The Columbus Dispatch

Buckeyes’ Johnson to begin spring at guard

- Joey Kaufman

Without the coronaviru­s pandemic prompting the NCAA to allow players an additional year of eligibilit­y, a step that paved the way for left tackle Thayer Munford to return for a fifth season at Ohio State, the makeup of the Buckeyes’ offensive line would have been different in 2021.

In the alternativ­e scenario, sophomore Paris Johnson Jr. likely would have been assigned to protect the blind side of OSU’S next starting quarterbac­k.

Johnson was the top-ranked tackle prospect in his recruiting class, drawing comparison­s to Buckeyes legend Orlando Pace. And it’s likely he’ll ultimately end up as a college tackle. But between Munford’s return and the presence of Nicholas Petit-frere at right tackle, the Buckeyes have no vacancies at starting tackle this fall.

The circumstan­ce leaves Johnson as a candidate to start at either left or right guard, where he will first line up when spring practice opens Friday.

Coach Ryan Day believes Johnson is versatile enough to settle in along the interior of the offensive line.

“He has some position flexibility,” Day said. “Really, our tackles and guards are kind of interchang­eable. They can kind of do both, which really helps.”

Johnson has experience at guard, filling in at both spots during the College Football Playoff semifinal win over Clemson.

The starting guard sports opened after right guard Wyatt Davis left for the NFL, and left guard Harry Miller slid to center to take over for Josh Myers. Day signaled a desire to find a spot for Johnson on the offensive line, no matter the position.

“The idea always in the offensive line is how do you find the right five,” he said. “You want to make sure you have your best five linemen in the game and go from there.”

Without an opening, it would be a tall order for Johnson to swipe a starting spot from Munford or Petit-frere, who were among the best in the country in pass protection last season. Between them, they allowed only a combined seven quarterbac­k pressures and no sacks.

Secondary limitation­s

Cornerback Cameron Brown and safety Kourt Williams will be held out of contact drills during spring practice as they recover from injuries that ended their

2020 seasons.

Day expected they might see some time in individual drills over the 15 workouts that run through the April 17 spring game.

“It’ll kind of depend on how much they’re able to handle,” Day said.

Brown is a candidate for a starting spot in the secondary, which lost outside cornerback Shaun Wade. Before he was hurt in the second game at Penn State, Brown filled in at slot corner.

Retaining Washington

Day said he was displeased when Tennessee’s pursuit of Al Washington for its defensive coordinato­r position became public last month, but was ultimately happy the Buckeyes were able to retain him as their linebacker­s coach.

“I love Al,” he said. “Always have. He and I go back a long ways. He’s like a brother to me. I always want Al to have great opportunit­ies. That’s why he came back here. I want Al to be a coordinato­r and a head coach some day. He’s always going to have great opportunit­ies, and this is one of those opportunit­ies.”

Day did not say if the assistant received a pay raise or change in title. Among the Buckeyes’ on-field assistants, Washington had the third-lowest salary, making $489,250 in base salary, a figure that included a 5% pay cut due to pandemic-related cost-cutting.

The school has not released salary informatio­n for coaches for next season. jkaufman@dispatch.com @joeyrkaufm­an

 ?? KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Freshman Paris Johnson Jr. (77) saw time at guard in Ohio State’s Sugar Bowl win over Clemson, and will see more time there this season with a logjam at offensive tackle.
KYLE ROBERTSON/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Freshman Paris Johnson Jr. (77) saw time at guard in Ohio State’s Sugar Bowl win over Clemson, and will see more time there this season with a logjam at offensive tackle.

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