Looking back at past recruiting classes and how the Buckeyes fared since 2002

Right: Wide receiver Santonio Holmes went from being a three-star recruit out of Florida to a Super Bowl MVP. (AP Photo)

First of all, I want to start out by saying that I really don’t get into recruiting that much. I know. I am sure that breaks some sort of commandment since I am a blogger. I do not subscribe to premium Buckeye web sites nor do I gossip around the water cooler wondering if “Player A” is going to commit to Ohio State or if “Player B,” who already verballed, is going to make a huge impact right away.

But I am quite surprised of some of the comments made about Ohio State’s 2010 recruiting class. If you browsed through the Buckeye message boards over the last few days you would of read things like head coach Jim Tressel should change his style of recruiting among many others that were not nearly as “soft.”

Not sure why there’s such “doom & gloom.” There are still two recruits out there that have yet to sign, and even though I don’t expect them to sign with Ohio State, they still have the Buckeyes on their short list. With that being said, I still think that the 2010 class is solid, if not spectacular.
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Thoughts on OSU’s win over Penn State

Right: Ohio State’s Evan Turner drives by Penn State’s David Jackson on his way to the tin.
(AP Photo)

Ohio State’s Mr. Everything, Evan Turner, had a double-double with 27 points and 10 rebounds to go along with six assists as the Buckeyes defeated Penn State, 75-62, before an announced crowd of 14,148 at the Schottenstein Center, Wednesday night.

Ohio State scored eight of the games first 10 points and after a pair of free throws from William Buford with 8:02 left in the first half, the Buckeyes claim a 10-point lead at 21-11 and were in control for the remainder of the opening period cruising to a 36-24 advantage at intermission.

It was more of the same for most of the second half.

Penn State’s David Jackson scored on a layup with nine minutes left in the final stanza to cut Ohio State lead down to 53-47. It was the Nittany Lions smallest deficit since midway through the first half. Click here to read more >>

Top recruit Henderson not going to USC?

According to Pete Thamel of the New York Times, top recruit Seantrel Henderson has not sign a National Letter of Intent with Southern California because of possible NCAA sanctions the program may face and will delay his decision until later this month.

Henderson, a 6-foot-8, 340-pound tackle from Cretin-Derham Hall High School in St. Paul, Minn., announced his decision on the CBS College Sports Network by wearing a white U.S.C. jersey and a cardinal Trojans cap on Wednesday. Though he announced his decision, he has had yet to sign. His top three choices, in order are: USC, Ohio State and Miami.

Thamel recently posted that:

…Henderson’s father, Sean, he will wait until U.S.C. appears before an N.C.A.A. infractions committee from Feb. 19-21 to hear about possible sanctions for the program before deciding whether to sign the letter. Though the Trojans are not likely to hear about any possible sanctions at that time, Sean Henderson said the hearing would give the family a sense of where the process was headed.”

Looks like Ohio State has another shot at Henderson. We shall see.

Game No. 23: Penn State

No. 13 Ohio State (16-6, 6-3) vs. Penn State (8-13, 0-9)



Date: Tonight
Time: 6:30 p.m. ET
Place: Schottenstein Center, capacity 19,049
TV: Big Ten Network with Tom Hamilton, Greg Kelser and Charissa Thompson.
Radio: WBNS-AM 1460 and WBNS-FM 97.1 in Columbus and 58 more stations across Buckeyeland on the Ohio State Buckeyes Radio Network with Paul Keels and Ron Stokes.
Series History: Ohio State owns a 25-13 all-time record vs. Penn State.
Last Game: Ohio State defeated Penn State 73-59 back on Feb. 24, 2009 at the Schottenstein Center. Jeremie Simmons led the Buckeyes with 14 points.

PROBABLE STARTERS
OHIO STATE BUCKEYES
Head Coach: Thad Matta
Record: 16-6, 6-3 Big Ten | AP Poll: 13 | Coaches Poll: 18 | RPI: 30
Pos. No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl. PPG RPG APG FG% 3FG% FT%
F 52 Dallas Lauderdale 6-8 255 Jr. 7.4 5.1 0.3 .762 .444
F 23 David Lighty 6-5 220 Jr. 12.9 4.7 2.9 .510 .362 .596
G 44 William Buford 6-5 190 So. 14.0 5.1 3.2 .430 .385 .763
G 33 Jon Diebler 6-6 205 Jr. 13.3 3.0 1.8 .450 .447 .871
G 21 Evan Turner 6-7 205 Jr. 18.4 9.5 5.7 .556 .280 .714
PENN STATE NITTANY LIONS
Head Coach: Ed DeChellis
Record: 8-13, 0-9 Big Ten | AP Poll: NR | Coaches Poll: NR | RPI: 229
Pos. No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl. PPG RPG APG FG% 3FG% FT%
F 54 Andrew Ott 6-10 240 Jr. 4.0 2.3 0.2 .608 .618
F 15 David Jackson 6-7 210 Jr. 8.6 4.5 1.2 .470 .361 .754
G 11 Bill Edwards 6-6 235 Fr. 5.7 4.5 1.5 .359 .294 .808
G 10 Charles Babb 6-5 215 So. 8.2 3.7 2.0 .353 .336 .786
G 12 Talor Battle 6-0 170 Jr. 18.8 5.3 3.6 .421 .338 .722


Signing Day update



Above: Running back Roderick Smith (25) from Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
submitted his National Letter of Intent this morning. (File Photo)


Out of the 17 high school student-athletes who verbally pledged to attend The Ohio State University and play football for head coach Jim Tressel and the Buckeyes, all of them got their National Letters of Intent in this morning.

Of those who have signed:

Darryl Baldwin, DE, Solon, Ohio, 6-7, 265
Brown had 63 tackles with 25 tackles-for-loss during his senior season.

Drew Basil, K, Chillicothe, Ohio, 6-2, 190
He made 7-of-11 field goals during his senior season with a longest coming from 47 yards. He was also 13-of-13 on his PAT attempts.

Corey Brown, WR, Springfield (Pa.) Cardinal O’Hara, 6-0, 175
Brown rushed for 1,400 yards with 600 receiving yards during his senior season with 26 TDs.

Christian Bryant, DB, Cleveland Glenville, 5-10, 175
Bryant played several positions including defensive back, wide receiver, and quarterback. He had 82 tackles and five interceptions.

David Durham, LB, Charlotte (N.C.) Christian School, 6-3, 226
Durham registered 86 tackles and 9-1/2 sacks during his senior year.

Taylor Graham, QB, Wheaton (Ill.) North, 6-4, 211
Graham suffered a torn PCL in his knee and played in just five games.

Chad Hagan, DB, Canonsburg (Pa.), 6-2, 225
As a senior, Hagan missed two games to start the season before doctors gave him the OK because of his heart condition.

Johnathan Hankins, DT, Detroit Southeastern, 6-3, 315
Hankins had 85 tackles and 12 sacks during his senior year.

James Louis, WR, Delray Beach (Fla.) Atlantic, 5-11, 180
As a senior, Louis caught 39 passes for 661 yards and nine touchdowns.

Scott McVey, LB, Cleveland St. Ignatius, 6-0, 225
McVey had 90 tackles even though he battled a shoulder injury for most of his senior season.

J.T. Moore, DE, Youngstown Boardman, 6-3, 230
Moore recorded 110 tackles, including nine tackles and 16 tackles-for-loss as a senior.

Andrew Norwell, OL, Cincinnati Anderson, 6-6, 290
Norwell suffered a a season-ending injury on the fourth game of his senior season.

Verlon Reed, DB, Columbus Marion-Franklin, 6-2, 185
As a senior, Reed passed for over 1,500 yards and 18 touchdowns and rushed for over 1,250 yards and 19 touchdowns.

Bradley Roby, DB, Suwanee (Ga.) Peachtree Ridge, 6-0, 182
Roby recorded 40 tackles and six interceptions including two returned for touchdowns during his senior year.

Roderick Smith, RB, Fort Wayne (Ind.) Harding, 6-2, 220
Smith had 1,855 yards on 285 carries with 19 touchdowns during his senior campaign.

Jamel Turner, DE-LB, Fork Union (Va.) Military Academy, 6-2, 220
As a senior, he had 66 tackles with two sacks and two interceptions.

Tyrone Williams, WR, East Cleveland (Ohio) Shaw, 6-7, 215
Williams had 29 catches for 600 yards and 11 touchdowns as a senior.

I can watch this over, and over, and over…


Fake news: Michigan to consider taking Pittsburgh’s spot in Big East

Right: Michigan athletic director Bill Martin speaking with reporters during a press conference in Ann Arbor, Monday morning. (File Photo)

With internet rumors swirling around like a F5 hurricane that the University of Pittsburgh will announce that their institution will become the 12th member of the Big Ten Conference, Michigan athletic director Bill Martin seized the opportunity to address the media at a press conference in Ann Arbor, Monday morning.

While Pittsburgh may join the Big Ten, it may not be in terms of expansion, but rather substitution.

Martin, who officially retires in September, has been University of Michigan Department of Intercollegiate Athletics Director since March 6, 2000.

“I am all in for Rich Rodriguez,” Martin said. “He will get the job done. He has assembled an excellent staff. He has got my full support, but I just think he and the university would do better in the Big East instead of the Big Ten.”
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Commentary: More thoughts on Pittsburgh and Big Ten expansion

Right: While Pittsburgh would be a nice addition to the Big Ten, it’s assumed that the conference’s television network and its’ commissioner, Jim Delaney, still has eyes for New York. (File Photo)

So I wake up at 5 a.m. on Sunday morning, which is generally about four hours earlier that I normally ever would and as I sit there rubbing my tired eyes, I first check the dozens of emails that have landed into my inbox before checking out what my 2,600-plus fans on Facebook have to say. Then it’s off to Twitter, where I had found some very interesting things about Pittsburgh joining the Big Ten. That led me to several message boards.

I was basically content on posting a Facebook status message about Pittsburgh joining the Big Ten with the hopes of possibly going back to sleep. But then I thought that it was a far bigger story to leave it at just that, a Facebook status message. After a cup of coffee, I dove in head first with a blog article. Admittedly, though, it wasn’t my best piece of journalism.
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Buford, Buckeyes say “Au revoir, Gopher!”

Right: Ohio State’s Dallas Lauderdale drives by Minnesota’s Ralph Sampson III. (AP Photo)

Roadkill is the remains of an animal or animals that have been killed on the road by cars or other vehicles. The roadkill this time, though, is what was found on the bottoms of the Nike’s worn by the Ohio State players after the Buckeyes ran over Minnesota, 85-63, Sunday afternoon.

William Buford scored a career-high 26 points with five rebounds and five assists as Ohio State never trailed in the game. The Buckeyes led by as many as 16 points in the first half and went into the intermission break up 49-35.

It was more of the same in the second half as OSU held a 28-point advantage on two different occasions midway through the period.

Ohio State shot 73.1 percent (19-of-26) in the first half to take control early and 63.0 percent (34-of-54) for the contest against a Minnesota team which came into the game leading the conference by limiting opponents to just 38.6 percent from the field.
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Game No. 22: Minnesota

Date: Saturday, January 31
Time: 1:00 p.m. ET
Place: Schottenstein Center – Columbus, OH – Capacity: 19,049
TV: CBS Sports with Kevin Harlan, Bill Raftery and Clark Kellogg.
Radio: 97.1 the Fan/WBNS-AM 1460 in Columbus are the flagship stations for the 60 affiliates of The Ohio State Buckeyes Radio Network. “Big Daddy” Paul Keels will call the play-by-play and will be assisted by former Buckeye Ron Stokes.
Series History: The Buckeyes are 74-55 all-time vs. Minnesota.
Last Time: Ohio State lost to Minnesota, 73-62, at Williams Arena back on Jan. 9. Evan Turner led the Buckeyes with 19 points, eight rebounds and seven assists in his second game back after missing more than four weeks while broken bones in his back healed.

Probable Starters
No. 20 Ohio State Buckeyes | Head Coach: Thad Matta | 15-6, 5-3 Big Ten
P No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl. PPG RPG APG FG% 3PT% FT%
C 52 Dallas Lauderdale 6-8 255 Jr. 7.5 5.0 0.3 76.2 44.4
F 23 David Lighty 6-5 225 Jr. 13.0 4.7 2.8 50.8 37.3 60.5
G 44 William Buford 6-5 200 So. 13.4 5.1 3.1 41.4 35.6 75.4
G 33 Jon Diebler 6-6 210 Jr. 13.0 2.9 1.8 44.8 44.0 86.2
G 21 Evan Turner 6-7 210 Jr. 18.4 9.9 5.5 55.0 31.8 72.1
Minnesota Golden Gophers | Head Coach: Tubby Smith | 13-7, 4-4 Big Ten
P No. Name Ht. Wt. Cl. PPG RPG APG FG% 3PT% FT%
F 50 Ralph Sampson III 6-11 241 So. 7.9 6.1 1.8 51.4 0.0 61.0
F 34 Damian Johnson 6-7 210 Sr. 10.2 3.8 2.2 54.0 31.6 67.3
G 24 Blake Hoffarber 6-4 210 Jr. 11.6 3.8 1.9 52.7 49.6 82.6
G 20 Lawrence Westbrook 6-0 193 Jr. 13.7 2.3 2.0 51.0 43.1 76.7
G 5 Devoe Joseph 6-3 179 So. 8.7 2.4 2.6 40.6 34.2 65.7


Pittsburgh to join Big Ten?

Right: If the rumors are true, Ohio State fans traveling to Pittsburgh will be able to enjoy a Primanti Bros. sandwich before or after the Buckeyes lay a beatdown on the Panthers at the Big Ketchup Bottle. (File Photo)

Rumors have been swirling around the internet over the weekend, particularly on message boards like Pantherlair.com and PantherDigest.com, that Pittsburgh will become the 12th member of the Big Ten Conference.

Supposedly, Pitt’s athletic department officials held closed door meetings with all student-athletes this past week to speak with them about the impending move to the Big Ten. That led to Panther athletes posting this information on their Twitter pages and the like, though those messages quickly disappeared.
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