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Game Thread THE GAME: #1 Ohio State 42, #2 Michigan 39 (11/18/06)

ABJ

Buckeyes aware that collision with Michigan is ahead

RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Like two runaway locomotives on a collision course, No. 1 Ohio State and No. 2 Michigan are rapidly drawing closer.
But before they can get to their Nov. 18 showdown at Ohio Stadium, each has three teams - none with a winning record - to get through.
The Buckeyes (8-0) preach playing a game at a time, focusing on the moment and not looking ahead, but like all 19- and 20-year-old kids, they watch "SportsCenter," check out Web sites and read the newspaper.
"We know Michigan is a great football team and after our game we might catch up on some games they might be playing later on Saturday," Ohio State defensive back Antonio Smith said. "We've seen the rankings but that doesn't mean anything to us. We have to get better as a team and go out and get ready for Minnesota this week."
Ah, yes. Minnesota, which comes to Ohio Stadium on Saturday. The Golden Gophers (3-5) are winless in the Big Ten and needed a blocked field goal on the final play last week to hold off I-AA North Dakota State, 10-9.
Since beating No. 24 Iowa to close out five difficult games (against three ranked opponents) in September, it's almost as if the Buckeyes have had to play a series of Minnesotas. First they beat Bowling Green 35-7 and Michigan State 38-7, then pounded Indiana 44-3 last week.
The Golden Gophers are perceptive enough to recognize that they are mere appetizers for the entree wearing maize and blue.
"We're just the next team that they play, and they're the next team that we play," Minnesota linebacker Mike Sherels said. "So we're not going to worry about them playing (Michigan) later on this year. It wouldn't necessarily be bad for us to have them worrying about that, but I don't think that's the attitude they're going to approach it with."
After Minnesota, the Buckeyes hit the road to play Illinois (2-6) and Northwestern (2-6) before finally getting to what is known in these parts as The Game.
Tailback Antonio Pittman said he was aware that the Michigan game was fast approaching.
"We're really not focusing on that right now," he said. "We've got Minnesota and we've got a couple more games until we get to that one and we have to focus on all of them to get to that one."
Michigan (8-0) must take on Northwestern and Ball State (2-6) at the Big House before traveling to Indiana (4-4). Next comes the trip to Columbus.
Neither coach Lloyd Carr nor any of the Wolverines mentioned the Buckeyes when they met with reporters this week. But it's only human nature if they, like the Buckeyes, kept an eye peeled for what their chief rivals are up to.
Even Tressel, who seldom admits that any other team exists other than the next one on the schedule, is willing to concede that the Michigan game is almost always on his players' minds.
"Even in spring practice where you tell them to be focused on today's practice, I think there's a little part of them that that's the reason they came to Ohio State or that's the reason they went to Michigan - to play in games like that," he said.
 
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BB73;644542; said:
My calculator is struggling with this one. :biggrin:

Best Buckeye;644584; said:
So is Mili's abacus :biggrin: :biggrin: :biggrin:

If I may offer a possible reason this happened...

Mili probably had two threads of thought going at once; part of his brain telling his typing fingers that it was more than 4 ppg, another part of his brain telling the motor cortex that it was more than 50% better. Somehow the two got combined in the translation.

Happens to me all the... hey is that something shiny over there??
 
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If I may offer a possible reason this happened...

Mili probably had two threads of thought going at once; part of his brain telling his typing fingers that it was more than 4 ppg, another part of his brain telling the motor cortex that it was more than 50% better. Somehow the two got combined in the translation.

Happens to me all the... hey is that something shiny over there??
buckeye1-200.jpg
 
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NFBuck;644694; said:
For my 4000th post I'd like to simply say it's 9:31am in Seoul, South Korea Friday October 27th and M*ch*g*n still sucks.

Ha! I thought Michigan sucked when I was in South Korea, too. That has to be one of the greatest things about being a Buckeye fan: no matter where you are in the world, Michigan will always still suck.
 
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Link

'English Majors' playing up to Wolverines' defensive legacy

[FONT=Arial, Helvetica]

[/FONT] [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Bo Schembechler has been clowning his beloved Wolverines. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] It started Friday when the Michigan coaching legend was taping a college football preview show in Detroit. Ol' Bo was feeling ill. Paramedics were called. They were ready to take him to the hospital. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Not until he finished taping the #*^@! show, to put it in Bospeak. Then he was rushed to a hospital, eventually airlifted to Ann Arbor and underwent a procedure to regulate his heartbeat. [/FONT]
img9756212.jpg
LaMarr Woodley (nine sacks) has nearly doubled his total from last season for Lloyd Carr. (Getty Images) [FONT=Arial, Helvetica] You want to talk tough? Bo made sure the show was in the can before they put a pacemaker in his chest. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] You want to talk tougher? At 77, Bo has survived two heart attacks (one before his first Rose Bowl in 1970), two quadruple bypasses and now this. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] You want to talk to him? Forget it. He wants to be left alone. Bo was released Tuesday and isn't taking any #^%*# calls. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "That definitely shows some toughness right there," said defensive end LaMarr Woodley. "If it was me I probably would have gone to the hospital." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] That's the problem. No matter how hard Michigan's defense plays, the program's standard for toughness recently had more tubes coming out of him than the London Underground. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] You can almost hear Bo from his easy chair in the den: Top that, @%*#^@! it. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] The current players no doubt have little idea that the toughness they play with has a legacy that has more heart than heart attack. If we could ask Bo, we would: Is this the best Michigan defense he has seen? These Wolverines are playing like a vintage Bo unit, or at least like Lloyd Carr's 1997 group that helped win a share of a national championship. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "It ranks with the best I've been around," said Carr, a man not given to such absolutes. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] A team that started with so many questions and a lot of heat on Carr now looks like That '70s Show. At least that's what the nation's No. 1 rush defense is heading for, ahead of a pace to allow the fewest rush yards at the school since 1971. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] It's a unit looking similar statistically to the '97 group that finished in the top five in most major categories.[/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] A defense that is currently best against the run, No. 5 in total defense and tied for the national lead in total sacks (29). [/FONT]
http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/imus.s...vip=no;sz=300x250;tile=7;ord=289891161941644? [FONT=Arial, Helvetica]Mainly because of that defense, Carr has his best overall team since that '97 co-champion. No wonder Bo demanded that he be able to watch Saturday's game against Iowa from his hospital bed. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "One of the doctors told him it might be a little bit too exciting for him," Carr said. "He was raising the devil and insisting he should be able to go home Saturday and watch the game. They ended up bringing in a big TV." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] It's up to Woodley and his defensive mates to live up to Bo's legacy. All that defense. All those All-Americans (17 on defense under Bo). If there are none this year, it would be the first time since 1982 there was more than two years between defensive All-Americans at Michigan. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] So maybe we should have seen this coming. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] They call them the "English Majors," even though there aren't any on the Michigan defense. The nickname is a tribute to new defensive coordinator Ron English. There was no major scheme change, just maturity (eight starters returned) and an attacking style. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] There are reputations being made. English, after being elevated from secondary coach. Carr, who loosened up enough after an unacceptable 7-5 finish in '05. The defense, which was embarrassed in several late-game breakdowns, especially at home against Ohio State. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] The seven senior starters who were part of that embarrassment. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "We lost it a little bit the last few years," said Woodley, one of those seniors. "Now it's starting to come back. Michigan was always running the ball and defense. This year we established that again." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] The defensive line is full of playmakers. Alan Branch, all 331 pounds of him, is one of those rare defensive tackles who can collapse an offensive line. Offenses have to decide whether to double team him or Woodley, who leads the Wolverines with nine sacks and 12 tackles for loss. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] The formula is fairly simple. Stuff the run and make teams one-dimensional. Then the sacks start flowing like vintage Bo invectives. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Penn State rushed 25 times for minus-14 yards thanks to seven sacks. The English Majors had 10 tackles behind the line against Wisconsin. Notre Dame was limited to 4 yards on the ground. The defense has allowed two rushing touchdowns all season. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "They were without a doubt the best defense we've played all year," Iowa's Drew Tate said. "How physical they are, their size, their speed, we haven't seen anything like that." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] That from a quarterback who previously faced No. 1 Ohio State. That's the other part of this. The carnage is going to get worse. Each team's schedule before the Nov. 18 Big Game is so squeezeably soft that the coaches can afford to game plan for each other during their upcoming routs. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] In the interim, how does a real Michigan Man complain about a tweaked ankle with Bo on the rebound? The only way to break the boredom might be to see Bo, his pacemaker and his legacy back in the worn but willing flesh. [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] "You (typically) see him around the practice facility a lot," Woodley said. "You see him in his office ... he still coaches guys up." [/FONT]
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica] Still coaches? Holy @$%*! [/FONT]
 
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JonathanXC;644890; said:
Is there a limit to how many they would give to this game...or are there just going to be 100s and 100s of press on the field?

There's gotta be a limit. I'd like to see them pack 15,000 people onto the field, though.

I'm going to make a wild guess and say that the limit is 982. Any more than that, and the squirrels who make it into the stadium might never find their way out.
 
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