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Game Thread (2004) Bowl Game: MasterCard Alamo Bowl - Oklahoma State - 12/29/04 (W, 8-4/4-4)

Hey guys, I decided to join my O-State.com brethren here. I am thrilled about this match up in the Alamo Bowl.

One thing I do not think has been covered is our Head Coach Les Miles. He coached and played at Michigan. So I would think playing Ohio State would be something special for him. (Maybe he will be more fiery/excited/aggressive) I don't know if this will have an impact on the game but I guess we'll find out.

As for our team: I am pretty pessimistic about our defense. Simply put we have sucked for the last 4 years with Bill Clay as our d-coordinator.
 
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Buckeyeskickbuttocks said:
Good point, with Morency rollin up 250, you don't need to throw.
Anthony Davis did have a good day, but he was pretty well contained during the first half, and it was the balanced attack that allowed him to run as well as he did.

I don't believe for a second that Morency roleld up 250 against a capable defense. tOSU will force their QB to beat them through the air where we are fairly capable. I think oOSU will make some big plays but also some big turnovers, and I don't see their shrimpy dbs being able to stay with Hall or Holmes (holmes won't beat them over the top all day, but when they get twisted around or have to jump backwards for the ball that size will really hurt them).

It's gonna be a good game.
 
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<?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:PlaceName>OKLAHOMA</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>STATE</st1:PlaceType></ST1:p Team Report<O:p</O:p

By The Sports Xchange<O:p</O:p

<st1:date Month="12" Day="6" Year="2004">12/6/2004</st1:date><O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
INSIDE SLANT<O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
Although the Big 12 bowl order underwent some shuffling when <st1:State><ST1:pTexas </ST1:p</st1:State>passed <st1:State><ST1:pCal</ST1:p</st1:State> as an at-large pick for the Bowl Championship Series, <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pseemed to be a solid choice all along for the Alamo Bowl. <O:p</O:p

So much so that OSU began taking orders for tickets to the game and the pre-sale resulted in 12,500 purchases, about 2,000 more than the allotment the Alamo Bowl requires participants to take. <O:p</O:p

"Head-to-head is not the major factor for us," Alamo Bowl representative Jack Rogers said before the BCS made its picks and <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pappeared to be in better position than the team it lost to in its final regular-season game, Texas Tech.<O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
"We want to put together the best matchup and we want to bring fans to our city," <st1:City><ST1:pRogers </ST1:p</st1:City>added, noting a large contingent that followed Oklahoma State to <st1:City><ST1:pSan Antonio </ST1:p</st1:City>for the 1997 Alamo Bowl, as well as the crowd that cheered the Cowboys at last year's Final Four. <O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
Now that <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State i</st1:PlaceType></ST1:ps playing a traditional power, <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Ohio</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State</st1:PlaceType></ST1:p, expect ticket sales to soar. Hey, even the casual fan can be drawn into this matchup. One, to watch the Buckeyes, and two, to see an Oklahoma State offense that tacked 35 points on the board against two BCS participants, Oklahoma and Texas. <O:p</O:p

Of course, both those games resulted in back-to-back losses during a disappointing stretch in which the Cowboys closed with three defeats in their last four games. <O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
"Our football team aspires to better things than 7-4," OSU coach Les Miles said. "At some point in time, we'd like to string together wins against our best opponents." Beating a big-name program like <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Ohio</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pwould be a suitable alternative.<O:p</O:p

NOTES, QUOTES<O:p</O:p

BY THE NUMBERS: Games are often decided by turnovers -- or at least coaches like to say they are -- and Oklahoma State won its share by capitalizing on a margin of plus-18, the best in the country. The Cowboys committed only seven turnovers all season thanks to sure-handed rushers. <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:plost just three fumbles. <O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:pGAME OF THE YEAR: Needing to regroup following an uninspired 16-point loss at home to Texas A&M, the Cowboys traveled to <st1:State><ST1:pMissouri </ST1:p</st1:State>and quickly dug a 14-0 hole. Still, they recovered for a 20-17 victory, which now looms large in their invitation to an bowl in the upper-tier of the Big 12 breakdown. The win at <st1:State><ST1:pMissouri </ST1:p</st1:State>was followed by losses in three of the last four games. OSU started 5-0. <O:p</O:p

MATCHUP TO WATCH: <st1:State><ST1:pOklahoma </ST1:p</st1:State>State PR Darrent Williams vs. Ohio State PR Ted Ginn Jr. -- OK, so they won't get to tackle each other unless Williams plays on the Cowboys' cover units ... but who will upstage the other? <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pwas adversely affected this season when Williams, the Big 12's top return man, broke his forearm against <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Iowa</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pon Oct. 2 and was slow to return. Ginn, meanwhile, returned four punts for touchdowns as a freshman and is averaging 26.9 yards. QUOTE TO NOTE: "This team did accomplish, considering a redshirt freshman quarterback (Donovan Woods) took the reins for us in the opener on the road (at UCLA). Seven victories is, to a point, achievement." <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pcoach Les Miles.<O:p</O:p

STRATEGY AND PERSONNEL<O:p</O:p

BOWL AT A GLANCE: <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pvs. <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Ohio</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State</st1:PlaceType></ST1:p, <ST1:pAlamo </ST1:pBowl, <ST1:p<st1:City>San Antonio</st1:City>, <st1:State>Texas</st1:State></ST1:p, Dec. 29. <O:p</O:p

PLAYERS TO WATCH: QB Donovan Woods -- Doesn't possess glossy stats because of his team's reluctance to throw the ball more, though he did emerge as a decent passer and certainly played a key role in the Cowboys' .933 conversion rate in the red zone. OSU has scored on 42 of 45 trips into the red zone, including 34 touchdowns. <O:p</O:p

<O:p</O:p
TB Vernand Morency -- The overload heaped on Morency early in the season when <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pwas slow to groom Woods probably contributed to different nicks, which forced the junior to sit out a Nov. 13 win against Baylor. He has 1,454 yards and 12 touchdowns, with a 5.8-yard average per carry. <O:p</O:p

PRO POTENTIAL: OG Sam Mayes -- The best player among an experienced <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pline, Mayes has the potential to move on to the next level. He not only possesses the blocking skills, but is a sharp kid who understands the game and all the intricacies of different offensive schemes.<O:p</O:p

TE Billy Bajema -- Though rarely used as a receiver in an offense that didn't throw much anyway, Bajema was recognized throughout the Big 12 as an exceptional blocker. That skill could get him to the next level.

ROSTER REPORT: <ST1:p<st1:PlaceName>Oklahoma</st1:PlaceName> <st1:PlaceType>State </st1:PlaceType></ST1:pOG Sam Mayes limped off with a sprained knee against Texas Tech, but quickly returned. ... TB Vernand Morency limped off the field after the game and leaned on a crutch while favoring his right ankle. Both Mayes and Morency, the two key components in the OSU run game, are expected to be at full strength for the Alamo Bowl.

http://www.collegesports.com/tsx/current/m-footbl/okst.html<O:p</O:p

<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=2 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=bg0><TD class=bg0font>SCHEDULE</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

<TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=2 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=bg1 align=middle><TD>Date</TD><TD>Opponent</TD><TD>Time/Result</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Sep 4</TD><TD align=middle>@UCLA</TD><TD align=middle>Won 31-20</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Sep 11</TD><TD align=middle>Tulsa</TD><TD align=middle>Won 38-21</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Sep 18</TD><TD align=middle>Southern Methodist</TD><TD align=middle>Won 59-7</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Oct 2</TD><TD align=middle>Iowa State</TD><TD align=middle>Won 36-7</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Oct 9</TD><TD align=middle>@Colorado</TD><TD align=middle>Won 42-14</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Oct 16</TD><TD align=middle>Texas A&M</TD><TD align=middle>Lost 20-36</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Oct 23</TD><TD align=middle>@Missouri</TD><TD align=middle>Won 20-17</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Oct 30</TD><TD align=middle>Oklahoma</TD><TD align=middle>Lost 35-38</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Nov 6</TD><TD align=middle>@Texas</TD><TD align=middle>Lost 35-56</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Nov 13</TD><TD align=middle>Baylor</TD><TD align=middle>Won 49-21</TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=middle>Nov 27</TD><TD align=middle>@Texas Tech</TD><TD align=middle>Lost 15-31</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

<TABLE cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=2 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=bg0 align=left><TD class=bg0 colSpan=13>Overall</TD></TR><TR class=bg4 align=middle><TD><NOBR>FDS/G</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Rush Att</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Rush Yds</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pass Att</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pass Cmp</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Int</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pass Yds</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pnt</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pnt Avg</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Tot Fum</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Fum Lost</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pen</NOBR></TD><TD><NOBR>Pen Yds</NOBR></TD></TR><TR class=bg2 vAlign=center align=right height=17><TD align=left>19.2</TD><TD>564</TD><TD>2695</TD><TD>166</TD><TD>89</TD><TD>4</TD><TD>1585</TD><TD>51</TD><TD>43</TD><TD>9</TD><TD>3</TD><TD>47</TD><TD>380</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
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BuckeyeFROMscUM said:
I think oOSU will make some big plays but also some big turnovers,
Just to let you know Ok State is #1 in turnover margin.

http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/Internet/national%20rankings/IA_teamturnovermrgn.html

I would also like to point out we are #3 in yards penalized and number of penalties.

http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/Internet/national%20rankings/IA_teamyardspenalized.html


http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/Internet/national%20rankings/IA_teampenalties.html

Just thought I would point that out.

And on a side note, I would like to add our kickoff return yardage defense. We are #11, but if you notice, on 22 returns against us. With our high scoring average, that shows our kicker kicks it in the endzone a lot.

http://web1.ncaa.org/d1mfb/Internet/national%20rankings/IA_teamkoreturndef.html
 
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you better pray you kick it into the endzone everytime if we drop teddy back, you might check the thread on him and his track skills, if that doesnt scare the shit out of you nothing will

you guys are fun to have tom i may stop in over at your site
 
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I'm not worried at all about kickoff returns. Give us the ball at the 20.

OK-state should be worried about Ohio State's punt returns. They're giving up 10+ yards per punt that is returned, and they haven't faced anyone as explosive as Teddy Ginn on a punt return.
 
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CleveBucks said:
I'm not worried at all about kickoff returns. Give us the ball at the 20.

OK-state should be worried about Ohio State's punt returns. They're giving up 10+ yards per punt that is returned, and they haven't faced anyone as explosive as Teddy Ginn on a punt return.

Only 7 or 8 teams have ever faced someone as explosive as him on punt return!!
I cant wait till next year, when he is there full time!
I am pumped for this game, I like playing someone different.
 
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Tex-Mex 101

BrutusBobcat ... you're very welcome! Its the least I can do!

-----

Now ... before I start with where to go for Tex-mex and Mexican food in San Antonio (there is a big difference), lemme ring the school bell for my fellow yankees - ding, ding.

To sum up Tex-Mex on a plate: enchiladas (stuffed with cheese, chicken or beef), covered in chili (Texas chili has no beans - its a hangin' offense), with refried beans and spanish rice ... and a plastic tortilla container full of fresh, hot flour tortillas. The prepatory course is always chips & salsa. A bazillion Mom & Pop restaurants here serve this fare daily. Read on ... and prepare thyself for comfort food ... Texas-Style!

-----

Tex-Mex 101

Nachos, tomatillio sauce, chile con queso - will the real Mexican food please stand up? A crash course in Texans' favorite fusion fare.

By Patricia Sharpe - Texas Monthly
August 2003

I'M WRITING THIS COLUMN TO apologize for having laughed at my friend and colleague Sam Gwynne. (I was laughing with you, Sam. Honest.) A recovering Yankee, Sam has made enormous progress in understanding the behavior and tribal customs of Texans during the nine years he's lived here. But there is one thing he just can't seem to get a handle on: As he put it recently, "What the hell is the difference between Mexican food and Tex-Mex?" Sam has been tragically misinformed that all sorts of popular dishes are Tex-Mex: quesadillas, breakfast tacos, charro beans, black beans, tomatillo sauce, flan, and sopaipillas, to name a few. His questions always make my day, but the afternoon he appeared at my office door to ask plaintively, "Are jalapeños Tex-Mex?" I knew he needed serious help. So, for Sam and everybody else who didn't have the good fortune to get here before 1970, here's my short course on the cuisine that was fusion before fusion was hip.

Austin, circa 1955: I'm with my two best friends from junior high school, Laura Ellen and Mary Jean. As they regularly do, Laura Ellen's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glass, have taken us out to eat Mexican food at El Toro (where the Clay Pit restaurant is now), a big, bustling space filled with tables and vinyl booths and with a large bullfight painting on one wall. While scanning the menu (which we have all but memorized), we pass the time eating saltines, supplied in cellophane wrappers, and hot corn tortillas, which we butter, salt, and roll up like cigars. There are no chips. Mr. Glass spoons a little of the thin, tomatoey hot sauce onto his crackers. Like the waiters, the restaurant's owner, Monroe Lopez, is of Mexican descent. Most of the customers wolfing down rolled-up tortillas are Anglo. The dining room could be the supporting cast for The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet.

Mr. and Mrs. Glass each get a beer (margaritas had not made the scene yet). Then they order combination plates: yellow-cheese-and-onion enchiladas, pork tamales, an ocean of ground-beef chile con carne(seasoned with red chile, garlic, and lots of cumin), refried beans, and Spanish rice. Laura Ellen has crispy tacos filled with hamburger meat (seasoned with garlic and a little chile) and topped with rapidly warming lettuce and chopped tomato. Mary Jean gets puffy tacos filled with the same thing. (Definitions are in order here: A crispy taco was/is made with a hard-fried, folded-over corn tortilla; a puffy taco is a corn tortilla that has been fried so that its layers delicately separate and balloon out.) I get chalupas compuestas, two crisp-fried flat corn tortillas topped with refried beans, melted yellow cheese, lettuce, and tomato. My friends and I are so filled with anticipation we can hardly sit still.

Our harried waiter warns, "Hotplatehotplate!" - spoken as a single word - as he slides the platters onto the table and checks to see that our tortilla basket is full. Twenty minutes of contented munching ensues. At the end of the meal, he reappears to leave the check and inquire, "Sherbetorcandy?" Did we want a dish of sherbet (pineapple, lime, or orange) or a crisp (not chewy) pecan praline for dessert? That was pretty much what we ate every time. There were no chicken enchiladas in chipotle sauce, no flautas with guacamole and sour cream, no tacos al carbón. None of the dishes that are now so common would become mainstream in Mexican restaurants here for at least another fifteen years. But in case you're feeling sorry for us, don't. At home, we were all eating tuna casserole, lime Jell-O, and frozen TV dinners. We would have sooner skipped church than our weekly Mexican food fix.

What I like to call classic Tex-Mex was born in Texas in the Mexican restaurants run by first- and second-generation immigrants during the first third of the twentieth century. It peaked in a kind of golden age (the color of melted Velveeta, no doubt) that lasted roughly from World War II to the Vietnam War. During this two- to three-decade span, the spicy components of the combination plate became our most treasured, and most Texan, comfort food. Going out for enchiladas and tacos was a cultural ritual that bound us together as surely as gathering for turkey, dressing, and pumpkin pie at Thanksgiving. By the seventies, though, the winds of change were blowing, and as streams of new Mexican immigrants moved north, bringing with them their more varied and, yes, more exciting interior styles of cooking, classic Tex-Mex began a slow, inexorable fade into the background.

What put the Tex in Tex-Mex? Three things: American yellow cheese, chile con carne, and the infinite malleability of the corn tortilla. (Rice and refried beans, while essential, were basically the same rice and beans served in Mexico.) First and foremost, though, is cheese. In Texas during the heyday of Tex-Mex, if it wasn't yellow, it wasn't cheese. Oh, all right: if you looked hard, you could find a few other cheeses, but they lagged far behind yellow cheese in popularity. Knowing what their customers liked, and being no fools, Mexican restaurateurs went with the flow. Most of them used mild American cheese for filling and topping enchiladas; some preferred real cheddar. (Kraft's Velveeta, being utterly bland and easy to melt, was ideal for creating the thin, seasoned sauce called chile con queso. So beloved was queso that it took on a life of its own as the national party dip of Texas.) Maybe one in a hundred restaurants used Monterey jack. But even if there had been more-expensive imported Mexican cheeses around, few would have bought them because part of the appeal of Mexican food was that it was cheap. It would have been economic suicide to buck the trend.

The second major component of Tex-Mex is chile con carne, a. k. a. chili. The familiar spicy ground-beef stew that we all know and love, or at least tolerate, chili was already a staple in Texas well before the Great Depression of the thirties, when a poor person could buy a filling bowl of it with crackers for a nickel or a dime. Since many Mexican restaurants initially served American dishes too, chili was often already on the menu. Ladling some on a plate of enchiladas wasn't even a stretch, and enchiladas and tamales sauced with chile con carne had practically become a basic food group by the fifties. Some restaurant owners objected that the combination wasn't "Mexican," and they were right. It was Texan.

Ah, the tortilla - master of, well, a dozen disguises. Tortillas go back at least to the Maya and the Aztecs, but it took the cagey Mexican-food entrepreneurs of the twentieth century and their deep-fat fryers to fully exploit the tortilla's possibilities. The crispy taco and the now charmingly archaic puffy taco both emerged from this felicitous union, but the two most important, and most Texan, variations on the tortilla were the tortilla chip and, in turn, its apotheosis, the nacho. It is a fact that until recently, restaurants in Mexico did not serve either tostadas or nachos as appetizers, nor did the earliest Mexican restaurants in Texas. These snacks didn't materialize until sometime around World War II. If you know a grad student who needs a dissertation topic, tell her or him to figure out which of the several cafes along the border that claim to have invented the nacho was actually the first to do it. That would be a worthy contribution to human knowledge.

One quick final aside. I haven't forgotten the state's most ubiquitous Tex-Mex dish: fajitas. It's quite true that the fajita plate, with its dramatic sizzle and forest of condiments, was cooked up in Texas. But fajitas did not become outrageously popular until 1973 - when Ninfa's opened in Houston and began selling tacos al carbón - and that was after the classic Tex-Mex era.

Up until thirty years ago, Tex-Mex was the big enchilada at every Mexican restaurant in the state (sorry, couldn't resist). Our universe back then was so Tex-centric that people would return from their first trip to Monterrey or Saltillo griping that they couldn't get any Mexican food there. It wasn't until travel and the arrival of new immigrants broadened our worldview that we realized that what we had here wasn't interior Mexican food but a distinctive regional cuisine that deserved its own name. Luckily, one was easily appropriated: the catchy term already in use for the border patois that today we call Spanglish. Today Tex-Mex has been downsized to a puffy taco, but most Mexican restaurants serve at least a few dishes. (Some of the most venerable purveyors are Dallas' El Fenix, founded in 1918; Fort Worth's Joe T. Garcia's, 1935; San Antonio's Mi Tierra, 1941; Houston's Molina's, 1941; and Austin's El Rancho, 1952.) Just scan the menu for words like "Combinaciones Mexicanas" or "Classic Texas Enchiladas." If you're of a certain age, order a Señorita Special for old times' sake. If you're a newcomer, have one out of curiosity. You'll be eating a part of Texas history.

And, Sam, jalapeños are Tex-Mex only if they're stuffed with Velveeta.
 
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somebody said it earlier, but i wanted to concur that I do indeed like the way we match up with their WRs. The one guy who is big and a jump-ball type receiver, i think youboty will do well against him, as he did a good job in that situation against braylon edwards. also the #2 guy sounds like someone that dustin fox could shut down. fox is very athletic, fast, and physical, but he is short. tall guys give him problems, but he has absolutely no problem at all keeping up with short fast guys. he did a great job against roscoe parrish in the fiesta (and this oklahoma st. guy sounds just like parrish) so i'm pretty confident.

i really hope that we play aggressive man coverage. i don't want to play soft zone against a mobile qb who could buy enough time for his receivers to find the holes in the zone. i would like to see us play a lot of man with aj hawk as the qb spy. i think we'll be fine against the run, we won't stuff them but we won't get gashed.

it will be interesting to see what kind of looks the cowboys give troy smith on defense. troy was amazing against michigan and he is very close to being the total package in a QB (speed, arm strength, arm accuracy, toughness, leadership, the innate ability to sense defensive pressure ala krenzel). However, the one thing that he has yet to prove is whether or not he can adjust to different defensive schemes. I'm really hoping that the d-coordinator throws everything in the book at Troy. If there is a flaw in his game, let's identify it now so that he and the coaches can work on it in the off-season. I would hate for oOSU to play vanilla on D, and then sometime next season some team tries to, say, zone blitz him, discover that it works, and then Troy struggles for the rest of the year battling with an Achilles' heel.

How has Oklahoma State's punt coverage been this year? Don't just give me stats, I hate stats in college football, they are so misleading. Basically, I want a Cowboy fan to describe how it's been in general. Does your punter get good hang time? Is he consistent? Is he good at angling the ball towards the sidelines? Are your gunners always right on top of the returner, or are they sometimes late getting there? Are they big hitters, or do they tend to miss tackles occasionally?

Being a Buckeye fan, I am inherently biased towards my team, and sometimes I overrate certain aspects of our team. But there is one thing that I am 100 percent confident in, and that is the fact that Ted Ginn Jr. is the best punt returner in the country, bar none. There are other guys that are fast, but he is just incredibly hard to bring down. He has a great ability to somehow stay on his feet after getting hit.

The smart thing would just be to punt the ball out of bounds, even if it only goes 30 yds. But I'm hoping that because it's the Alamo Bowl, your coach will just say fuck it and let 'em play.
 
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BuckeyeTrail said:
How has Oklahoma State's punt coverage been this year? Don't just give me stats, I hate stats in college football, they are so misleading. Basically, I want a Cowboy fan to describe how it's been in general. Does your punter get good hang time? Is he consistent? Is he good at angling the ball towards the sidelines? Are your gunners always right on top of the returner, or are they sometimes late getting there? Are they big hitters, or do they tend to miss tackles occasionally?
Cole Farden, our punter is one of the best in the Big 12 (if not the country). He has a great leg (he also does kickoffs, and only a handful this year haven't been touchbacks) and is pretty accurate. The gunners do a pretty good job as well, as Oklahoma State has given up only one punt return for a TD this year, I believe; the Gooners ran it back on us after three block in the back penalties that weren't called.
 
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