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Ohio State Football: One Last Time in the Horseshoe
On November 23rd, the Buckeyes play their final home game of the 2013 season. Source: OSU Official Site


Ohio State bids a fond adieu to 18 seniors, along with redshirt junior CB Bradley Roby who has already announced he's giving up his final season of eligibility to jump into the NFL draft.

"It's been a great ride," said OL Jack Mewhort, who was on a 2011 team that went 6-7 and then experienced the other extreme by not losing since. "I owe everything, I owe who I am to this university and this program. It's going to mean a lot to me running out for my last time."




Seniors Prepare For Emotional Farewell
November 22, 2013 Source: BuckeyeSports.com - With four games likely left in their Ohio State careers, the 16 seniors on the 2013 squad still have plenty of time left to author a storybook ending to their careers. There remains, in that span, a division title to be clinched, a chance to beat Michigan, a Big Ten crown to play for and – barring any losses – a trip to Pasadena to play in either the Rose Bowl or the BCS Championship.

There is no shortage of fine memories for those who will run out of the Ohio Stadium tunnel for the final time on Saturday. A victory against Indiana – on Senior Day, no less – would give the Buckeyes the longest winning streak in program history at 23 games, as well as send OSU to its first-ever Big Ten title game. The Buckeyes remain on course for a BCS berth of some kind, the second or third of their careers for seniors, depending on the year they arrived.

While the finest moment for this class may not have even happened yet, everyone remembers the lowest point of their time in Columbus. The 2009 and 2010 seasons ended with victories in the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl, respectively, but NCAA violations wiped out the 2010 season and ended with the ouster of head coach Jim Tressel.

Luke Fickell took over on an interim basis, and losses to Michigan in the regular-season finale and to Florida in the Gator Bowl clinched Ohio State’s first losing season since 1988, before anyone currently on the team was born. Excluding the vacated win from the 2010 season, it was the first time Ohio State lost to Michigan since 2003.

“Probably losing to That Team Up North,” said senior center Corey Linsley, when asked about the lowest point of his time at Ohio State. “After that game, everyone was just like, ‘Man, we haven’t lost to these guys in forever.’ There were classes that went through and never lost. I don’t think anyone wanted to be at the Gator Bowl, and obviously that wasn’t our expectation going into the season back in January of 2011, but regardless, that was the darkest moment of that season.”

The perceived indignity of playing in a lower-tier bowl – albeit one on New Year’s Day – was a far cry from the success of the program under Tressel, the coach who recruited them to Ohio State.

“I’m not trying to down the Gator Bowl or anything, but it’s not the Rose Bowl or the Sugar Bowl,” senior quarterback Kenny Guiton said. “We kind of got spoiled from the start, and then once it got done, I’m glad we got to pick it back up for one last go-round.”

Enter Urban Meyer, who had been hired in the weeks between the Michigan loss and Gator Bowl defeat with an eye on picking up where Tressel left off. Players have admitted that they didn’t always trust Meyer, but they eventually came to recognize that his methods had a purpose behind them.

“He’s a guy that came in here, and it wasn’t the most pleasant meetings we had,” senior wide receiver Corey “Philly” Brown said earlier this season. “Him coming in here the way he did, I guess everyone looked at him like, ‘Who are you to just come in here and change this and change that?’ At the time, we didn’t know that he knew what he was doing. Now, everybody trusts him.”

They’ve yet to taste defeat since Meyer’s arrival, since the loss in a game nobody wanted to play in a city nobody wanted to be. That renewed success came largely due to the work put in by these seniors, a group that hadn’t taken on any sort of leadership role in their early years within the program.

“I think we did a lot of growing up, as far as maturity goes,” senior left tackle Jack Mewhort said. “I think when Coach Meyer got here, we kind of realized we were the older guys now, and we had to assume some responsibility and not just take a backseat and watch other guys do it.”

The seniors who will be honored on Saturday, along with last year’s seniors, have gone through three head coaches in their tenure, something that hadn’t been done by a class at Ohio State since the 1940s, when the program saw three coaches in seven years in between Paul Brown and Woody Hayes. The up-and-down nature of their time in Columbus adds a unique quality to their legacy, but Linsley hopes the past two years has solidified the group’s reputation.

“It fluctuated over time, but I think it will end up being that we were a bunch of hard workers, guys who care,” he said. “That’s for everybody else to determine and for the coaching staff to determine how we’ll be remembered. We only control that by how we work, how the season ends up. However the season ends up, that’s going to be reflective of how hard we worked and how much we prepared. I don’t think it’s set in stone yet, but in the weeks to come, I hope we’ll be remembered as hard-working guys who really cared.”

Almost every senior who spoke this week said they’ve tried to keep away thoughts about playing their last game in The Shoe. The final introduction, though, in front of 105,000 Buckeye fans, will certainly be savored.

“Right now I’m trying not to think about it because I know when I run out of that tunnel for the last time it’s going to be a pretty emotional thing,” Mewhort said. “It’s been a great ride, and I owe everything… I owe who I am to this university and this program. It’s going to mean a lot to me running out for the last time. I know I’m going to take it all in, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Make no mistake – the Buckeyes have designs on bigger accomplishments than the record-breaking win streak. However, even getting back to this level has justified the work they’ve put in over the past two years. The defeat to Michigan, the lowest of lows for this class, is a distant memory as they chase a national championship.

“For the guys that made it through and the guys who stuck it out through everything, through the ups and downs, it’s absolutely been worth it,” Linsley said. “Coming from that moment, we’re a whole ‘nother world away.”

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Which Ohio State senior will you miss the most? Vote in The Cleveland Plain Dealer online POLL



Ohio State-Indiana: Senior Day could prove one to remember
November 22, 2013 Source: Land-Grant Holy Land - 

The 2013 Ohio State senior class has a chance to finish off what would be a two-season long unbeaten streak that is itself an amazing feat, particularly when you think back to all of the turmoil that preceded the magical run spearheaded by Urban Meyer. After Terrelle Pryor led the Buckeyes to a 2011 Sugar Bowl victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks (that happened right? I swear I remember this happening), Ohio State partisans expected a national championship contender the following season. No one could have foreseen the lingering months of scandal coming from the infamous tattoo-gate scandal or the ultimate resignation of one of the best coaches to cross the field at Ohio Stadium. This group of players was there for all the chaos and now they have a chance to take the program to a place they have not been to in over a decade.

Head coach Urban Meyer's said he will not let anyone forget the class of 2012, and rightfully so. Last year's group of seniors had the ultimate challenge of following through with the responsibilities of leading a team to victory week in and feel out even though there really was nothing to play for due to the one-year bowl sanction. This group of seniors, however, has taken the example set by their predecessors and become leaders in their own right.

Meyer has even praised the emergence of senior wide receiver Corey Brown as one of the main voices in the locker room this season. On a cold and dreary day in Ohio Stadium on October 19th, the Buckeyes were playing a very lackluster game against the Iowa Hawkeyes. Trailing 17-10 at halftime, Brown took it upon himself to address the team before Meyer got a chance to light the team up. It's safe to say that Brown has come a long way from being a freshman who received his nickname "Philly" from then Coach Jim Tressel.

The 2013 Buckeye offense is an upperclassman heavy bunch and this makes it no surprise that they've carried this team to its current 10-0 record. The Buckeyes rank fourth in the country in scoring offense and rushing offense, led by senior tailback Carlos Hyde who is only 53 yards shy of becoming Urban Meyer's first 1,000-yard running back and an offensive line that has started four seniors all season. For all that has been said about Hyde, many people tend to forget about his often partner at tailback, Jordan Hall. Hall came to Ohio State not long after his high school teammate Terrelle Pryor from Jeannette, PA and played alongside Pryor in some huge Big Ten and BCS battles. Hall's battle with injuries late in his career have often kept him sidelined, but it's important that the running back will get to finish his sixth season strong and help his team pull out a victory in his final home game. The emotions will be flowing for Hall and his teammates but it may not even hit them until game time:



Possibly the best story on the Ohio State team is senior quarterback Kenny Guiton. Aside from being the most popular guy on campus, Guiton has emerged as a leader from the back up quarterback position and a legitimate NFL prospect. If only Kenny Guiton could write a tell all book.

Guiton is probably the one guy on the team that could tell you everything about all the scandalous things that happen behind the scenes in Columbus. The senior gunslinger backed up Terrelle Pryor and hung in there when he was passed up on the depth chart in 2011 by a freshman Braxton Miller and by the curious case of Joe Bauserman. All the while, Guiton sat quietly and continued to light up the spring game seemingly year after year. He continued to stay ready for when his time would come.

That time came Saturday October 20th of last year, when Guiton was called upon to relieve an injured Braxton Miller late in a home game against Purdue trailing 22-14. No Ohio State fan will ever forget Kenny G's epic tying touchdown and 2-point conversion that kept OSU's undefeated season alive. In three starts and some spot duty this season, Guiton has thrown for 749 yards and 14 touchdowns. Not too shabby for a guy who Urban Meyer didn't think particularly highly of when he first got to Columbus. It should be an emotional day on Saturday for Guiton, and if any of his magic is needed you can best believe he will be ready to step in on a moment's notice.

The defensive side of the ball took a huge blow to start off the Big Ten season when senior captain Christian Bryant broke his ankle near the end of a 31-24 victory over Wisconsin at home. Coach Urban Meyer was obviously hurt about the loss of Bryant when he slammed the podium in disgust after the game. Bryant's leadership meant so much to the team that teammate Ryan Shazier wears Bryant's No. 2 proudly every Saturday. I would suspect that Bryant may be called out last or near last when the seniors are honored, not unlike John Simon was honored before the Ohio State-Michigan game last season. It still remains to be seen if Shazier will return for his senior season at Ohio State, but fourth-year junior cornerback Bradley Roby has already announced that this will be his final season in Columbus and he will walk with the seniors Saturday afternoon. Roby's lockdown cover skills will be missed just as much as the other 16 seniors playing their final game in Ohio Stadium.

Senior Day is often emotional at Ohio State, but this group especially needs to be recognized for having bought into exactly what Urban Meyer has sold them from day one. Each player took on a leadership role that they may not have known they were capable of, but each has given their all in order to bring Ohio State football back to prominence faster than many could have seen coming after a 6-7 2011 season.

Here's to the Ohio State football class of '13.


 
Seniors
The class has experienced Big Ten titles and BCS games, as well as NCAA troubles, a losing season and a bowl ban. Now, under Urban Meyer, it has dug deep and restored the Buckeyes’ winning ways.


Cover Story | Seniors have had a wild ride
November 22, 2013 Source: Columbus Dispatch - As New Year’s hangovers go, this was about as bad as it could get for the Ohio State football team.

It was the early morning of Jan. 3, 2012, just hours after Ohio State lost to Florida in the Gator Bowl to bring an end to a forgettable 6-7 season — the Buckeyes’ first losing season since 1988. The players who would return for 2012 weren’t feeling so good.

Over the course of the previous year, they had dug themselves quite a hole. Several teammates had been implicated in a tattoo scandal and other misdeeds that cost them games and, in quarterback Terrelle Pryor’s case, his senior season. Coach Jim Tressel was relieved of his duties after 10 seasons, and Luke Fickell stepped in as coach to try to save the sinking ship.

Then out of the gloom strode coach Urban Meyer to take the helm. A native of Ohio and two-time national champion at Florida, he had a plan for winning that works, he told the team, if the players would take heed and abide. It started the day after the Gator Bowl.

“We were outside, 5 o’clock in the morning, 10 degrees, frozen tundra, all that kind of stuff,” senior safety C.J. Barnett said of the first workout under Meyer. “That was a moment when things started to change.”

In short, the 18 seniors who will be introduced before their final home game today at Ohio Stadium did abide. It was a group that first had grown accustomed to the finer things in the college football world, such as Bowl Championship Series games in the Rose and Sugar bowls; one that had continued to add to the collection of gold pants for defeating Michigan; and one that had won Big Ten titles. But it also had suffered the pangs of a losing season and the indignity of NCAA sanctions, which included a postseason ban.

Now, they are back on top.

“I will probably be a little emotional,” Barnett said. “I remember the first time I ran out as a freshman against Navy in 2009. So it will be a little emotional. But we’ll get our emotions together because we’ve got a job to do, to go out there and try to beat Indiana.”

Today won’t be the seniors’ last game, but a victory in their final home game would give them the longest winning streak — 23 — in school history. It would secure their place up on the mantel, no matter what the rest of the season brings. That’s a long way removed from 2011, the first losing season in 23 years.

“It has been one heck of a ride,” senior center Corey Linsley said. “We’ve had a lot of stuff thrown at us. For the guys who made it through and stuck it out, through everything, the ups and downs, it has absolutely been worth it. Coming from that moment (after the Gator Bowl loss), we’re a whole ’nother world away.”

One at a time today, each senior will make the symbolic final run to midfield. Among those are:

Safety Christian Bryant, who suffered a broken ankle against Wisconsin on Sept. 28 and hopes to make his run without using crutches.

Safety Jamie Wood and defensive back Adam Griffin, who both had to give up the sport because of injuries.

Cornerback Bradley Roby, who is a junior but announced in April that this would be his final season.

10 players in their fifth year in the program.

Meyer heaped praise on the senior class of a year ago, a group that bought in and helped turn things around in a hurry, and it was rewarded with just the sixth undefeated-and-untied season in school history, although there was no bowl reward at the end. Then came this senior class, which has been the backbone of another undefeated run, a season in which the Buckeyes, No. 3 in the BCS rankings, are still in the hunt for a spot in the national title game. At the least, they are strong contenders for a Big Ten title and Rose Bowl bid.

“It’s emotional,” Meyer said. “Not every senior class is good. For some of them, it’s time to go, time to move on with their careers. The last two (senior classes) we’ve had here have been not good but great.

“That’s going to be real hard (to watch them be introduced). Once again, that’s not because they’re seniors. It’s because of what they’ve done.”

It’s going to be emotional for the seniors, too, but defensive back Corey Brown said, “The journey we’ve all taken here — us fifth-year guys remember going to the Rose Bowl, the Sugar Bowl and then to no bowl last year — it has made moments like this sweeter for us. We just want to keep on doing what we’re doing.”

They have been doing it since the start of the 2012 season.

But Barnett said the passion truly returned in the pregame meal before the Big Ten-opening victory at Michigan State last year, when Meyer introduced the simple water toast, the pledge to be all-in.

“I think guys bought into that and opened their chest and gave the program their heart,” Barnett said.

“And I think from then on, we’ve been a family.”

But in the family of a college football team, the elders change from year to year. Those are the rules.

The trick is to try to leave one’s mark within that four- or five-year window while also learning as much as possible.

“I believe that the experiences we’ve had here — it’s going to sound funny, but I feel like we’ve been lucky to have them because they prepare you for life,” offensive tackle Jack Mewhort said.

“Stuff isn’t always going to go your way.”

Never to be forgotten, Mewhort said, was the way that Fickell, now the defensive coordinator, took over in the chaotic days of mid-2011 when the program was teetering.

“I really appreciate Coach Fickell,” Mewhort said. “He took over a sinking ship, and I will always admire him for doing that.”

The toughest moment on the field for the group was losing to Purdue in 2011, when the Boilermakers blocked an OSU extra-point attempt with less than a minute left to preserve a tie, and the Buckeyes went on to lose in overtime.

“It was a microcosm of the whole year,” Mewhort said. “It might have been the darkest point because we could have still had something going, but it wasn’t meant to be.”

The Buckeyes closed the season with a loss to Michigan, its first in the series since 2003, and the uninspired defeat to Florida in the Gator Bowl.

“The end of the season was tough, too, but Coach Meyer got us back on track,” Mewhort said.

In the end, for what will this group of seniors be known?

“Turning it around,” backup quarterback Kenny Guiton said. “We had a bad year, and Coach Meyer came in and changed the leadership around, he changed a lot around, and it helped for the better.”

Seniors' moment
The 18 Ohio State seniors to be honored:

S C.J. Barnett
K Drew Basil
G Ivon Blackmon
S Corey Brown
WR Corey Brown
S Christian Bryant
WR Chris Fields
DB Adam Griffin
QB Kenny Guiton
RB Jordan Hall
G Marcus Hall
RB Carlos Hyde
C Corey Linsley
LS George Makridis
OT Jack Mewhort
G Andrew Norwell
*CB Bradley Roby
S Jamie Wood

*-junior who announced he won’t return next season



Ohio State football on pace to break multiple school records in 2013
November 22, 2013 Source: Land-Grant Holy Land - Everyone is well aware of the Buckeyes' opportunity to set a new school record of 23 consecutive wins with a victory over Indiana on Saturday, but the Buckeyes are on pace to shatter other program records as well.

It can get lost in all of the discussion about the BCS, and the Buckeyes' bowl possibilities, but the Buckeyes are having a pretty phenomenal season.

It's most evident in their current winning streak, which stands at 22. The Buckeyes have the opportunity to set a school record of 23 consecutive wins with a victory over Indiana on Saturday. Ohio State's current streak of 22 consecutive wins ties Woody Hayes' remarkable winning streak of 22 wins spanning the 1967-1969 seasons.

The winning streak, while impressive, is not the only record the Buckeyes have the potential to set this season. Actually, the Buckeyes have already established one program record so far, just ten games into the season. The Buckeyes have scored 67 touchdowns in 2013, with two regular season games, and theoretically a Big Ten Championship and a bowl appearance to go. The previous record of 64 touchdowns in a single season was set in 1995.

The Buckeyes are on pace to set a new school record for the most points scored in a season. The record is currently 504 points, and was set by John Cooper's Buckeyes in 1998. The 2013 Buckeyes have scored 494 points so far this season, and are averaging 49.4 points per game, so the current record is likely to fall.

The Buckeyes should also be in contention for the top spot in the record books for the total offensive yards in a single season. The current record, set in 1995, is 6,222 offensive yards. The Buckeyes currently have 5,369 total offensive yards, so the high mark is within reach.

Ohio State's ground game is prolific, and it is evident in their yards per carry on the ground. Ohio State's average of 10.5 yards per carry against the Illini set a single-game school record. Ohio State also has the potential to set a school record for total rushing yards in a single season. The current record of 4,199 yards was set in 1974, and has withstood many strong rushing efforts since that time. It may not be able to withstand the 2013 Buckeyes' dominance on the ground. Ohio State currently has 3151 rushing yards on the season, and they are averaging an impressive 315.1 rushing yards per game, good for fourth in the NCAA.

Backup quarterback Kenny Guiton has also set school records this season. Guiton's touchdown pass to Devin Smith against the Cal Golden Bears went for 90 yards, setting the record for the longest play from scrimmage in school history. Guiton also set the program's single game passing touchdowns record when he started against Florida A&M for an injured Braxton Miller. All of Guiton's touchdown passes came in the first half of that blowout game.

Punter Cameron Johnston set a school record for the single game yards-per-punt average with 57.0 against Illinois. The record was previously held by Tom Skladany, who established the record by averaging 52.6 yards per punt against That Team Up North in the 1976 season. Johnston's personal best prior to the Illinois victory was 61 yards. Against the Illini, Johnston eclipsed his personal best with punts of 63, 64 and 71 yards during that game.

The records that have already been set by the 2013 Buckeyes, and the records that are poised to fall, serve as yet another reminder of what a special time this is in Buckeye football history.



Damon Webb
DB from Michigan likes fit at Ohio State


Recruiting Watch | Damon Webb
November 22, 2013 Source: Columbus Dispatch - The questions still come, inevitably.

Why would you, Damon Webb, leave your native Michigan to play for Ohio State?

“I hear that all the time,” said Webb, a cornerback who has committed to join the Buckeyes’ 2014 recruiting class. “I know for the rest of my life people will always ask why I picked Ohio State over Michigan. I’m just used to it.”

He also has a ready answer.

“I just feel like Ohio State was the best place for me if I wanted to win,” he said. “I felt like Michigan and Michigan State weren’t going to get me to the next level where I want to be.”

Webb has nothing against Michigan or Michigan State. He likes them just fine. But he has always liked the Buckeyes more.

“To be honest, I was a Michigan and Michigan State fan,” said Webb’s father, Damon Sr. “Damon always liked Ohio State. I remember he told my wife that he wanted an Ohio State T-shirt, and she went and bought him one somewhere.”

Webb can’t escape the Michigan ties at his high school. Detroit Cass Tech’s coach is Thomas Wilcher, who played running back for the Wolverines in the 1980s. Wilcher said he fully supports Webb’s decision to come to Columbus.

Webb transferred to Cass Tech before his junior year. He had always been a wide receiver and was just starting to make the transition to cornerback. His confidence got a big boost in the summer of 2012 at a 7-on-7 competition in suburban Detroit. He covered Laquon Treadwell, one of the top receivers in the 2013 recruiting class who now is at Mississippi.

“I locked him up most of the game,” Webb said. “He had a couple of catches on me, but overall I felt I did well. Doing well against him made me more confident.”

Wilcher said that Webb still considered himself more of a receiver when he arrived at Cass Tech. He explained to Webb, who’s 6 feet and 175 pounds, that colleges are looking for bigger wide receivers. His quick feet and speed could make him a him a blue-chip cornerback.

“He’s very coachable,” Wilcher said. “He’s a young man who has a lot of poise, a lot character and a great family background. He’s a young man you love to be around.

“He’ll be a great player at Ohio State. He’ll fit in in a great way. He has great speed, great height, great arm length, good cover skills. And he’s a focused player. He’s always wanting to learn.”

Webb helped Cass Tech win a state title last year, and he is hoping to do so again. Last week against Macomb Dakota, he intercepted a pass in the end zone to thwart a long drive with the Technicians’ lead threatened in the fourth quarter.

“The receiver was having success on that whole drive,” Webb said. “I switched to him. The quarterback tried to throw skinny post and I jumped and caught it.”

Webb also had two catches for 54 yards on offense, and a couple of pass breakups on defense. Cass Tech rallied from a 17-7 halftime deficit to win 32-17, setting up a state semifinal showdown against Detroit Catholic Central.

“That’s my main goal for now, winning a state championship,” he said.

But not his ultimate one.

“Just want to tell all the fans that I can’t wait to get down on campus and be a Buckeye,” Webb said, “and hopefully one day I’ll be in the national championship game as an Ohio State Buckeye.”

Damon Webb
Damon Webb is a 2014 U.S. Army All-American

Damon Webb
U.S. Army All-American Bowl is on Sat, Jan. 4, 2014 at the Alamodome in San Antonio.


CORNERING THE MARKET
CB Damon Webb
Vitals: 6 feet, 175 pounds
High school: Detroit (Cass Tech)
College choice: Ohio State

OTHER 2014 OFFERS:
Alabama - SEC
Illinois - Big Ten
Indiana - Big Ten
Michigan - Big Ten
Michigan State - Big Ten
Mississippi State - SEC
Toledo - MAC
West Virginia - Big 12
Wisconsin - Big Ten

TOP CORNERS FOR 2014
1. Marlon Humphrey (Hoover, Ala) - Uncommitted
2. Tony Brown (Beaumont, Texas) - Uncommitted
3. Jalen Tabor (Washington, D.C.) - Uncommitted
4. Jabrill Peppers (Paramus, N.J.) - Michigan
5. Damon Webb (Detroit) - Ohio State


 
OSU IU Play of the Week
Shotgun, trips left, sweep left
Ohio State Indiana Play of the Week


In Carlos Hyde’s quest to break the 1,000-yard barrier today, the Ohio State running back could have an attempt or two with this play, one the Indiana Hoosiers had trouble stopping in last season’s meeting.

Let’s call it something simple — “shotgun, trips left, sweep left” — because when executed correctly, the blockers clear the way like a broom on the outside.

What gives this play a chance from the start is the offensive skill personnel on the field. With three wide receivers, a tight end and a running back deployed along with the quarterback, that usually coerces the defense into nickel personnel, which means one more defensive back and one less linebacker. When the offense lines up for the play, it shows three receivers (including the tight end) split left and one split right, and with Hyde stationed next to quarterback Braxton Miller in the backfield.

The first tip that something other than a pass play is on the way comes at the snap. In this case, right guard Marcus Hall immediately steps back and pulls to the left. The receivers, meanwhile, have started downfield but are seeking defenders to block, not beat on a route.

Hyde takes an inside handoff from Miller and starts left as the broom of blockers starts to do its job. He can cut up immediately behind Hall or stretch it wide outside before making his move.

The key is Hyde, at 230 pounds, arriving at his cutting point with a full head of steam, much as he did on his final touchdown run last week at Illinois. It was a 55-yarder off the left flank, a play very similar in concept to this one.

November 22, 2013 Source: Columbus Dispatch




November 22, 2013 Source: Columbus Dispatch

Cover Story: Seniors fare well
Ohio State spotlight: RB Carlos Hyde
Meet a Buckeye: Joe Burger
Who has the edge: Ohio State vs. Indiana
Game predictions: Ohio State vs. Indiana
Play of the week: Shotgun, trips left, sweep left
DB from Michigan likes fit at Ohio State & more...



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