Buckeyes hope for upset to salvage pride


Associated Press

COLUMBUS

Just three weeks ago, Ohio State held out hope of playing for the Big Ten title.

Now after consecutive losses, about all the Buckeyes (6-5, 3-4 Big Ten) have to play for is beating No. 17 Michigan — which would be no small accomplishment.

Interim coach Luke Fickell said the players are playing for each other as much as for anything else.

“Those 110 guys that are sitting in that room that have been through what they’ve been through, been through the ups, been through the downs — that’s what it’s all about,” he said on Monday. “Those guys looking around [at each other], that’s what they play for.”

A season already scuttled by NCAA violations, coach Jim Tressel’s forced resignation, star quarterback Terrelle Pryor’s premature departure and a series of crucial injuries now comes down to a showdown at The Big House.

Already a virtual holiday for Ohio State fans, players and coaches, the game offers one last chance for the Buckeyes to rise above their troubles to ruin what has been a remarkable season for the Wolverines (9-2, 5-2).

That’s enough inspiration for just about everyone in scarlet and gray.

So beating their rivals is the very first objective.

“Any time you can win in Ann Arbor and win against Michigan, that speaks volumes in itself,” linebacker Andrew Sweat said. “That’s our goal. To beat Michigan.”

Sweat may not even play. He’s still recovering from a concussion sustained in the loss at Purdue on Nov. 12 and was held out of last week’s game, a 20-14 defeat to No. 21 Penn State in the home finale for the Buckeyes.

The NCAA has yet to declare Ohio State’s final sanctions. Several players were suspended for accepting cash and tattoos from the subject of a federal drug-trafficking investigation. Tressel then was pushed aside after it was revealed that he knew of his players’ complicity but did not tell his superiors or the NCAA — contrary to his contract and NCAA rules.

Ohio State has had several subsequent violations and suspensions which have led the NCAA to issue a “failure to monitor” charge against the athletic department — the second-most serious charge that can be levied against a school.

After going before the NCAA’s committee on infractions in August, Ohio State has since received a second letter of allegations to which it has responded. The NCAA could rule any day whether it is enough that Ohio State has offered to vacate the 2010 season, pay back $339,000 in bowl revenue, go on two years of NCAA probation and surrender five football scholarships over the next three years.