Wells’ status uncertain after painful injury
PRE-INJURY: Ohio State tailback Chris "Beanie" Wells, left, is tied up by Youngstown State defender Mike Barlak during Saturday's game at Ohio Stadium in Columbus.
Ohio State officials are keeping mum on how much the Heisman Trophy candidate is aching.
COLUMBUS (AP) — The Beanie watch is on for the Buckeyes.
A day after Chris “Beanie” Wells fell back in a heap with an injured right foot, the second-ranked Buckeyes could do nothing but wait and hope that their Heisman Trophy contender would be quick to recover.
Wells went down early in the third quarter of a 43-0 victory Saturday against Youngstown State.
Ohio State spokeswoman Shelly Poe sent an e-mail to reporters Sunday, restating that Wells had no broken bones.
“It’s not likely that there will be any update until probably [today] after some initial treatments and therapy,” she wrote.
Coach Jim Tressel said Saturday team doctors told him the X-rays were negative and the injury was not turf toe.
Ohio State can probably get by without Wells this Saturday when the Buckeyes play host to Ohio. That’s not the case the following week, when they visit No. 3 Southern California in a huge non-conference showdown.
“You see one of the guys go down and you hope he’s all right,” linebacker James Laurinaitis said after the game. “Chris is a tough guy. I hope it’s not serious. You hate to see a guy of his caliber laying on the ground.”
Judging from how Wells writhed on the field in pain, the injury did not appear to be a minor one. A crowd of more than 105,000 thought so too. The Horseshoe was practically silent for several minutes while doctors and trainers attended to Wells near the goal line.
“I may have rolled it or planted wrong a play or two before,” Wells said through Poe moments after the game. “Something just didn’t feel right. Then I think I felt a pop. But the X-rays are OK, so we’ll see how it feels in a day or two.”
Wells, who has been hindered by nagging injuries throughout his college career, fell to the ground in pain before he was even hit after taking a handoff at the Youngstown State 2. He fumbled the ball away before there was contact, then fell backward while medical personnel rushed to his side. Tressel even ran onto the field.
“As I handed the ball back, he didn’t even grab the ball,” quarterback Todd Boeckman said. “I didn’t know what to expect, didn’t know what he did. He went down and he was in some serious pain.”
After he was helped off the field, Wells was put on a motorized cart and taken to the locker room. He returned to the sideline in the fourth quarter wearing a boot on his right ankle, watching the end of the game while sitting on the bench with teammates. When the final seconds ticked away, Wells walked to the locker room from the bench area and was almost dragging his right leg.
The junior had 111 yards on 13 carries, including a 43-yard touchdown burst as the Buckeyes rolled to a 26-0 lead at the time of his injury.
“Sure, Beanie’s one of the best in the country,” offensive lineman Ben Person said. “He’s our guy. It would hurt to not have him, but we’ve got lots of guys behind him that can do well.”
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