USA TODAY Sports Weekly

‘The Game’:

- Jon Spencer

Is Ohio State’s best effort good enough to topple Michigan? This year’s Wolverines primed for the test.

Irish flashing championsh­ip form, Page 17

Games to watch, Page 20

We kept waiting last weekend for Ohio State to handle ballcarrie­rs as roughly as coach Urban Meyer tossed his headset. And his replacemen­t headset. And the replacemen­t for the replacemen­t.

With No. 4 Michigan up next, there’s hope, right? We saw Dwayne Haskins actually look like a dual-threat quarterbac­k, rushing for 59 yards and three touchdowns on 15 carries, so an equally stunning transforma­tion from OSU’s defense is always possible.

Right?

Meyer didn’t have an answer immediatel­y after watching his Buckeyes win a road shootout they never led until overtime. Like everyone else, he was still trying to comprehend what he had just witnessed in the wild 52-51 win over Maryland.

That’s twice this season his team has yielded at least 49 points in a game.

But it could be worse. No. 10 OSU came awfully close to losing to a second unranked team in the same year (Purdue being the first) for the first time since Meyer came aboard in 2012.

The Maryland game provided exciting theater and the outcome needed for Ohio State to stay in Big Ten title contention and, at 10-1, at least on the periphery of the College Football Playoff discussion.

It also came at the expense of a team whose quarterbac­k was starting his first game of the season with a supporting cast of true and redshirt freshmen doing much of the damage.

So how does this Ohio State team stack up with the maize and blue monolith coming up on Nov. 24 at home in Columbus?

“We’ll have to play much better than that on defense or we won’t win that game,” said Meyer, who after an emotionall­y exhausting afternoon still had enough wits about him not to mention OSU’s archrival by name.

“That will be the message all week and I anticipate we’ll play much better.”

The defense couldn’t play much worse.

But how about that offense? Haskins, when he wasn’t imitating J.T. Barrett with his legs, enjoyed his fourth 400-yard passing game of the season, setting the school’s single-season records for passing yards and touchdown passes and doing so back home against the school where he had originally committed.

Haskins has now thrown for 36 TDs — breaking Barrett’s mark by one — with three against Maryland, including a 68-yarder to Terry McLaurin and a 3-yarder to Binjimen Victor to send the game into overtime.

But Haskins made an even bigger impression as a runner, especially since he had seemed so averse this season to toting the football. Meyer saw every yard he gained as another step closer to providing Barrett-type leadership.

“It meant everything to go out there and ball like that in front of family and friends,” Haskins told the OSU Radio Network. “I just wanted to show I could lead and do whatever it takes to win.”

After a couple of subpar efforts, Haskins looked more himself despite fumbling once and throwing a pick-6 at the outset of the second half that put Ohio State in a 31-17 bind.

He had to be great in the clutch to overcome his self-destructiv­e moments and another meltdown by the defense.

Meyer didn’t expect to go on the road and watch a Big 12 game break out.

The scoreboard, like Meyer, overheated. That will happen when there’s 103 points scored and 1,223 yards gained. Throw in 10 OSU penalties, three OSU turnovers and too many explosive plays by Maryland to count on one hand and the stress can be over the top for a head coach who spoke recently about his own health issues.

Meyer was asked what it’s like to be in the eye of a topsyturvy game and threw it right back at the reporter.

“What’s it like for you?” he said. “It’s frustratin­g when you see a pick-6, and you see a tight end not release on a pass, and the quarterbac­k fumble.

“You see a guy who’s a very good running back for Maryland. It’s up and down, up and down ... what a chess match at the end of the game.”

Tshimanga (aka Tim) Biakabutuk­a’s name often comes up during Ohio State-Michigan week because he’s part of series lore. His 313 yards rushing is a record against OSU and led to an upset of the No. 2 Buckeyes, dashing their dreams of a 1995 national championsh­ip.

His name came up a week earlier than usual as Maryland redshirt freshman Anthony McFarland flirted with Timmy B’s mark, finishing with 298 yards on 21 carries.

The bulk of that came on TD runs of 81 and 75 yards on Maryland’s first two series, establishi­ng the tenor for what Meyer called a “street fight.”

The Buckeyes don’t catch up if not for Haskins and J.K. Dobbins, who, with Mike Weber ailing and unavailabl­e, had a career day, rushing for 203 yards and a TD on 37 carries.

Unable to stop them, Maryland gambled — and failed — on the two-point conversion try in overtime that sealed the Terrapins’ fate.

I would have done the same thing.

Conversely, I would not have thrown the ball on the fourthand-inches play that kept OSU’s drive alive to start overtime. Yes, I would have eschewed the field goal, but I would have stuck the ball in Dobbins’ gut.

Ryan Day’s pass play worked. As did many by the Buckeyes down the stretch.

But Meyer doesn’t want to get used to this, winning in Big 12 fashion. He admitted this is no formula for winning a Big Ten title.

But it sure gave Michigan plenty to watch before this weekend’s game, from the grand to the grotesque.

 ?? TOMMY GILLIGAN/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Ohio State quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins (7) celebrates after scoring a third-quarter touchdown against Maryland.
TOMMY GILLIGAN/USA TODAY SPORTS Ohio State quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins (7) celebrates after scoring a third-quarter touchdown against Maryland.

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