The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Big D still rules in the Big Ten

- Rusty Miller

Pat Fitzgerald, once a stalwart linebacker and now the head coach at Northweste­rn, looks at the numbers put up by offenses these days and can only shake his head.

“When I was playing they’d say hold your opponent to 17 points or less and you’re going to win a lot of games,” he said with a chuckle. “And now it’s four scores. If you can keep your opponent under four touchdowns, you’ve got a chance to win.”

In a day when the spread offense seems to be in command and when it appears every game ends up 45-38, there are glimmers that defenses are holding their own in the Big Ten.

Big Ten teams comprise six of the top 20 teams in the Football Bowl Subdivisio­n in total defense, five of the top 20 in scoring defense and five of the top 25 in stopping the run and also intercepti­ons.

So even if the perception is teams are blowing up scoreboard­s with points, defense isn’t dead in the conference where Woody Hayes and Bo Schembechl­er preached defense wins championsh­ips.

The pendulum swings constantly. Not so long ago, defenses adjusted to the advent of the spread attack and seemed to take the high ground. Now, however, it may be swinging the other way.

“Back in ‘04, when we were at Utah, that’s the easiest. I just felt it was very easy to move the ball because teams really didn’t know how to defend the spread. You had more yardage by misalignme­nts and mistakes by defense than certainly you did in the years following because it wasn’t a novelty,” said Ohio State coach Urban Meyer, a proponent of getting to the line quickly and squeezing off a play to surprise a gassed defense.

That’s the blueprint. An innovator comes up with a new way of moving the ball, and his defensive counterpar­t comes up with a way to stop it. Back and forth it goes, year after year, a never-ending struggle.

Even though eight Big Ten teams are averaging at least 28 points a game and 10 are averaging at least 26, maybe once everything shakes out over an eight-game conference season, it all might be a comparativ­e stalemate between rock and hard place.

“If the offense is ahead, the defense will catch up,” said Maryland coach Randy Edsall. “And if the defense gets ahead then the offense will catch up. It goes in cycles.”

There is ample evidence to show that defense isn’t buckling under in the Big Ten. Wisconsin is eighth, Penn State ninth, Michigan State 11th, Iowa 15th and Ohio State 18th in total defense in the nation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States