The rise of Darron Lee
He’s funny, he’s outgoing, he’s a play maker, and he is not afraid to say anything that comes to mind. He is Darron Lee. The starting Linebacker for Ohio State has made plenty of noise on the field, but what may be even more interesting about him is what he did before he even played a down for the Scarlet and Grey. Darron Lee, who grew up 20 miles away from campus in New Albany, has ever only wanted to attend The Ohio State University.
High School:
Being from New Albany, he attended New Albany High School for his 4 years before Ohio State. At New Albany, he was  a 3 star recruit who played Quarterback, Receiver, and Safety, and led his team to the State Championship his senior year, only to be beat by 1 point. He was recruited by some very good collegiate programs like Duke, Cincinnati, Marshall, and Purdue, but was overlooked by a 5 star chaser like Ohio State. He went to camp after camp, being rejected time and time again. The one person who saw the potential in Lee was the line backers coach Luke Fickell. He kept telling Urban Meyer to take a shot on Darron Lee, who he saw future in and when Meyer finally agreed and offered him the scholarship, he accepted on the same day. Lee would then make it his personal mission to prove Fickell right.
Freshman Year:
After being behind Ryan Shazier his true freshman year, he played only 2 games of special teams before an injury forced him to medical red shirt. He made his presence known quickly replacing Shazier at Linebacker the next year by returning a 61 yard fumble recovery in the opener against Navy, in a game where the offense was struggling and the score was close. He then went on to record 81 tackles in the 15 games they played, with 7.5 tackles and 16.5 tackles for loss. The true breakout performance he had were the 3 final games of the year in the postseason, recording 22 tackles and 2 sacks, and was the defensive MVP of the run to the championship for Ohio State. Lee, along with Tyvis Powell, made their names nationally known by their performance on the field, and antics off of it.
Current Season:
Even after his incredible first season and his MVP performance, Lee was left off the 51 player Butkus award preseason watch list. To add a little more fuel to the fire, his fellow linebacker teammates Joshua Perry and Raekwon McMillan were on the list. So far this year he has 12 tackles and 2.5 sacks in 3 games and, in their game 2 days against Northern Illinois, he had the game changing interception for a touchdown that just might have saved Ohio State from the upset of the year. If I have learned anything from Darron Lee, it is that whenever this team needs a play, he is always right there to step up. After all the snubs he gets and how overlooked he constantly is, I am very excited to see what he has in store next. One thing is for sure, he loves the attention.
Building a Dynasty: 2016 Class Prediction
Since taking over for the Buckeyes in 2012, Urban Meyer has amassed a top 10 recruiting class every year – with an average national rank of 4.25 during that four year span.  That might not be all that surprising considering this is Ohio State; a school which resides in a high school football hot bed and is the only in-state college football power. But unfortunately for Urban Meyer, he took over the Buckeyes after the worst season in over 100 years and he was facing a steep uphill climb. He was fighting against his fellow Big Ten coaches and their constant negative recruiting tactics – Ohio State was a broken and corrupt program who had been beaten by the likes of conference foes Michigan, Penn State, Michigan State, Nebraska and Purdue.  Brady Hoke and Michigan were coming off a Sugar Bowl victory and their first win against the Buckeyes since 2003.  Outside of the B1G (the southeast in particular is an area coveted by Urban and for good reason) the discussion wasn’t only about the on-field struggles of the Buckeyes, but how Urban Meyer can’t be trusted.  Look what he did to the Florida program.  He walked out on his players and left the program in disarray.  Would you want your son to play for a coach like that? Â
Urban’s response to all this negativity?  He simply flipped several big name recruits, ensuring that his peers knew that Urban hadn’t lost a step in the living rooms of top prospects.  Noah Spence (heavy PSU lean), Tommy Schutt (ND commit), Brionte Dunn (flirted with TUN), Se’von Pittman (MSU commit), Taylor Decker (ND commit) and Kyle Dodson (Bert was sad) all pledged to the Buckeyes during the first few months of Meyer’s reign.  That momentum has continued on for Meyer and his staff.
The scariest part of all of this for non-Buckeye fans? Â Urban’s 2016 and 2017 classes are currently projected as being the best of the bunch (both classes are currently #1 in the country). Â Let’s take a look at how this 2016 class currently stands, and where it could finish by signing day.
Current Commits: (247 Composite rank)
QB: Tristen Wallace (179)
RB: Kareem Walker (31)
WR/HB: Demario McCall (44), Austin Mack (101), *George Hill (129), Kierre Hawkins (304)
TE: Jake Hausman (100), Luke Farrell (155)
OL: Michael Jordan (124), Tyler Gerald (143), Jack Wohlabaugh (413), Gavin Cupp (555)
DL: Nick Bosa (5), Jonathon Cooper (26), Malik Barrow (299)
LB: Tuf Borland (281)
DB: Wayne Davis (317), Kareem Felder (793)
P: Drue Chrisman (874)
Total: 19 commits
*I don’t expect Hill to be a part of this class. Â I think he eventually ends up at MSU or Pitt.
The biggest need right now is at DB and interior DL, areas where the Buckeyes continue to recruit the hardest. Â Now lets get to some prognostication…
DT Antwuan Jackson (56) – Arguably the top player on the staff’s board currently and he fills a major need. Â Just unofficially visited Columbus for the Hawaii game, meaning an official visit is to be expected later in the season. Â Auburn has been the main competition so far.
(247 Sports)
WR Binjimen Victor (71) – This position group has been about as fluid a situation as they come during this cycle.  Other names like Nate Craig-Myers and Donnie Corley we have heard about for months, but Victor is trending up right now.  Another big body receiver coveted by the NFL and a recent emphasis in recruiting by the OSU staff.
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(247 Sports)
DB Jordan Fuller (123) – Quiet kid but has always been in constant contact with the staff. Â Will need to get him on campus for an official this fall. Â Has unofficially visited Rutgers, Notre Dame, TCU, Stanford, Penn State and Michigan State recently. Â Brother attends UCLA.
(247 Sports)
DB Damar Hamlin (151) – Pulling kids out of the Pittsburgh area is always tough, but the Buckeyes have been on this kid forever and he has been to campus numerous times.  Final four looks like it could be OSU, PSU, Notre Dame and Pitt.
(247 Sports)
DB Tony Butler (530) – This is my dark horse pick. Â Every year there is someone who flies under the radar until the last minute and the Bucks swoop in and steal. Â I think the staff will be impressed with his senior game film at St. Eds and put on the full court press late in the process. Â A one time Pitt commit and Michigan lean who is now considering schools outside the B1G footprint, he is an interesting prospect to monitor this season.
(247 Sports)
An Observation from Section 5C
I was lucky enough to come across some tickets for Saturday’s game agains NIU, so my wife and I headed down to Columbus Saturday morning expecting to see the Buckeyes unleash their frustrations over the Hawaii game on the unfortunate Huskies. Unfortunately, that is not what we witnessed. Instead we saw a team, that on offense, looked like it was the first time they had ever played football together. Quarterbacks completely out of sync with their receivers, lineman not communicating well enough to execute a good blocking scheme, and a team that is suppose to be head and shoulders better than their opponent. It seemed as though they truthfully didn’t even want to be there.
Let’s be clear about this though, the defense was spectacular, as they have been all year. It would not be a stretch to say that the silver bullets from top to bottom are the best defense in the country. Guys like Von Bell and Darren Lee were all over the field all day. I think it’s safe to say that Coach Meyer is not worrying about the defense right now.
I think I have a pretty good idea what he is worried about though, and that is what has happened to the offense that last year made national power defenses look completely inferior? That team has not shown up so far this year. As a fan, the obvious thing to do is look back and say, “Okay what is different from last year to this year?” Â “Who are we missing that would have made this big of a difference?” In my opinion it is both Evan Spencer and Devin Smith. I can remember last year coach Meyer always talking about Spencer being the offensive MVP and I always thought that was just him trying to give praise to a guy that was a program guy, he did the right things all the time. In all actuality, Spencer’s blocking ability and leadership is sorely missed. If you haven’t noticed we have a serious issue running the ball both inside and outside the tackles. Anything outside the tackles has a ton to do with your receivers keeping their blocks and allowing the back to get up field. As of now we have not found that guy that we can say we are going to run to his side every time we need a big play. Â When it comes to Devin Smith I have to say that I really thought we would be able to find a guy that could at least make an impact down field in the passing game to fill in for Devins absence. I felt guys like Johnnie Dixon and Jalin Marshall would be able to take the top off like Devin did, but that has not happened yet. Not even close. As you can imagine, if a defense is not worried about you going up top on them then it makes it extremely hard to run the football due to them stacking the box and anticipating the run.
Another big factor the offensive struggles with has been the poor play of the offensive line. Coming off of last year the o-line was probably our strongest unit and from then to now not much has changed. In fact we only lost one starter and last year was the first year he started ,so it wasn’t like we lost a huge part of our line. The player to fill this void was Chase Ferris and ,so far, he has been playing great. It is actually our center and guard position that has struggled, namely Boren and Price; two guys that were great in the playoff stretch last year, but so far this year it seems they cannot get on the right page which is something the entire offense has had a problem doing.
Let’s also address the elephant in the room, the QB dilemma. I will be the first to admit that I have not been impressed with the way Cardale has been playing, and I have been one of the people calling for JT to be put in when Cardale was struggling. For some reason I just feel more comfortable with JT at QB, and every time he comes into the game I feel like the offense is about to explode, except it doesn’t. For some reason neither of them can get this offense on the right page. At the end of the day I think Urban owes it to the rest of the team to just pick a starter. Going back and forth is obviously not working so it is time to ride or die with one or the other and ,honestly, I don’t know which one it should be….
The last thing that needs addressed is the offensive play calling. There is no question that so far this year the Ohio State offense is missing Tom Herman after he decided to take the head coaching position at Houston. The offense last year ran like a well -oiled machine, and so far this year we look like we are lost half of the time. My problem is I know that Ed Warinner is the new co- offensive coordinator, but let’s be honest, this is Urban offense. It always has been, so the fact that we can’t run it right now with all the talent that we have is definitely concerning.
At the end of the day, I will always have faith in whatever Urban Meyer is doing because I think he has a chance to go down as the best coach in Ohio State history, ( sorry Woody) but so far this year I have been scratching my head a lot more than I have clapped my hands!
Huskie Quick Recap
Want to start off with a tip of the ole cap to Northern Illinois. Chip Minnich and I discussed on our MotSaG Podcast about the Huskies, them defeating other Big Ten teams. Heck in my game preview I showed how they have a better record than the Maize and Blue. Did that mean we thought the Buckeyes would escape with a seven point victory, thinking no.
Positives
The Silver Bullets are the real deal. I mentioned the keys of the game for Ohio State was to limit turnovers against the high powered offense of Northern Illinois. They didn’t, handing the Huskies the ball five times. The Buckeye defense held firm only giving up ten points from the turnovers. Darron Lee had a nice interception for a touchdown – the difference in the game.
Ohio State threw for a touchdown. Kept winning streak alive (16). No injuries.
Not so positive
In my opinion Cardale Jones lost his job as the starting quarterback. J.T. Barrett came in, in a drive threw for a touchdown to Michael Thomas. Unfortunately Barrett wasn’t any more efficient than Jones.
Buckeyes last week stopped their passing for touchdowns, this week they snapped a streak of rushing touchdowns that was just as long. Offense is out of sync or as head coach Urban Meyer called it, discombobulated. We can sadly say the Buckeyes aren’t complacent, they are having offensive issue (big issues).
Looks like we will have to sleep on this game then start breaking it all down for you this next week. Western Michigan is their next opponent. Sorry short on words but the alleged record breaking high powered offense is not there.
Northern Illinois Open Thread
It’s the Open Thread for the Buckeye’s tilt against Northern Illinois University.
Noon Games Open Thread: Week 3
Week 3 | ||
Game | Time | TV |
Savannah State vs. Akron | 12:00 PM | ESPN3 |
South Florida vs. Maryland | 12:00 PM | ESPNU |
UNLV vs. Michigan | 12:00 PM | BTN |
Air Force vs. #4 Michigan State | 12:00 PM | ABC |
Kent State vs. Minnesota | 12:00 PM | BTN |
Buffalo vs. Florida Atlantic | 12:00 PM | N/A |
Nevada vs. #17 Texas A&M | 12:00 PM | SECN |
Illinois vs. North Carolina | 12:00 PM | ESPN2 |
Connecticut vs. #22 Missouri | 12:00 PM | ESPN |
Wake Forest vs. Army | 12:00 PM | CBSN |
Tulsa vs. #16 Oklahoma | 12:00 PM | FOXS1 |
Central Michigan vs. Syracuse | 12:30 PM | ESPN3 |
#23 Northwestern vs. Duke | 12:30 PM | ESPN3 |
The Rivals, Part IV: Finding A Way
Generally, when someone describes a team as “finding a way to win,†they’re talking about close victories, amazing comebacks, or a seemingly superhuman ability to pull off miracle plays. The 2002 Buckeyes had a string of games like that, and even won a national championship in double overtime, thanks in part to a frequently criticized but completely correct pass interference penalty.
It is not something you would say about a team that just won 38-0 or 35-7. Yet, both Ohio State and Michigan found themselves in the position of winning handily but still unclear on the identity of their offenses.
Ohio State had a quick turnaround from the Labor Day night game on the road at Virginia Tech and a Saturday afternoon kickoff against Hawai’i. Although the players and coaches dismiss the idea, it’s pretty absurd to think this tight schedule didn’t have a hand in the slow-starting offensive performance. The Buckeyes were a massive favorite, but held only a 17-0 lead heading into the fourth quarter.
Michigan actually had more time than usual to prepare for their second consecutive Pac-12 opponent thanks to an opening Thursday game at Utah. But still, they too held just an okay 20-7 lead at the end of the third quarter.
While both defenses were stout—both held their opponents to fewer than 200 total yards—the quarterback position remained an area of concern. For Michigan, Jake Rudock threw one interception and no touchdowns, giving him a two-game total of 2 TDs and 4 INTs, despite completing a decent 65.2% of his passes. For Ohio State, neither Cardale Jones nor J.T. Barrett could find the end zone either, and for that matter, Braxton Miller—who works from the QB spot regularly—was also shut out.
Instead, the two teams had to rely on their traditional running backs for points. Ezekiel Elliott delivered three scores for the Buckeyes, and De’Veon Smith did the same for the Wolverines. Going forward, Ohio State simply needs to get its two dynamic QBs back to the level of play they showed last season and against Virginia Tech this year. Getting the running game back in full swing will go a long way to help that cause, so in that sense, the Hawai’i game could be considered a step in the right direction.
In Michigan’s case, things a little trickier. It still isn’t evident what Jake Rudock brings to the table. Harbaugh’s refusal to replace him at any point in the first two games suggests either that he has confidence in Rudock’s ability to become a solid QB, or that he has no other legitimate options available.
Today, Michigan hosts the 0-2 UNLV Rebels, a bottom-10 defensive team thus far, and a good opportunity for Rudock (or someone else) to finally shine. Ohio State welcomes the 2-0 Northern Illinois Huskies, a team that has won at least 11 games in each of the past five seasons but currently ranks 105th in the nation in passing defense, something that the Buckeye QBs need to exploit early and often.
Preview: Northern Illinois University
When
Saturday, September 19, 2015
Where
Ohio Stadium Columbus, OH
TV Viewing
ABC/ESPN2
Mike Patrick, Ed Cunningham
Sidelines Dr. Jerry Punch
Series All-time Record (Last Meeting)
Ohio State 1 Northern Illinois 0 (2006)
Head Coach
Rod Carey 25-6
Northern Illinois Huskies Fun Facts
2014 MAC Champions
Have won 5 of last 8 against the Big Ten, that is better than TTUN has been (maybe invite the Huskies into the B1G)
3 straight road victories against the B1G
Huskie Offense
Lead by QB Drew Hare who has a passer efficiency of 203.30 which is currently fifth nationally. Hare has completed 78.1 percent of his throws for 718 yards while rushing 16 times for an additional 64 yards. The Huskie running back Joel Bouagnon is averaging 5.7 yards a carry and 102 a game. Joel has 208 yards rushing total but has only lost 4 yards so far making his total 204 on the season so far. Hare has a favorite target which is South Dakota transfer Kenny Golladay. Golladay is averaging 178.5 yards a game receiving. He has 17 catches for 357 yards with 2 touchdowns. I know they have only played UNLV and Murray State but its an offense this Buckeye defense can’t afford to fall asleep on, will be a great test for the Silver Bullets.
Huskie Defense
Buckeye head coach Urban Meyer has stated they have a big defensive line that will cause the Buckeye offensive line problems. Northern Illionois has a very good linebacker group and secondary. They play a 4-3 mainly while their secondary mixes up from man to zone. They play aggressive, hard and fast just like the Buckeyes. Huskie defense has 14 tackles for a loss, 7 sacks, 4 interceptions and 3 forced fumbles on the season so far. This will be another great test for Cardale Jones and company. Buckeyes will have to make sure as to not turnover the ball and remain aggressive unlike they were against Hawaii last week.
My Three Keys to the Game for Buckeyes
Huskies have outscored their opponent in every quarter but the first. Buckeyes will need to jump on them fast and keep their foot on the gas.
Limiting turnovers – Kind of self explanatory but limiting how many times their high powered offense has the ball
Aggressive defense – Need to keep the duo of Hare and Golladay out of sync to cut down on the big plays from happening
2015 Season Stats
Huskies | Category | Buckeyes |
---|---|---|
47.5 | Points/G | 40.0 |
12 (6-6) | TDs (Rush-Pass) | 10 (7-3) |
54 | First Downs | 47 |
594.0 | Total Yards/G | 467.5 |
219.5 | Rush Yards/G | 270.5 |
374.5 | Pass Yards/G | 197.0 |
2 | Turnovers Lost | 3 |
25:40 | Time of Possession/G | 31:20 |
42% | 3rd Down Conversions | 42% |
33% | 4th Down Conversions | 50% |
36.7 | Net Punting Avg. | 40.8 |
40.5 | Kickoff Return Avg. | 25.0 |
13.2 | Punt Return Avg | 11.6 |
12-113 | Penalties-Yards/G | 13-173 |
28.0 | Points Allowed/G | 12.0 |
(8-8) 100% | Red Zone Scores | (6-7) 86% |
(8-8) 100% | Red Zone TDs | (5-7) 71% |
5 (1-4) | TDs Allowed (Rush-Pass) | 3 (0-3) |
50 | First Downs Allowed | 30 |
433.0 | Total Yards/G Allowed | 242.5 |
128.0 | Rush Yards/G Allowed | 104.0 |
305.0 | Pass Yards/G Allowed | 138.0 |
42% | 3rd Down Conv. Allowed | 32% |
67% | 4th Down Conv. Allowed | 50% |
4 | Turnovers Gained | 4 |
I will leave you with this: the Ohio State trailer for the Northern Illinois game.