Springfield News-Sun

OSU GOES CASHLESS, MASKS OPTIONAL

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energy to them,” Day said. “Were there mistakes? Absolutely. Were there missed tackles? Yes. Were there some plays they want back? Absolutely.

Minnesota quarterbac­k Tanner Morgan completed 14 of 25 passes for 205 yards and a touchdown, but he did not have a completion over 22 yards.

“There were some good things for some young guys going in there,” Day said. “Certainly, there is some improvemen­t that has to be made and that has to happen. Otherwise we won’t win this game. We have to play really well in all three phases to win this game. This is a good team coming in here. I am looking forward to seeing those guys take the next step.”

3. Injury updates: Day has largely resisted answering questions about injuries since he became head coach, preferring to defer to a pregame availabili­ty report instead.

He stuck with that when asked if Brown, Banks or safety Josh Proctor would be available Saturday.

“We went to the availabili­ty report…. for a variety of reasons,” Day said. “Certainly there are different situations for each person. We just felt like moving forward the best thing would be to not comment on any type of injuries.”

Proctor started the Minnesota game but left with an apparent injury in the fourth quarter.

4. The variety in Minnesota’s attack influenced defensive player rotations: The Golden Gophers offense showed several different looks, bouncing from the three-receiver (“11 personnel”) sets that are most prevalent in college football today to threetight end sets (13 personnel). They also put one or even two extra offensive linemen on the field on a regular basis.

That led to Ohio State using a lot of different players to try to match up.

“When you make that big of a jump from 11 to 12 to 13 personnel, we wanted to match personnel in that game,” Day said. “Based on their style of play, we thought that was very important.”

The coaches are still determinin­g their best 11 on defense, and the rotation could be tightened up as the season goes on.

“It looked like a New York sidewalk at times with guys coming in and going out,” Day said. “I thought they could have given us more time to sub. We seemed rushed at times, but that was unique to that game.

“That being said, we are going to play a lot of depth and roll those guys. We will talk and meet about it and take it into the game based on how they practice.”

5. He sees Oregon adopting some characteri­stics of their coach: Mario Cristobal was an all-conference offensive lineman for the Miami Hurricanes when they were winning national championsh­ips in the early 1990s, and he has tried to instill some of that toughness in the Ducks since taking over in 2018.

“They have embodied that,” Day said. “They have recruited very well. They are very athletic. This is a very very good team coming in here with a lot of good players. It is a major challenge.

“We are going to have to play and keep up with them speed-wise. They will be strong in the middle, so we will need to be strong in the middle. They have power and strength and toughness, but they also have speed and athleticis­m.”

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 ?? ANDY NELSON / AP ?? Oregon running back CJ Verdell (7) celebrates the Ducks’ first touchdown of the season during their 31-24 win against Fresno State on Saturday.
ANDY NELSON / AP Oregon running back CJ Verdell (7) celebrates the Ducks’ first touchdown of the season during their 31-24 win against Fresno State on Saturday.

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