Dayton Daily News

OSU’s season may hinge on new QB

- By Marcus Hartman Staff Writer

Identifyin­g the most interestin­g Ohio State football player this preseason is easy.

No one will draw more attention than Justin Fields, and not just because he is a quarterbac­k.

With the way Urban Meyer recruited over the years, the Buckeyes figure to be good this season.

But how good? That will probably depend on Fields, a sophomore who transferre­d from Georgia in January.

Perhaps no player in the country has more power to affect the trajectory of a College Football Playoff candidacy, and that presents a unique challenge to Ryan Day, the first-year head coach of the Buckeyes.

Day is well aware. “I think that’s really important for the quarterbac­k to understand week in and week out what his role is, week in and week out how the game is going to be different, week in and week out how the media is handling everything,” Day said at Big Ten Media Days in Chicago.

“Our schedule is funny this year. We have six games, a bye week, two games, a bye week, and then we play four games. And so in those first six games, the quarterbac­k is going to be green. He’s not going to have a lot of experience. So the guys around him, our defense, the running game, the receivers on the end, they’ve got to pick up the slack there, and so as we go and grow throughout the season, we kind of get into that middle season hitting our stride on offense.”

Fields was a five-star prospect coming out of high school, fueling high expectatio­ns for him.

On top of that, he will be compared against the ridiculous­ly high standard Dwayne Haskins set in breaking nearly every single-season school passing record in his first year as a starter, and Fields will more or less be operating without a net.

If he does not win the job in preseason, the Ohio State offense figures to fall to fellow transfers Gunnar Hoak or Chris Chugunov, both veteran three-star recruits who are viewed more as caretakers than playmakers at the highest level of college football.

“There’s not in a guy in that room that was on the roster in December, other than Chris Chugunov, so it’s an interestin­g situation,” Day said. “Whoever is playing in that first game, it will be the first time. Justin and Gunnar are going to compete like heck to go win the job. At the end of the day, it’s going to come down to who can play the game.”

If the competitio­n in preseason is close, Fields figures to get the nod as teams generally prefer to endure growing pains with five-star sophomores rather than threestar juniors or seniors.

From a physical standpoint, Day said Fields checks off a lot of boxes.

“Running, athleticis­m, size, power, throwing ability, arm strength, accuracy, intelligen­ce — he has all those things,” Day said. “Now it’s just a matter in August of going on the field and seeing what kind of product we have. But in order to learn, you have to fail. Unfortunat­ely, we don’t have the luxury of failing a lot in practice and spending a few years as an understudy. Some of those failures are going to happen in a game, and there’s going to be a lot of deep breaths. But in the end the good news is we’ve got a chance for a high ceiling.”

Ohio State’s likely No. 1 receiver, senior K.J. Hill, is a believer in Fields.

“Very comfortabl­e — not worried at all,” Hill said of the quarterbac­k situation. “We was in the same position last year so it’s just a process; it’s not going to happen overnight. Going into training camp all he can do is go to work. It’s not going to be perfect. I know Coach Day is gonna want perfection, but all I can do is lead the team in the right direction.”

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? Justin Fields was a five-star prospect coming out of high school, fueling high expectatio­ns for him and the Buckeyes.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF Justin Fields was a five-star prospect coming out of high school, fueling high expectatio­ns for him and the Buckeyes.

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