The Columbus Dispatch

OSU wary of improved Rutgers as Big Ten play resumes

- Bill Rabinowitz

Ohio State resumes its Big Ten schedule on Saturday at Rutgers, and the path to a fifth straight conference title looks more daunting than it did a month ago.

Back when the Buckeyes opened the 2021 season at Minnesota, they were the prohibitiv­e favorite to be hoisting the trophy in Indianapol­is again.

Sure, Ohio State had to break in a new quarterbac­k, and the back seven of the defense was unproven. But the Buckeyes had enough talent that those issues looked to be more speedbumps than roadblocks.

That might still be the case. Ohio State (3-1) is still arguably the favorite. But few believe it'll be a cakewalk.

Some of that has to do with Ohio State's struggles. The Buckeyes have trailed in all four games and have dominated only sporadical­ly. The loss to Oregon eliminates the margin for error in their pursuit of a return trip to the College Football Playoff.

The Buckeyes still have quarterbac­k issues. C.J. Stroud has been good but has his understand­able growing pains, and he missed last week with a shoulder injury. Kyle Mccord's debut last week wasn't as impressive as the 319 yards passing would seem to indicate. Last week's defensive performanc­e against Akron was a step in the right direction, particular­ly for the defensive line. But dominating the Zips should be a given.

While Ohio State has had its issues, the rest of the Big Ten has proven to be stronger than expected, especially teams in the East Division. Michigan, Penn State, Michigan State and Maryland are 4-0, as is Iowa.

Ohio State began the season ranked No. 4 in the Associated Press poll. No other Big Ten team was ranked higher than 12th. Now Ohio State is 11th, Penn State fourth and Iowa fifth.

The Buckeyes are still likely to be

favored in all of their remaining games, but few should be considered locks, even against Rutgers (3-1). Ohio State has beaten the Scarlet Knights by an average margin of 43 points in their seven meetings since the New Jersey school joined the Big Ten in 2014.

This year, Ohio State is favored by only 15. Former OSU defensive coordinato­r Greg Schiano, the only coach in recent memory to bring Rutgers to prominence, is on his way to doing the same thing in his second tour of duty with the program. Last week, Rutgers rallied from a 20-3 deficit at Michigan before falling 20-13.

“I think he's done a very, very good job in these past two years of getting his team ready, and he does a good job coaching in all three phases,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said of Schiano. “It is a challenge going on the road. You see

what he did last year, playing some really good football, and then last week took (Michigan) all the way to the fourth quarter. They played excellent defense in the fourth quarter.”

Rutgers ranks seventh nationally in scoring defense (13.5 points per game), eighth in pass defense efficiency and fourth in turnover margin.

The Scarlet Knights' offense lags behind their defense, though. Rutgers' passing game has been a liability.

A year ago, Ohio State led Rutgers 35-3 before some successful Scarlet Knights trick plays made the final margin a more respectabl­e 49-27.

“He has the guys believing and playing hard,” Day said. “It's going to be a Big Ten conference road game. We have to do a really good job and handle the environmen­t. It will be a good environmen­t. He'll have them rocking.”

 ?? DISPATCH FILE ?? Quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud is expected to return to action on Saturday after missing last week’s game against Akron because of a shoulder injury.
DISPATCH FILE Quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud is expected to return to action on Saturday after missing last week’s game against Akron because of a shoulder injury.

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