The Arizona Republic

Barrett leads Buckeyes to victory over Badgers

- Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS – J.T. Barrett looked just fine Saturday. Now it’s up to college football’s selection committee to decide whether No. 8 Ohio State has done enough to earn a playoff bid.

Six days after having surgery on his right knee, Barrett threw two touchdown passes, ran for another and had a crucial fourth-down conversion late in the game to give the Buckeyes a 27-21 victory over previously unbeaten No. 3 Wisconsin in Saturday’s Big Ten championsh­ip game.

Ohio State (11-2) claimed its first conference crown since its 2014 national championsh­ip season. The loss ended the nation’s longest active winning streak at 13 and probably doomed the playoff hopes of the Badgers (12-1).

The reason: Barrett’s incredibly speedy recovery.

“I didn’t have any pain in my knee,” he said before answering whether the Buckeyes deserve a playoff spot. “I feel like we’re one of the best teams in the country.”

While most athletes need at least two or three weeks to recover from minor knee surgery, Barrett told doctors and coaches he would be OK. And after watching Barrett in pregame warmups with a protective brace around the injured knee, Barrett got the starting nod and played like the three-time conference quarterbac­k of the year.

After running nine yards to convert a third down on the Buckeyes’ second possession of the game, he found a wide open Terry McLaurin for an 84yard TD pass to make it 7-0.

Two possession­s later, Barrett’s threw a short pass to Parris Campbell, who turned a missed tackle into a 57yard mistake for another score. Then after a 77-yard run by J.K. Dobbins, Barrett powered in from the 1-yard line to give the Buckeyes a 21-7 lead early in the second quarter.

Sure, Barrett made some mistakes and missed some receivers.

But the only time he really paid for it came on an ill-advised pass from near his goal line in the first quarter. Barrett was picked off by Andrew Van Ginkel, who returned it nine yards for a Wisconsin score.

Otherwise, the Buckeyes were pretty much in control.

“We expected to see the best and he was,” Badgers coach Paul Chryst said of Barrett. “He’s a heck of a quarterbac­k.”

Wisconsin closed the deficit to 21-10 at the half and 21-13 early in the third quarter.

The Badgers offense finally broke through early in the fourth by capping a 52-yard drive with a Chris James’ 1-yard TD run and a 2-point conversion pass from Alex Hornibrook to Troy Fumagalli after a delay to repair the field. That cut the deficit to 24-21 with 12:39 to go.

Barrett’s fourth-and-1 conversion on the next series set up a short field goal, and the Badgers couldn’t rally on their final two possession­s to save the perfect season.

Barrett finished 12 of 26 with 211 yards, two TDs, two intercepti­ons and rushed 19 times for 60 yards.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Ohio State wide receiver K.J. Hill (14) runs the ball against Wisconsin’s Alec Ingold (45) in the second half during the Big Ten Championsh­ip game at Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday.
GETTY IMAGES Ohio State wide receiver K.J. Hill (14) runs the ball against Wisconsin’s Alec Ingold (45) in the second half during the Big Ten Championsh­ip game at Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday.
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