Ohio State's Greatest Games
If you were lucky enough to flip to channel 220 on DIRECTV (Comcast channel TBD) in June, you were treated to encore presentations of games you did not care about the first time. The BTN is guessing the marginally relevant interviews sprinkled throughout the broadcast will make all the difference. Oh, and they never seem to show an Ohio State game.
This got us thinking, what are Ohio State’s greatest games. The BTN has only gone back couples of seasons, but we thought we would expand that a little. We considered the entire Tressel era.
Greatest Regular Season Game: 2006 v. Michigan – You could choose any of Troy Smith’s games against Michigan, but this one really stands. The first ever #1 v. #2 game in the history of The Game; Bo’s death days before; and a national title game berth on line all added to the emotion and intensity of the day. What more could you ask for? Michigan played a nearly perfect game, executing their game plan flawlessly. With the exception of the some third quarter turnovers which let Michigan back into the game, Troy and the Buckeyes were more than equal to the task. The 3:30pm kickoff added to the intensity as the majority of the game was under the lights. In our opinion, Troy’s play action pass to Ted Ginn is one of the best looking plays in Ohio State history.
Greatest Bowl Game: 2003 Fiesta Bowl v. Miami – Duh.
Greatest Comeback: 2005 v. Michigan
– There were slim picking in this
category, which means Tressel’s teams rarely
get behind and/or rarely rally once they fall behind,
and this was the clear winner. Troy Smith came out on
fire and led the squad to a TD on the first drive.
Then things got sticky. Michigan started reeling off
big plays and Ohio State’s offense ground to a
halt. With the Buckeyes down 21-12 in the fourth
quarter, it did not look good. When Smith airmailed a
wide-open Holmes on a post pattern, the game looked
lost. Seconds later, however, Troy connected with
Santonio on the exact same play (nice adjustment
Michigan) and the comeback was on. On their final
drive, Troy took the team the length of the field
highlighted by Gonzalez’s acrobatic grab.
Pittman ran it in with 25 seconds remaining.
Greatest First Half: 2001 v. Michigan and
2002 v. Texas Tech – This is not
really a tie (the Michigan win being clearly better),
but they came in back-to-back regular season games
and provided the same sense of surprise, although
relative to different circumstances, as they both
featured dominating rushing performances and created
energy well beyond the single game.
In 2001, Tressel’s first team had been uneven
giving up big comebacks to Penn State and Wisconsin,
but the Senator had made his pseudo-prediction eleven
months earlier and was not going to back down.
Whatever, he fed Jonathan Wells before the game
caused him to go off in the first half and cramp up
tremendously in the second half. The Buckeyes 21-0
lead at intermission was enough to get the win,
26-20. The energy of that first performance has been
felt in the series ever since. Rather uncomfortably
by Michigan, I might add.
Likewise, the vibe created in the 2002 opener versus
Texas Tech resonated for the entire season,
ultimately culminating in a National Championship.
Clarrett’s dominating performance gave the
Buckeyes a weapon they had not had since Eddie
George. Love him or hate him, Maurice provided the
Buckeyes with the much needed energy, and yards, that
propelled them to their first title in decades.
[Ed. Note: The granddaddy of all first half
demolitions is the 56-7 mauling Cooper’s gang
put on Iowa in 1995. If memory serves, Iowa had a
top-15 ranking going into that game and ESPN’s
Gameday was onsite for the match-up. Oops.]
Greatest Second Half: 2002 v. Washington
State – This was a total team
turnaround. In the first half, the offense was anemic
and the defense was confused. The Cougars, led by
Jason Gesser, piled up about 200 yards, while the
Buckeyes could not get much going on the ground with
Clarrett gaining only 35 before halftime. In the
second half, Clarrett exploded for 195 yards and the
defense limited Washington State to only 91 yards. Oh
yeah, there was Darrion Scott’s hit on Gesser.
Greatest Individual Performance: 2004 Troy
Smith v. Michigan – This is one of the
most spectacular performances in Ohio State’s
history and it came against the archrival. Troy threw
for 241 yards and two touchdowns and, even more
impressively, ran for 145 yards and another
touchdown. When the Wolverines played the pass Smith
used his feet and darted downfield for first downs.
When they played the run, he connected on several
long passes. Even when it looked like they had him
wrapped up, he spun away for a 46-yard gain. For that
afternoon (and the Michigan series), he was
unstoppable.
Greatest Surprise: 2004 Fiesta Bowl v. Kansas
State – The Buckeyes were coming off a
loss to Michigan and Kansas State had dominated
Oklahoma 35-7 in the Big 12 Title Game. Under the
previous regime, Ohio State had not become known from
bouncing back from losses to Michigan, so there was a
bit of hesitation for Buckeyes' fans. Yet, Ohio State
dominated the early action on the way to a 35-28.
While the Wildcats mounted a formidable charge late,
it was bolstered by Ohio State’s patented
prevent defense and some fortuitous calls.
Greatest Loss: 2005 v. Texas –
Yeah, we know. There is no such thing as a good loss,
but time has allowed us to see how truly great this
night was in Ohio Stadium. Vince Young began his
National Title march under the lights in the
Horseshoe. The Ohio State defense was outstanding
limiting Young to 76 yards rushing, including a
32-yard run in the first quarter. If not for an
unbelievable throw with 2:37 left, the Buckeyes would
have likely escaped with the win. Just because we are
nice, we will not mention the Ryan Hamby bobble-fest.
Oh, nevermind.





