NCAA at center of Ohio St.-UCF
Buckeyes’ next game pits two teams that have felt the NCAA’s wrath
Associated Press
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Call it the Bowl Ban Bowl.
No. 18 Ohio State hosts Central Florida on Saturday in a game pitting schools who have felt the wrath of the NCAA in the past 12 months.
The Buckeyes know they won’t be going to the postseason this year, part of the penalties for a memorabilia-for-tattoos scandal. The Knights are also scheduled to sit out the bowl season after UCF was linked to runners for sports agents and found to have given money to recruits.
UCF is appealing the bowl ban, so that could change.
Based on the meager sampling of their season openers, the Buckeyes and Knights look to be postseason-quality teams. Both rolled over Ohio opponents while scoring 56 points apiece.
The Buckeyes pounded Miami (Ohio) 56-10 in Urban Meyer’s Ohio State debut, overcoming a slow start to rack up 538 total yards while forcing three turnovers.
“We all know it’s difficult to win in major-college football,” Meyer said. “Now we’ve got one and now we get ready for next week.”
They’ll be getting ready for a UCF team that ruined former Auburn coach Terry Bowden’s Akron debut with a 56-14 victory on Thursday night.
“The players played with great effort, made some plays and we got some turnovers,” coach George O’Leary said. “That was important. Overall, it was good effort. A lot of people played tonight, which was what we wanted to do. We were very productive in a lot of areas.”
The scary part is that both teams believe they have plenty of room for improvement.
“It’s a big confidence builder but it’s the first game,” said Ohio State cornerback Travis Howard, who intercepted Miami’s Zac Dysert twice.
The Buckeyes came out for the noon kickoff half asleep. They mustered just 48 yards while Dysert passed for 165 yards and had several passes — including two relatively easy touchdowns — dropped by his receivers.
After weathering three impressive Miami drives in the first period, the Buckeyes defense regrouped to permit only 147 yards in the last three quarters.
On offense, quarterback Braxton Miller completed just 1 of 7 passes for 5 yards in the opening 15 minutes, yet came alive to finish 14 of 24 for 207 yards with no interceptions and touchdown passes of 5 yards to Corey Brown and 23 yards to Devin Smith. Smith leaped high to pull down Miller’s high throw with one hand in the signature moment of the game.
Miller also stutter-stepped past a defender for a 65-yard touchdown run just 17 seconds into the second half. He finished with 161 rushing yards to set an Ohio State record for a quarterback.
“I was absolutely comfortable,” said Miller, who stumbled at times as a freshman last year as the Buckeyes went 6-7 in a tumultuous season on and off the field. “The first quarter they threw a little trick at us. We fixed it. And after that we got rolling.”
Meyer was pleased with the win over the RedHawks but also aware that UCF will present a bigger challenge.
The first-ever meeting of the teams also offers UCF a chance to show what it can do on a national stage, since the Knights won’t be able to in the postseason.
“We look forward to the opportunity,” O’Leary said. “We’ll have to play our ‘A’ game.”
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