• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

DE Nick Bosa (Pro Bowl, All Pro, 2019 ROY, 2022 DPOY, San Francisco 49ers)

SKULL SESSION: NICK BOSA'S EFFORT, ISAIAH PRINCE'S NFL HOPES, AND CHRIS HOLTMANN'S HOOPS TRANSFER SEARCH


“EVERY DOWN LIKE IT'S HIS LAST.”
I remember a few years ago when Jadeveon Clowney was hailed as a football god ahead of his junior season at South Carolina, but really didn't live up to the hype to many because he took plays off – as defensive linemen do sometimes, to be fair.

Nick Bosa had comparable hype heading into his junior season, but the key difference was he only had one speed.

Eric Branch of the San Francisco Chronicle:

Offered (former Rutgers offensive coordinator John) McNulty, who saw Bosa collect one sack and two other tackles behind the line of scrimmage in September: “The talent is one thing, but when it’s matched by the relentless effort on every snap … it’s just very hard to deal with.”

...

(Former Michigan offensive coordinator Tim) Drevno says Bosa, who is 6-foot-4 and 266 pounds, plays “every down like it’s his last.” And McNulty and NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah cited specifics when discussing Bosa’s hair-on-fire approach.

McNulty recalled when Rutgers was in a two-minute drill against Ohio State and he had a tackle block Bosa one-on-one, thinking Bosa would be slowed by the frenetic pace. Instead, the tackle got gassed, Bosa blew past him, and, McNulty recalls, “he just about crushed our quarterback.”

“There’s a lot of guys that are talented in the draft,” McNulty said. “But I don’t know if there’s anyone that plays as hard. Can’t say I’ve watched every guy in the draft, but I just know that there aren’t too many people in football that play that hard on every snap.”

...

“There are a handful of plays where he’s triple-teamed and he’ll crawl to the quarterback — like he just finds a way to get it done,” (NFL.com Draft Analyst Daniel) Jeremiah said. “If you want somebody that can win early with speed, he can overpower you. He’s outstanding with his hands. The effort is off the charts."

I don't think we properly appreciate how absurdly unblockable Bosa was through his first 2.5 games. He had 14 tackles, six tackles for loss and four sacks. Those are season numbers for some pass rushers.

If you extrapolate his sack numbers based on the pace with which he opened the season, he'd own the Ohio State single-season sack record before the end of the ninth game of the season.

I might never get over how insane his numbers could have been opposite of Chase Young.

Entire article: https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skul...ts-versatility-chris-holtmann-transfer-search
 
Upvote 0
1998 MSU
2015 MSU
Joey Bosa not having Noah Spence bookend him
Nick Bosa getting hurt and not having a full year book-ended by Chase Young


These are the things that I dwell on and play the "what if?" game a lot more than I probably should.

I'll add losing Clarett for the 2003 season. Gotta think we would've repeated with him or at least made it back to the NC game.
 
Upvote 0
Nick Bosa getting hurt and not having a full year book-ended by Chase Young.
Having four Bosas on the field at the same time at Purdue wasn't going to prevent our back seven from shitting all over themselves. And having Nick and Chase both on the field at Iowa in 2017 was useless again thanks to the back seven.
 
Upvote 0
Having four Bosas on the field at the same time at Purdue wasn't going to prevent our back seven from shitting all over themselves. And having Nick and Chase both on the field at Iowa in 2017 was useless again thanks to the back seven.

Not sure I agree with 2017 Iowa--the game was tied very late in the second quarter, and OSU was getting the ball back when Nick was ejected. One play later, Iowa scored to go up 7, and it was all downhill from there.
 
Upvote 0
Not sure I agree with 2017 Iowa--the game was tied very late in the second quarter, and OSU was getting the ball back when Nick was ejected. One play later, Iowa scored to go up 7, and it was all downhill from there.
IIRC, Iowa was up 24-17 when Nick got tossed, and we didn't score on our next possession (and then Iowa scored to make it 31-17 at the half). Now, would the game have been closer--even significantly closer--had Nick not got canned? Maybe. But the way Iowa exposed the back seven in the second half was brutal.
 
Upvote 0
IIRC, Iowa was up 24-17 when Nick got tossed, and we didn't score on our next possession (and then Iowa scored to make it 31-17 at the half). Now, would the game have been closer--even significantly closer--had Nick not got canned? Maybe. But the way Iowa exposed the back seven in the second half was brutal.
It was 17-17, and Iowa had just failed on 3rd & 8 from the OSU 40. They would have surely punted.

Sidenote: those TEs that ate OSU alive are both projected as first round picks, and this mock has them at #7 / #12 overall.

Not that OSU was without its issues, the primary one being that they were living or dying by JT's arm, which was way off that day.
 
Upvote 0
St. Thomas’ Nick Bosa, taken No. 2 in NFL draft, is Broward’s second-highest pick ever

St. Thomas Aquinas graduate Nick Bosa became Broward County’s second-highest drafted player in NFL history when he was picked by the San Francisco 49ers at No. 2 in the first round on Thursday night.

Only South Broward alum Tucker Frederickson, who was taken by the New York Giants with the first pick in 1965 as a running back out of Auburn, has been taken higher than Bosa.

Bosa, as Ohio State junior defensive end, bested older brother Joey Bosa by one pick in draft position. In 2016, the elder Bosa went No. 3 to the San Diego Chargers, who since have moved to Los Angeles. Father John Bosa was also a Miami Dolphins first-round pick (No. 16) in 1987, as was the uncle on their mother Cheryl’s side, Eric Kumerow, in 1988.

Entire article: https://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports...d/fl-sp-nick-bosa-drafted-20190425-story.html

ba70e2f7e0009edc5a192053e7869ce9.jpg
 
Upvote 0
Holy freaking crap. I just saw a more compact, quick Joey Bosa. Love the fact he embraces #97 too. Two Bosa's on our DL at one time is not going to be fair to others. This kid is just unreal. Incredibly quick off the line, violent hands, very strong, closes well, and his instincts put him around the ball 24/7. Incredibly disruptive player. He would just as rather blow by a blocker and get to the ball as he would bull rush to it. The first step is as deadly as I have seen and he finishes. Gets leverage when he slides inside and shuts down gaps. Gets to the QB as quick as humanly possible and his motor is off the charts, incredible athlete. I do not say this lightly, but at this point in his career he is a better prospect than Joey. And everyone knows my man crush on Joey. He is already growing rapidly, I expect him to be a 6'4-6'6 260-290 lb. DL by the time he signs the dotted line.

Serious question...best DL in the 2016 class? I haven't seen many others but I can't imagine a better prospect. Let me rephrase that, best prospect period in the 2016 class? Honestly might be the best film of a young defensive prospect I've seen maybe aside from Clowney.

Congrats to Nick on the #2 overall selection. Had to go back to this post where I saw that film. Injuries prevented him from hitting the numbers Joey did, but damn what a player. About as impressive as it gets. Hope Nick kills it in SF.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top