The Ohio State Buckeyes fail AGAIN

For the past 5 years, we’ve waited for The Ohio State football team to not only win another National Championship, but redeem themselves from the disgusting 2006 loss to Florida. Well, the Buckeyes met that challenge by rolling over and dying in New Orleans.

ESPN sportscasters bad-mouthed them to the point where one of their coordinators made a CD showing the lowlights of the previous loss as well as all the crap being spewed by the sports commentators.  It was supposed to get them fired up, and that lasted for maybe the first quarter.

Of course, the scoffing continues.

By Pat Forde
ESPN.com

NEW ORLEANS — With the 2007 football season complete, here’s the game plan for 2008:
We need border patrols along Interstate 10, from Jacksonville to Pensacola. A Coast Guard blockade at Biscayne Bay. And the FAA should redirect all inbound flights to South Florida from Ohio.

If you see a silver helmet and a sweater vest coming, contact authorities.

Because next year’s BCS National Championship Game will be played in Miami, and the Ohio State Buckeyes aren’t invited. Especially if the Southeastern Conference champion is invited.

If you’ve ever seen lions maul a water buffalo, you’ve seen the last two title games. You’ve seen a fierce pair of SEC teams — Florida last year, LSU this year — blow the vulnerable Buckeyes back to the Bratwurst Belt by a combined 41 points. You’ve seen the best of one league flex, and the best of an inferior league collapse.

Nobody wants to see it a third time. Give Ohio State credit for consistently being very good — but until Jim Tressel’s team proves it can step up to the highest level of competition and actually stay on the field with an SEC opponent, stay away.

When the program’s bowl record is 0-9 against the SEC, the evidence is overwhelming.

Buckeyes fans are fond of breaking into impromptu group spelling bees, shouting out “O-H-I-O.” When an SEC team shows up on the other sideline it should be “O-H-N-O.”

They’re also fond of calling their school The Ohio State University. It might also now be called TheOvermatched State University of the BCS.

This time the final score was healthy-and-loaded LSU 38, in-over-its-head Ohio State 24. And it wasn’t that close. Once again, the Bucks got their fans excited by scoring early — ran the opening kickoff back for a touchdown last season, jumped out 10-0 this time.

Then, once again, it was time for southern-fried dominance.

Last year the Gators ran off 21 unanswered points to take control. This year the Tigers peeled off 31 straight, scoring five times in six possessions over a 30-minute span, ripping what was statistically the nation’s No. 1 defense.

The Buckeyes aided in their own demise by committing a spate of personal-foul penalties. By blowing coverages. By getting a key field goal blocked. By showing neither the composure nor the competitiveness of a champion.

“They didn’t fight back like an SEC team would do,” said LSU safety Harry Coleman, who filled in superbly for injured All-American Craig Steltz.

The Tigers had no problem fighting back. Down 10-0, they shrugged.

Been there, overcome that — three times, in fact. They were down 10 against Florida and Auburn and Alabama. All SEC opponents, not coincidentally.

“There’s no panic in this team,” said coach Les Miles said. “Are you kidding me? We’ve been down 10 before. We know how to play.”

The SEC is not a humble place by any measure. But it ain’t braggin’ if you can back it up — and especially if you can back-to-back it up, as Florida and LSU have done.

“They’re used to playing in tough games week-in and week-out,” said SEC commissioner Mike Slive, between sideline fist pumps after LSU’s final touchdown of the night. “They’re used to playing in what I call the crucible.”

The Big Ten, by contrast, has been the baby’s crib. Ohio State has coasted through that league 15-1 the past two seasons, only to collapse in the face of an SEC champ with a lower BCS ranking and a worse record.

“I don’t think it was easy,” said LSU offensive tackle Carnell Stewart. “But they let momentum get to them, and their heads were gone.”

Ohio State was in it early but QB Todd Boeckman ended up being pounded often by the fierce LSU Tigers defense.
How much negative momentum had the Buckeyes encountered in strolling to their 11-1 record? How much adversity had they overcome? Almost none.

They were tied with Wisconsin heading into the fourth quarter before pulling away. (The Badgers, by the way, lost to SEC opponent Tennessee in the Outback Bowl.) In their only other serious second-half fight, they seized up and lost at home to Illinois. (The Illini, by the way, were nudged by 32 in the Rose Bowl.)

So, no, the Buckeyes weren’t ready for what LSU threw at them. Not ready to win the battle in the trenches, not ready to match speed on the perimeter, not ready to calmly and smartly execute under a mountain of pressure. LSU figured to be better at a majority of positions but wound up better at virtually every position but running back.

Combine that lack of toughening with vivid memories of the destruction in the desert against Florida and you know why so many of us were concerned about Ohio State’s fitness for this battle. Especially if you saw a fully loaded LSU from earlier in the season, before the SEC wars began wearing it down.

……Ohio State, meanwhile, now symbolizes the pigskin Peter Principle. The Buckeyes have achieved just enough the past two seasons to rise to a level where they’re incompetent.

It’s a tough thing, putting together an overachieving season and seeing it end in embarrassing fashion. Especially since the Buckeyes know what this means — another year of “S-E-C” chants and barbs about flopping on the big stage.

“I worry about disappointment because I know how hard these kids work,” Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. “I don’t worry too much about criticism, because if you’re not tough enough to handle criticism, then you better get out of this game. … There’s a whole lot of people that don’t really have much understanding of what it takes to be good at this game but yet love to have opinions.

“If you struggle to take criticism, then you need not be at Ohio State or not be playing the game of football.”

Well, good. At least Tressel knows what he’s in for.

And he should know not to bring that weak Big Ten stuff back to the BCS National Championship Game again next year.

Link: http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/columns/story?columnist=forde_pat&id=3186010&sportCat=ncf

Fordes’ criticism pales in comparison to what Tressel and company will endure from the fans.

We’re sick of this shit. The Buckeyes need to get over their own hype and realize that at least for now, there’s tougher opponents to deal with outside the Big Ten.

This statement by Tressel is revealing:

… There’s a whole lot of people that don’t really have much understanding of what it takes to be good at this game but yet love to have opinions.

That’s pretty condescending especially to loyal Ohio State fans. Tell you what Jim, I’ve been an Ohio State fan since the mid-1960’s. I’ve seen what it takes to be good at the game and when it comes to Championships, you ain’t been good enough.
Newsflash Tressel, We’re more than entitled to our opinions.

I love ’em, but the way I feel right now, Tressel and the entire team should hold hands and jump off a cliff.

That’s what they did figuratively, anyway.

3 thoughts on “The Ohio State Buckeyes fail AGAIN”

  1. Well said. It is always tough for an SEC team to escape the conference without at least one loss. I believe that there is more parity within the SEC than there is within the other major conferences. As a result SEC teams are more tested. I think that hurts OSU.

    At least you do not have Les Miles going to coach Michigan.

  2. Tiger Fan,

    First let me congratulate you for taking advantage of Ohio State’s lackluster performance.

    This is from an article back in November from a local newspaper:

    In Gator country, an OSU title without beating an SEC team would come with enough asterisks to fill the Gulf of Mexico.

    “The fans here would just roll their eyes,” said Adam Reardon, co-host of The Sports Fix on EPSN 1230 in Gainesville, “and say, ‘They don’t play in a real conference, they don’t play in the SEC.’ ”

    Whether the fans have a point isn’t really the point. The SEC has more teams (five) in the Top 25 of the BCS than the Big Ten (three). But the Big Ten (Ohio State and Michigan) and SEC (LSU and Alabama) have just two teams with fewer than two conference losses. Regardless, the reality is that most Southeastern Conference fans will view the Buckeyes as illegitimate champions unless they prove it against one of their own, just as ESPN analyst Kirk Herbstreit said Saturday.

    “The only thing that can happen is for Ohio State to get to a bowl game and beat a team from the South,” Herbstreit said. “I’m not saying that’s fair. I’m just telling you that’s what people think about the Ohio State program right now.”

    Ohio State linebacker Marcus Freeman was asked Tuesday whether he’d like to meet an SEC team so he and his teammates could prove themselves. Then, he was asked whether it might be smarter to avoid the SEC after what happened last year, Ohio State’s bowl record against the SEC dropping to 0-8.
    “No, I think we’d look forward to the challenge,” Freeman said. “You see a lot of comparisons about how the SEC is such a dominant conference over the Big Ten, but no matter who we play we just want to represent the Big Ten well.”

    And Saturday’s win over Penn State did impress Reardon and ESPN analyst Todd Blackledge, who has covered the SEC for a decade.

    “Week in and week out, the competition is more fierce in the SEC,” said Blackledge, who picked Florida to beat Ohio State last year. “And LSU is the best team I’ve seen personally this season. But after last week, it’s not like Ohio State is doing it with mirrors or anything like that.”

    ……”Around here, people say winning the SEC is more important than winning the national championship,” Reardon said. “That’s how screwed up some fans are.”

    Link: http://www.cleveland.com/osufootball/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/sports/119390622027660.xml&coll=2

    When you look at the Ohio State 2007 schedule, it’s easy to see that they had a pretty cushy season. None of the teams gave them any kind of a fight, so they never really had to worry about “coming from behind”.
    Secondly, the comment about “winning the SEC is more important than winning the national championship” compares to the way we feel about Michigan.

    The only way to settle the debate is to have more scheduled games between the major conferences, and for Ohio State to prove they have the ability to play well and win consistently no matter the opponent.

  3. You have to realize that LSU had practice this year coming from behind. As a result they do not panic when someone jumps to the lead. They understand what they do well and stick to that plan. I was suprised that LSU had as few a penalties as they did. Equally, I was suprised by the “lack of discipline” penalties by OSU. You have an entire team returning for ’08. Maybe we get to meet again.

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