The Columbus Dispatch

GOOD ENOUGH

Buckeyes’ victory over Rutgers a little tricky

- Bill Rabinowitz

Justin Fields did not expect to be playing deep into the fourth quarter Saturday night, especially after Ohio State took a 32-point halftime lead against Rutgers.

“To be honest, no, I did not,” the Buckeyes' quarterbac­k said. “And I don't think anybody did, to be honest with you.”

But Fields took all but the final snap after Rutgers scored four second-half touchdowns in Ohio State's 49-27 victory. Credit Rutgers, which is on the way toward respectabi­lity under former Ohio State defensive coordinato­r Greg Schiano. Credit Schiano for a creative game plan that used gimmickry to counteract the Buckeyes' talent advantage.

Make no mistake, the outcome was never in doubt.

“Not to make excuses for our guys, but one of the things that's real is, you go up 35-3 and it's 8:30 or 9 o'clock on a Saturday night. The stadium's empty. There's no juice in the stadium.”

Ryan Day Ohio State coach

Fields and the Buckeyes' passing game – he was 24 of 28 for 314 yards and five touchdowns – continues to be nearly unstoppabl­e. Rutgers didn't get closer than 42-21 early in the fourth quarter.

Still, Ohio State was a 38-point favorite. The expectatio­n was this would be a game in which Fields and the other starters could rest for much of the second half, especially after taking a 35-3 halftime lead.

“I think we (gave) up too many points in the second half,” Fields said, “and coach Day was just talking about that. What we need to focus on is just playing the second half better, finishing teams off.”

That's true, especially with Maryland and Indiana up next. In this wacky year, the Terrapins (2-1 after routing Penn State) and the 10th-ranked Hoosiers (3-0) really look like the toughest tests the No. 3 Buckeyes will face in the regular season.

Day called Saturday's game “a tale of two halves.” In the first, Ohio State outgained Rutgers 353-83. In the second, the Scarlet Knights gained 290 yards to Ohio State's 164. And while the Buckeyes did use more backups in the second half, a lot of starters, such as Fields, stayed in.

Day struck the balance between not losing sight of the first-half dominance while also understand­ing the secondhalf blahs. The Buckeyes didn't have the emotion of finally getting to start the season as they did against Nebraska. They didn't face an expected tough road challenge like they did last week against Penn State.

This was Rutgers in an empty Horseshoe, except for players' families.

“Not to make excuses for our guys,” Day said, “but one of the things that's real is, you go up 35-3 and it's 8:30 or 9 o'clock on a Saturday night. The stadium's empty. There's no juice in the stadium.

“We have to bring our own energy, and that's the challenge for us.”

The Buckeyes' modified practice schedule this week also may have contribute­d to the issues. Because the NCAA mandated that Election Day on Tuesday be a day off for players, the Buckeyes practiced Monday.

“A very, very different week coming in on a Monday,” senior linebacker Tuf Borland said. “But that's not really an excuse. We pride ourselves on being a profession­al, no matter what the circumstan­ces are.”

The Buckeyes do still have work to do. While the passing game is humming, the run game is merely solid. The statistics against Rutgers aren't bad – 203 yards rushing with a 5.5-yard average.

But that's a bit deceiving. It includes the 38-yard fake-punt carry by Steele Chambers. The redshirt freshman has looked promising, but he also fumbled on his fourth and final carry. Twentyfive of Master Teague's 60 yards in 12 carries came on his first run.

As for Trey Sermon, 36 of his 75 yards (in 12 carries) came on his final run. He was hurt on that play, but a source told The Dispatch that Sermon isn't expected to miss time.

There were other issues. The Buckeyes committed nine penalties for 74 yards, including three holding calls on left guard Harry Miller. Some of Rutgers' big plays were aided by bad tackling.

“If you asked me at halftime, I'd feel really good,” Day said. “Then after the game, it's just kind of flat.”

He wanted to watch video to dissect the issues and vowed to focus on practicing better.

“But any win this year, any conference win, is a good one,” Day said. “There's a lot of good things out there so it's not like we're going to sit here and talk about all the bad things.

“That was a good conference win. We're 3-0. We're playing good football. We've got a lot of good players. We came out and played really, really well in the first half. But we're critical (of ourselves), and that's a good thing. We want perfection. We're looking for greatness.” brabinowit­z@dispatch.com @brdispatch

Rutgers 3 0 6 18 — 27

Ohio St. 7 28 7 7 — 49

FIRST QUARTER - OSU: J.williams 38 pass from Fields (Seibert kick), 10:05. RUT: FG Fava 30, 6:11.

SECOND QUARTER - OSU: Fields 7 run (Seibert kick), 14:54. OSU: Olave 6 pass from Fields (Seibert kick), 9:30. OSU: Wilson 8 pass from Fields (Seibert kick), 5:42. OSU: Teague 9 run (Seibert kick), 1:22.

THIRD QUARTER - RUT: O’neal 4 run (run failed), 8:08. OSU: Ruckert 7 pass from Fields (Seibert kick), 4:49.

FOURTH QUARTER - RUT: Haskins 6 pass from Langan (run failed), 14:55. RUT: B.melton 58 punt return (run failed), 12:46. OSU: Olave 33 pass from Fields (Seibert kick), 11:15. RUT: Langan 1 run (run failed), 7:17.

RUT OSU

First downs: 22 25

Rushes-yards: 32-141 37-203

Passing: 229 314

Comp-att-int: 33-48-0 24-28-0

Return Yards: 140 56

Punts-avg.: 5-46.6 4-39.5

Fumbles-lost: 2-2 1-1

Penalties-yds.: 9-83 9-74

Time of Pos.: 28:51 31:09

RUSHING: Rutgers, Pacheco 7-68, Cruickshan­k 2-21, Langan 5-15, Vedral 7-15, Aa.young 3-7, Adams 4-6, Sitkowski 3-5, O’neal 1-4. Ohio St., Sermon 12-68, Teague 12-60, Chambers 4-46, Mccall 1-12, Fields 6-7, Wilson 1-5, M.williams 1-5.

PASSING: Rutgers, Vedral 21-32-0-165, Sitkowski 9-13-0-62, Langan 3-3-0-2. Ohio St., Fields 24-28-0-314.

RECEIVING: Rutgers, Cruickshan­k 7-50, B.melton 6-83, S.jones 4-30, Washington 4-16, Woods 3-25, Pacheco 3-6, Aa.young 3-6, Alaimo 2-7, Haskins 1-6. Ohio St., Wilson 6-104, Olave 5-64, Ruckert 4-29, Teague 3-37, Smith-njigba 2-(-1), J.williams 1-38, Mccall 1-27, Sermon 1-11, Farrell 1-5.

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Tackle Nicholas Petit-frere lifts receiver Chris Olave into the air after his 33-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Tackle Nicholas Petit-frere lifts receiver Chris Olave into the air after his 33-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter.

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