Chicago Sun-Times

BUCKEYES CAN STILL RALLY

Oklahoma an example of how a talented team can overcome obstacles, stay competitiv­e

- Twitter: @PaulMyerbe­rg PAUL MYERBERG

Ohio State needs only to look back to last September to see how the right promotion can maintain a national power’s winning ways under adverse circumstan­ces. As questions circled around Oklahoma’s rookie head coach, the Sooners’ victory against the Buckeyes on the second Saturday of the regular season drasticall­y changed the national perception of the team’s chances of reaching the College Football Playoff.

The comparison between the current dilemma facing Ohio State and the situation at Oklahoma last season isn’t exact: OU’s surprise coaching move came in the quiet days of early June, for one, and the decision was immediatel­y made to name Lincoln Riley as Bob Stoops’ permanent successor, not his interim replacemen­t.

The Buckeyes, on the other hand, have temporaril­y named co-offensive coordinato­r and quarterbac­ks coach Ryan Day as the team’s interim coach as the university continues its independen­t investigat­ion into Urban Meyer’s handling of the allegation­s of domestic abuse involving former assistant coach Zach Smith.

Even as Meyer issues a strongly worded statement claiming he followed all proper “protocols and procedures” in the wake of a 2015 incident involving Smith and his ex-wife, and as Smith says that Ohio State administra­tors — namely, athletics director Gene Smith — were aware of the allegation­s, the potential remains that even if Meyer is not fired, he might face a suspension entering the season.

Amid a spotty track record of interim hires, however, the Sooners’ successful season — culminatin­g in a Big 12 title and Rose Bowl loss to Georgia in the CFP semifinals — provides an example of how a supremely talented team can fend off potential hurdles and roadblocks to reach its full potential after an unsettling coaching change.

But for every Dabo Swinney, who replaced Tommy Bowden midway through the 2010 season and has since staked claim to an elite spot in the coaching profession, there’s a John L. Smith, who won four games with an Arkansas team rattled by the offseason dismissal of Bobby Petrino in 2012. And for every Clay Helton, who turned the interim job at USC into the permanent position, there are countless temporary replacemen­ts who try and fail to milk the most out of a roster wobbled by an unexpected change in leadership.

“In a situation like that, it’s almost like the glue is gone,” said Smith, now the coach at Kentucky State. “To hold everything together was difficult, without a doubt. It’s almost like you’re a fighting dog with no teeth.”

To a degree, there is a model for this scenario at Ohio State. The university fired Jim Tressel in May 2011 after it found he had misled NCAA officials about the nature of violations that occurred during his tenure. In his stead, Ohio State promoted then-assistant coach Luke Fickell, now the coach at Cincinnati. Ranked No. 16 in the preseason coaches poll, the Buckeyes dropped out of a national ranking after a loss to Miami (Fla.) in September and finished with a losing record for the first time since 1988.

Two other examples this decade of interim coaches taking over in the summer saw Everett Withers and Jim Grobe, respective­ly, finish 7-6 with North Carolina and Baylor.

Yet there is little precedent for the situation unfolding in Columbus, which in recent college football history is mirrored by Florida’s decision to fire coach Charley Pell three games into the 1983 season amid rampant NCAA violations. There’s the timing, just as the Buckeyes are kicking off fall camp. There’s the name involved: Meyer is a legendary figure, one of the most successful coaches of his era or any other, and the only coach with the pedigree to be mentioned in the same breath as Alabama’s Nick Saban. And there’s the team: Ohio State, ranked third in the preseason poll, might house the most talented roster in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n.

It’s a roster with two 1,000-yard running backs. One, sophomore J.K. Dobbins, is a Heisman Trophy contender. The offense is projected to find more balance under a new quarterbac­k, Dwayne Haskins, though we’ve heard that before. The Buckeyes’ defensive line is among the nation’s best. Each of the program’s last three recruiting classes have ranked among the top four nationally, according to the composite rankings compiled by 247Sports.com.

One active Big Ten head coach, who spoke to USA Today Sports on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the situation, said the potential impact of Meyer’s dismissal on the Buckeyes’ season is impossible to ignore. Even still, he continued, the staff Meyer has hired is talented enough to keep Ohio State afloat and in the mix for the playoff in a star-studded conference.

 ?? AP ?? The investigat­ion of Ohio State coach Urban Meyer’s handling of a domestic-violence complaint against a former assistant is expected to be completed within 14 days.
AP The investigat­ion of Ohio State coach Urban Meyer’s handling of a domestic-violence complaint against a former assistant is expected to be completed within 14 days.
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