Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Ohio State goes Urban

With the "resignation" of coach Jim Tressel before the beginning of this season, the Buckeyes have been torn on what to do with their head coaching position. They had two choices: let interim head coach Luke Fickell keep the job or hire a big name coach at the end of the year. Ohio State has gone with the latter of the two choices, hiring former Florida head coach Urban Meyer.

If anyone has the credentials to take over the program at Ohio State, it's Urban Meyer. Meyer won two National Championships in his time with Florida, was raised in Ashtabula, and was an assistant coach under Earl Bruce at Ohio State before going off to be the head coach at Bowling Green. Meyer is clearly a talented enough coach to take over a program like Ohio State.

Probably the biggest positive from hiring Meyer will be the windfall of recruits Ohio State will now be getting. Meyer is a masterful recruiter and is widely known as being one of the best recruiters in the country, if not the best. Meyer has alreadly landed a few ESPN Top 100 recruits, most recently the no. 4 recruit in the entire country. His recruiting will also benefit from the Penn State scandal, which will have former Lions' commits flocking to other Big Ten schools.

 The only downside to the Meyer hire is the concern about how he left his former job at Florida. While at Florida, Meyer resigned twice, coming back almost instantly after his first resignation and leaving to be an analyst at ESPN after his second resignation. Meyer cited his health and needing more time with his family as the reasons for resigning.

For Buckeyes fans, these concerns shouldn't be too troubling. After what happened at Florida, Meyer has learned how he needs to run his program to prevent this from happening again. He decided he can't micromanage every detail of the program anymore, and he is dedicated to building the best coaching staff in teh country to prevent that from happening. He has also said that he's found balance with his job and his family, which takes care of the other problem for him.

Buckeyes fans should be excited about their new head coach. He's Ohio grown, he understands what the expectations are in Columbus, and he's a proven winner. Meyer his sure to bring the football program back to national relevance and competing for a National Championship year in and year out.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Buckeyes Defense Manhandled by Michigan in Bitter Loss


Denard Robinson sprints to a 41-yard TD run
At 2926 days, the streak is finally over for the Buckeyes. That's how many days it had been since Ohio State had lost to Michigan, and the bitter taste of defeat at the hands of the Wolverines is as painful as ever.

Watching the Big House after the 40-34 win over the Buckeyes brought a sick feeling to the stomachs of Buckeyes fans everywhere.  Before this game, the Buckeyes had won seven meetings in a row, which is one of the longest streaks in the history of this rivalry and it was difficult to see that streak come to an end. Missed opportunities, poor coaching in critical moments, and Denard Robinson all combined for the heartbreaking loss for Ohio State.

The missed opportunities for the Buckeyes were the most difficult thing for them to overcome. Freshman quarterback Braxton Miller, who had an otherwise impressive game statistically, had troubles hitting open receivers throughout the entire game.

Miller was throwing the ball better than usual for just about the entire game, but he missed at least three open receivers for touchdowns throughout the span of the game. These missed passes would've completely changed the momentum and could have led the way for a huge upset for the Buckeyes.

Ohio State coach Luke Fickell came into this game knowing that, aside from a possible bowl game, this would most likely be his last game as head coach of the Buckeyes and you could see it in the way he coached. Luke Fickell and offensive coordinator Jim Bollman were unusually aggressive in their play calling, which helped the Buckeyes' offense tremendously and ultimately gave them a chance to win.

All of this good coaching was undone by a single call late in the fourth quarter when the Buckeyes were on their final offensive drive. On third down, Fickell did what even a coach of a grade school football team knows not to do: he spiked the ball on third down. That gave Ohio State just one more chance to get the first down, which they failed to do.

Lastly, the defense just couldn't find a way to stop Michigan quarterback Denard Robinson. Robinson is one of the most explosive players in all of college football, but that is no excuse for a defense that is as talented as the Buckeyes to fail to come up with a way to adjust to his play and slow him down.

This devastating loss to the Wolverines is a tough end to the regular season, the Buckeyes' winning streak against Michigan, and Luke Fickell's tenure as the head coach of the Buckeyes.