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Gonzalez not sure he deserves all the attention
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Posted: September 14, 2006
Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Anthony Gonzalez has a firm grasp of what he can do on a football field. The thing is, he's got more confidence in the talents of his teammates.
"If I'm a defensive coach and I'm thinking about players to stop on Ohio State's offense, I wouldn't put myself very high on that list," the wide receiver for the top-ranked Buckeyes said. "I would put Ted (Ginn Jr.), Troy (Smith), Tony Pittman and the running game in general above stopping me."
Texas defensive coordinator Gene Chizik apparently agreed with Gonzalez. He focused his personnel on putting the clamps on the mercurial Ginn out wide and on containing quarterback Smith and tailback Pittman out of the backfield.
That was a big mistake.
All Gonzalez did was turn the game around, making a career-high eight catches for 142 yards with a touchdown last Saturday night in the Buckeyes' 24-7 victory over the defending national champions and then-No. 2 team in the country.
The speedy complement to Ginn said he doesn't think he'll be anything more than a defensive afterthought, despite those gaudy numbers, when the Buckeyes host Cincinnati on Saturday.
"We'll see this week," he said. "If you think about the other weapons on our team, it would be hard to convince me that you should pay more attention to me."
Being in the background is OK with Gonzalez, a cerebral 6-foot, 195-pound junior. The philosophy major from Cleveland has always been overshadowed in Ohio State's high-octane offense.
In many ways he doesn't fit the mold of your typical jock at a football factory.
For instance, Gonzalez sleeps in a hyperbaric chamber -- a clear plastic "tent" around his bed -- which simulates high altitude and helps the body to produce more red blood cells. After a restful night in the zippered enclosure, Gonzalez says he has more energy.
Cornerback Malcolm Jenkins, who butts heads each day in practice with the player the Buckeyes call "Gonzo," said he's not creeped out by the vampire-like aura around Gonzalez.
"Nah, actually he's never tired when I see him, so I guess it's working," Jenkins said.
Gonzalez, a three-time scholar-athlete of Cuban descent, hopes to attend Stanford Law School. But the way his horizons and options are expanding on the field, that might have to wait a while.
It was Gonzalez and not the acclaimed speedster Ginn who leaped high to make a critical 26-yard catch late in last year's game against Michigan -- where his father, Eduardo, played -- that helped the Buckeyes pull out a come-from-behind 25-21 victory.
Then came the big game against the Longhorns, which helped open things up for Ginn, which helped make Smith more effective, which gave the Buckeyes some much-needed breathing room.
When Santonio Holmes left a year early for the NFL, many wondered who would take his place as Ohio State's go-to receiver. With each passing game, it appears the answer is Gonzo.
"If someone would ask me, 'What's the thing that he knows maybe better than anyone else?' it's that he knows when the quarterback is ready to throw it," coach Jim Tressel said. "He understands the timing."
Unlike just about everybody else, Gonzalez isn't impressed with what he did against Texas. He said it wasn't his best game.
"Stats can lie to you in a way," he said. "There were a few plays I obviously could have done a lot better on. That's why, no matter how great or how terribly people think you played, it's never as good or as bad as you think. It just isn't. That's just the reality."
An ongoing debate in the locker room revolves around who is faster -- Ginn, whose time in the 40-yard dash is in the low 4-second range, or Gonzalez.
Tressel said it's almost a tossup. The players' opinions are almost split down the middle, some favoring Ginn, who can shift into another gear when he has green space in front of him, and the sneaky-fast Gonzalez.
Gonzalez doesn't care. Each Saturday is just another chapter in his interesting, offbeat, often curious existence.
"It's enough for me to win," he said. "Winning is the only thing."
Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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