Sunday, August 31, 2014

Posted by Jon Dalton On 12:30 PM
I had my morning coffee in my favorite Ohio State mug. By game time, Gidget and I had our Ohio State jerseys on, prepared to watch the first game of the 2014 season. Usual protocols followed for an Ohio State football game.

After a week of reading all the pregame analyses and musings of various sportswriters, I was prepared to watch this game with the same uneasiness I think most Buckeye fans were experiencing. After all, we'd lost senior quarterback Braxton Miller to a shoulder injury in practice two weeks earlier forcing Urban Meyer to start a freshman quarterback who hadn't taken a snap from center in game conditions since the middle of his high school season in 2012. The offensive line was a rebuilt unit replacing four starters from 2013. There was only one returning starter in the defensive backfield, which now featured a new coverage scheme. Then, there was the porous linebacking corps, which hadn't looked like OSU linebackers of old for several years.

All in all, the Buckeyes came away with the win, quarterback J.T. Barrett, while no Braxton Miller, looked steady and the defense, although it gave up a lot of yardage to Navy's triple option attack, showed why it's to be regarded as one of the premier defenses in the country. Still, there are some areas of concern for the Buckeye coaching staff.

The offensive line remains a work in progress as the unit gels into a cohesive force, although halftime adjustments had this unit playing sharper in the second half. With a new quarterback, the passing attack was conservative, featuring short but safe slants. Barrett only threw deep once, a bomb to Devin Smith that resulting in a touchdown. The rushing attack (no Carlos Hyde this year) using a committee of running backs performed well, but was nothing to write home about, although there were glimpses of exciting things to come as these guys gain experience. It was a relief to watch receivers actually catching the ball this year instead of dropping them as it was last year.

Defensively, Michael Bennett and Adolphus Washington were a force to be reckoned with, as well as Joey Bosa lurking in the background. When Noah Spence returns after serving one more week of his suspension, this unit will be the strength of the Buckeyes.

The officiating was okay with a crew from the Big Ten, and a replay official from the ACC. There were a couple of close calls on replay that didn't go the Buckeye's way that had the fans in an uproar (me included). Then, there was the strange play where it appeared the Buckeyes running back had made the first down but the call on the field was that he was short. The replay official never stopped play to review the call, nor did Urban ask for a review. Hope he doesn't make that mistake again as the back clearly had made the first down.

So, next up is the Virginia Tech Hokies on Sept. 6 at 8 p.m. This prime time game will be on ESPN.

And a shout out to my Ohio U. Bobcats, who opened their season with a 17-14 win over MAC rival, Kent State.


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