The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Ohio State tries to avoid letdown against Indiana

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS » Ohio State staff and players are still baffled by the stunning loss at Iowa last season. Rolling along after a pressureco­oker win over Penn State the week before, the No. 3 Buckeyes became mistakepro­ne and were outplayed by the unranked Hawkeyes, who were three-touchdown underdogs.

That debacle ended up keeping Ohio State out of the College Football Playoff.

Ohio State (5-0, 2-0) is trying to avoid a similar letdown as it prepares to host Indiana on Saturday. The Buckeyes are ranked No. 3 and coming off a gritty second-half rally against Penn State in the most watched college football game of the year.

The Hoosiers (4-1, 1-1 Big Ten) visit Ohio Stadium as 25-point underdogs.

Coach Urban Meyer said this week the players will be focused on Saturday.

“That’s part of our staff’s responsibi­lity, and more importantl­y, our leadership of our team,” Meyer said. “That one (Penn State) is over. That’s something we’ll address, and that’s something we work on every day.”

Other things to look for in Saturday’s game:

Next man up

Hearts sank on the Ohio State sideline when AllAmerica­n defensive end Nick Bosa went down with an injury in the TCU game. Talent like his is hard to replace, but other Ohio State linemen are rising to the occasion.

In the Sept. 22 Tulane game, it was defensive tackle Dre’Mont Jones. Last week against Penn State, defensive end Chase Young was all over the place.

The 6-foot-5, 265-pound sophomore had six tackles, half of them for losses, including two sacks. He also broke up two passes and had two quarterbac­k hurries.

“I think it changed everybody on the unit’s mindset that we had Nick down,” Young said. “(He’s the) best player in college football, so we all knew we had to step it up.”

Dent in the armor

As well as Ohio State’s

defense has played at times this season, it has remained susceptibl­e to big plays.

The Buckeyes allowed a 93-yard touchdown run at TCU, and scoring runs of 80 yards and 78 yards by Oregon State. At Penn State, the defense gave up a 93yard touchdown pass after earlier allowing quarterbac­k Trace McSorley to escape for a 51-yard scramble.

Ohio State plays an aggressive man-to-man defense, and when a ball carrier gets free of his man, someone else needs to clean up the mess, Meyer said.

“When one breaks, you’ve got to get him down,” he said.

“It’s not going to be perfect all the time. We’re a very aggressive coverage team. And there’s been a couple examples this week of not getting them down, those are all things we’re working on.”

 ??  ?? After Ohio State’s stunning loss at Iowa last season, Buckeyes want to avoid a similar letdown as they prepare to host Indiana on Oct. 6. Coach Meyer says his players will be focused.
After Ohio State’s stunning loss at Iowa last season, Buckeyes want to avoid a similar letdown as they prepare to host Indiana on Oct. 6. Coach Meyer says his players will be focused.
 ?? JAY LAPRETE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State defensive end Chase Young, right, sacks Tulane quarterbac­k Jonathan Banks earlier this season in Columbus.
JAY LAPRETE — ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State defensive end Chase Young, right, sacks Tulane quarterbac­k Jonathan Banks earlier this season in Columbus.

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