Well if this holds, I might have to cheer for OU, LOL.
Can the BCS look any more fraudulant?
Yea, Texas would kill The Trojans, I can really see it now. SC'd be up 3-4 TDs on both these bitches.
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Moderators: 88BuckeyeGrad, Left Seater, buckeye_in_sc
USC has a fan base?Mace wrote:I'm shocked that USC would be the focus of this "Ohio State 6 Texas 3" thread. Not really.
Notre Dame wears gold helmets to represent the Golden Dome. USC wears tin foil helmets to represent their fan base.
Quit bothering us.TheJON wrote:USC has a fan base?
King Crimson wrote:anytime you have a smoke tunnel and it's not Judas Priest in the mid 80's....watch out.
mvscal wrote:France totally kicks ass.
Dinsdale wrote:Hey, I think I figured out
He has a defensive ONLY mindset. Grow a fucking pair on offense. I'm not saying coach like Urban Meyer (who can get away with his garbage playcalls because he just has so much darn talent), but for crying out loud.......how's about mix in just 1 god damn unpredictable play? And kicking a 51 yard FG up 3-0 on 4th and 2 is just fucking dumb. The obvious call is to go for it. I know they'd already made 1, but you can't expect a kicker to hit a 2nd one.PSUFAN wrote:JON, JT's certainly calling an aggressive defense. He's bringing the house on just about every play. Doesn't look like scared coaching to me.
Attention dumbfuck: Please pick up the Orange Courtesy Phone.PISC wrote:Wow, I continue to be so impressed by the supposed powers that be. The mighty Big 12 Texas Longhorns, down 3 to the weak ass Big 10 Buckeyes.
All coaches cheat and are the scumbags of the earth. Tell me you knew.M Club wrote:a coach's success is inversely proportional to how shite jon thinks he is.
Goober McTuber wrote:One last post...
Dinsdale wrote:Hey, I think I figured out how USC could have avoided this BCS "slight"...
By winning their fucking games.
That's what they sell us, that's why Bob Stoops gets away with being a horses' ass, scoring meaningless TDs.Shoalzie wrote:I love the 'report the score in the second quarter of a game' thread and then followed by the obligatory ripping of one or both teams along with their conference affiliations. Apparently you can't play in a close game or a low scoring game or else your program is a fraud and your conference sucks.
PISC wrote:You meant winning ALL their games?
that's one way to look at it. another is to point out that florida depended on florida to win its conference while usc had to rely on... oregon.PISC wrote: Sucks ha but FLA can lose a close game at home and USC can't lose to Oregon State, a team that lead the 5-0 post season Pac-10 for most of the season.
Being down 14 points to start a game, giving up 34 points, being down up until 2 minutes are left in the first half, giving up 368 yards of passing, and committing three turnovers is destroying a team?Sudden Sam wrote:
Yeah, hard to figure. Florida loses a one point game at home to a team that destroys Texas Tech.
BSmack wrote:I can certainly infer from that blurb alone that you are self righteous, bible believing, likely a Baptist or Presbyterian...
Miryam wrote:but other than that, it's cool, man. you're a christer.
LTS TRN 2 wrote:Okay, Sunny, yer cards are on table as a flat-out Christer.
Yeah, absolutely nothing. Never even watched a game before, in fact. I hear Notre Dame won some football game out in Hawaii. Didn't see it though. That's pretty awesome. Hawaii is a beautiful place. With me not knowing anything about college football, I'd say that win is worth a 30 year contract with NBC. Do you agree?Killian wrote:You're a shit poster, period. Shut your fucking man pleaser and stop embarassing your self. You know nothing about Tressel or his style, and know little more about college football.
Right. And that makes no sense. He's the coach of Ohio State. He can bring in some of the top recruits. You don't have to play that kinda football.People like you who say that Tressel "is a shit coach, period." The guy likes to pound the rock and play great defense. He always has, and always will play ball control offense.
Right......on defense. I was talking offensively. He's defensive/ball control minded. You don't have to play ball control/pound it out at Ohio State.As for his play calling, he played to win as well. What do you call keeping the pressure on McCoy and blitzing him late in the 4th quarter?
See, I don't completely agree with that. I think great teams don't have to narrowly escape every week. You're right, great teams know how to win games. But great teams also know how to put away lousy/average football teams earlier than the last minute. OSU in 2002 didn't do that. Hey, don't take it from me.....ask Michigan's players. Many of them said Iowa was far better than Ohio State. Also, you can be a clutch team but you still need breaks to go your way to win like that week in and week out. Come on, they were very lucky that year. Clutch too, but definitely lucky on top of that.It's funny how good teams end up being "lucky". There are a handful of playes each year that are the difference between a team being .500 or finishing with 0 or 1 loss. Great teams make those plays, average teams don't.
Yes, but think about the situation here. You're up 3-0. You're playing a great offense. You have multiple running options (Wells, Pryor) and 4th and 2. You are facing a 51 yard FG. Get a 1st down and maybe you end up scoring a TD and going up 10-0. Best case scenario by kicking a LONG FG is you're up 6 against a great offense. I know tOSU has a very good defense, but kicking FG's all day wasn't winning that game. Tressel had to know that. It's a no brainer to go for it. Honestly, I think pooch punting would have been as good of an option as kicking the FG so as to not give up field position just to try and score 3 points.As for the kicker, he was their long distance kicker and was 5/5 on the year
So let's see here......Iowa goes 8-0 in the conference blowing away nearly every opponent. tOSU escapes nearly every conference game but they'd have beaten Iowa by 7-10? And you say I don't know football?My guess would be that they wouldn't have been able to move the ball much on offense (like Miami couldn't) and OSU would hit enough plays to win by 7-10.
Who cares? Iowa wasn't a great team early in the year. You could tell we had the potential but we melted down a couple of times early on in the year. We just couldn't quite put it all together. That all changed about 5 games into the year. After that it was beatdowns every week. Heck, we were up 22 points at Penn State with 8 minutes to go and had to finish them off in OT. The ISU game was just a big meltdown. Part had to do with injuries, part I think just had to do with plain cockiness thinking it was over when we were up 24-7 at half. But Bob Sanders went down at half, so did Fred Russell (had over 100 yards in the 1st half) and Brad Banks played with an injured finger that cost us a couple fumbles. Shit happens man. USC lost to Oregon State this year.......I suppose they weren't a great team???They were their conferences best team, and the team that played the best against their OOC slate. Iowa, on the other hand, shit in their own hat against ISU.
It doesn't matter where he coaches, that's his type of offense and the offense he prefers. Lou Holtz didn't have to run the option, but he wanted to. Urban Meyer doesn't have to run the spread, but he wants to. When Tressel has experience and talent at the QB position, he tends to open it up a bit more.TheJON wrote:Right. And that makes no sense. He's the coach of Ohio State. He can bring in some of the top recruits. You don't have to play that kinda football.People like you who say that Tressel "is a shit coach, period." The guy likes to pound the rock and play great defense. He always has, and always will play ball control offense.
See above.TheJON wrote:Right......on defense. I was talking offensively. He's defensive/ball control minded. You don't have to play ball control/pound it out at Ohio State.As for his play calling, he played to win as well. What do you call keeping the pressure on McCoy and blitzing him late in the 4th quarter?
I think he was trying to run down the clock, but they hit a couple of big plays. Even when you are trying to run down the clock, things like this sometimes happens. As for the blitz, it may have been a stupid call but it was a half step away from being a brilliant call. That's what happens when you gamble. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. Unless you take your "locks", in which case you always lose.TheJON wrote:What about not running down the clock on that final drive? Why bring the heat on that last play? It makes no sense. The whole last possession strategy should be to keep everything in front of you because they needed a TD, not a FG. Both were absolutely HORRIBLE decisions. A veteran coach like that has absolutely gotta know better.
See, I don't completely agree with that. I think great teams don't have to narrowly escape every week. You're right, great teams know how to win games. But great teams also know how to put away lousy/average football teams earlier than the last minute. OSU in 2002 didn't do that. Hey, don't take it from me.....ask Michigan's players. Many of them said Iowa was far better than Ohio State. Also, you can be a clutch team but you still need breaks to go your way to win like that week in and week out. Come on, they were very lucky that year. Clutch too, but definitely lucky on top of that.[/quote]It's funny how good teams end up being "lucky". There are a handful of playes each year that are the difference between a team being .500 or finishing with 0 or 1 loss. Great teams make those plays, average teams don't.
How much did OSU end up losing by? My guess is that field goal would have come in handy at the end of the game. Tressel was trying to score points at that time. We saw last night that it's not always easy to pick it up on 4th and short. Early in the game you always take the points, later in the game you start to gamble. You bring up a good point with the pooch punt. I bet Tressel's thoughts were 1a Field Goal, 1b Pooch Punt, 5 Go for it.TheJON wrote:Yes, but think about the situation here. You're up 3-0. You're playing a great offense. You have multiple running options (Wells, Pryor) and 4th and 2. You are facing a 51 yard FG. Get a 1st down and maybe you end up scoring a TD and going up 10-0. Best case scenario by kicking a LONG FG is you're up 6 against a great offense. I know tOSU has a very good defense, but kicking FG's all day wasn't winning that game. Tressel had to know that. It's a no brainer to go for it. Honestly, I think pooch punting would have been as good of an option as kicking the FG so as to not give up field position just to try and score 3 points.As for the kicker, he was their long distance kicker and was 5/5 on the year
Yes, I do and no, you don't. That OSU team that escaped nearly every conference game (5 close games, 3 that were double digit wins) also beat a team that had NFL starters at almost every position, and multiple 1st round picks on offense and defense. So yes, I think they would have beaten Iowa by 7-10.TheJON wrote:So let's see here......Iowa goes 8-0 in the conference blowing away nearly every opponent. tOSU escapes nearly every conference game but they'd have beaten Iowa by 7-10? And you say I don't know football?My guess would be that they wouldn't have been able to move the ball much on offense (like Miami couldn't) and OSU would hit enough plays to win by 7-10.
Wait a minute, how you do in conference play matters, but how you do out of conference doesn't? Or is it that the early season doesn't count because teams haven't found their stride? Great teams don't have stretches where their own fans don't consider them great, like you mentioned above. Iowa was a very good team, USC was a very good team that year. OSU and Miami were great.TheJON wrote:Who cares? Iowa wasn't a great team early in the year. You could tell we had the potential but we melted down a couple of times early on in the year. We just couldn't quite put it all together. That all changed about 5 games into the year. After that it was beatdowns every week. Heck, we were up 22 points at Penn State with 8 minutes to go and had to finish them off in OT. The ISU game was just a big meltdown. Part had to do with injuries, part I think just had to do with plain cockiness thinking it was over when we were up 24-7 at half. But Bob Sanders went down at half, so did Fred Russell (had over 100 yards in the 1st half) and Brad Banks played with an injured finger that cost us a couple fumbles. Shit happens man. USC lost to Oregon State this year.......I suppose they weren't a great team???They were their conferences best team, and the team that played the best against their OOC slate. Iowa, on the other hand, shit in their own hat against ISU.
And I think, Mace, you're a fucking retard. I absolutely HATE the air it out style of football. I like a pro-style offense personally, but nice try. I just don't like ridiculous ball control football when you don't have to play that way.Killian, I think theJON has watched too many Arena Football games and thinks that the only successful offense is one that puts the ball in the air and goes for big plays.
Right, cuz no one on the 2002 Iowa team is starting in the NFL. Dallas Clark, Bob Sanders, Colin Cole, Chad Greenway, Nate Kaeding, Jonathan Babineaux, Matt Roth, Eric Steinbach, Robert Gallery, Sean Considine all are/were starters in the NFL. That also doesn't include Brad Banks, a Heisman runner-up or Bruce Nelson, a 3rd round pick that would most definitely be starting in the NFL if not for an injury that ended his career after a year.That OSU team that escaped nearly every conference game (5 close games, 3 that were double digit wins) also beat a team that had NFL starters at almost every position, and multiple 1st round picks on offense and defense. So yes, I think they would have beaten Iowa by 7-10.
Quite easily. That's what happened when Iowa finally had to play somebody good that season.How the fuck was tOSU going to even score 7-10 points on us?
So explain to me why tOSU needed last ditch efforts to beat a lot of teams Iowa had put away in the 1st quarter?Van wrote:Quite easily. That's what happened when Iowa finally had to play somebody good that season.How the fuck was tOSU going to even score 7-10 points on us?
Sincerely,
38 points, 247 rushing yards, close to 600 total yards and a three TD beat down in the '03 Orange Bowl
Why do you say that? We rarely turned the ball over. Brad Banks had like 5 picks all year and we were near the top in the nation in turnover margin. Penalties? Very few of those too. So why do you say we too would have screwed up? Based on what????OSU played ball control offense and waited for the other team to screw up, which every team did. Would Iowa have been different? I don't think so.
Umm.....I was comparing rosters with Ohio State. Miami obviously had the best NFL talent in the nation. USC and Iowa were probably 2nd. Miami came out flat. They'd won 24 straight games and were the defending champs. Everyone expected them to roll. Probably arrogance on their part. If you think tOSU wins even 2-3 out of 10 against them, you're insane. Props to the Buckeyes, sometimes the breaks just go your way.And if you want to compare rosters to Miami of 2002, first of all, you're an idiot.
Sometimes?? You mean, sometimes, as in half their games? A simpleton like you calls it luck. But when one team consistently wins the way that team won during the season, there's an element that you can't put a value on, that you don't see on film or on paper. No way you could ever convince me that Iowa, or any other team for that matter, would've beaten Ohio State that year. It was their year. Talent aside, they had heart, they had guts, they refused to lose.TheJON wrote:Props to the Buckeyes, sometimes the breaks just go your way.
Jeezus JON, you just built a killer template for a Business Mgt 101 SWOT analysis paper. Nice work.TheJON wrote: ______ was a horrible matchup for ______. ______ were the type of team that ______ simply could not beat because they were so disciplined, talented, balanced, and they could counter every one of the ______'s strengths and take advantages of their weaknesses.