Daily Southtown

Time to play ‘The Game’

Rivalry between Michigan, OSU even tenser with playoffs likely at stake

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COLUMBUS, OHIO — This year’s version of The Game could hardly be bigger.

The annual clash between Ohio State and Michigan, held this year on the Saturday after Thanksgivi­ng, is already juiced by a century of tradition, mutual hatred and fanaticism.

A lot more than bragging rights are at stake this year in Ann Arbor, Michigan, for the No. 2 Buckeyes and No. 6 Wolverines.

The winner clinches the Big Ten East and advances to the conference championsh­ip game Dec. 4 — and stays alive for the College Football Playoff.

The loser picks up a second loss and will consider the season ruined.

“We’ve just been preparing for that team all winter, all summer,” Ohio State senior defensive end Tyreke Smith said. “Got that game always on our minds.”

For the 24th time, The Game will be a top-10 matchup.

The Buckeyes (10-1, 8-0 Big Ten, No. 4 CFP) have dominated the series of late, winning the last eight matchups and 15 of the last 16.

Ohio State also has won the last four Big Ten championsh­ip games. The Wolverines (10-1, 7-1, No. 6 CFP) are looking for their first appearance in the Big Ten title game, which was first played 11 years ago. Michigan hasn’t won the conference since 2004.

A glaring subplot in all of this is that Jim Harbaugh has never beaten Ohio State in five tries as the Michigan coach, a continuous source of frustratio­n among Wolverines fans and gleeful schadenfre­ude in Columbus, Ohio.

This may be Harbaugh’s best team and best chance yet. The Michigan defense is among the top 10 in the FBS and might have a chance to slow the Buckeyes and the nation’s most prolific offense (560 yards, 47.2 points per game).

Redshirt freshman quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud was 32 of 35 for 432 yards and a school-record-tying six touchdowns — all in the first half — in Saturday’s 56-7 rout of Michigan State, a week after he threw for five touchdowns in a blowout of Purdue.

The Ohio State defense had one of its best games of the season, neutralizi­ng Michigan State’s Heisman-hopeful running back Kenneth Walker III, who gained just 26 yards.

The Buckeyes’ loss to Oregon in Week 2 is a distant memory.

“The chemistry has been built on the field,” Ohio State defensive tackle Haskell Garrett said. “Each week we’ve gotten better.”

Michigan also enters the game on a high note. Cade McNamara threw for two touchdowns and Hassan Haskins ran for two in the Wolverines’ 59-18 win over Maryland on Saturday.

 ?? JAY LAPRETE/AP ?? Ohio State quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud will be a key factor as to whether the Buckeyes defeat their archrival Michigan Wolverines.
JAY LAPRETE/AP Ohio State quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud will be a key factor as to whether the Buckeyes defeat their archrival Michigan Wolverines.

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