New York Post

BUCK’ STARTS HERE

OSU makes case for playoff spot with blowout of No. 4 Michigan

- by Zach Braziller zbraziller@nypost.com

HE College Football Playoff has much-needed drama. Debate will rage over the next week. Next Saturday’s Big Ten and Big 12 conference title games now have major ramif ications, potentiall­y determinin­g the last spot in the final four. Ohio State’s stunning blowout of Michigan created that intrigue, setting up an Ohio State or Oklahoma argument barring Georgia upsetting Alabama in the SEC Championsh­ip game. But I believe there is an easy answer — if, and only if, the Buckeyes rout Northweste­rn, ranked 19th by the playoff committee, next Saturday in Indianapol­is, and prove that performanc­e was no fluke. They demonstrat­ed, with that 62-39 shellackin­g of the fourth-ranked Wolverines, their “A” game is worthy of a playoff berth, a bludgeonin­g few saw coming. It was a performanc­e the defense-optional Sooners have not shown capable of delivering, needing remarkable offensive outbursts virtually every week to stay in contention. The résumés are similar. Both have wins over two ranked opponents, both have one loss, both have six victories over .500 teams or better, and both have a number of ugly victories. Neither has a significan­t non-conference game to speak of. Oklahoma’s loss, 48-45 to No. 14 Texas, is a better defeat than Ohio State’s, an embarrassi­ng 49-20 setback at six-win Purdue. But Michigan is a far better win than anything Oklahoma can boast, which at the moment is Friday’s 59-56 victory over No. 13 West Virginia. The idea of the playoff is to take the four best teams. That’s Ohio State, which comes from a better conference and seems to be getting better as the year goes on. Remember, the Buckeyes manhandled a good Michigan State team, 27-7, on the road before last weekend’s shaky overtime win at mediocre Maryland.

Oklahoma has given up at least 40 points in each of its past four games, allowing a whopping 524 yards of offense to three-win Kansas. The unit is allowing 32.8 points per game. Alabama could hang 70 on the Sooners.

That’s not to say Ohio State’s defense is some juggernaut. The loss of star lineman Nick Bosa (core muscle surgery) lowered its ceiling, and the Buckeyes were exposed by Maryland and Purdue. But they showed their capabiliti­es against Michigan. The 39 points allowed were not indicative of the performanc­e. A fumble set up one score and the Wolverines scored a pair of touchdowns in garbage time.

This situation is reminiscen­t of 2014-15, when Ohio State came all the way back from No. 16 midway through the season to snag the last playoff spot and win the national championsh­ip. That team had a bad loss early, to unranked Virginia Tech, and swayed the committee with blowouts of Michigan and Wisconsin.

This team can follow that model. Blow out Northweste­rn, show the Michigan rout was a sign of a developing power instead of a blip, and Ohio State should be the choice. The Buckeyes would be mine, if that were to take place.

Harb’ day’s night

Once the game got out of hand and it was clear Michigan was going to lose yet again to Ohio State, I began thinking what the future will hold for Jim Harbaugh.

The favorite son is not getting f ired at Michigan, especially after elevating the program with three double-digit win seasons in four years. But he has also fallen short of expectatio­ns, particular­ly in big games, now without a win against Urban Meyer in four tries. The Wolverines have yet to claim a Big Ten East crown or reach the playoff.

He could always return to the NFL — the Jets will almost certainly be in the market for an offensive-minded coach — but he doesn’t seem to be the kind of offensive innovator that has become so popular in the league. It’s no secret Harbaugh’s intense style is known to wear on people. He rarely stays in one place for long.

In many ways, this game was a referendum on Harbaugh. Michigan had won 10 straight games, featured the top-ranked defense in the country, and Ohio State appeared diminished. Instead, the favored Wolverines allowed a program-worst point total in regulation, bringing into question Harbaugh’s entire tenure. He’s in a strange spot, being good but not good enough.

Wait & USC

The easy move was to move on, look for another head coach, but USC athletic director Lynn Swann didn’t take the easy way out. He decided to keep Clay Helton, a move that took guts. When Helton replaced Steve Sarkisian in October 2015, he became the Trojans’ fifth different coach in less than five years. That’s no way to run a winning program. Helton may not turn out to be the right guy — USC isn’t bowl eligible this year after winning 11 games a season ago — but he needs more time to prove if he is or isn’t.

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