Chicago Sun-Times

UNHAPPY VALLEY

HOST PENN STATE HAS PLAYED OHIO STATE WELL RECENTLY, BUT DON’T EXPECT UPSET TONIGHT

- STEVE GREENBERG sgreenberg@suntimes.com @slgreenber­g

Well, that didn’t take long. Big Ten teams didn’t even get to their second games before several heaping cupfuls of chaos were stirred into the mix.

Penn State was knocked from the top 10, thanks to an impossibly exciting — and controvers­ial — overtime loss at Indiana. Purdue, without its coach or its best player and with a walk-on at quarterbac­k, upset Iowa.

Closer to home, Northweste­rn — more broken offensivel­y last season than the Bears or Cubs— showed in a 43-3 wipeout of Maryland that it has a game-changer in graduate-transfer quarterbac­k Peyton Ramsey. And Illinois, well, that’s a different story. Supposedly on the ascent, the Illini were bombarded 45-7 by Wisconsin. Has disaster arrived all over again for Lovie Smith in Champaign?

Then came the whopper: a COVID-19 breakout at powerhouse Wisconsin. It hit early in the week, affecting coach Paul Chryst and breakout quarterbac­k Graham Mertz among more than a dozen others, and forced the cancellati­on of the Badgers’ scheduled game Saturday at Nebraska. Health concerns aside — sorry if that’s insensitiv­e — Wisconsin’s on-field goals are in peril. Indeed, Nebraska’s season took a real hit, too. Any Big Ten team that misses more than two games is unlikely to have a shot at the league title.

Perhaps only one thing could top all that in Week 2 for the Big Ten — which is Week 9 nationally — and that would be a big, fat ‘‘L’’ for its flagship football team. No. 3 Ohio State (-12) at No. 18 Penn State (6:30 p.m., Ch. 7) has the potential to deliver.

‘‘Our home record is as good as anybody’s in the country,’’ Nittany Lions coach James Franklin said. ‘‘We’re looking forward

to the opportunit­y.”

Since 2015, Penn State is 26-2 at Beaver Stadium, a mark that includes a 24-21 victory against the Buckeyes in 2016 and a heartbreak­ing 27-26 loss to them in 2018. Last season, Franklin’s team scored 17 consecutiv­e points in the third quarter on the road to put Ohio State— which ended up winning — on red alert. The Buckeyes were ranked in the top four in all three of those games.

‘‘We’ve foundaway to beat themwhen very few people have, and we have played them to the wire,’’ Franklin said. ‘‘And sometimes, you know, those games to the wire, they’re probably the most painful on everybody.’’

Speaking of pain, here comes Ohio State’s Justin Fields, the Big Ten’s best quarterbac­k since Drew Brees. Here come all the weapons— Chris Olave, GarrettWil­son, Master Teague, Trey Sermon — in an offense that just won’t stop threatenin­g to break the game open. Worth noting: There’s no massive, ‘‘whiteout’’-style crowd to help stop them. Buckeyes, 41-24.

OTHER WEEK 9 PICKS

Purdue (-7) at Illinois (11 a.m., BTN, 890-AM): The Illini were the better team at the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball in their 24-6 cakewalk victory last season in West Lafayette, Indiana. That’s the key question here: Are they still better? Meanwhile, it helps — a lot — that the Boilermake­rs’ Mr. Everything, Rondale Moore, likely won’t play.

‘‘I know we’re going to play a lot better than last week,’’ Smith said. ‘‘And I can’t wait for that.”

Illini get it done 27-21, putting an early end to the Purdue myth.

Northweste­rn (+2½) at Iowa (2:30 p.m., ESPN): The Ramsey-led offense did whatever itwanted against overmatche­dMaryland.

‘‘Good win, fun win,’’ Ramsey said, ‘‘and really set the tone.’’

The tone? No, that gets set by beating a real team. Keeping Hawkeyes running backs Tyler Goodson and Mekhi Sargent from going off is a must because quarterbac­k Spencer Petras has yet to show he’s ready for all this. Go, Cats, 24-21 — their third consecutiv­e winning trip to Iowa City.

No. 4NotreDame(-20) at GeorgiaTec­h (2:30 p.m., Ch. 7): There’s a word for the Yellow Jackets’ defense, and that word is ‘‘for the love of Bobby Dodd, they’re terrible.’’ The Irish offense worked out some kinks — not many, but some — against Pittsburgh. Time to step on the gas. All Irish, 45-17.

No. 17 Indiana (-11) at Rutgers (2:30 p.m., BTN): The Greg Schiano effect is real, people. Rutgers is a laughingst­ock no more. Well, not a complete laughingst­ock, anyway. One of these teams is about to be 2-0. Wouldn’t it be just like the Hoosiers to blow a shot at some success? Indiana, 27-20.

My favorite favorite: No. 13 Michigan (-24) vs. Michigan State (11 a.m., Fox-32). Normally, in a rivalry game and all, a line this big would be a red flag. There’s nothing normal about first-year Spartans coachMel Tucker’s JV-quality roster.

My favorite underdog: Texas Tech (+16) vs. No. 24 Oklahoma (7 p.m., Fox-32). The Sooners have covered only once in their last six visits to Lubbock.

Last week: 6-5 straight-up, 5-6 against the spread.

Season to date: 6-5 straight-up, 5-6 against the spread.

 ?? AP ?? Quarterbac­k Justin Fields leads No. 3 Ohio State into State College for a game Saturday against No. 18 Penn State.
AP Quarterbac­k Justin Fields leads No. 3 Ohio State into State College for a game Saturday against No. 18 Penn State.
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 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Northweste­rn quarterbac­k Peyton Ramsey had a field day last Saturday against overmatche­d Maryland. A road trip to Iowa will present the Wildcats with a much stiffer test.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Northweste­rn quarterbac­k Peyton Ramsey had a field day last Saturday against overmatche­d Maryland. A road trip to Iowa will present the Wildcats with a much stiffer test.

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