Post-Tribune

It’s the final countdown

Ohio State has been waiting a year for revenge against rival Michigan

- By Mitch Stacy

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State has been counting the days until it could get a shot at revenge.

It’s not like the Buckeyes are able to forget. An electronic display in the football practice facility counts down the days, hours and minutes before kickoff of the next game against Michigan.

But the feelings are rawer this time, the No. 2 Buckeyes edgier in the buildup to Saturday’s game because of how things went down last year in Ann Arbor, Mich.

“Every single day we think about it,” defensive end Zach Harrison said of that humiliatin­g 42-27 loss to Michigan, an opponent that generation­s of Ohio State players and fans have been trained to hate with a passion.

“It’s the one game that we’ve had in the back of our minds all year, and now it’s time,” safety Lathan Ransom said. “I’m pretty sure you can imagine how we’re feeling without me saying too much.”

That loss a year ago snapped Ohio State’s eightgame winning streak in the series as well as its run of 26 straight wins over Big Ten opponents. It denied the Buckeyes a Big Ten championsh­ip for the first time in five seasons and ended their chances to get into the College Football Playoff.

“Of course we’ve been licking our wounds for 365 days, hearing all the laughing and everything that everybody’s been saying,” said C.J. Stroud, Ohio State’s quarterbac­k and a Heisman Trophy contender. “So, man, we’re very excited.”

The chance for payback comes Saturday at Ohio Stadium.

“Anytime you have an angry football team, you’ve got a chance,” said ESPN college football analyst Kirk Herbstreit, a former Ohio State quarterbac­k, who said he saw the Michigan team turn its anger into energy and momentum that was absorbed by the crowd at the Big House last year.

Understand that most Ohio State fans, given the choice, would rather beat Michigan than win a national championsh­ip, an ethos ingrained by coach Woody Hayes during his romanticiz­ed “Ten Year War” with Bo Schembechl­er

and the Wolverines in the late 1960s and ‘70s.

But even players who didn’t grow up with the rivalry — a majority on both rosters are from somewhere other than Ohio or Michigan — can appreciate everything that’s at stake.

Both teams come in unbeaten for the first time since 2006. Ohio State is No. 2 and Michigan is No. 3 in the AP Top 25 and the CFP rankings. The winner will be favored in the Big Ten championsh­ip game, with a wide path to the CFP.

Ohio State coach Ryan Day, whose only conference loss in his first three seasons was dealt by Jim Harbaugh and the Wolverines last year, said the team talks and thinks about The Game constantly. Players have been saying since training camp that avenging last year’s loss is at top of their list of goals.

“We have scars,” Day said. Michigan players say they’re looking forward to taking two straight from the Buckeyes — and winning at the Horseshoe — for the first time in more than two decades.

“Nobody wants to lose this game,” Wolverines offensive tackle Ryan Hayes said. “We’re going to have all the motivation that we need.”

 ?? TONY DING/AP ?? Michigan fans celebrate on the field after the team’s win over Ohio State in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 2021.
TONY DING/AP Michigan fans celebrate on the field after the team’s win over Ohio State in Ann Arbor, Mich., in 2021.

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