The Commercial Appeal

Can Buckeyes slow Alabama down in the air?

- Brett Hudson

Losing three defenders in the first 19 picks of the NFL Draft, including both cornerback­s, has proven enough to derail Ohio State's typically excellent pass defense.

Its final test will prove to be its most difficult.

Ohio State enters Monday's College Football Playoff National Championsh­ip ranked tied for 56th in the nation in yards per attempt allowed, 57th in quarterbac­k rating allowed and tied for 10th in the Big Ten in passes of 20 yards or more allowed. On the surface, it's not a great matchup against the best passing attack in college football — that of No. 1 Alabama.

"Simply, we've got to do a great job of tracking the ball,” Ohio State linebacker Pete Werner said. “We've got to be good tacklers and we've got to have our feet in the ground when they're trying to not get our feet in the ground with all the shifts and everything that they do.”

The three losses to the NFL Draft are three who played a critical role in defending the pass — top pass rusher Chase Young and both cornerback­s, Jeff Okudah and Damon Arnette Jr. — but they were not the only losses. The Buckeyes also lost safety Jordan Fuller, who broke up four passes and intercepte­d two in 2019.

Then Ohio State entered an offseason that was not conducive to overhaul after spring practice was taken away from most and summer workouts were heavily modified. That being the case, the replacemen­t starters — Sevyn Banks at cornerback, Marcus Williamson and Josh Proctor at safety — had to climb their learning curve in regular-season games.

“I think those are the kids that probably suffer the most from the structure of the way summer went and a shorter season and all those kind of things,” Ohio State defensive coordinato­r Kerry Coombs said.

The early results showed those growing pains. The Buckeyes allowed Nebraska to complete 80% of its passes and average 8 yards per attempt in the season opener, well above the Cornhusker­s' season averages of 68.1% and 6.6 yards per attempt. The following week, Penn State averaged 9.4 yards per attempt against the Buckeyes; it would not get above 7.4 yards per attempt in its next five games.

The Buckeyes have improved moderately in that regard, especially against some of the weaker passing offenses in the Big Ten, but where its pass defense could be most dangerous for UA'S purposes is in forcing turnovers. Ohio State has intercepte­d six passes in its last four games, adding a 38-yard return to its intercepti­on in the semifinal against Clemson.

UA quarterbac­k Mac Jones has thrown just four intercepti­ons this season on 357 attempts.

His 11.3 yards per attempt is unlike anything Ohio State has faced this season. If he can keep his passes in the hands of UA receivers as opposed to Buckeye defensive backs, there is reason to project success.

The same could've been said for Clemson, as well, and Ohio State held the Tigers to a season-low 28 points.

“I think the two corners have great length,” UA offensive coordinato­r Steve Sarkisian said. “They play the ball extremely well when it's in the air, thus you see the turnovers. They can play man-to-man, they can play zone coverage.”

Reach Brett Hudson at 205-722-0196 or bhudson@tuscaloosa­news.com or via Twitter, @Brett_hudson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States