The Columbus Dispatch

Bosa gets 2 sacks, TD in extended playing time

- By Tim May tmay@dispatch.com @TIM_MAYsports

Nick Bosa bought into the player-rotation system at the heart of Ohio State’s defensive-end play the past two seasons because of all the capable players available, but he didn’t mind the more limited subbing Saturday a 77-31 win over Oregon State.

Named preseason AllAmerica­n by several publicatio­ns and primed to be one of the elite players in the country, the junior had a grand start against the Beavers. He ended with two sacks and his first collegiate touchdown, pouncing on a fumble in the end zone caused by linebacker Pete Werner.

“It’s cool,” Bosa said of scoring. “I like getting sacks better, but touchdowns are cool, too.”

He was excited about being in the mix more, at Teammates congratula­te Ohio State defensive end Nick Bosa after he recovered a fumble in the end zone for his first collegiate touchdown during the second quarter.

least when the game was in the balance.

“It was fun just playing …

not rotating as much, just getting more comfortabl­e out on the field,” Bosa said.

Not that it was red-letter day for the defense, which gave up three long touchdown plays to the heavy underdog Beavers.

“We made a lot of small mistakes in the second half that can easily be fixed; even in the first half we had some mistakes,” Bosa said. “Once we fixed those, we can take what we did good today and build on it.”

One facet that was good on occasion was the BosaChase Young pass rush. Young said a coach told him they were averaging 1.7 seconds from snap to affecting the quarterbac­k, either with a quick throw, a sack (the Buckeyes had five) or a bailout scramble.

“I think that’s pretty good,” Young said. “But we’ve still got a lot more work to do. I jumped offsides twice” within a three-play span in the first quarter on plays when cornerback Jeffrey Okudah also was called for pass interferen­ce.

Three of Oregon State’s touchdowns came on long plays: 49-yard catch by Trevon Bradford on a pass from Conor Blount, and 80and 78-yard runs by Artavis Pierce in the second half.

The video session with the coaches likely won’t be pleasant.

“That’s bad football,” first-year defensive cocoordina­tor Alex Grinch said. “There’s no sugarcoati­ng it. That’s not what good defenses do.

“So after week one you have to evaluate yourself and say ‘How are you going to get it corrected?’ … We’ve got to get back tomorrow and make sure we get some of those corrected. It’s demoralizi­ng to a football team, and we’re very fortunate it didn’t have an impact on the outcome.”

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[JOSHUA A. BICKEL/DISPATCH]

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