The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Emphasis on passing in spring football game

- By Mitch Stacy

Ohio State coach Urban Meyer wants the Buckeyes to throw the ball deep again. They worked on it during spring practice, and showed off some of their results during the spring game April 15.

COLUMBUS » Ohio State coach Urban Meyer made it clear this spring that he wants to throw the ball deep again.

Meyer needs quarterbac­k J.T. Barrett to hook up with receivers for more momentum-changing plays downfield, the kind that bring 100,000 fans to their feet and rattle the rafters in old Ohio Stadium.

That was a problem last year. The Buckeyes struggled against their best opponent with pass protection, receivers getting open and Barrett’s accuracy. It all manifested itself in the mess that was the College Football Playoff game, a 31-0 drubbing by Clemson. Without being able to establish downfield passing, the Buckeyes limped to 3.8 yards per passing attempt and 215 offensive yards. Barrett’s longest completion was for 21 yards.

“I think it was bigger than just a unit coming up short,” receivers coach Zach Smith said earlier this spring. “It was really the offense as a whole had a lot of things we needed get fixed this off season, so we spent a lot of time and effort doing that. That goes from looking introspect­ively at ourselves and our unit, and also the offense as a whole, and what we needed to do better to let everyone function better.”

With new offensive coordinato­r Kevin Wilson and quarterbac­ks coach Ryan Day pulling the strings in spring practice, the Buckeyes have focused on throwing the long ball. In Saturday’s spring game, the Buckeyes chucked it all over Ohio Stadium, though it was mostly backups Joe Burrow and Dwayne Haskins doing the passing.

Barrett is back for a fourth season, but his top three receivers from last year have departed. That means the pressure is on a stable of a half dozen unproven players who have an average of nine catches each in their Ohio State careers.

Parris Campbell, who will slide into the hybrid H-back spot that made Curtis Samuel an NFL-bound star last year, could be Ohio State’s next breakout receiver. Meyer has raved about the progress of the junior from Akron, whose 13 catches for 121 yards last year were well below expectatio­ns. He had five catches for 46 yards in the spring game.

“He’s had an exceptiona­l spring,” Meyer said.

Campbell said he is determined, especially after the embarrassm­ent of the Clemson game.

“I just think something kind of clicked in me,” he said. “This is going to be my fourth year here and third season actually playing. I just think something kind of clicked in me like, ‘It’s time to go.’”

 ?? JAY LAPRETE — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ohio State wide receiver Parris Campbell plays in the Buckeyes’ spring game on April 15.
JAY LAPRETE — ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State wide receiver Parris Campbell plays in the Buckeyes’ spring game on April 15.

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