South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

All Buckeyes in showdown vs. Badgers

- Associated Press

What was billed as a battle of the nation’s top defenses turned into another rout for surging Ohio State.

The No. 3 Buckeyes’ matchup with No. 13 Wisconsin was supposed to be the biggest challenge of the season for Ohio State, a test of mettle against a Badgers defense that statistica­lly was ranked the best in the country.

Instead, Ohio State running back J.K. Dobbins slashed Wisconsin for big gains and two touchdowns, and it was the Buckeyes defense that put on a show. All-America defensive end Chase Young was nearly unblockabl­e with four sacks as Ohio State romped to a 38-7 win in a steady rain Saturday in Columbus, Ohio.

“I think in all honesty we could have put up 50,” said Ohio State quarterbac­k Justin Fields, who threw two touchdown passes to Chris Olave and ran for another score.

“I think if the weather was different, I think we could have (thrown) the ball more and put up way more points than we did.”

Dobbins rushed for 163 yards against a Wisconsin defense that had limited opponents to 58.4 yards per game. He had 112 of those yards and scoring runs of 9 and 14 yards in the second half after the rain let up some and Fields was able to loosen up the Badgers defense with some effective passing.

“If you put all your attention on one guy, they’ve got a lot of other ways to hurt you,” Wisconsin coach Paul Chryst said.

Wisconsin (6-2, 3-2) scored on a 26-yard touchdown pass from Jack Coan to A.J. Taylor early in the second half after the Badgers blocked an Ohio State punt and started with a short field. That made it 10-7, but Ohio State immediatel­y answered with a touchdown drive and was never threatened again.

Dobbins outperform­ed Wisconsin’s Jonathan Taylor, who came to town with plenty of Heisman hype. Taylor could muster only 52 yards rushing against the Buckeyes (8-0, 5-0 Big Ten) after averaging almost 137 per game coming in.

Dobbins’ teammates teased him all week about the attention being heaped on his counterpar­t at Wisconsin

“All the Jonathan Taylor stuff,” Dobbins said. “He’s a great player, but I’m here to win games, win championsh­ips.”

Dobbins on Saturday passed the 1,000-yard mark for the season, becoming the first Ohio State player ever to rush for more than 1,000 yards in his freshman, sophomore and junior season.

Young also looked like a Heisman contender on this day, tying a school record for sacks in a game, including two strip sacks that led to fumbles recovered each time by linebacker Pete Werner.

He extended his streak to 10 straight games with a sack. The junior is now tied for second in career sacks at Ohio State, a school that produced the Bosa brothers who were both top-five NFL draft picks.

“Going into the season, you want to break every record, and I feel like right now I can’t really worry about the sack record,” Young said. “I’ve got to keep on perfecting my craft.”

TCU knocks off Texas: Freshman Max Duggan threw two touchdown passes, including a tiebreakin­g 44-yarder to Jalen Reagor the first play after one of Sam Ehlinger’s career-high four intercepti­ons, and TCU beat No. 15 Texas 37-27 in Fort Worth, Texas.

Duggan finished with a career-best 273 yards passing against the Big 12’s worse pass defense and ran for a clinching score late as the Horned Frogs (4-3, 2-2 Big 12) bounced back from consecutiv­e conference road losses. Duggan led TCU with 72 yards rushing.

Ehlinger’s first three intercepti­ons led to 13 TCU points, and coach Tom Herman gave the Horned Frogs three more when he called timeout just before freshman Griffin Kell missed a 52-yard field goal try on the final play of the first half. Kell drilled the second chance.

The Longhorns (5-3, 3-2) lost a third straight game in Fort Worth for the first time since the 1940s. It was the fifth win in six tries against Texas for the Horned Frogs, which includes their first fourgame winning streak in the series since the 1930s.

Gophers still golden: Rodney Smith ran for 103 yards to become Minnesota’s career leader in all-purpose yards, Seth Green had two touchdown runs and the No. 17 Golden Gophers routed Maryland 52-10 in Minneapoli­s.

Tanner Morgan was 12-of-21 passing for 138 yards and two touchdowns to help the Gophers (8-0, 5-0 Big Ten) reach 8-0 for the first time since 1941. Minnesota has the nation’s fourthlong­est winning streak at 10, trailing Clemson, Ohio State and Appalachia­n State.

The Gophers were national champions when they started 8-0 in 1941. The 5-0 start in conference play is their first since 1961, the last year they earned a trip to the Rose Bowl.

Maryland (3-5, 1-4) lost for the fifth time in six games while again losing a starting quarterbac­k. Tyrrell Pigrome was injured late in the first half. He was helped off the field favoring his left leg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States