again held under 100 yards, and a Rutgers RB had a higher YPC than Henderson.
i. Overall, the Rutgers QBs had a higher completion percentage (71.8%) than the Ohio State QBs (67.7%).

Those are absolute, undeniable FACTS. Deal with it.

2. Now for the other side of the story....

Even in a 52-13 blowout (45-6 at the half), you can twist and shade the facts to fit a narrative. Yes, Ohio State went through an unprecedented scoring drought yesterday, but at that point the Buckeyes had a 46 point lead and the coaching staff put in the 2nd and 3rd units and basically shut things down. Yes, some Buckeye LBs floundered around a bit, but those LBs were walk-ons Cade Kacherski (5 tackles) and Ryan Batsch (6 tackles) who were manning the mop-up unit. Yes, the Buckeye defense produced only one sack, but they made three interceptions (and dropped a fourth) and forced two fumbles (both recovered by Rutgers) and generally stymied the Scarlet Knight offense. Yes, the defense gave up a 75-yard touchdown, but.... Well, there's really no excuse for that, especially when it was the first team defense that got torched on that play. Yes, Tre Henderson was held under 100 yards, but he had only eight carries (for 71 yards, 8.9 average) before leaving the game with a minor injury (and an 18-point lead). Yes, a Rutgers RB bested Henderson's YPC (9.8 to 8.9) and the Rutgers QBs did have a higher completion percentage than the Ohio State QBs (71.8% to 67.7%), but those are meaningless statistics when taken out of the context of a 39-point blowout.

3. The best news to come from yesterday's game was the re-emergence (or perhaps, the actual emergence) of quarterback C.J. Stroud. In the season opener against Minnesota, Stroud often looked shaky and his passing numbers were padded with 203 yards after the catch (69.0% of his total passing yards). Against Oregon, Stroud posted near-record stats for 53 minutes, but his 474 total yards (9.7 yards per play) yielded only 28 points; and during the final 7 minutes of that contest, with the game on the line, he accounted for only 27 total yards on 10 plays (2.7 yards per play), threw an interception, was sacked twice, and scored zero points. Against Tulsa, Stroud was mediocre-to-bad (15/25 for 185 yards, TD, INT, 2 sacks) and the Buckeyes needed a record-setting performance from TreVeyon Henderson and a pick six to put the game away. Stroud sat out of the Akron game due to a supposed shoulder injury that disappeared awfully quickly (seeing your backup throw for 319 yards can accelerate the healing process, apparently). Against Rutgers, a capable defense that had surrendered just 54 points on the season (13.5 points per game) and held Michigan to 20 points the previous week, Stroud avoided his characteristic slow start and posted some outstanding numbers: 17/23 (73.9%) for 330 yards (19.4 per completion, 14.4 per attempt), 5 TDs, no INTs, no fumbles, no sacks; Stroud's numbers would have been even better but for a couple of dropped passes. As good as the numbers look on paper, Stroud's on the field performance was even better: he was comfortable in the pocket, fired lasers over the middle into tight windows, threw a beautiful touch pass to Jaxon Smith-Njigba down the right sideline for 28 yards, and even stayed cool under pressure as evidenced by a 56-yard TD to Chris Olave on a scramble to his left during a rare occasion when the pocket collapsed. If Stroud can continue to play like that, then there definitely won't be a quarterback controversy in Columbus, and the Buckeyes will have the potential to beat anyone in CFB, both this year and next.

4. On his first carry of the game, TreVeyon Henderson scored on a 44-yard run, his fourth touchdown of 40+ yards this season (in just 50 total touches, at that point of the game). Henderson looked like he was going to have another huge performance, but his next 7 carries netted only 27 yards and he was removed from the game with a minor injury and the Buckeyes on the verge of a blowout. Master Teague was solid and steady (11 carries, 52 yards, 4.7 average), while Marcus Crowley flashed in limited action (7 carries, 58 yards, 8.3 average; 1 reception for 21 yards).

5. When Denzel Burke signed with Ohio State as an ATH last December, we weren't really sure if he was a cornerback, a safety, a linebacker, or maybe even an offensive player. We also weren't expecting the #196 overall prospect (and the #19 prospect in Ohio State's recruiting class) to make an immediate impact in a freshman class loaded with talent entering a team loaded with talent. But after just five games, Burke has already established his position (cornerback), his status (starter), and his potential (All American, first rounder). Yesterday, Burke recorded his first career interception (or the first one the counted, at least) and it was of the variety known as Pick Six. The Buckeye defense has now recorded a Pick Six in three consecutive games (Tulsa, Akron, Rutgers), only the second time that that's happened at Ohio State (also 2016: Bowling Green, Tulsa, Oklahoma).

6. Granted, Rutgers is not an offensive juggernaut, but the Buckeye defense performed admirably throughout the game. Although we will likely experience some rocky patches as the opponents improve, the long-term future looks bright as many of the best performers are first- or second-year players: defensive end J.T. Tuimoloau; defensive end Jack Sawyer; defensive tackle Tyleik Williams; linebacker Cody Simon; safety Cameron Martinez; and of course cornerback Denzel Burke.

7. Yes, Rutgers is improved, but they are still Rutgers so I'm not going to get overly excited about a 39-point win. And next week is Maryland, another tune-up game, followed by a bye week and an Indiana team that has reverted to the mean after a surprisingly good 2020 campaign. The season won't resume in earnest until October 30th when a top-10 (as of now) Penn State team invades Columbus. If the Buckeyes can survive that ordeal, then it's on to Lincoln to face a Nebraska team that (at least yesterday) looks like its in mid-1990s form. After a brief intermission (Purdue), the Buckeyes finish with potentially their two toughest Big Ten foes: Michigan State (home) and Michigan (away). Ohio State can certainly run the table and earn yet another trip to Indy (probably to face a tough Iowa squad). If the Buckeyes continue to play like they did yesterday, then it will happen.
Obviously you subscribe to the Darrell Huff school of statistical analysis.
And that is a great breakdown as usual.
 
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A great look at TreVeyon's Henderson's 44-yard TD run.

Two defenders follow the jet sweep action to the right, but Henderson counters to the left - the play is essentially made at this point because Rutgers has been schemed out of position. RG Paris Johnson pulls left and seals the OLB inside (who had basically taken himself out of the play anyway by following the jet sweep action); TE Jeremy Ruckert also pulls and to block the safety who is filling and trying to set the edge - this is the crucial block against the last man standing and Ruckert flattens the guy. The CB is out on an island with Garrett Wilson and in no real position to make the play, and that leaves about an acre of open turf for Henderson who's going to beat everyone in a footrace to the end zone. Nicely done!
 
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A great look at TreVeyon's Henderson's 44-yard TD run.

Two defenders follow the jet sweep action to the right, but Henderson counters to the left - the play is essentially made at this point because Rutgers has been schemed out of position. RG Paris Johnson pulls left and seals the OLB inside (who had basically taken himself out of the play anyway by following the jet sweep action); TE Jeremy Ruckert also pulls and to block the safety who is filling and trying to set the end - this is the crucial block against the last man standing and Ruckert flattens the guy. The CB is out on an island with Garrett Wilson and in no real position to make the play, and that leaves about an acre of open turf for Henderson who's going to beat everyone in a footrace to the end zone. Nicely done!

This is what makes Ryan Day so good... he put those touch passes in with a plan last week. They hit big last week and now our counter off the play hits big this week. Ryan Day just adds so many small wrinkles throughout a season and they're always plays that end up hitting big.

Just so much fun not knowing what we'll do next. With UFM we always knew what out plan was but Coach Day always stays multiple steps ahead of teams.
 
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This is what makes Ryan Day so good... he put those touch passes in with a plan last week. They hit big last week and now our counter off the play hits big this week. Ryan Day just adds so many small wrinkles throughout a season and they're always plays that end up hitting big.

Just so much fun not knowing what we'll do next. With UFM we always knew what out plan was but Coach Day always stays multiple steps ahead of teams.

I think a main difference with UFM, was that his style of offense was innovative in the early 2000s. By the time he got to OSU, most teams were running a similar style offense, and added their own wrinkles. UFM never added many wrinkles, he just kept using the same offense, and it became predictable over time. Herman and Day were able to get him to add a few different things, but UFM still had the last say. Herman at UH(not so much at UT) put his own spin on UFM's offense, and now Day is doing the same while at OSU.
 
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Grumpy Old Buckeye: Ohio State at Rutgers

The Buckeyes visited Piscataway, NJ on Saturday to take on the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers. Your boy, the Grumpy Old Buckeye, was born not far from there and by age four I had done everything there was to do, so my family packed up and moved to the Buckeye State and I think we’re all better off for it.

Here’s what had me howlin’ at my television against Rutgers, despite the 52-13 win.

Wasting No Time

The aggravation started early with Sevyn Banks getting flagged for pass interference on the first play from scrimmage. He and the receiver had a hold of each other’s jerseys, and each let go before the ball arrived, but only one player could possibly have committed an infraction and so it was Banks. It got Rutgers out of a hole from a poor kickoff return to start the game.

Dropping Six

Rutgers tried some trickeration at the end of the first drive of the game, faking a punt near midfield. The Buckeyes weren’t fooled by the trick play, and took over in good field position, but they could have scored. Cam Martinez dropped an interception and it’s doubtful that anyone could have stopped him if he’d have gotten the sideline after the catch. It turned out OK anyway because a couple of plays later TreVeyon Henderson scored on a long touchdown run.

Got Away With One

Rutgers had the right play called to gash Ohio State on the team’s third offensive drive of the game. The Knights had a third down and the call was for a swing pass to backup quarterback and sometimes receiver Johnny Langan in the flat. The pressure nearly got to Noah Vedral but he had a chance to hit his man. Thankfully Vedral overthrew Langan, who had a blocker and a lot of empty green field in front of him. The play didn’t hurt Ohio State, but the potential was there. Blitzing can be costly at times and the call had the Buckeyes burned. Vedral simply couldn’t execute. I’m not a fan of the Rutgers coaching staff out-thinking Ohio State’s.

Curious Call

Ohio State opted not to take a shot on second-and-1 on its third offensive drive. The Buckeyes had the ball deep in Rutgers territory and while many teams would use the down to go for a big play, Ohio State kept the ball on the ground with a conservative call. Unfortunately, the play call was to run wide, and Rutgers attacked the line of scrimmage, dropping Henderson for a four-yard loss. If you’re going conservative anyway, a simple run up the middle should leave a team with nothing worse than a third-and-1 situation. Instead, it put the Buckeyes behind the chains with a third-and-5. A pass to Garrett Wilson bailed out a play call that put the team in a bad situation.

Big Play Rutgers

Ohio State’s defense had hardly put a foot wrong in the first quarter but then Rutgers started a drive — down 24-0 — from its own 25. But a simple pass to Aron Cruickshank was completely mangled by the Buckeyes. Once he caught the ball, he continued to the sideline, cut up the field and there was no one left to catch him. Rutgers scored a touchdown on the 75-yard play and a defense that had been playing confidently got its lunch money taken away. By Rutgers.

Bad Overturn

Master Teague scored a touchdown early in the second quarter. Except, it’s possible that he didn’t. If he didn’t, it was still called a touchdown on the field and there were multiple camera angles and not one of them showed conclusive evidence that the ball hadn’t broken the plane before he was down. There was one that might have, but the ball was obscured by a player. The play was overturned anyway in what has become an increasing use of video review to change calls that aren’t obviously wrong. Ohio State scored on its next snap on a pass to Mitch Rossi, but the point stands that the officials should officiate, and no replay should change a ruling on the field unless it shows an obvious mistake.
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Entire article: https://buckeyescoop.com/grumpy-old-buckeye-ohio-state-at-rutgers/


The game officials seemed to know they made a stupid decision and started punishing for Ohio State for it by calling holding on the next few plays.
 
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OFFENSE

Scoring offense: 45 points per game (4th nationally, 1st in the Big Ten)
Passing offense: 336.2 yards per game (8th nationally, 1st in the Big Ten)
Rushing offense: 219.4 yards per game (22nd nationally, 3rd in the Big Ten)
Total offense: 555.6 yards per game (1st nationally, 1st in the Big Ten)
Third down conversion: 55.13 percent (3rd nationally, 1st in the Big Ten)
Red zone conversions: 94.12 percent (tied for 19th nationally, 3rd in the Big Ten)
Sacks allowed: 7 (Tied for 30th nationally, 4th in the Big Ten)

DEFENSE
Scoring defense: 21.2 points per game (tied for 42nd nationally, tied for 8th in the Big Ten)
Total defense: 397.8 yards per game (84th nationally, 11th in the Big Ten)
Pass defense: 251.4 yards per game (tied for 98th nationally, 12th in the Big Ten)
Rush defense: 146.4 yards per game (78th nationally, 13th in the Big Ten)
Opponent third down conversions: 43.04 percent (97th nationally, 14th in the Big Ten)
Opponent red zone conversions: 82.35 percent (72nd nationally, 8th in the Big Ten)
Sacks: 14 (tied for 29th nationally, 5th in the Big Ten)

SPECIAL TEAMS
Punting: 44.14 yards per game (48th nationally, 7th in the Big Ten)
Field goals: 100 percent (tied for 1st nationally, tied for 1st in the Big Ten)
Extra points: 100 percent (tied for 1st nationally, tied for 1st in the Big Ten)
Kickoff return: 22.25 yards per return (50th nationally, 4th in the Big Ten)
Punt return: 1.44 yards per return (123rd nationally, 13th in the Big Ten)

MISCELLANEOUS
Penalties: 69 yards per game (tied for 111th nationally, 13th in the Big Ten)
Opponent penalties: 545.6 yards per game (104th nationally, 10th in the Big Ten)
Time of possession: 26:46.20 per game (117th nationally, 13th in the Big Ten)
Turnover margin: 0.80 (23rd nationally, tied for 5th in the Big Ten)
 
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Headed in the right direction but not there yet. Still think these are the true indicators of a good defense.

360_F_433466592_JpXOCCvbV3kMKTWo3jZKhGBnqEafnmfw.jpg


Yeah, the defense is still a work in progress.

:nod:
 
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What They’re Saying Following Ohio State’s Win At Rutgers

Ohio State resumed Big Ten play with a convincing 52-13 win at Rutgers on Saturday afternoon.

The Buckeyes were led offensively by quarterback C.J. Stroud, who threw for 330 yards and a career-high five touchdowns, as well as defensively by safety Ronnie Hickman’s team-high 11 total tackles.

It marked Ohio State’s 20th straight regular season conference victory, dating back to a loss at Purdue in 2018.

With that said, local and national college football analysts shared some of their thoughts on the game, and BuckeyesNow has compiled some of the best reactions below:

Bill Landis, The Athletic
“Ohio State is starting to look like Ohio State. I know, it’s Rutgers. It’s not the same Rutgers that the Buckeyes used to routinely run off the field. Greg Schiano has made his program more competitive, more respectable, better. But it’s still Rutgers, and you only get so much credit for that. You certainly don’t get a bunch of gold stars for boat-racing Akron.

“Still, there’s something to be said for a team gaining confidence and simply performing to expectations. And the past two weeks, this team has looked how it’s supposed to look. That’s progress.

“We all know about the weird vibe that surrounded the team in the first three weeks. Nothing looked easy. The defense was a wreck. The offense couldn’t put together a complete game, or find balance. It’s probably too early to say Ohio State has turned a corner as it pertains to any of that. But maybe the corner is coming into view? Maybe the Buckeyes are starting to lean into the turn a little bit?”

Bill Bender, Sporting News
“The Buckeyes are the next Big Ten team (behind Penn State, Iowa and Michigan), but we still consider them the favorite in the conference. The board sets up nicely with those other teams in front. Ohio State dominated Rutgers in a 52-13 victory.

“C.J. Stroud returned and had four of his five passing TDs in the first half, and playmakers TreVeyon Henderson, Chris Olave and Garrett Wilson all scored TDs. Ohio State is the one team on this list with enough offensive firepower to entertain challenging Alabama and Georgia.

“That Oregon loss will be forgiven with a Big Ten championship.”

Tom VanHaaren, ESPN
“Coach Ryan Day said after the win that this was the first week he felt like the team had made a lot of progress toward their goal. Questions about the defense this season resulted in a change in play-calling duties, but the Buckeyes' defense caused three interceptions against Rutgers and looked more like a typical Ohio State defense than it has in the past four games.”
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Entire article: https://www.si.com/college/ohiostat...ing-buckeyes-win-over-rutgers-scarlet-knights
 
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Headed in the right direction but not there yet. Still think these are the true indicators of a good defense.

The Buckeyes defense allowed 4 conversions on 15 attempts on Saturday, including 1 for 4 in each of 3 quarters. That's significant improvement.

I agree completely that there is still a lot of work to do. I said elsewhere that if next Saturday is a blowout they need to keep the 1st string defense in until the Terps pull their 1st string offense because the Buckeyes need the reps.

But pointing to a marginal improvement in season statistics and saying "not good enough" is misleading, though I'm sure it is not intentional. After the start the Buckeyes had, they could end up as a top 5 defense and still have some mediocre stats for the season. Here's hoping that, from here on out, season-long stats are an increasingly bad indicator of the kind of defense the Buckeyes have.
 
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