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Game Thread Game Seven: #1 Ohio State 38, Michigan State 7 (10/14/06)

Wingate1217;631313; said:
Maybe because it was the last time they beat OSU!!!

Michigan State's last win in the series came on Nov. 6, 1999, 23-7, in Spartan Stadium.

Deep in their hearts, how they wish they could have little Nickie back at the helm.

The most deeply ironic part of their coaching changes is the manner in which the Cards fans ride them on what passes for their other board (Scout). Seems John L left Da'Ville in less than perfect standing, hinting he was going to greener pastures, guess he was thinking of the uniforms. Now, with a revitalized program under Petrino Cardinal fans have the perfect and Karmic bragging rights over the peripapetic Smith. (Who will soon walk alone into the sunset away from East Lansing).
 
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sandgk;631323; said:
... Smith. (Who will soon walk alone into the sunset away from East Lansing).

You know, it's funny. I ran into Bobby Williams on campus just a couple days before he was fired.

...I've been keeping my eyes peeled for JLS, but we haven't crossed paths yet.


Oh, and by the way?

It's Snowing.
 
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DDN

Smith, Stanton shared slow ride to stardom

From the ranks of the redshirts come Saturday's signal callers in the OSU-Michigan State matchup.


By Doug Harris
Staff Writer

Thursday, October 12, 2006

COLUMBUS ? Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith played sparingly as a redshirt freshman, reduced primarily to returning kickoffs. But that was glamorous duty compared with what Michigan State QB Drew Stanton endured.
He was part of the protection team on punts as a redshirt freshman and blocked on kickoff returns.
"You want to help the team any way you can," Stanton said. "And if you can't be the quarterback, you want to contribute in some capacity."
Smith and Stanton have much in common ? and not just their humble paths to stardom
They met at the Elite 11 quarterback camp in California in 2001 and have remained close friends.
The two talk frequently by phone and chatted this week, even though their teams will meet in East Lansing on Saturday.
Asked how Stanton is handling the Spartans' three-game losing streak, Smith said: "We don't talk about that. That's not my concern. Hopefully, what's on his plate, he can handle because he's been the quarterback (for three years). But we talk about other things ? things young adults do."
 
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DDN

Smith, Stanton built lasting bond before college

Two met at a quarterback camp while in high school.


By Doug Harris
Staff Writer

Thursday, October 12, 2006

COLUMBUS ? Troy Smith's home-state college had misgivings about him, and he didn't have to be told why.
Although he was an athletic marvel at Cleveland Glenville High School, Smith wasn't built like a prototype quarterback. And Ohio State and others wondered whether his talents would be better utilized at a different position.
But Smith refused to listen to those murmurs, convinced that he was among the nation's premier prep passers. A letter he received in the spring before his senior year ? inviting him to join a select few that summer at the Elite 11 quarterback camp in California ? was all the proof he needed.
"That was pretty much the biggest accolade I had coming out of high school, and it was smooth sailing after that," he said. "That was a quarterback camp. It wasn't about running the ball. It wasn't about what was in your brain. It was about you throwing the ball, and we threw the ball seven days straight."
But Smith received more than just validation as a quarterback at the camp.
He also walked away with an enduring friendship.
Smith and Drew Stanton, a Farmington Hills, Mich., native, roomed that week and clicked right away. Neither player was heavily recruited, Smith eventually becoming the last member of Ohio State's celebrated 2002 class and Stanton choosing Michigan State.
And while both traveled similar paths to stardom ? redshirting as freshmen and accepting roles on special teams the next year ? they're now in their third seasons as starting QBs and will face each other for the final time when the Buckeyes visit the Spartans on Saturday.
"Drew Stanton is a first-class guy and a warrior through and through," Smith said.
The two have stayed in touch over the years, and they reunited last summer as counselors at the same Elite 11 camp that had given them their big breaks.
"(Troy's) a very confident person in the way he carries himself, but I don't think he's arrogant at all," Stanton said. "He's confident that he can accomplish what he needs to do. And you always know with him that he's got your back."
Smith also admires Stanton ? not only for his tenacity but also his candor.
"Any time you meet someone that's going to keep it 100 percent (real) with you all the way and not sugarcoat things ... you can do nothing but get better as friends," Smith said.
The 6-foot-3, 230-pound Stanton has a career completion percentage of .649 ? just .001 behind the Big Ten record set by Iowa's Chuck Long. And the 6-1, 215-pound Smith is on pace to break the all-time conference mark for career passing efficiency.
But Stanton is rated higher by NFL scouts ? he'll likely be the second QB drafted after Notre Dame's Brady Quinn ? but Smith's stature is growing.
"Because of his height, he probably won't be taken until late in the first round," draft analyst Jerry Jones said. "But he has moved himself up to the point where someone will say, 'He's just a shorter Vince Young ? and he's become the better quarterback.' "
NFL personnel who may still have reservations about Smith probably should ask Stanton about his pal's resolve.
Although Justin Zwick was one of the Buckeyes' first recruits in 2002 and was hailed as their quarterback of the future, Smith was convinced he could change some minds.
"We were riding the bus back to the hotel, and Troy said, 'I know Zwick has already committed to Ohio State, but I want to go and compete with him.'
"He's become the front-runner for the Heisman and is playing as well as any quarterback in the nation. And I'm happy to see his success," Stanton said.
 
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ABJ

ARM IN ARM

OSU's Smith, MSU's Stanton friends as well as QBs

By Marla Ridenour

Beacon Journal sportswriter

COLUMBUS - As unlikely as their friendship might appear because of logistics, Drew Stanton and Troy Smith think it makes perfect sense.
Both seniors start at quarterback, Stanton at Michigan State, Smith at Ohio State. Dangerous passers and runners, they have similar athletic skills. They seem to be cut from the same cloth as competitors and leaders.
But when they hit it off at a Nike camp and went on to become roommates at the prestigious Elite 11 quarterback camp during the summer of 2001, they hadn't made their college choices yet. They had no idea of the tie that would later bind them.
``This summer when we served as counselors, we talked about how we both traveled the same path to get to where we are now,'' Stanton said. ``We both played special teams. We weren't expected to be the quarterbacks of the teams we have now.''
Asked what they have in common, Smith cites the same parallel.
``We started off on special teams and ended up at the position we love,'' Smith said. ``We'll continue to grow as team people.''
The pair must put team before friendship Saturday, when top-ranked Ohio State (6-0, 2-0 in the Big Ten) visits Michigan State (3-3, 0-2). Hoping to continue their quest to capture a BCS national title, the Buckeyes know Stanton will be a formidable foe.
That didn't keep Smith from talking to Stanton this week, because they both say football never comes up in their conversations.
``When we talk, it's not about the game,'' Smith said. ``It's more along the lines of, `How are you doing? What else is going on in your life?' We talk about other things young adults do when we grow up a little bit.''
It's been that way since they met, Stanton said.
``You don't have to talk about being a quarterback or about high school or college football,'' Stanton said. ``We talk on the other side of the fence. You get to know people and see the type person he is.
``He's a very confident person, the way he carries himself. I don't think he's arrogant; he's confident in what he can accomplish. He cares about other people. He's one of the guys who has your back.''
Smith called Stanton ``a first-class guy and a warrior through and through.''
``I can't begin to express the way I feel about him because he's a great person,'' Smith said. ``When you meet somebody who's going to keep it 100 percent with you the whole way and not sugarcoat things and let you know what kind of friend he is from the time you meet him up until now, you can do nothing but get better as friends. I know our relationship will continue to grow.''
Smith admitted when he was invited to the Elite 11 camp, he never took his eyes off Stanton.
``Night in and night out that was the guy I was looking at, practicing and warming up with him,'' Smith said. ``It was a great experience for both of us. Obviously, it paid off.''
Smith can still name nine others who were there. They included Vince Young (who went on to Texas), Justin Zwick (Ohio State), Ben Olson (UCLA), Drew Olson (UCLA/Baltimore Ravens), Matt Gutierrez (Michigan-Idaho State), Gavin Dickey (Florida and a Seattle Mariners '06 baseball draftee as an outfielder), Anthony Martinez (Virginia), Tyler Palko (Pittsburgh) and Ryan O'Hara (Arizona-Central Oklahoma).
Young, Stanton, Smith, Palko and Olson became starters at their original colleges; Gutierrez and O'Hara, after they transferred.
Smith remembered what the Elite 11 invitation meant to him when he was finishing his time at Cleveland Glenville High School.
``That was the biggest accolade I had ever received,'' Smith said. ``I got that letter in the mail and it was smooth sailing from there on out. That was a quarterback camp; it wasn't about running the ball. It was about what was in your brain. We threw the ball seven days straight.
``That was a great time for me because of the whole, `Is he an athlete? Is he a quarterback?' What Bob Johnson (camp coach) saw in me was a quarterback. That was one of the big breaks for me.''
That said, neither Smith nor Stanton took the easy road in college.
Smith was the last player to sign with OSU in the winter of 2002, and then his position was listed as ``athlete.'' Massillon's Zwick, a Parade All-American, headlined coach Jim Tressel's second class.
``He talked about it that summer; we were both on the same flight and taking the bus ride to the hotel,'' Stanton said. ``He said, `I know Justin just committed to Ohio State, but I think I can compete with him.' ''
Smith and Zwick redshirted on the 2002 national-championship team behind Craig Krenzel and did not battle for the starting job until Krenzel left after the 2003 season. Smith played primarily in '03 as a kickoff returner and began the '04 season as a backup to Zwick. He took over in Week Seven, after Zwick injured his shoulder, and led the Buckeyes to a 4-1 mark.
Zwick's only starting action since came when Smith was suspended for two games for taking money from a booster. Now Smith is 19-2 as a starter, leads the league and is seventh in the nation in passing efficiency (170.6). He's considered by many to be the front-runner for the Heisman Trophy.
Stanton's journey is almost a carbon copy. Stanton also redshirted when he came to East Lansing in 2002. In 2003, he volunteered to be the personal protector on the punt team and led that unit in tackles. He also played on the kickoff return unit but hurt his knee in the Alamo Bowl against Nebraska.
``I wasn't returning kicks like him,'' Stanton said of Smith. ``That also speaks of the type person he is. If he wasn't going to be the quarterback, he'd do anything to contribute.''
Stanton became the Spartans' starter in the 2004 Big Ten opener and immediately ignited the offense. Under Stanton that season, Michigan State led the conference in scoring (31.6 average) and total yards (477) after putting up averages of 20.7 and 368.7 in the first three games. Last year, Stanton ranked second in the Big Ten and 10th in the nation in passing efficiency (153.4).
The future looks bright for both. Stanton, listed at 6-foot-3 and 230 pounds, might fit the NFL prototype better than Smith, 6-1 and 215. ESPN NFL draft analyst Mel Kiper Jr. has Stanton rated second and Smith third at their position behind Notre Dame's Brady Quinn.
Stanton is sure their relationship will survive, even in the pros.
``I'll always keep in touch with him,'' Stanton said. ``Down the road, he'll always call and it doesn't have to be about football. That's when you know you've gained a relationship, when it goes beyond football.''
 
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Smith, Spartans know that good and bad opportunity awaits against Ohio St.

October 12, 2006
EAST LANSING, Mich. -- John L. Smith knows opportunity is knocking for his Michigan State players and coaches. He also knows the next opponent, top-ranked Ohio State, can knock the Spartans out if they don't play better than they have the last three weeks.
And if Michigan State (3-3, 0-2 Big Ten) doesn't turn things around and at least make a bowl game, Smith understands he could be out of a job as head coach.
"I think we have to show up," Smith said Monday. "That's pretty evident, isn't it. I kind of believe that. That's the word that has been passed on, isn't it?"

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PASSING (YARDS PER GAME) Curtis Painter (PUR) 297.8 Drew Tate (MSU) 237.8 Bryan Cupito (MINN) 217.3 INTERCEPTIONS James Laurinaitis (OSU) 4 Adam Shada (IOWA) 3 Tracy Porter (IND) 3 PASS EFFICIENCY Ohio State 167.7 Michigan 161.3 Michigan State 141.7 PASS DEFENSE EFFICIENCY Wisconsin 87.5 Iowa 100.3 Michigan 105.1

Smith said he hasn't been told that by anyone who could make a coaching change. But with a 131-81 record in 17 1/2 seasons, including a 21-21 mark with the Spartans, he has been around long enough to recognize reality. Michigan State was 3-0, held a 37-21 lead over Notre Dame and had a combined 154-81 edge in scoring after 15 quarters this season. Over the past nine quarters it is 0-3 and has been outscored 73-33.
"I told our players, 'Look at when we play right. Look at when we execute,'" Smith said at his weekly press conference. "But we can't afford to drop five balls. We have to be more disciplined and not have an offside or a motion penalty. We have to play more correctly. Then, we can play with people."
Michigan State has beaten a top-ranked Ohio State team twice - 16-13 in 1974, one of wildest finishes in college football history when the result wasn't known for 45 minutes after the game, and 28-24 in 1998, when the Spartans rallied from a 24-9 deficit in Columbus.
 
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CPD

Spartans the best:
Sorry, Iowa. Not you, either, Texas. Ohio State safeties coach Paul Haynes said Wednesday that Michigan State on Saturday will be the best offense Ohio State has faced this season.
"They're well-balanced right now with the run and the pass," Haynes said. "I think Drew Stanton is the best quarterback we've faced, and I think these are the best receivers we have faced. They've got big-play ability."
Michigan State will be without leading receiver Matt Trannon, who sprained his ankle against Michigan last week, and leading rusher Javon Ringer, out with a knee injury. But Haynes, who's in his second season in Columbus after coaching at Michigan State, said Jehuu Caulcrick, the 260-pound current starter at running back, is a force.
"He's running with a lot of confidence right now," Haynes said. "When I was there, he tried to run around you, not over you."
He's learned how to use his size now. The Spartans rank 21st in the country in offense, averaging 413 yards per game. Iowa ranks 28th, Ohio State 35th and Texas 36th.
 
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What Mich St. tean will show up?

Ohio St-Michigan St Preview

Ohio St-Michigan St PreviewBy AMY JO WALKER, STATS Writer
October 11, 2006

Ohio State began the nation's longest winning streak with a victory over Michigan State last season.
Now the top-ranked Buckeyes look to extend that streak to 14 and continue their run at a national championship Saturday when they visit the Spartans.
The last time these Big Ten rivals squared off on Oct. 15, 2005, Ohio State was reeling after two losses in four games. A 35-24 come-from-behind victory over the Spartans sparked a seven-game winning streak that led to a share of the Big Ten title and a season-ending 34-20 Fiesta Bowl victory over Notre Dame.
The Buckeyes (6-0, 2-0 Big Ten) have kept that streak intact this season, rattling off six consecutive wins -- including three over ranked opponents. The last Ohio State team to begin the season 6-0 was the 2002 National Championship team.
The Buckeyes again appear to be a championship-caliber team. They are averaging 32.8 points and 386.7 yards this season, led by senior quarterback Troy Smith, whose 170.6 passer rating leads the Big Ten.
Smith connected on his first nine passes against Bowling Green last week and completed 85 percent (17 of 20) overall for 191 yards and three touchdowns en route to a 35-7 win. His completion percentage was the third-best mark in team history, helping him earn Big Ten co-offensive player of the week honors.
"I thought his footwork, his focus on doing just the little things right was really outstanding in the ball game," Buckeyes coach Jim Tressel said.
Ted Ginn Jr., Smith's high school teammate, has been his favorite target this season with 33 receptions for 459 yards, including a career-high 10 catches for 122 yards and a TD last week.
The Buckeyes have also had success on the ground with Antonio Pittman, who leads the team with 109 carries for 628 yards and seven touchdowns. The junior running back had season lows of 13 carries and 61 yards last week, but had his first two-touchdown game of the year.
The Buckeyes are 21-for-26 in the red zone this season with 18 touchdowns and three field goals. While that offense has been impressive, Ohio State's defense -- which boasts nine new starters -- has been dominant.
The Buckeyes lead the nation in scoring defense (9.3) and are tied for first with 12 interceptions, double the total they had all of last year. They also lead the Big Ten with 20 sacks.
Those numbers will likely only improve as the Buckeyes' victory last weekend marked the first of six straight matchups against struggling teams. Ohio State's next five opponents-- Michigan State, Indiana, Minnesota, Illinois and Northwestern-- are the bottom five teams in the Big Ten.
The Buckeyes, though, aren't looking past Michigan State, which posted upset wins in 1974 and 1998 over then top-ranked Ohio State teams.
"Michigan State will be another big test," said Buckeyes linebacker James Laurinaitis, who leads the Big Ten with four interceptions. "They definitely think they should've beat us last year."
The Spartans (3-3, 0-2) were well on their way with a 10-point lead late in the second quarter during that last meeting, but a key special teams play before the half changed the momentum of the game and possibly Ohio State's season.
Michigan State's kick unit tried to beat the clock and rush a 35-yard field-goal attempt while offensive players were still trying to get the field. Ohio State's Nate Salley blocked the kick, and cornerback Ashton Youboty returned it 72 yards for a touchdown as time expired.
That was just the boost the Buckeyes needed as they scored three second-half touchdowns to win the game. Ohio State's ability to close out teams has continued this season as it has outscored opponents 76-16 in the fourth quarter.
Michigan State's inability to close out then-No. 12 Notre Dame three weeks ago triggered its current losing streak. The Spartans opened the season with three straight wins and held a 16-point lead over the Fighting Irish at the beginning of the fourth quarter on Sept. 23, but lost the game 40-37.
Their current skid hit three games after a 31-13 defeat to then-No. 6 Michigan last week. Drew Stanton completed 20 of 35 passes for 252 yards, but failed to throw a TD pass for the second straight game and was intercepted twice.
The senior quarterback, who played with bruised ribs last week, will have limited targets to throw to on Saturday. No. 2 receiver Matt Trannon will likely miss the game with an ankle injury, while tight ends Kellen Davis and Eric Andino remain suspended indefinitely.
Michigan State coach John L. Smith, whose job may be in jeopardy, realizes his team needs a turnaround. "I think we have to show up," Smith said. "That's pretty evident, isn't it. I kind of believe that. That's the word that has been passed on, isn't it?" Ohio State leads the all-time series 24-12, including an 11-5 advantage in East Lansing, and has won four straight meetings.
 
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Dispatch

Michigan State fans know misery very well
Late-game collapses have become common
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Tim May
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH


It has not been easy to be a Michigan State football fan the past five years, unless you?re into pain.
And not the numbing kind of pain that comes with a team perpetually in the loser?s column. It?s the acute, at times almost unbearable pain that comes with a team that, well ?
"Being a Michigan State football fan is all about expecting it to rain any minute, even when the sun is at its brightest," John Procida said.
At 43, and a graduate of Michigan State, the Grosse Pointe, Mich., public relations specialist has been a Spartans fan almost all of his life. He has learned of the glory years of the 1960s under Duffy Daugherty, he knows of the up-and-down seasons of the 1970s, the great years under George Perles in the 1980s and ?90s and the not quite-realized promise under Nick Saban, whose 1998 team upset No. 1 Ohio State.
But the short-lived stay of Bobby Williams and four seasons under John L. Smith have been pockmarked by tormenting losses and last-season collapses.
"You now go into a season with a sense that the Spartans likely are going to win a game they shouldn?t, always knowing they also are going to lose a game that they shouldn?t, and there will be another game that they will just give away," Procida said.
This season, the Spartans have almost filled their quota. After starting 3-0, they jumped out to a 17-0 lead over Notre Dame and were up by 16 going into the fourth quarter before losing 40-37.
The next week at homecoming, they lost 23-20 to underdog Illinois and a fight broke out among players after the game when Illinois tried to plant its flag on the field. Then, Smith ended his postgame news conference by slapping himself in the face.
It was meant to mock Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis, who the week before had said someone struck him during a melee. But Michigan State fans who have often seen their team go off just as unexpectedly as their coach were not amused.
"We?d just lost homecoming to a team that hadn?t beaten another Division I-A team in more than a year," Procida said.
Michigan State lost handily, and not unexpectedly, at Michigan last week. Next is No. 1 Ohio State, which leaves Spartans fans and even Buckeyes fans wondering just what OSU will be walking into.
"The last three weeks have been tough, but we?ve got to bounce back," said Spartans defensive end Justin Kershaw, formerly of Reynoldsburg. "We know we can still compete. We see this as a great opportunity, going against the No. 1 team in the country. Everybody is still positive. Nobody that I know is hanging their head."
But then, blowing a big lead at Ohio State last year started a downward spiral for the Spartans that ended with their losing four of their last five and being ineligible for a bowl. Now here they sit, their season needing a pick-me-up, but with Smith presumably strapped into an armed ejection seat.
"They?re going to be playing hard and fast and tough, so that you know for sure," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. "Now, what are you going to get from an execution standpoint? That?s what you don?t know."
Perhaps, Procida said.
"But you know, we have a saying around Michigan State, and it goes ?Thank heavens for Tom Izzo,? " Procida said. "Basketball season is right around the corner."
[email protected]
 
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Dispatch

Spartans defensive end yields to Bubba Smith
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Rob Oller
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

Michigan State retired his jersey number in September, but fortunately for Justin Kershaw the Spartans decided not to retire him along with it.
The sophomore defensive end from Reynoldsburg will suit up against Ohio State on Saturday wearing No. 11 after MSU retired 95, the number he wore since arriving in East Lansing.
Well, actually, the Spartans had Bubba Smith in mind when they retired the number, but that didn?t stop Kershaw from telling teammates before the Notre Dame game three weeks ago that "they?re retiring my number this weekend."
Michigan State retired Smith?s number as part of the celebration of the 40 th anniversary of the 1966 game between the Spartans and Fighting Irish that ended in a 10-10 tie, but Smith wanted Kershaw to keep it until he finished his career. Kershaw, however, decided on his own to switch numbers.
"Bubba Smith deserves to have his number retired. If they?re going to do it, do it now," Kershaw said in the Detroit Free Press.
Most of the 90s were taken, so Kershaw picked 11, an unusual number for a 6-foot-6, 230-pound lineman. Then again, this was an unusual situation.
"It?s a nice number," he said of No. 11. "It?s square, even and it has two ones," said Kershaw, adding that the reason he originally wore No. 95 was "because they gave it to me."
Kershaw liked No. 95 but knew that giving it up was the right thing to do.
"Knowing it?s Bubba Smith and the circumstances, there really wasn?t that much hesitation to give it up," he said. "It?s a privilege because (Smith) was a great player."
Smith played defensive end at Michigan State from 1964 to 1966, helping the Spartans win national titles in 1965 and ?66. He was the No. 1 overall draft pick of the Baltimore Colts in 1967.
So Smith had more accolades than Kershaw, but the sophomore still had his number. Until last month.
 
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Former Buckeyes revisit upset of '98
By JON SPENCER
For The Advocate

COLUMBUS -- One season he's a hero against Michigan State. The next he feels like a zero.
Eight years later, the feeling of "utter disbelief" hasn't faded for Gary Berry. He wonders if his 1998 Buckeyes will ever be able to live down their 28-24 loss at home to the Spartans -- the only scar on an otherwise perfect season.
"Nothing against this team; it's a great team," Berry said of the top-ranked Buckeyes, "But, hands down, I think we could have beat any Ohio State team ever.
"With that loss, I can't say anything because we didn't win the national championship. But, on paper, I think we could have beaten anybody in college football."Berry was a starting safety, one of eight members of that first-team defense to get picked in the NFL draft. The offense had weapons galore, in Joe Germaine and David Boston and Michael Wiley and Dee Miller. Joe Montgomery rushed for nearly 800 yards and seven touchdowns -- as a backup.
It was a team on a path to the 1998 national championship. Eight games, eight weeks at No. 1, eight wins, eight blowouts.
Then came the Spartans. Berry owned them the season before, returning an interception and blocked punt for touchdowns in the span of two minutes in leading the Buckeyes to a 37-13 victory.
Their Nov. 7, 1998 rematch looked like a rerun. The Spartans were 28-point dogs. When Berry's sidekick, Damon Moore, returned a pick 73 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter, the Buckeyes were in front 24-9 and seemingly on their way to beating the spread.
Instead, they beat themselves. A freak turnover -- a punt that bounced off Nate Clements' helmet -- triggered the comeback. The Buckeyes played giveway six times that day, four times in the second half. MSU drove 92 yards against the nation's third-ranked defense for the go-ahead touchdown.
"It still haunts me to this day," said Berry, who now reports on the Buckeyes for NBC4 in Columbus. "We could have been -- I'm not going to say the best team to come through Ohio State -- but one of them. That loss really did something to our legacy."
This week Berry is taking one for the '06 Buckeyes, graciously revisiting that horror over and over again in hopes that his recollections will resonate throughout the Woody Hayes Center and prevent a repeat of history on Saturday in East Lansing. The Spartans, losers of three straight, can save their season by spoiling Ohio State's.
"I hear these guys on the team say how they're in there studying film and taking it game-by-game," Berry said. "You hear these guys talk and you can tell how mature they are. They need to keep working hard every day and realize you're not promised a win. You have to give it your all every game and every play."
Ahmed Plummer, a starting cornerback on the 1998 team and one of three NFL first-rounders on that defense, dispenses similar advice.
"Don't buy into Michigan State's three-game losing streak," said Plummer, an assistant strength and conditioning coach at OSU. "We have to approach it like they're going to approach it. This is their season. If they can stop our national championship bid, that would mean everything to their season. We're going to get their very best.
"The thing I worry about for our guys is that not for one minute can you relax in the Big Ten. We were beating them at halftime, and I think in the second half we relaxed. We thought it was going to be like the rest of the games, that we would blow them out, and it wasn't that way."
Berry and Plummer were part of three Ohio State teams with national championship aspirations. The 1996 team lost once, 13-9 to Michigan, when Shawn Springs fell down on a touchdown pass to Tai Streets. That team and the 1998 team finished No. 2 in the nation. The 1997 squad lost at Penn State and eventual national champion Michigan during the regular season before losing in the Sugar Bowl.
"If you look down through the 90s, to the '95 and '96 teams and the times we had close games and had to deal with adversity, I don't think we did that well," Berry said. "I noticed (a difference) from the first time coach (Jim Tressel) came on the scene."
In his five-plus seasons as head coach, Tressel is 17-9 in games decided by seven or less points -- 15-5 since the start of the 2002 national title season. By comparison, predecessor John Cooper was 19-17 during a 13-year stint that included five top 10 finishes.
"You look back at the all the close games they had in 2002, and they were the best team in the nation," Berry said. "In the final game against Miami (a double OT win in the Fiesta Bowl), they had a close game and might not have been the best team on paper, but they were definitely the best team overall because they dealt with the adversity and came out on top."
The smallest margin of victory this season has been 17 points. Ironically, that was also true of OSU going into that 1998 game with Michigan State.
"When I got to the NFL, everybody was like, 'You guys were unbelievable. How did you guys lose that game?' It's a hard question to answer," Berry said.
 
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osugrad21;631462; said:
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"If you look down through the 90s, to the '95 and '96 teams and the times we had close games and had to deal with adversity, I don't think we did that well," Berry said. "I noticed (a difference) from the first time coach (Jim Tressel) came on the scene."
In his five-plus seasons as head coach, Tressel is 17-9 in games decided by seven or less points -- 15-5 since the start of the 2002 national title season. By comparison, predecessor John Cooper was 19-17 during a 13-year stint that included five top 10 finishes.

Thank you Andy Geiger!
 
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Ohio State offense leans to the left
By D.Laurant on October 12, 2006 12:57 AM


The best offensive line in America? It would be tough to top the five guys at Ohio State -- literally.

Height-wise, that unit reads more like the starting five for the Buckeye basketball team -- from left to right, 6-8 (LT Alex Boone), 6-8 (LG Steve Rehring), 6-5 (C Doug Datish), 6-5 (RG T.J. Downing), 6-7. (RT Kirk Barton). Add some impressive poundage (Datish is the "shrimp" of the group at 295), and you can see why OSU is averaging 386.7 yards and 32.8 points a game.

Coming into this season, Datish and Barton were placed on the Outland Trophy "watch list," and Downing made the cover of Sports Illustrated. But the two sophomores on the left side, Boone and Rehring, have been perhaps more imposing than their senior linemates.

Right before halftime in the Iowa game, when it was still close, OSU took the starch out of the Hawkeyes with a methodical 89-yard drive that included a 19-yard off-tackle burst by freshman RB Chris Wells and three straight carries for 15 yards by Antonio Pittman. All of those runs went to the left side, where Boone and Rehring have been making pancakes out of opponents and creating the empty space that running backs crave.

"They're so powerful," TE Rory Nichol told reporters when asked about Boone and Rehring. "That's like 650 pounds of force out there."

But Boone and Rehring are more than just big. Tall offensive linemen can sometimes be upended through better leverage if their technique isn't well developed. The two Buckeye sophomore have learned to stay low.

The scary thing about Rehring is that he was on the track team at Lakota West High School in West Chester, Ohio.

A shot-putter, right? Well, yeah, he did that. But he also ran the 100 meters.

Boone, meanwhile, was nimble enough to be a staple on the basketball team at St. Edward's high in the Cleveland suburb of Lakewood. Last spring, however, he found himself getting more publicity for his drinking than his blocking.

At the unhappy conclusion of a night (April 2) of celebrating his elevation to the first team, Boone had a few too many (which, for him, meant a lot of beer), wrecked his truck and blew a 1.15 into a breathalyzer. He was charged with DUI and briefly suspended from the team, and he didn't remember the crash.

"I was so lucky," Boone said. "I could have killed somebody."

Subsequent newspaper articles revealed that Boone had been drinking 30 to 40 beers a day. But they also chronicled how he took stock of the situation and decided to quit drinking, a resolution he has apparently maintained.

"He did what he had to do to get back on the team and be good here," Steve Rehring said.

And he's got three more years to make pancakes.
 
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