Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Top Big 10 defenses focus on halting run

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In an era of high-scoring, pass-happy offenses, some of the Big Ten’s top teams keep it old school: Their defenses are big, stout and focus first on stopping the run.

The conference has three of the top seven run defenses and four of the top 18 in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n. Dig deeper and six of the league’s 14 teams are in the top 50. It’s by design. “We’re building a wall, we’re not getting knocked off the ball, we’re tackling well, we’re leveraging the ball well, those type of things,” Michigan State Coach Mark Dantonio said. “We’re making it difficult.”

It’s become a way of life for the 20th-ranked Spartans (3-1, 1-0). This year, they’re allowing just 40.3 yards per game and only 1.49 yards per carry — the lowest numbers in the nation by a wide margin. San Diego State is second (64.5 and 2.11).

A year ago, Michigan State finished second nationally against the run and the Spartans need to continue playing well if they want to be in position of winning the Big Ten East and punching another ticket to December’s conference championsh­ip game. They host Northweste­rn (1-3, 1-1) on Saturday before visiting No. 11 Penn State (4-1, 1-1) and then welcoming No. 15 Michigan (4-1, 2-0) to East Lansing in two weeks.

Then comes a trip to Maryland (3-1, 1-0) and a home game against No. 3 Ohio State.

Dantonio knows how challengin­g these next few weeks will be.

“I think when you get to November, you’re chasing championsh­ips and things of that nature,” he said.

“That kind of comes from my background with Coach [Jim] Tressel and really with Earle Bruce, who used to always talk about November’s going to kind of ultimately define you. But you have to get to November first.”

And in a football climate where dual-threat quarterbac­ks are all the rage, stuffing the run and making teams one-dimensiona­l has become essential.

The Buckeyes (5-0, 2-0) faced a daunting test last weekend when Penn State quarterbac­k Trace McSorley ran for a career-high 175 yards and broke the school record with 461 yards of total offense. Ohio State sealed the victory, though, by tackling Miles Sanders for a 2-yard loss on a run on fourth-and-5.

Now the Buckeyes face a similar challenge when Indiana (4-1, 1-1) and quarterbac­k Peyton Ramsey visit on Saturday.

“The guy we just played is one of the best we’ve gone against,” Coach Urban Meyer said. “I see a lot of that in him [Ramsey] — the extension of plays, the ruggedness, the get-the-first-down, move-the-chains type guy.”

The trend goes deeper than just a couple schools.

Iowa (3-1, 0-1) is fourth in the FBS, allowing 84.0 yards per game. The Wolverines are seventh (86.4).

And the margin for error, as some teams learned the hard way, is small.

“It’s one missed tackle,” Minnesota Coach P.J. Fleck said in reassessin­g last week’s loss to Maryland. “Against them, you miss one tackle, you don’t have a second level. They don’t miss a tackle up the defensive line.”

Perhaps no team has benefited more from its improving run defense than Maryland, which heads into this weekend’s matchup at Michigan ranked 18th nationally at 104 yards per game. Under interim coach Mat Canada, the Terrapins could crack the top 25 with a victory in Ann Arbor.

 ?? AP/AL GOLDIS ?? Central Michigan quarterbac­k Tommy Lazzaro (bottom) is tackled by Michigan State’s Justin Layne (2) and Mike Panasiuk (72) during the fourth quarter Saturday in East Lansing, Mich. Michigan State is allowing 40.3 yards per game and 1.49 yards per carry, the lowest numbers in the nation by a wide margin.
AP/AL GOLDIS Central Michigan quarterbac­k Tommy Lazzaro (bottom) is tackled by Michigan State’s Justin Layne (2) and Mike Panasiuk (72) during the fourth quarter Saturday in East Lansing, Mich. Michigan State is allowing 40.3 yards per game and 1.49 yards per carry, the lowest numbers in the nation by a wide margin.

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