Showing posts with label Urban Meyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Urban Meyer. Show all posts

Friday, October 18, 2024

IT IS NOT TIME TO SEND RYAN DAY PACKING

Following Ohio State's loss to Oregon, a lot has been made about Ryan Day and his inability to win "big games" (in quotes because people have their own definition of big games, though truthfully it's pretty evident which ones are) and, going forward, taking the Buckeyes to their stated goal of a national title. 

Day is in his sixth full season in Columbus, which seems like a long time but really is not. The coaching business has changed, with fans expecting results sooner, and with transfers now a big part of the equation it is possible to boost a program to the top much quicker than in prior years. OSU fans who have skepticism seem to think that if Day was going to win a title, it would have happened already. But that's not the way it works. 

Some of the all-time greatest coaches took a long time to nab their first crown. Only Barry Switzer at Oklahoma and Pete Carroll at USC were able to break through in rapid fashion. Switzer won in his second year as a head coach at any college level, and Carroll took three years (though had a lot of NFL experience). Most of the others took quite awhile to grab their first national title, as the following numbers show. 

Kirby Smart (6th year as HC/6th at Georgia) 

Urban Meyer (6th year as HC/2nd at Florida) 

Jim Tressel (6th year as HC/6th at Youngstown State)

Woody Hayes(9th year as HC/4th at Ohio State) 

Jimmy Johnson (9th year as HC/4th at Miami) 

Dabo Swinney (9th year as HC/9th at Clemson) 

Nick Saban (10th year as HC/3rd at LSU)

Darrell Royal (10th year as HC/7th at Texas) 

Steve Spurrier (10th year as HC/7th at Florida) 

Ara Parseghian (11th year as HC/3rd at Notre Dame)

Jim Harbaugh (16th year as HC/9th at Michigan) 

Bear Bryant (17th year as HC/4th at Alabama) 

Tom Osborne (22nd year as HC/22nd at Nebraska) 

Bobby Bowden (28th year as HC/18th at Florida State) 

It's a good thing for a lot of these coaches that they weren't coming up today, because many probably wouldn't have had the chance to stick around long enough to win a natty. To say someone can't win a title just because they haven't is silly. They can't until they do. Most of the coaches on this list were probably derided by their fanbase as being unable to win the big one, to bring home the brass ring. Until they did. 

It is possible that Ryan Day isn't the guy to bring a title to Ohio State. But here's the thing -- that's impossible to say after one loss (by a single point) on the road to an excellent team, in an expanded CFP, with all of the Buckeyes' goals still attainable. If Ohio State loses another on the way then maybe that kind of talk can heat up. 

One current coach who has followed kind of the same trajectory and was bashed as someone who couldn't get it done is Steve Sarkisian at Texas. While he hasn't made that ultimate breakthrough, the Longhorns are once again relevant and seem ready for the long haul. Sark is in his 11th season and has a club that is more than just a small threat to win it all. Yet it wasn't that long ago that he was laughed at by outside fanbases, that Texas was going to continue in the malaise it had been in since Mack Brown left. 

Ohio State has not been in any kind of malaise under Day -- hell, the Buckeyes played for the national title in 2020 (yeah, it was a wacky year with Covid). You learn the most about a team following adversity, and the Buckeyes have a full week off before they get ready for another game. We'll see whether there is championship mettle with this bunch, from Day on down to the players. I am confident there will still be calls for his head -- with no definitive upgrade presented -- and that's fine. Fans can fan however they want to. But it should be noted that expectations don't always jibe with reality.

Thursday, August 23, 2018

Where Does Ohio State Go From Here?


Well, that was odd.

One of the strangest days in recent Ohio State football history capped one of the strangest months in Ohio State football history, ending with a three-game suspension for Buckeyes coach Urban Meyer.

Depending on whom you talk to, it was either a slap on the wrist or completely undeserved.

As with most things, the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
Urban Meyer (WPLG)

By now everyone knows all of the sordid details of this saga, the back and forth social media journalism rivalries that uncovered nugget after nugget – most having nothing to do with anything, but lapped up just the same.

The investigative committee charged with sorting out this mess was about as thorough as could be expected, especially given the fact they worked under the confines of a self-imposed 14-day deadline. They talked to numerous people, including Meyer, athletic director Gene Smith, former receivers coach Zach Smith, his ex-wife Courtney Smith, as well as examined text messages and emails. Their conclusions were that Meyer did not violate any contractual policies but did mismanage his handling of Zach Smith, allowing him to stay on staff despite numerous red flags.

The result determined by Ohio State was a three-game suspension without pay, which means Meyer won’t be around the team at all until after Sept. 2nd and won’t coach until after TCU and won’t receiver any money until Sept. 16th. That nearly five weeks of salary, or roughly $580,000. I don’t care how much you make, that’s not pocket change. 

There were definitely some troubling things uncovered by the committee – the fact that Meyer’s phone appeared to be devoid of text messages older than a year, not coincidentally around the same time a staffer told him that the phone’s settings could be adjusted to get rid of messages older than one year. The committee could not PROVE that Meyer did anything shady in that aspect, but it does seem odd that it was talked about prior and then shown to have captured messages a year old or newer.

Also troubling was the committee’s determination that “We learned that coach Meyer sometimes had significant memory issues in other situations where he had prior extensive knowledge of events.” The issues were attributed to medication Meyer takes, which sometimes impairs his memory and focus. Even taking the committee at its word, this one seems a bit hard to swallow.

And then there’s Zach Smith.

Where to start? 

There were financial issues, an OVI (which he never informed Meyer about), an affair with a staffer, sex toys ordered and delivered to the offices at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center. In short, a ton of reasons why Smith could have been fired and no one would have batted an eye. There were also the domestic claims, though only an incident in 2009 while an assistant at Florida under Meyer has been confirmed by all parties. Meyer repeatedly talked to Smith about his behavior, warning him that if it happened again he would be fired. But he never did, and that’s concerning. Did he keep him on because he was a top recruiter? Because the receivers seemed to play hard for him? Because he was Earle Bruce’s grandson, and Bruce was the man who helped Meyer break into the coaching profession?

Probably all of the above.

While loyalty is to be commended, at some point you have to take a step back and ask yourself if it’s worth it. Is the stain on your reputation and that of your university worth keeping such a troubled guy on staff? 

Meyer apparently thought so, at least until Smith violated protection order. At that point he was fired. That was on July 23rd. The next morning a story by Brett McMurphy ran alleging that Smith had been arrested for domestic violence (which was untrue), and Meyer was asked at the Big Ten Media Days, “the 2015 reported incident … are you saying you don’t know anything about that, or do you believe that didn’t happen?” Meyer said, “I can’t say it didn’t happen because I wasn’t there. I was never told about anything, never anything came to light, I’ve never had a conversation about it. So I know nothing about that.”
He then doubled down – a crucial mistake – and uttered the infamous “There’s nothing. I don’t know who creates a story like that.”

The committee said it accepted that Meyer was “deeply absorbed” in football season and wanted to focus on football on that day. They kind of gave him a pass, saying he misspoke, but that reasons were complex, and that in their view, Meyer did not deliberately lie. He definitely came off looking bad, and should have said something to the effect of “we have let Zach Smith go due to an accumulation of things.” If asked to expand upon that, about the domestic violence incident specifically, he could have said he was aware of it, did what he was obligated to do and didn’t want to talk any further about it as it was a personnel matter. But he didn’t.
Urban Meyer (NewsOK)

He had a second chance, a chance to make it right, at the end of the August 22nd press conference. He was asked what he would say to Courtney Smith. His response was that he was “sorry we are in this situation.” It was obvious he did not believe her, and maybe he had reason not to. There were never charges, and the committee even hinted that no incident could be confirmed in 2015, referring to it throughout the report as “allegations.” The facts at hand can be debated, but his statement cannot be. In a situation like that one, even if you’re skeptical, be a bigger man and show some remorse for the victim. Don’t come off like a petulant kid, because that’s what you looked like.

All of those things can be examined up, down and sideways, and different people will have different feelings.

What cannot be disputed is that Meyer acted properly in reporting his concerns about Zach Smith to his superiors. The committee said as much, though added he should have done more and gone to Compliance. That seems odd, considering Compliance has no jurisdiction over these kinds of matters. Compliance deals with Title IX and NCAA violations, and this was neither.

The committee concluded the following:

“Although neither Urban Meyer nor Gene Smith condoned or covered up the alleged domestic abuse by Zach Smith, they failed to take sufficient management action relating to Zach Smith’s misconduct and retained an Assistant Coach who was not performing as an appropriate role model for OSU student-athletes. Permitting such misconduct to continue is not consistent with the values of the University and reflects poorly on Coach Meyer, Athletic Director Smith, and the University.”

So if Meyer did not violate his contract, he could not be fired – at least not with cause. OSU could have terminated him without cause, but would have owed him $38 million in the process. That’s a hefty price to pay someone to go away. The committee did chide him for his handling of Smith, of keeping him on staff despite repeated missteps, which is more than fair. Thus, the suspension.

If naysayers want to cast aspersions on the committee or on Ohio State, that’s a they problem, not an Urban Meyer problem. People don’t get to choose their version of reality, though they often do. Quick rushes to judgement, even if the facts prove otherwise. They will stick to their original ideas and blast the process, or ignore them altogether. If people want to throw shade at Meyer, that’s fine – as long as they have something to back their argument.

We’ve seen this recently – the misguided Tennessee fans who torpedoed Greg Schiano’s hire because they believed that he was tied to the Jerry Sandusky pedophile scandal at Penn State, even if no tangible evidence of that exists. They got vocal and UT backed away, ultimately hiring Jeremy Pruitt away from Alabama. 

The fact that this whole thing has devolved into a soap opera, a fencing match of dodge and parry statements, is sad. Prurient reports about things have nothing to do with the investigation are released just a reporter can stay relevant. That’s where journalism has gone. 

Even though Meyer was retained, there are no winners here, at least not in the short term. 

OSU will take a PR hit nationally, though that doesn’t bother me too much because local approval matters much more than anything the outsiders say. The only way it becomes an issue is if recruiting suffers, and at the moment that does not appear to be the case. 

Journalism hasn’t won because it has sunk to the lowest common denominator, with a few exceptions. 

Fans haven’t won because they’ve been painted with a broad brush.

The sport hasn’t won because too many people have been talking about off-field issues instead of battles for the starting quarterback job.

All of that said, at least the situation is no longer a distraction. The Buckeyes and Meyer know where they stand and can begin planning for the season.

It will be interesting to see not only how the Buckeyes play in week 4 vs Tulane, but how Meyer comports himself going forward. While the press conference was botched – twice, in fact – there is a real chance to shape a new legacy, to make people forget about this blip in time.

He’s remade himself once before. Can he do it again?

For the sake of his career, he will have to.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

College Football 2018 Conference Previews -- Big Ten


BIG TEN

OVERVIEW
Ohio State's Urban Meyer (Larry Brown Sports)
 
 Fans of the Big Ten will be as thrilled and as mystified in 2018 as they would be by a great detective novel. There is a ton of intrigue and a mountain of uncertainty before settling for a somewhat expected ending.
  Ohio State won't cede its throne easily, though there is a bit of concern about a rebuilt secondary and a new man under center. Dwayne Haskins has the keys to the Buckeyes ride now, and the coaches are optimistic that he will give the passing game a dynamic addition. But look for OSU to ride its talented 1-2 tailback punch of JK Dobbins and Mike Weber to success. The defensive line is one of the best anywhere, and the schedule is mostly manageable. Penn State coach James Franklin has been a tireless recruiter in his time in State College, and that could finally pay off as he has his most talented team -- but a demanding schedule. With Trace McSorley, the league's best quarterback, showing the way, and an aggressive, athletic defense -- not to mention getting OSU, Michigan State and Wisconsin at home -- Penn State could be an outside threat for the College Football Playoff. Michigan needs to make hay now, and fortunately for Jim Harbaugh it's his most talented team. There may finally be a quarterback that can put pressure on a defense in Ole Miss transfer Shea Patterson. The defense will once again be lethal, with elite players at each level. Michigan State needs to become a bit more offensive minded it really want to challenge for East Division supremacy. Quarterback Brian Lewerke is an excellent field general but isn't asked to win games. That may change this year if the defense doesn't live up to expectations.
 It's still Wisconsin and all of the others in the West, but the gap is closing thanks to the infusion of new coaching blood at Nebraska (Scott Frost) and second-year bosses at Purdue (Jeff Brohm) and Minnesota (PJ Fleck). The Badgers feature, as usual, a mammoth offensive line and ground game led by Heisman candidate Jonathan Taylor. Wisconsin will grind foes into the ground and may be more deliberate this season as a typically stout defense returns just four starters. One of the old guard coaches -- Pat Fitzgerald -- has Northwestern primed as Wisconsin's biggest divisional threat. If quarterback Clayton Thorson is healthy after an ACL injury suffered in last year's bowl game, the Wildcats should be fast out of the gate. They open on the road with Purdue, so will need to be focused from the get-go. Iowa has its typical blue-collar team, though the combo of quarterback Nathan Stanley to tight end Noah Fant will be heard more than a few times this fall. The defense may drop just a notch as only six starters return. Purdue could be a better team this year but it might not be reflected in the record as it tackles Ohio State, Michigan State and Wisconsin, as well as a non-league test with Missouri. The offense returns nine but the defense has only four returnees, though linebacker Markus Bailey is an all-league talent. Frost's homecoming to Lincoln could be bumpy, but expect Nebraska to win a game it shouldn't -- and lose one it shouldn't. A quarterback back that will extend into fall camp isn't the best thing, but the defense should be good with eight starters back and new, more aggressive coordinator in Erik Chinander, Frost's DC at UCF.

RISING: Nebraska
FALLING: Minnesota
BOWL TEAMS (9): Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Northwestern, Iowa, Purdue, Nebraska

BIG TEN PROJECTED STANDINGS 
EAST
1 Ohio State (12-1, 8-1)
2 Penn State (10-2, 7-2)
3 Michigan (10-2, 7-2)
4 Michigan State (9-3, 6-3)
5 Maryland (6-6, 4-5)
6 Indiana (5-7, 3-6)
7 Rutgers (4-8, 1-8) 
WEST 
1 Wisconsin (10-3, 7-2)
2 Northwestern (8-4, 5-4)
3 Iowa (7-5, 4-5)
4 Purdue (6-6, 4-5)
5 Nebraska (6-6, 3-6)
6 Minnesota (5-7, 2-7)
7 Illinois (4-8, 2-7)

BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Ohio State over Wisconsin

ALL-BIG TEN TEAM
FIRST TEAM OFFENSE
QB Trace McSorley/Penn State
RB Jonathan Taylor/Wisconsin
RB JK Dobbins/Ohio State
WR Stanley Morgan Jr/Nebraska
WR Felton Davis/Michigan State
WR Donovan Peoples-Jones/Michigan
TE Noah Fant/Iowa
OT David Edwards/Wisconsin
OT Michael Dieter/Wisconsin
OG Beau Benzschawel/Wisconsin
OG Michael Jordan/Ohio State
 C  Tyler Biadasz/Wisconsin
FIRST TEAM DEFENSE
DE Nick Bosa/Ohio State
DE Rashan Gary/Michigan
DT Dre'Mont Jones/Ohio State
DT Aubrey Solomon/Michigan
LB TJ Edwards/Wisconsin
LB Devin Bush/Michigan
LB Paddy Fisher/Northwestern
LB Joe Bachie/Michigan State
CB Lavert Hill/Michigan
CB Justin Layne/Michigan State
 S  Jordan Fuller/Ohio State
 S  David Dowell/Michigan State
FIRST TEAM SPECIALISTS
 K  Rafael Gaglianone/Wisconsin
 P   Drue Chrisman/Ohio State
KR Parris Campbell/Ohio State
PR J-Shun Harris/Indiana

SECOND TEAM OFFENSE
QB Brian Lewerke/Michigan State
RB Karan Higdon/Michigan
RB Miles Sanders/Penn State
WR JD Spielman/Nebraska
WR Binjimen Victor/Ohio State
WR Juwan Johnson/Penn State
TE Cole Herdman/Purdue
OT Ryan Bates/Penn State
OT Alaric Jackson/Iowa
OG David Beedle/Michigan State
OG Ben Bredeson/Michigan
 C  Kirk Barron/Purdue
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE
DE Chase Winovich/Michigan
DE Chase Young/Ohio State
DT Mick Stoltenberg/Nebraska
DT Jacob Robinson/Indiana
LB Khaleke Hudson/Michigan
LB Markus Bailey/Purdue
LB Thomas Barber/Minnesota
LB Koa Farmer/Penn State
CB David Long/Michigan
CB John Reid/Penn State
 S  Darnell Savage/Maryland
 S  Jacob Thieneman/Purdue
SECOND TEAM SPECIALISTS
 K  Quinn Nordin/Michigan
 P   Blake Gillikin/Penn State
KR Rodney Smith/Minnesota
PR DeAndre Thompkins/Penn State

OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Trace McSorley/Penn State
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Nick Bosa/Ohio State
COACH OF THE YEAR: Pat Fitzgerald/Northwestern
NEWCOMER OF THE YEAR: LB Micah Parsons/Penn State

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Don't Look Now, But Ohio State Is In The CFP Hunt


Could Urban Meyer and Ohio State once again make it to the College Football Playoff? (chroniclet.com)
It's amazing a difference a year makes -- or, in this case, most of a football season.

The latest unveiling of the College Football Playoff rankings set social media abuzz, with fans outraged that their team was too low, or that another team was too high -- never mind that NONE of this counts until December. And never mind that the committee got the four teams right. If people want to quibble about the order, that's fine. But it isn't like the committee butchered things.

Well, not mostly, anyway.

To hear some fans tell it, one team in the top 10 has no business being there, or anywhere near the upper half of the rankings. This school is wildly overrated, gets all kinds of breaks and is simply chosen because it's a brand name. This school is the Ohio State Buckeyes, and for myriad reasons they have become one of, if not the, most hated schools in college sports. You would have though Urban Meyer kicked puppies and drowned babies the way some fans carry on.

Fans from around the country not only voiced their displeasure with the pecking order of the top four, but were livid that there appears to be a chance that Ohio State -- yes, the same Ohio State that lost 55-24 to a mediocre Iowa squad earlier this month -- has a shot at crashing the party. A remote shot, but a shot nonetheless.

The committee did appear to make a clear path for the Buckeyes, should they win out. OSU came in at No. 9 in the CFP rankings, just behind Notre Dame. The Irish do not have a championship game while the Buckeyes could have one last shot to pretty up their resume in the Big Ten championship game against No. 5 Wisconsin. So the Irish will almost certainly be passed.

Georgia stumbled in at No. 7, fresh off a beatdown at the hands of No. 6 Auburn, which still must play No. 1 Alabama -- with the winner of that game taking on the Bulldogs. Auburn already has two losses and has no margin for error. A loss and it's bye-bye. Another loss for Georgia and it's likely curtains for the Dawgs, even with a road win over Notre Dame padding the resume. Alabama is in the driver's seat, but even the Tide are not a lead pipe cinch to make it with one loss. Alabama has a current Strength of Schedule of 38, which will go down after this weekend's monumental tussle with Mercer, an FCS school that is mediocre even by that level's standards. It will come back up after the Auburn game, but could still be in the low 30s. A loss to Georgia would put it somewhere in the high 30s or low 20s, but only unbeatens or conference champions have gotten in with such a low SOS. Washington got in last year with a 55, while Ohio State as an at large got in with an SOS of 29. So the Tide would likely get in, though it isn't a guarantee.

Wisconsin currently sits at No. 5, and should the Buckeyes beat the Badgers for the B1G crown, they will rocket past Bucky. So OSU is on the precipice, and Clemson and Miami, ranked 2 and 3 respectively, still have to play in the ACC title game. The loser is likely out, though the Hurricanes could sneak in with one loss if the final outcome is close. Miami right now has a SOS of 21 and the No. 1 Strength of Record, but isn't highly thought of by some analytics. If Ohio State has a league crown and a similar SOS, wouldn't it be wrong to take a one-loss Miami, without a conference title, over a two-loss Ohio State with a title?

No? Hmm, that's funny, because fans were screaming bloody murder last year when the one-loss, no conference title Buckeyes got in over a two-loss, conference champion Penn State.

See how that works? You can't have it both ways just because you hate the Buckeyes. If it was all right for a two-loss conference champ to be in last year over a one-loss non-champ, then it must be all right for the same scenario to happen this year, right? Or is it because it's Ohio State that the shouts of "no way" echo throughout the halls of college football? And yes, I realize college football doesn't really have halls to echo down.

This likely dates all the way back to the days of yesteryear, to the first College Football Playoff, all the way back in 2014. The Buckeyes were on the outside looking in in the penultimate CFP ranking, coming in fifth, behind No. 4 Baylor and No. 3 TCU. A 59-0 annihilation of Wisconsin in the B1G championship game impressed the committee, enough to move Ohio State up to No. 3 in the final poll.

The cries of foul from Texas were heard all over the nation, with many accusing the committee of bias and playing to ratings, among other things. Many believe the Buckeyes got in undeservedly -- and that is incorrect.

TCU griped about falling from 3 to 6 without losing, and on the surface that has merit. The resumes for OSU and TCU were virtually identical, in SOS and SOR and Game Control. The Buckeyes had one more win over a top 25 team, but that's splitting hairs. What isn't splitting hairs is that Ohio State was a definitive champion, whereas TCU was not. In his infinite wisdom, Big 12 commish Bob Bowlsby never declared a single champion for the committee to look at, deciding that Baylor and TCU were co-champions. And by the letter of the rule book, they were. But without one champion, the committee could not look at them as single entities, which is a big reason the Horned Frogs didn't make it. Oh, and the fact it lost head to head to Baylor during the season. So if anyone really had a case, it was the Bears, but with a SOS of 57 and just two "good" wins, they weren't going to be in the field. So it was actually a pretty easy case for Ohio State to be selected.

Last year was also filled with turmoil at the end, but was also a pretty easy choice.

The Buckeyes had the advantage over Penn State in just about every metric -- SOS, SOR and especially Game Control (5 to 37). Analytics loved the Buckeyes, too, ranking them in the top five, while Penn State was in the teens. Yes, Penn State won head to head and beat Wisconsin for the league title. But it also lost to Pittsburgh and was battered 49-10 by Michigan, and that ultimately was a big reason for the Nittany Lions playing in the Rose Bowl instead of the playoff. Oh, let us not forget that OSU had three top 10 wins on the resume, the most of any of the CFP participants.

Has the committee cleared a path for the Buckeyes in 2017? Maybe, though there is nothing sinister behind it. Despite the protestations of the fans, teams are not selected because they are brand names or ratings draws, they are selected because the committee feels they are the four best teams.

Do I think Ohio State is one of the four best teams in America? Probably, especially when it is focused and knows what it is. The Buckeyes are a physical, athletic team that loves to get opponents back on their heels, and when they stick to that gameplan they are close to unstoppable. Ask Michigan State. It's when the coaching staff gets cute and tries to make OSU into something it isn't -- a pass-heavy team -- that trouble ensues. 

Do I think Ohio State is deserving? Probably not. If the loss to Iowa was earlier in the season it might be more forgivable, but to have it in November, and to rally from that? It seems a pretty big stretch. Ohio State's early loss to Oklahoma wasn't a blowout, but the Buckeyes were outplayed at home by the Sooners. That one could be given a bit more slack because it was very early, and the Buckeyes have changed radically since that contest. If OSU wins out, there won't be another two loss team with a markedly better dossier, and since this is all subjective it wouldn't, on its face, be "wrong."

If Ohio State makes it -- and it ain't impossible, people -- there are going to be a ton of upset fans. And I get that. But the committee has gotten it right all three years -- even if there were some bumps in the road.

This year seems to be more testing than ever, given all of the late season showdowns and looming head to head comparisons of a bunch of two loss teams. Though the committee will do its best to get it right, there will be some inconsistencies.

But that's no big deal -- hell, just look at the fans. When making an argument for their team -- and especially against Ohio State -- consistency be damned.

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

B1G Supremacy On The Line Saturday In Columbus

Now it gets real.


There's an old saying about November is when you separate the contenders from the pretenders, but this B1G battle is happening a week early, with the winner getting a big leg up in the race to the East Division title and a berth in the College Football Playoff. 



Second-ranked Penn State, fresh off of a 42-14 demolition of Michigan, comes in to Columbus to take on No. 6 Ohio State, which had the week off. This is the first time both teams have been ranked in the top 10 since 2008, when No. 3 Penn State topped No. 10 OSU 13-6 in Columbus. The game kicks off at 3:30 in Ohio Stadium, where the Buckeyes have lost just once in Big Ten play under Urban Meyer.
Penn State RB Saquon Barkley has the attention of Ohio State's defense (Sports Illustrated)



The Nittany Lions upended No. 2 OSU last year in Happy Valley, blocking a punt and a field goal, the latter being returned for the game-winning score in a 24-21 victory. That really got things going for Penn State, which won out and ended up winning the Big Ten and going right down to the wire against USC in the Rose Bowl before falling 52-49.



"I don't think there's any doubt when you find a way as an organization to beat the No. 2 team in the country, I don't care where you're at in your program's development, things like that, those wins have a big impact from a lot of different perspectives," Penn State coach James Franklin said.



Meyer remembers last year's game very well, and while he stopped short of saying that it is a driving force in OSU practices this week, it can be used to good effect at times.
 

"Sure. Revenge is a motivator, hell yeah it is. I'm not saying this will be it," he said. "But there's times where we've used it and looked silly using it. There's other times it's worked. It's about execution of a game plan more than anything else."

Both teams enter the game with impressive stats, Heisman candidates and admiration from the other side. 



Penn State leads the country in scoring defense (9.6 points per game) and pass defense (94.02 opposing passer rating, nine interceptions), while the Buckeyes are first in scoring offense (47.3) and fourth in passing (171.3 rating).



All eyes will be on Nittany Lions running back Saquon Barkley, the Heisman leader at the turn, and though he has never scored a touchdown in two games against the Buckeyes, he has averaged over eight yards per carry. Barkley has 12 touchdowns for the season, in nearly every fashion imaginable -- rushing, receiving and returning. He will be first, second and third in any game-planning the Buckeyes do.



"He's the best all-purpose guy we've faced in probably, maybe my career," Meyer said. "He's obviously a great running back. But they do a good job using him and creating matchup issues. You have different ways to bottle up great running backs, but this guy, it's hard. The fact they motion him out and create matchup nightmares, that's what makes this guy -- he's as good an all-purpose running back we've seen. And that's 30 years." 



OSU quarterback J.T. Barrett has rebounded from a slow start, and now ranks fourth in the country in passer rating. His decision making has been off the charts, tossing just one interception to 21 touchdowns.



Franklin knows that his pass defense, led by shutdown corner Grant Haley and safety Marcus Allen, will be tested by OSU's passing attack.
Ohio State QB J.T. Barrett is one of the top dual threats in the nation



"J.T. Barrett has been playing at Ohio State for … I think this is his 16th year maybe going on 17,” Franklin joked. "He's one of the most successful quarterbacks in school history, if not the most. He's one of the most successful quarterbacks in Big Ten history and nationally. I mean you got to just completely respect everything that that guy's been able to do in his career and everything I know about him and have heard about him, he's a class act. So that's going to be a challenge for us because he can beat you with his legs, he can beat you with his arm, he can beat you with his mind."



Both defenses love to pin back their ears and make plays in the opposing backfield. Penn State is fourth in the country in sacks, Ohio State is fifth in tackles for loss. Buckeyes sophomore Nick Bosa has been a real force, recording 10 tackles for loss and four sacks despite averaging just 34 snaps per contest.



Penn State has been humming offensively for much of the season, but the Buckeyes have just started to find their footing in the last month. Some will say OSU's improvement is tied to playing some of the sad sacks of the conference, and there is some truth to that. But as much as the execution has improved, so has the philosophy. No longer are the coaches attempting to fit square pegs into round holes, and the results have been proven on the field.



"We all know Kevin Wilson is a really, really good offensive coach and been successful wherever he's been and I think early in the season they were still trying to kind of find their offensive identity," Franklin said. "And they found it now and they're putting up big time points and yards on everybody and you knew it was just a matter of time because Kevin's such a good coach and they got so many good players."



The Buckeyes are coming off of a bye week, which has typically been a good thing for Meyer coached squads. Meyer teams are 21-1 following an off week, and that includes three victories over top-10 teams.



Penn State had a bye before last year's contest and won the game, so there do appear to be obvious benefits.



"There's no doubt about it," Franklin said. "You just have more time for everything. More time to recover, more time to get healthy, more time to watch film and plan. It's valuable. I think it's probably the most valuable thing we have on this earth is time and a bye week creates that."    



There are plenty of statistics that can lead fans to think one team has an edge over the other -- the home team has won 10 of the last 17 meetings, the higher ranked team is 19-3 since Penn State joined the conference in 1993. 



But numbers and stats won't determine the winner on Saturday. 



Confidence and execution and lack of fear will. Is someone willing to take a risk, to throw caution to the wind, to stamp themselves in history? 



"I know some people call it a process, some people call it whatever, and it's all true," Meyer said. "I call it a culture within a program. And culture is driven by leaders. If you have very strong leaders on the field and very strong leaders in the coaching rooms, you tend to have great performances against great teams."