Archives for July 2013

Numbers Crunch- 2014 recruiting class size *UPDATED*

OSU FootballSo as is the case every year the Buckeyes are in a numbers crunch for the recruiting class. This is the last year of a 3 year 3 scholarship reduction from the punishments handed down from the NCAA. Any normal year and OSU would be looking to get to 85 scholarship players but alas this is the last years for the 82 mandate. On top of all of that this is an extremely small Senior class due to the same NCAA issues mentioned among other issues.

So as a service to those recruiting fans out there we thought we would take a look at where we sit right now and where we think they will end up come next February. So lets get started but just a reminder these numbers are extremely fluid and changing so while it might be true today an hour from now it might now be.

Basil, Drew K/P SR
Barnett, C.J. SS SR
Brown, Corey WR SR
7Norwell, Andrew OL SR
Guiton, Kenny QB SR
Brown, Corey DB SR
Blackman, Ivon OL SR
Linsley, Corey OL SR
Makridis, George LS SR
Hall, Jordan RB SR
Hall, Marcus OL SR
Mewhort, Jack OL SR
Bryant, Christian S SR
Fields, Chris WR SR
Wood, Jamie DB SR
Hyde, Carlos RB SR

So as you can see we have 16 SRs on the team as of May 28, 2013 two of which are walk-ons in George Makridis and Ivon Blackmon. This is taken directly from www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com. There were of course rumors that Jamie Wood had quit football last winter but as you can see from this story on the Ozone he is still on the team and playing. So as best I can tell all 14 of these guys are still on scholarship and will be leaving this year for the pros or future in the real world.

The next area where OSU has some scholarships available to them is from player transfers.

Se’Von Pittman– Transferred out and is now at Akron.
David Perkins– Transferred out and is now at Illinois State.
Luke Roberts- Transferred out and will attend Harvard.

Now we also have to add back in though new punter Cameron Johnston who transferred into OSU back in June from Australia.

So that puts us where we are right now as we speak at 16 spots for the Ohio State 2014 football recruiting class. Again the number is SIXTEEN lol.

Now where can OSU pick up some more numbers? There are several JRs who could declare for the NFL after the season is over. Lets take an educated guess of all those who could do it. Not saying they will but they could.

Braxton Miller
Bradley Roby
Ryan Shazier

That is about it right now but you never know what could happen in the next few months to give any of the other JRs the itch to jump to the NFL. If all 3 of them did leave that would put OSU at 19 scholarships for the 2014 class.

Finally based on recent and past history OSU will have a few more guys transfer out or get kicked off the team before February 2014 comes upon us. Is it so unreasonable to think OSU could get to 20-22 in the 2014 class? Based on the research I have just done I don’t think it is.

What do you guys think? Make your prediction for the size of the 2014 class in the comments section. Maybe I will give a prize to the 1st person to guess the correct number.

***Edited to include the fact that 2 SRs listed are in fact walk-ons who I cannot confirm were given scholarships ever.

*UPDATED*

Since I wrote this article there has been more issues come to light. Here is the updated list as of August 15th.

Tim Gardner- Kicked off the team for legal issues.

Najee Murray- Suspended indefinantly still possible may be off the team for good.

Adam Griffin- Injured possible career ender.

By my count that puts the number at 17 for sure 18 very likely and 19 semi-likely.

The 2014 class size at this point could get up to 24-25 depending on early departures and transfers.

**Updated** 8-17-13

Blake Thomas has a career ending injury his father has confirmed… Depending on what happens with Adam Griffin which also seems to be confirmed now his career is over.

That puts the number currently at 19… If Najee Murray also is off the team due to rules violations the number is at 20. The class size very likely could reach 25 very easily now.

***UPDATED*** 8-22-13

Najee Murray has officially left the team. As of today the official number is 20. A class of 25 is very likely.

****UPDATED**** 11-21-13

Bradley Roby has officially declared himself for the NFL draft…

****UPDATED**** 1-4-14

Ryan Shazier will officially enter the NFL Draft…

That puts the number at 22 officially and inches us closer to 25 recruit class size…

The Best of the B1G, #25 Andrew Norwell

b1g_icon(We’re counting down the best twenty five players going in to the 2013 season from the B1G. We start things off with Ohio State’s Andrew Norwell and we’ll post a new player everyday for the next five weeks. On Saturday’s we’ll discuss how we did with our rankings for the week.)

Left guard Andrew Norwell comes in as our 25th player overall. I know what your thinking, typical the guard position isn’t the sexiest of picks, but you’d be dead wrong:

Andrew Norwell

Andrew Norwell

The Big Show

The Big Show

Have you ever seen Norwell and The Big Show in the same place, at the same time?

Didn’t think so.

Norwell is as steady as she goes and pretty much the definition of consistency on an offensive line loaded with talent and experience. Norwell anchored a Buckeye running game that finished an impressive 10th in the nation last year. Norwell has 25 starts in his career, 20 of which came at left guard. He’s played more snaps last year than any other Buckeye, playing 862 snaps. Norwell played 98.8% of the offensive snaps last year as well and that lead the team.

The Big Show is the type of player that is extremely important to the team and his worth can rarely be measured. He is the type of player that will rarely be mentioned and that is typically a good thing when it comes to guards. You won’t hear his name called on many holding penalties (cough, cough Marcus Hall) and you won’t here his name called on many false start penalties (cough, cough J.B. Shugarts):

jb-shugarts

The 6’6, 310lb guard has not cut his hair since 2010 as he believes his hair is the source of his power. Big Ten defensive tackles have been working tirelessly to find a way to remove Norwells power and find a way into the Buckeye backfield:

Could they have found it?
tumblr_mh9bwcVilI1rmqhhno1_250

Award Watchlist Watch: Butkus, Thorpe, and Lombardi

OSU FootballMore Award Watchlists released, more Buckeyes named:

Butkus Award (Best Linebacker)
Ryan Shazier, LB

Jim Thorpe Award (Best Defensive Back)
C.J. Barnett, S
Christian Bryant, S
Bradley Roby, CB

Lombardi Award (Top Offensive Lineman, Defensive Lineman, or Linebacker)
Andrew Norwell, G
Ryan Shazier, LB

Previous Watchlists:
Award Watchlist Watch: Outland, Nagurski, Maxwell, Bednarik, Rimington, and Mackey

Block His Punt, But You Can’t Block JD Bergman

JD Bergman is a complex and talented man embarked on the mission of his life, which is to say his entire life. He is just the kind of person you think of when you hear the Abraham Lincoln quote which is something like: “A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.”

Buckeye Beginnings

While JD (twitter handle @jdbergmanusa) came to Ohio State in Fall, 2003 on a full scholarship to wrestle–a sport which he loved and at which he excelled (having won two state and three high school national titles), he really had visions of parlaying his preferred walk-on status on Jim Tressel’s football team into a becoming a starting linebacker or fullback. There was no secret about this intention: OSU wrestling coach and 1976 Olympic Silver Medalist Russ Hellickson (himself a three sport star at Wisconsin) knew of the plan and embraced it—if JD’s plan worked Russ would at least get his scholarship back and be no worse for the wear—if the plan did not work, Russ would have a wrestler on his squad who could perennially challenge for a national title.

At Oak Harbor High (a few miles southeast of Toledo), JD was the guy on the football team: running back, linebacker and punter. In fact, he was first team Ohio Div. III-IV as a running back–future OSU and NFL running back Antonio Pittman, ironically was named to the Div. III-IV second team. In the spring of his senior year, he was invited along with a few dozen players from southern Michigan and northwest Ohio to an all-star high school football banquet attended by at least 1,000 persons. Speaking extemporaneously, guest speaker Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel (twitter handle @JimTressel5), just a few months after leading his Buckeyes to a national title, specifically cited JD for his hard work on the football field and on the wrestling mat. The bond established, one thing led to another and before he knew it, JD had two opportunities at Ohio State, even if the football opportunity did not come with a scholarship attached–yet. What the relationship with Jim Tressel did for certain was that whatever doubt there might have been about his collegiate choice, JD was now going to be a Buckeye.

Life as a Gridiron Walk-on

JD did in fact start his freshman year at Ohio State as a wrestler. In fact, he had a stunning freshman year–after losing in overtime in the first round of the NCAA tourney, he won his next seven consolation bracket matches to place third in the nation–as a true freshman! Still, he stuck with his plan to pursue Ohio State football glory in the spring football season following his freshman year of wrestling. Unfortunately, after the season he participated in the freestyle wrestling US Open and injured a hand. Not being able to participate in football contact drills he hung out with the kickers, hoping to make an impression as a punter. He was befriended by then Buckeye kicker Mike Nugent and seemed to be off to a flying start.

Three events standout from JD’s brief Buckeye football career. First, at a scrimmage in Ohio Stadium, supervised by coach Tressel, JD lined up to take a long snap to punt at about his endzone in a full contact practice. The snap sailed over his head. Although he was able to get ahold of the ball before it went out of the endzone, he could not evade the 300 pound defensive linemen in ravenous pursuit and was tackled for a safety. As a walk-on JD was not coddled from facetiously loud veteran player abuse. The second event went much better—at a spring practice in front of invited Ohio high school coaches, JD bombed kicks so deep that coach Tressel told him he would be punting at the upcoming spring game.

Dream becoming reality—anyone who knows anything about Ohio State football knows how huge the spring game is. With the name “Bergman” on his back, JD ran out the tunnel for the 2004 edition with the likes of AJ Hawk, Anthony Gonzalez and Pittman. In front of a reported 45,000 screaming fans. When it came time to get on the field, JD was relieved to be kicking from mid-field, not the back of his endzone. Preparing for a high snap, JD was ready. “Hut!” The ball came low, headed for a point on the grass well in front of JD. Prepared as he was for a high snap but being shocked to see a low snap instead, JD stepped forward attempting to scoop at the same time but muffed the snap. In front of 45,000 for his only appearance in a Buckeye football game, his punt was blocked.

Sadly, or mercifully perhaps, the closest one can get to finding a record of JD’s appearance is the following from the Ohio State website “Leading the Scarlet defense was Matthews with five tackles and two sacks, while sophomore defensive back Ashton Youboty (Klein, Texas/Klein) recorded four tackles, a tackle for loss, a forced fumble, one pass breakup, a fumble recovery and a blocked punt.”

Although Coach Tressel made it clear JD could try again when healthy, knee surgeries among other injuries never permitted that to happen again. But when one door closes…

Chasing the World

Now, after a successful Ohio State wrestling career, like long-time teammate Reece Humphrey (twitter handle @reecehump60kg), JD has won two national freestyle titles sandwiched around a year of heartbreak in the 2012 Olympic qualifiers, and is poised to compete for a world title in Budapest, Hungary in September.jdbergman1

Buckeyes Humphrey and Bergman comprise two sevenths of the US World team—two others, Keith Gavin and Tervel Dlagnev train with them on the Ohio State campus at the Ohio Regional Training Center (ORTC). There are striking similarities between their Ohio State and national freestyle records (both lost NCAA titles in one point losses in the championship match). (The 2007 NCAA championships were especially eventful for JD. Wrestling in the 197 pound class, JD lost in the first round as a sixth seed. Then, starting from the very beginning of the consolation bracket, JD started an yet another epic run which like is freshman run is still talked about. Along this long and torturous route he had to beat a succession of wrestlers as they themselves dropped down from losses deeper into the championship bracket. In the consolation semifinals he beat current UFC terror “Phil Mr. Wonderful” Davis from Penn State before settling for fourth place by losing in the consolation finals to the 11th seeded Hofstra wrestler, Chris Weidman (twitter handle @ChrisWeidmanUFC), now a reigning UFC champ after his recent dramatic knockout of Anderson Silva).

Old nemesis and friend, UFC Champion Chris Weidman

Old nemesis and friend, UFC Champion Chris Weidman

Before going any further, let’s acknowledge just a few of the great coaches JD has encountered along the way, starting with youth coach and sixth grade teacher Mike Eshrich (“Mr. E”) and his dad, Jim Bergman (Ohio high school state champion from Toledo’s Cardinal Stritch–curiously, as noted in Archie Griffin Where Art Thou, Archie was a favorite by many to contend for the 1972 167 pound title–to win it, he would have had to beat actual champion Jim Bergman). He was also coached by his uncle Joe Bergman in junior high and George Bergman (longtime Oak Harbor High wrestling and football coach) in high school. He was then blessed to do his collegiate wrestling under the great Russ Hellickson mentioned above and the youthful Tom Ryan (twitter handle @buckeye158, an NCAA runner-up at Iowa where he was a teammate of the irrepressible current Iowa coach Tom Brands). He has also greatly benefited from the tutelage of Ohio State associate coach and ORTC Head Coach Lou Rosselli (@LouRosselli), who judging by the success of the ORTC, has something magical going. JD especially acknowledges the strength training he receives from JL Holdsworth and the “crossfit and crossfit mobility” training he receives from Joe Snider. (Humphrey was recruited by Hellickson and also coached by Ryan and Rosselli, and no doubt also gets an earful from old teammate, two time National Champion and current Ohio State Assistant, J. Jaggers @jjaggers2x.)

Pursuit of Personal Excellence the JD Way

JD Bergman bursts with energy in conversation, going into extraordinary depth in rapid succession on a host of different topics, but it is clear his life has evolved to one comprised of a unified collection of devotional, relationship, dietary, athletic, training, intellectual, recreational and health pursuits. He describes with charismatic evangelism the interconnectivity of the various facets that comprise his assault on life. So when you ask JD about his diet, he refuses to describe it as such—instead he refocuses the discussion on a lifestyle in which diet is but one essential part. His evangelism certainly includes that with a capital E—his Christian faith is the umbrella within which his life fits—but in toto he is an evangelist with a lower case e—all the many complex and moving parts that make up his life are to be experienced and shared with those who will receive his message, hopefully as a whole, but he is more than happy to break it down and share by component parts.

JD’s approach has evolved over time, though recently the approach has incorporated a few drastic revisions. There are several differences between the JD Bergman of last year, who lost his Olympic bid, and the JD Bergman of this year, who has emerged as a more dominant national champion than before.

JD has had his share of devastating injuries—a broken back, four knee surgeries, multiple shoulder and disc surgeries. Within the last eighteen months, he has been told that surgery is required, not merely to wrestle, but to ensure he can continue to simply walk. Indeed his wrestling, let alone wrestling at such a high level, at one point represented a clear and present danger to his health. Facing such a prognosis just when he was in a position to strive for athletic achievement on a world stage, JD has addressed it with strict faith/mind/body/care assault in an effort to change his reality.

Training

From a training regimen standpoint, JD took three months where he only stepped onto a wrestling mat a few times a week. When not wrestling during that period, he substituted cross training methods, especially borrowing from the increasingly popular crossfit and crossfit mobility regimens (crossfit mobility uses things like foam rolls and pvc pipe to do a sort of deep tissue massage). For his specific challenges, this type of cross training reduces the strain on troubled parts of his body while letting him better dictate how his training can help reduce the risk to and support the injured areas.

Diet

JD says that although blessed with youth and extraordinary athleticism, his inattention to nutrition was significantly hurting his ability to compete. He now believes, and there are persuasive voices from the scientific community in agreement, that the body was designed to run at a high level primarily using fat as a fuel source, not carbohydrates. Fat is a by-product of eating anything, whether it has nutritional value or not, that is stored until burned. Carbohydrates and their resulting sugar provide little nutritional value but are either turned to fat or burned more quickly in the expenditure of energy. Proponents believe that because of the typical American diet, most people burn sugar first and fat secondarily, thus first relying on a fuel source that introduces little nutritional value. So as a body loads up on bread, rice and pasta that convert to large amounts of sugar, the fuel source is sugar. Proponents believe a diet of mostly fruits, vegetables, fish, grassfed beef, eggs (including the yolk) and nuts, without reliance on dairy, breads and rice converts the body, especially the body of an athlete, into a machine that uses fat as its primary fuel source, which is a more powerful and efficient source of fuel. JD also insists that quality matters in the consumption of food and so he submits that food should be organic where possible and genetically modified food should be avoided.

One might think a wrestler, under constant weight loss pressure, would be burning large amounts of fat and if not losing enough to be attempting weight loss results from forskolin or other alternatives, and that’s certainly true on a relative basis. However, wrestlers pay the biggest price for weight reducing inefficiency—those who are the most inefficient wrestle at competitive disadvantage compared to the more efficient weight losing wrestler. So the margin for error is small—unnecessary pounds cannot be left on the table, so to speak. A fat burning program intuitively would seem ideal for the wrestler to the extent it is true such a program burns all available fat before sugar is added to simply fuel a training regimen.

And to JD’s mind the food dilemma involves much more. The typical American diet leads to cell inflammation which inhibits cellular waste discharge and restricts cellular nutrient intake–a double whammy. Thus the body feels unnecessary inflammatory pain (not just in muscles and joints where the pain is noticeable, but throughout the body) while starving a little at the cellular level. Again, proponents believe that the bread, rice, pasta and dairy diet leads to and exacerbates numerous health problems including diabetes, arthritis and allergies.

Strategic Use of Medical Care to Improve Quality of Life and Avoid Injury

As part of his holistic assault, JD also relies heavily and primarily on chiropractors, who he believes as a profession, are focused on and rooted more in prevention of disease. He does not quibble with the extraordinary value of modern medicine in cases of emergencies or severe damage, but so much of modern medicine is focused on addressing problems once they have occurred (after all, hospitals that need to fill beds, doctors who get paid by insurers only when patients have a clear medical need and pharmaceutical companies looking to sell drugs for actual conditions cannot really make money unless someone gets sick–prevention is bad for the provider part of the system generally). Again, these thoughts have support in the health care field at large, though reliable data is still sparse. JD’s experience is that chiropractic practitioners, who are generally cheaper and more available than doctors, have a fundamental focus on and have carved out a niche in disease prevention, and in a sense, guide their patients in more systemic ways to avoid illness and injury. He then believes the specific training they apply using mechanical methods takes stress off the nervous system and other areas of the body, including joints that are so susceptible to injury.

In practical terms, JD has combined all these elements in such dramatic fashion that surgery is no longer recommended by his physicians. Not only have his measurable conditions improved, but he is now out of substantial zones of risk. He also indicates his energy level is much better, he is far less fatigued, his workouts can now be more strenuous because his recovery time is so much shorter (in effect, naturally duplicating the effects of steroids without the harmful side effects) and he is therefore stronger and in better cardiovascular shape. His allergies have also disappeared. To a large extent we have to take JD’s word for it. However, in real terms, on the mat, anyone who saw him compete in the World Team Trials in June in Stillwater knows how dominant he has become. If you still don’t believe just watch this—->

ORTC coach Rosselli is emphatic about both JD’s dominant turnaround and the effect of JD’s programs. “There is not one formula in my experience that works, but the important thing is to have a program that works for you and that you can believe in. When JD is healthy he can beat anybody. A lot of guys don’t know what they have until it is too late. JD has grown. His nutritional plan has been exceptional and the consistency with his training has been at an elite level. He understands his body and has learned to listen to it. Sometimes we push him like we push all others but I know with JD that he is going to need to figure out what is best as he goes along–and seeing the growth he has gone through gives me confidence that I can trust him to do what is right. And he has, so sometimes when he needs a pause to do things differently, we respect that and plan accordingly. But as you saw in Stillwater, this is a guy who at age 28, in a brutally demanding sport, is on the rise and he will continue to get better if he sticks with what he has learned.”

The results are apparent to us. The reasons are clear to JD.

A Man on a Mission

Spirituality plays a large role: one can readily understand the clarity JD insists he achieves through devotion: whether before a match for concentration on the specifics of the task at hand or as a resort to a source of strength; or in training as a means of breaking down his sport in ways he can understand to better attack his own areas of weakness. One can also understand how thoughtful attention to a code of conduct can simplify choices and remove the tugs of self doubt or uncertainty as one decides how to deal with those choices. But to JD it is more. God has given him a body that is intended to be fed and cared for in a certain way—it is his job, in commanding the machine God has blessed him with, to operate it effectively and efficiently.JDbergman3
Thus, in this context, what seem to be setbacks, especially when viewed from the narrow perspective of pursuing an Olympic title, actually become opportunities when viewed in light of the broader goal. So it is that, rather than complain about time lost to injury, JD approaches the time off as a blessing because it affords the opportunity to be involved with youth projects and share on several levels, including spiritually.

Likewise, while losses on the mat are not a frequent occurrence, to JD they have to be put in perspective. Woody Hayes once said, “show me a gracious loser and I’ll show you a bus boy.” JD has his own perspective: “People often don’t understand losses. Don’t get me wrong, I really hate to lose and think only about how I win every match, and I drive through each match so that if I am in danger of losing by one point, I win by one–it takes a mindset. But it is important how you handle a loss when it happens and put it in perspective regarding how you are growing. Win or lose you can learn and keep getting better. But if you lose and think that just because you lost you’ve regressed, guess what? You just really did regress. Fear of losing becomes a big liability for a lot of people and it retards their growth and artificially lowers their ceiling.”

For much of what you might expect an athlete to do in retirement, you see JD doing now. Public speaking, whether through wrestling camps or as an invited speaker in a variety of settings—church, sport, alumni, promotional, civic—is a cherished opportunity to share his approach to life. If JD were to settle on a specific non-wrestling goal right now he does not jest when he insists it would be to host a food or nutrition show that meets his evangelical approach to eating and living. It is no surprise that JD has found himself in front of a camera—when the eagerly awaited Channing Tatum, Mark Ruffalo and Steve Carell wrestling movie “Foxcatcher” comes out about the time this fall that JD is involved in his world title quest—he can be seen in the movie. He and Humphrey can also be seen with Buckeye Tommy Rowlands (twitter handle @Tommy Rowlands) in the Ithaka Project, a moving documentary on wrestling (see twitter @IthakaFilm2012). But first things first. JD was selected to film a potentially lucrative Nike commercial—an opportunity he had to turn down because the filming coincided with his date in Stillwater, Oklahoma last month for the World Team Trials.jdbergman2

JD also is a huge ambassador, inside and outside of his sport. For years he has served on USA Wrestling Committees, serving as a voice for the safety and concern of the athletes. An enthusiastic and engaged communicator, he takes on several causes simultaneously—again, as part of his interconnected approach to life. Emblematic is a t-shirt JD produced calling attention to wrestling’s fight to stay in the Olympics, his own pursuit of Olympic gold and his deep faith, emblazoned with “respect all, fear ONE.”

Wrestling is, as almost everyone knows, the oldest original Olympic sport, and is in an uphill fight (a fight that seems increasingly winnable) to stave off Olympic ostracization. While wrestling is in fact one of the most popular sports in the world—170 countries wrestle at the Olympic level—it is a sport that perhaps because of its ancient roots and because of where it is most popular (Russia, Iran, Bulgaria, to name a few)—has resisted change. It is ironic that the potential Olympic abolition of the most ancient Olympic sport is in many respects attributable to holding itself hostage to ancient precepts. The move to more actively involve athletes in wrestling’s administration, the scoring rule changes to make the sport more understandable and exciting for the fans, and the expansion to include female wrestling are breathtakingly beautiful changes that were long overdue.

JD thus believes that while dropping wrestling from the Olympics would be “ridiculously stupid, the changes that are resulting by the threat are some of the best things that could have happened.” In September, the International Olympic Committee will finally decide wrestling’s fate. In September, JD will chase the dream of becoming world champion. Almost simultaneously, JD and his sport will look to overcome adversity and become all the richer because of it.

Two Tight Ends Are Better Than One

OSU Football(Please welcome Ronnie Glickman (@ronnieglickman). We’re hoping that Ronnie becomes our “X’s and O’s guy here at Men of the Scarlet and Gray -Ed.)

There has been attention and excitement given to the Ohio State offense, under Urban Meyer and Tom Herman, prior to its second year. Braxton Miller is an early Heisman favorite at quarterback. Coach Meyer has dubbed Corey “Philly” Brown as a potential All Big Ten talent at wide receiver and Carlos Hyde has committed to rush for 1,000+ yards. Add in the return of Jordan Hall and the emergence of Chris Fields at the “hybrid” position. Place that alongside a recruiting class that includes the likes of speedsters and game breakers Jalin Marshall, Dontre Wilson, and James Clark, and the expectations continue to sky rocket for this offense.

However, there is one important position that may be the most productive and reliable out of any of the aforementioned. The tight end/H-Back position has been one that has thrived under the instruction of not only Urban Meyer, but also Tom Herman. As many are aware, Meyer had a great deal of success at Florida with Aaron Hernandez in the TE position. Hernandez racked up 68 catches in his 2009 season at Florida which is more than current Buckeye receiver Corey Brown’s total from last year. As some may not be so aware, Herman had more success with current NFL tight end James Casey while they were at Rice from 2007-2008. Casey put up gaudy numbers in the 2008 season, racking up 111 catches for 1,329 yards and 13 TD’s in his 2008 season under Herman. In 2007, Casey still had an impressive 46 receptions for 585 yards and 4 TD’s.

While it would be unfair for Buckeye fans to expect that kind of production from Jeff Heuerman, whose name was added to the Mackey Award watch list for the nation’s best tight end, or from Nick Vannett, it would be fair to expect a boost in stats. Both players are 6’6” and around the 250-255 pound range, and both have enough speed to get behind linebackers and manhandle any defensive back attempting to cover them.

Coach Meyer has been quoted about the tight end position during this past offseason: “The tight end area is the best I’ve had, and I had Aaron Hernandez at Florida. I have two legitimate guys that are very good blockers, good receivers, Nick Vannett and Jeff Heuerman, so we’re going to utilize all of our personnel.”

If there was any additional doubt about Meyer and Herman’s commitment to getting the H-Back/TE role more solidified in the offense, look at their recruiting efforts for 2014: they are pushing hard to land someone to fill that role in the future. They are telling guys like Austin Roberts, Mike Gesicki, and possibly Sam Hubbard that they would want them as a big wide receiver target on the boundaries and would also utilize them as an H-back.

Buckeye fans should look for many more two tight end sets and utilization of the H-back in the upcoming season as Ohio State makes a push for the national title. Two tight end sets have become a very popular trend in the NFL, initially beginning with the Colts in the Peyton Manning era, and continuing with great effectiveness with the New England Patriots and San Francisco 49ers. In this past offseason, Tom Herman confirmed that he did speak with some coaches from the San Francisco 49ers offense in reference to the “Diamond Formation.” Herman also stated that they received a lot of offensive film from the 49ers which would not rule out the possibility of Herman using a two tight end set such as the one seen below:

2TE_BR1

This is a pretty basic set that the 49ers used against the New England Patriots’ nickel package last season. This set includes two tight ends, one running back, and two wide receivers. One tight end (circled in yellow near the top) is lined up on the line of scrimmage as a slot receiver and the other is lined up just off the line of scrimmage, probably used as an H-Back. This type of base formation was used last season with Jake Stoneburner as the slot receiver and Heureman as the H-back. It proved to be versatile as it allowed the Buckeyes and 49ers to either cause mismatches in the passing game with the slot tight end on the nickel linebacker or the H-back on the nickel back. This formation also made downfield blocking much more effective as they now have two big mobile tight ends able to get their initial block and potentially move up to take care of the safeties downfield.

Not imaginative enough for you? Well leave it to the New England Patriots to give you a little more excitement. In the photo below, both tight ends are lined up at the bottom of the picture. This set includes two tight ends, two receivers and one running back, however it is changed a little bit from the last set. The two tight ends (circled) have been shifted to the bottom of the formation, but the Patriots also decided to throw two kinks in to this set. One is that they added a slot receiver with a little more speed to create another mismatch at the top of the formation. So Wes Welker, the slot receiver at the top of the field, could be a Chris Fields, Jordan Hall, Dontre Wilson, or Jalin Marshall.

2TE_BR2

The second kink being thrown in here is that the tight end at the very bottom of the screen is lined up as the Z receiver which leaves him one-on-one with the corner. This means a 6’6 255 lb. Jeff Heureman versus a 6’0 190 lb. defensive back. That match up may also force the deep safety to cheat more to that side of the field leaving speedsters like Brown, Smith, Fields, Wilson, and Marshall one-on-one with their man on the other side of the field.

As excited as Meyer and Herman are to have more speed on the offense, they should be equally, if not more excited, to have big versatile tight ends available at their dispense. The speed the Buckeyes will put on the field this fall will get them through the Big Ten schedule. However, when facing an SEC opponent who may be able to match that speed, a bigger stronger weapon may be the key to exposing a stubborn defense. It would be unfair to expect James Casey numbers from either one of our beloved Buckeye tight ends, although it would be fair to call on them more often to be more reliable and productive to help the Buckeyes to a national title game.

(Images via Bleacher Report)

Marcus Baugh Arrested

To say Marcus Baugh made a mistake is an easy thing to do — he is 19 years old, had a fake ID, went to a bar and had some adult beverages. He was arrested late last night and gets to spend the rest of the weekend behind bars while he waits to see a judge. You see, that’s the best part of his weekend because as soon as he gets out of the pokey on Monday morning he will have to go and see Coach Meyer and Coach Marotti. Look for him to do a whole lot of extra running and maybe miss a game or two as punishment.

The news of his arrest was broke today by Alex Gleitman of 247sports/Bucknuts.

Unfortunately the meat of his story is behind a pay wall. If you want to read the post I suggest following the link in his tweet and signing up if you like.

Kyle Rowland of Eleven Warriors confirmed the arrest via his own twitter account.

MotSaG Reader’s Digest for July 14, 2013

b1g_iconBlog/site newsOSU LogoOSU FootballThe MotSaG Reader’s Digest is just that — a quick glance at the past week of content here at Men of the Scarlet and Gray. This will give you a chance to catch up on anything you may have missed during the course of the week. This isn’t everything we posted this week, so we always encourage everyone to subscribe to our feed, sign up for email alerts or simply check the website on a regular basis.

Site News

We kicked off the week with the announcement that we had added a host of new writers to site, most of which you have read in the past week or so and some you’ll read in the coming week. We have made a serious push to recruit some fine writers and I think we’ve been successful in that endeavor. We are excited to have such a good group.

Wrestling

Speaking of new writers, we also launched a new content category here on the site led by our new writer Garth: Wrestling. He spoke with future B1G member Rutger’s wrestling coach, Scott Goodale. Along with the future of the Rutger’s wrestling program, Garth also touched on the impact that Rutger’s is feeling in anticipation of joining the B1G:

Thus, at least for football, wrestling and many other sports, one suspects, the move to the Big Ten has to be seen as a recruiting bonanza

Garth also spoke with former Buckeye wrestler Reece Humphrey and his quest to compete at the highest level of wrestling in the 2016 Olympics.

Garth wrapped up the week with a personal story about Archie Griffin and his ill-timed sickness before one of the biggest wrestling matches of the future Heisman winner’s life.

Recruiting

Dylan gave us a recap of all the future Buckeye’s that were out in the Pacific Northwest the week before, participating in The Opening . The Buckeyes were well represented, bringing nine recruits to the festivities, the most from any single team.

Dylan says that Terry Mclaurin had the best showing of the nine Buckeyes there:

Terry’s numbers for the four events for Sparq were 4.4 seconds for the 40-yard dash and an amazing 44.8″ vertical jump. He also had a 42′ power toss and a 4.07 second shuttle run. In the final competition he came in second overall by winning 3 of the 4 events. In addition to his incredible athletic ability, on the last day of 7 on 7, he hauled in four TDs.

We also had interviews with David Dowell and Jonathan Hilliman.

On the basketball recruiting side, Chris K. gave us an update on Carlton Bragg, a target Thad Matta would love to land here in Columbus.

Football

Jeremiah (SYR) looked at the recently announced 2016 and 2017 football schedules. He also recapped the sad story of Ray Small and the sorry turns his life has taken ever since he left the Buckeye football team.

Coming up

We’ve got a lot of great content coming next week that we’ve been hard at work on and we are really excited about sharing.

We’ll be starting a new series looking at the Top 25 Football Players in the B1G, starting with #25 tomorrow. Here’s a spoiler: We’ll start with a Buckeye. Will we end with one, too?

We also will be introducing another writer that we’re really excited about, breaking down some of the technical aspects of the Tom Herman/Urban Meyer offense, starting with the tight ends.

That, and a whole lot more awaits as we lead up to the opening of camp in August

Football Moment 2012 Bracket (Championship Round)

OSU FootballWe’ve finally made it here, all the way back when this started in March Madness — the quest to determine the most spectacular moments during the 2012 Football Season (see all the previous entries here).

First, we have to crown the two division winners. For the greatest Defensive/Special Team moment of 2012, the nod goes to the force of nature, star scholar at Linebacker University, Ryan Shazier, with his fourth-and-goal stop of Wisconsin’s Monte Ball in Ohio State’s thrilling victory over those dirty Badgers. Nothing during the Bielema era was sweeter than the past two gut-punching defeats at the hands of the Ohio State defense.

For the greatest Offensive Moment of 2012, we give the game ball (and our hearts) to Kenny G for his manufacturing a comeback-drive (and subsequent win in OT) against Purdue. This, in my mind, was a bit of an upset. Even though I seeded Kenny over Devin Smith’s catch at Miami, I really thought you fans would deem Devin’s one-handed wonder the greatest football moment of 2012. But then, I realized that MotSaG readers are some of the smartest football fans out there, and you realize that Kenny G’s heroics did not happen in a vacuum, but actually came to represent the 2012 season as a whole — a gritty, determined football team that did not quit. And for that, we salute you, Kenny Guiton.

So now that brings us to the Championship Round. There are no losers here, but One Moment must be crowned. So join us now in deciding the Most Amazing Moment of the 2012 Ohio State Football Season:

2012 Football Moment Championship

Shazier’s goal line hit [Wisconsin] vs. Kenny Guiton’s last drive [Purdue]

VS.

So which one was the better moment?

[poll id=”63″]

Three Yards and a Cloud of Links

OSU FootballOSU LogoBest Damn Band in The Land: This isn’t shocking but as every Buckeye fan knows that Script Ohio has been selected as the B1G’s Best Traditions. The folks at Athlon Sports has an article out and talks about how great Script Ohio is. Every time I witness it I still get goosebumps (of course anytime I’m walking into the Shoe it happens too). They also selected the Rivalry as Number Three. Beaver Stadium’s “White Out” was chosen second. The O-H-I-O chant was selected but low on the board.

Return of the Night Lights: According to Buckeye Planet Friday Night Lights will be returning July 26, 2013. This is the second year Coach Meyer has held the camp in Columbus, he originally started it in Gainesville with much success.

Media Days: The B1G has announced who will be attending the Media Days at the Hilton Chicago July 24-25th. The Ohio State University will be represented by Senior Jack Mewhort, Juniors Braxton Miller and Bradley Roby. Of course Coach Meyer will also be there.

Big Man Wanted: Thad Matta is on a mission to find the elusive Big Man. The Buckeyes only have one opening remaining for the 2013-2014 basketball team and they need a center to replace Evan Ravenel who graduated. Lets send out positive vibes for this to happen and lets see Buckeye Basketball back in the Final Four and beyond.

Coach gets Extention: As I reported to you before the B1G will now officially have Lacrosse as a B1G Sport. Nick Myers the coach of the Buckeyes Lacrosse team for the last five seasons just received a five year extention running until 2018. Coach Myers led the Buckeyes to the best season in Ohio State history. Congrats to Coach Myers and continued success.

Thank You for taking the time again for joining us today Buckeye Fans and remember if your on Facebook like us on there, follow us on twitter @MotSaG (or each writer who’s handles are on the right side of the page, plus we are working on getting back on Google+. You can also subscribe to get your daily dose of Men of the Scarlet and Gray emailed to you and please if you have any news, videos, memes, anything Buckeye related send it through the “contact us” tab.

We are planning on running 3 yards and a Cloud of links every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. I will be on the look out for other Buckeye sports news than just Football and Basketball to inform all Scarlet and Gray fans whats going on with their favorite University.

Well Buckeye Nation until next time.

Archie Where Art Thou?

dispatch_wrestling_1972

What, or rather, who is missing from this picture? A very intense Ohio State fan could tell you about one person who is in this picture—one of the Central Ohio District Champions pictured above, Pat Curto, went on to gridiron fame as a defensive end on some of Woody’s best teams of the mid 70s. And local wrestling enthusiasts will recognize young sensation Mike Chinn who would go on to be a collegiate wrestling All-American at Louisiana State where he would place fifth in the 1978 NCAAs.

But still the remarkable thing about this picture is who is missing—Archie Griffin. Not many of his adoring fans know that both Archie and his younger brother Ray were also sensational wrestlers at Eastmoor High in Columbus. One lucky soul recounted how he watched Woody Hayes quietly sneak into the side door of Upper Arlington’s gym during the 1973 District Championships just to peak around the side bleachers for brief glimpses of Ray competing in that year’s championships.

As for Archie, legend has it that at some point in his high school wrestling career, he commanded a 24-1 record in the 167 pound weight class—his only loss being by disqualification from a body slam perpetrated on an overmatched opponent. Indeed, the week before at the sectional qualifying tournament at Brookhaven, Archie worked his way through the championship by pinning advancing wrestlers from Walnut Ridge, Brookhaven and Gahanna in 54 second, 43 seconds and one minute six seconds. In the finals he demolished Dave Wickline of Reynoldsburg. Few apparently doubted Archie would win the district title and then advance to the state tournament where he would have been a heavy favorite to join Curto as one of two “big school” state champions from Central Ohio that year (Central Ohio, led by Bob Triano’s DeSales Stallions, always performed with distinction in the small school division at the time).

Years later, I had a surprise opportunity to be part of a small group luncheon with Archie in San Diego. Although I really don’t remember the purpose, I am sure it related to Archie’s outreach role with Ohio State—presumably for fundraising. I had heard a few things about that weekend in 1972, mainly that Archie had lost 11-1 in overtime Whetstone’s Pat Dickerson—who indeed is seated in the picture above and identified as a district runner-up, also headed to the state meet the next week. This would have been no ordinary loss—having won one match already at the district tournament, the winner would go to the district finals that evening and would fill one of the two spots in the state tournament the following week—the loser’s season would have been finished. I had also heard that Archie had wrestled Dickerson twice before, including during the Columbus City League Championships and that he had absolutely overpowered Dickerson both times, as Archie had done to all his opponents (don’t feel sorry for the young Dickerson—by all accounts, he and Wickline were both highly accomplished and successful wrestlers—the point being, Archie Griffin was a force unto himself).

Now here I am sitting with one of my favorite Buckeyes and one of the most iconic persons in all of sport—the only two-time Heisman winner to date, hero of so many great Buckeye teams and mentor, confidante and friend to all in the Buckeye community. It never occurred to me that a man who had achieved such heights, who had accumulated so many friends and admirers and who had so much to occupy his busy life would care much or even recall much about an athletic moment so obscure and so unrelated to his future achievements.

So I asked, him—how in the world was it that he could lose such an important match to a person he had twice clobbered—and how did he get to overtime just to lose in such dominating fashion?
Wow. Nothing prepared me for the reaction I received. There might have been some resentment to the way in which I asked the question, which was intended as a warm and humorous inquiry into a sidebar in the life of someone who had accomplished so much, but which might have come off as glib and cutting. But the scene could not have been more dramatic in my mind if the windows had been blown open by hurricane winds and Archie had been transformed from this jovial, warm ambassador of all things Ohio State to one of the ring wraiths who had just encountered Frodo Baggins. I’m sure I was too stunned by this sudden change in demeanor to remember what he really said, but to me it sounded like, “you silly poor excuse of a wretched measly little subterranean troll—I HAD THE FLU!!!!”

The flu—what a moron I had been to not even think of such a possibility.

Ok, so the mystery was solved, but the stark change in friendliness (which may have only been a figment of my imagination as I tried to cope with his surprisingly visceral reaction), demeanor, fire with which he recounted the details of the match and the obvious pain he revealed in describing what to many might have seemed just a mild bump on the road to greatness left a deep impression on me, not just with regard to him, but as to sport in general and wrestling in particular.

I did not hold it against Archie that he became dark over that moment. If there was any personal embarrassment, it was mine. Perhaps I asked the question inartfully, perhaps this was not the forum to ask such a question. But to see, years later, how personal this failure to achieve was, even when not his fault and after he had accomplished so much and had attained so much love and recognition, gave me a direct insight as to just how driven this man was and obviously remains as an athlete and a person.

This incident raised my already healthy respect for Archie in a way that took me years to digest. True, it was direct evidence of the drive so often associated with highly successful athletes. It is interesting to see that in person, but it is not really anything novel or rarely witnessed or remarked upon. Archie’s talents on the football field were undoubtedly attributable to a strong work ethic, but much was also attributable to gifts that essentially are God given such as raw speed and the innate ability to see a hole and have the quickness to race through it.

But wrestling is different. God given talent still counts for a lot, but individuals with lesser amounts can still excel through extraordinary fitness, strength training, attention to technique, practice and most importantly an attitude of physically and personally dominating another athlete who is trying to do the same to you.

Archie did not just excel in wrestling—he obliterated his competition in a fashion that actually exceeded his domination on the football field. And wrestling is not detached by the isolation of a helmet, the open field or the shared and thus somewhat de-individualized joint experience with teammates—it is mano y mano, you against me and if you cannot smash me I will do just that to you, up close and personal, looking into your very eyes while twisting and throwing your body around at my will. Wrestling is an intensely intellectual endeavor—one in which every move has a counter, and every counter has a counter. It is also a very tedious study in hundreds of discreet body movements that have to be practiced over and over again so that they can be called on for use without thought in moments of intense physical stress. It is competition at its most basic and most personal level.

Archie’s obvious pain years after his high school disappointment, to me at least, said that having done everything possible to reach a goal in such a personal arena, only to have it yanked away because he might have had the unfortunate luck to suck on the same contaminated orange juice bottle being passed around in practice the week before, was to cheat him out of something that he had earned through unrelenting devotion to extremely hard, intellectual and tedious work, not merely something that he could achieve because of other gifts given him or shared with others. It was like “I busted my ass for years, learned everything there was to learn, lifted other strong men high into the air against their will and threw them onto their backs. I did all that by myself, I had reached the top and for no fault of my own, when the prize for all that effort was there for me, I had at snatched and given to an opponent who had not gone through nearly the hell I had—this is so unfair!”

And from Archie’s perspective there was another reason why wrestling might have meant so much for him. Consider Pat Curto, who as noted was a state champion that year. Pat was a key member of the defensive front on those great Buckeye teams. As a big defensive end he got his fill of combat and clamping down on running backs, quarterbacks and others. To a guy like him, wrestling was probably an awful lot like play on a defensive line. But to a speedster like Archie, his job on the football field was to avoid the punishment guys like Curto dealt out. Archie could certainly deliver a hit himself, but it was generally his job to avoid and actually run away from the imposing monsters on the other side. But in wrestling, Archie was the monster, he was the aggressor, he was the man with the ability to throw another talented athlete to the ground and make him submit. That form of combat had to appeal to Archie as a form of personal vindication and retribution for what he faced on the football field and of course he would have mourned the opportunity for the world at large to take notice of how he handled himself in the field of combat.

Those are the type of things I think Archie was screaming about from the inside. I don’t really think he was angry at me, and as awkwardly as I may or may not have raised the issue, I do not think he resented my bringing it up.

Sadly, that was the last the world would see of Archie on the wrestling mat—Woody would not allow his football players to wrestle—in an era when dual sports were more doable. What a shame that was because when you just consider the benefit to an otherwise serviceable wrestling program guys like Curto, Ray and Archie could have provided, Ohio State was hiding a good part of its wrestling lamp in an era in which it could have enjoyed great success. The rich, though obscure to most, history of Ohio State wrestling that has included the iconic names of Humphrey, Randleman, Rowlands, Bergman, Jaggers and Stieber, incredibly, could have had a very bright light shined on it if had been allowed to include the name of one Archie Griffin. But there were Rose Bowls to play in, national titles to contend for and Heismans to be won and cherished. The small but real opportunity that a wrestling injury could have done is admittedly too heavy a consideration to dismiss, so at a personal level, what happened to Archie in high school took from him the last and best validation of service well performed in an endeavor he so obviously cherished.

I have not talked to Archie since and it is doubtful he knows of my existence and unlikely he remembers that conversation in San Diego. Perhaps he would disagree with my resolution of this episode in his life, but I bet at some basic level he would not. I should probably ask him, but the idealist within me prefers to think of it this way. Luck and happenstance treated me to a front seat at a window on greatness and gave me a deeply personal reason to cherish someone who had been previously just an idol from a distance but more importantly helped me better understand the unique place an ancient and unique sport enjoys, even among the most cherished and accomplished of our heroes.

What I should have asked Archie, and what I would in fact ask given the chance to do it all over, was, “to what extent did the hard work in the wrestling room benefit you on the gridiron”? In a parallel universe I am enjoying the warm glow that would have followed had I just done that.