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Bill O’Brien (HC Boston College, aka BillyBob O’Buttchin et al)

Good thoughts all, the BOB hiring has probably lent an uncertainty to the Asst coaches, specifically Frye. Produce or get gone, as BOB has no loyalty to those guys. Just like the new AD....everybody wants a subordinate who is loyal to him, through personal loyalty or positional loyalty. It looks like Ohio has a goodly number of highly rated OL candidates, and if tOSU can get the current crop to play better, augers well (?) for their commitment to the good guys. But am betting that Day/BOB/Frye go fishing in the portal come spring, unless Proctor comes to C'bus to stiffen the OL. Am rooting for that, as he could be the LT, and Simmons could slide back to his natural position at RT. Then believe all the pieces would be in place for both O and D. As my Dad used to say, "Woody's got a loaded team this year", so substitute Day for Wayne Woodrow, and steamroll. PS, any thoughts on Day upsetting the QB applecart if Sayin is all that and a bag of chips? Go Bucks!
 
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I don’t think discourtoeus is the right word. I’m not being mean about him. The offense only had success at bama despite him. A ridiculous percentage of the yardage gained by Bama was on broken plays.

I think his performance at New England lends credence to my opinion. He spent 8 years under Bellicheck and Saban with no titles. That’s pretty special territory.

I honestly think this hire will be the final nail in the coffin for Day’s tenure at OSU.

The Pats had one of their best offenses ever in 2011 before he left for PSU. They didn’t lose the Super Bowl because of him.

And Bama would’ve won the natty if Jameson doesn’t get hurt.
 
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I know most of you guys like to act like you’re too mature to notice things like this, but be honest: Right after we hire Bjork as AD we hire an OC named Bobbin O’Bjorkskein… probably a coincidence but not a good look, right?
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With Bill O'Brien hire, Ohio State appears to be declaring 2024 as title or bust​

2024-01-19_With-Bill-OBrien-Hire-Ohio-State-Title-or-Bust_16x9.jpg


Barely three weeks into the New Year and one thing has become abundantly clear in college football: Ohio State is unmistakably all-in for 2024.

To be fair, that statement tends to ring true no matter what year it is.

The Buckeyes, after all, have consistently been a regular national title threat throughout the past few decades and the lone member of the blue-blood fellowship in the sport which has reliably avoided out of character results or any semblance of a down cycle. It's perhaps the program's defining trait – no matter what era you're reexamining in the history books, OSU has started off nearly every football campaign capable of capturing a trophy between the talent on hand in Columbus and the head coach calling the shots.

That fact felt unmistakable yet again on Thursday night as a source confirmed to FOX Sports that recent New England Patriots offensive coordinator Bill O'Brien would be joining Ohio State as the team's new offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach.

It's a bold move in itself from head coach Ryan Day and continues an offseason full of reinvention around the Woody Hayes Center, much of which has only served to reaffirm the Buckeyes' place in the top five of the early 2024 polls ahead of a pivotal year.

There is no denying that O'Brien's latest stint in Foxborough under now-former head coach Bill Belichick did not end well in 2023 – coloring much of the initial, possibly muted reaction to the hire – but the veteran coach has historically proved to be an adept offensive coordinator and quarterback developer at both the pro and college levels.

While at Alabama just two years ago, he helped guide Bryce Young to the Heisman Trophy and had the Crimson Tide in the top 10 in scoring offense for both seasons in which he called plays in Tuscaloosa. Prior to that, he had the Houston Texans as a consistent playoff threat and was around for several of Tom Brady's best statistical years with the Patriots. Throw in an adept job navigating a tough situation while leading a Penn State program out of the Jerry Sandusky aftermath and there's plenty on the resume to sit up and take notice that O'Brien's next career move was to head to Ohio State.

Maybe more notable is the message sent by the man who made such a hire.

There is no question that Day, despite a still hard-to-fathom 56-8 mark as a head coach, has felt the heat emanating beneath his seat from his own fan base the past few months. Though outsiders cannot understand where such sentiment comes from, given that overall record, one only has to look at how sullen and despondent the 44-year-old was in the wake of a third consecutive loss to rival Michigan last November – the measuring stick above all measuring sticks for the program.
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Since the conclusion of his first stint with the New England Patriots as an assistant coach from 2007 through 2011, new Ohio State offensive coordinator Bill O’Brien has coached three college quarterbacks at his two stops at the NCAA level.

Two of those signal-callers – Penn State’s Matt McGloin and Christian Hackenberg – saw the best years of their respective careers under O’Brien, each under a unique set of circumstances.

MATT MCGLOIN AS A STARTER
(YEAR UNDER O'BRIEN IN BOLD)
YEAR COMP ATT PCT YDS TD INT Y/A
2010 118 215 54.9 1548 14 9 7.2
2011 125 231 54.1 1571 8 5 6.8
2012 270 446 60.5 3271 24 5 7.3

CHRISTIAN HACKENBERG AS A STARTER
YEAR COMP ATT PCT YDS TD INT Y/A
2013 231 392 58.9 2955 20 10 7.5
2014 270 484 55.8 2977 12 15 6.2
2015 192 359 53.5 2525 16 6 7.2
BRYCE YOUNG AS A STARTER
YEAR COMP ATT PCT YDS TD INT Y/A
2021 366 547 66.9 4872 47 7 8.9
2022 245 380 64.5 3328 32 5 8.8
The last of them, Alabama's Bryce Young, had one of the best careers in the history of his prestigious school under O'Brien.

If O’Brien can elevate Ohio State’s quarterback play in a similar way this season, it will go a long way toward the team’s ambitions of avenging three straight losses to Michigan, winning the Big Ten and winning a national title.
 
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Ohio State opportunity for Bill O'Brien less headache than Patriots​

Former New England Patriots assistant coach Bill O'Brien landing at Ohio State as the Buckeyes' new offensive coordinator caught some by surprise given the expectation Ryan Day sought college-level options. Ohio State's dominance in the transfer portal means the cupboard is stocked for O'Brien to execute his playbook at an elite for one of the nation's title contenders in 2024, an opportunity he reportedly sought out.

According to NFL reporter Albert Breer of The Monday Morning Quarterback, O'Brien wasn't guaranteed a position on New England's new coaching staff in 2024 following the departure of Bill Belichick, so he started looking around and found the Buckeyes.

"The Patriots will conduct interviews with Los Angeles Rams assistants Nick Caley and Zac Robinson on Monday and Tuesday for their open offensive coordinator job," Breer wrote over the weekend. "And while both have Patriots ties, this is, indeed, a sign of how open-minded Jerod Mayo is going to be filling out his staff. That's not to say Mayo won't have trusted lieutenants (Belichick's sons have strong relationships with Mayo, and both have job offers from him). But it is indicative of how Mayo has not locked himself in on any ideas in any phase of the game. And why Bill O'Brien took the OC job at Ohio State rather than the chance to compete for a job he already had."
 
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