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Time for Tressel's success to be noticed

meisel.14@osu.edu

Published: Monday, November 23, 2009

Updated: Tuesday, November 24, 2009 19:11

tress

The Lantern

Jim Tressel

Ohio State has captured at least a share of five consecutive Big Ten titles.

Since 2002 the Buckeyes have won 86 games, the fourth most among FBS schools.

OSU has represented the Big Ten in the BCS Championship game three times during that span.

In four of the six seasons the Buckeyes didn't reach the title game, they still appeared in a BCS Bowl game, playing in the Fiesta Bowl three times, and reaching the Rose Bowl this season.

This barrage of success has all come after Jim Tressel took the helm at OSU in 2001.

And yet, after Iowa's Kirk Ferentz was named Big Ten Coach of the Year on Monday, Tressel still has no coaching awards to show for his nine years of excellence.

One could make a strong case for Ferentz earning the distinction this year.

He led a Hawkeye squad to 10 regular season wins after it lost its starting running back for the year before the season started.

Iowa, picked to finish fifth in the conference's preseason predictions, was ranked as high as No. 4 in the BCS this season.

Certainly, Ferentz's credentials merit such recognition.

Tressel's ‘09 resume could warrant the award as well. The Buckeyes coped with the loss of 28 seniors from last year's squad by knocking off Penn State, Iowa and Michigan in succession to clinch the outright conference title.

OSU relied heavily on sophomores and juniors, and maintained a ranking inside the Top 20 all season.

Neither Ferentz nor Tressel would have been a wrong choice for Coach of the Year.

But despite the accolades "The Vest" has piled up throughout his Buckeye tenure, Tressel has never earned recognition of being the Big Ten's best coach.

Since arriving at Ohio State, Tressel has led the Buckeyes to a 93-21 record and six Big Ten championships.

He has beaten rival Michigan in eight of his nine seasons — including a running streak of six victories.

Tressel will say that numbers and statistics don't mean anything, but they paint a vivid picture of the excellence he has instilled in the OSU program.

When success goes unnoticed for so long, often times it eventually gets rewarded even when not at its peak.

When Kobe Bryant captured his first NBA MVP award in 2007, many experts reasoned that "he was due." After all of the magnificent, stat-sheet-stuffed seasons he had put together without taking home the coveted distinction, even just an above-average year by his standards would have been enough to merit the award.

Many prognosticators used the same method of thinking when predicting the outcome of this year's Heisman Trophy race. Texas quarterback Colt McCoy had slung touchdown passes left and right for two seasons, but finished behind Tim Tebow in ‘07 and Sam Bradford in '08 in the Heisman voting. Instinctively, he was appointed the favorite entering 2009 because he was due.

If the same reasoning was applied to determining the Big Ten Coach of the Year, then Tressel is long overdue.

Eventually, his rare string of success in Columbus must be noticed and rewarded.

To Tressel, statistics don't mean much. But to voters, they should.

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6 comments

Ken H.
Fri Jan 1 2010 10:17
I feel coach Tressel needs to be a bit more of a chance taker. For example, he doesn't go for the 4th & short, he always tries the safe bet, and several times (I Feel) has lost the game because of it. Yes Pryor is NOT the 1/4 back he should be by now and should set the bench a couple of times to give him time to think about his dumb decisions. Get the 2nd string 1/4 back in there to learn will Pryor learns his lesson.
Doug
Wed Dec 30 2009 15:28
Larry you are a joke
Larry
Sat Dec 19 2009 01:57
You've go to be kidding. LOL The Big Ten has been one of the weakest conferences in college football for the past eight to ten years. Ohio State has just been the best of a very weak conference. Winning against weak teams and gaining in the National Standing because he plays only weak teams does not make Tressel a GREAT coach as he has been made out to be. Tressel has never been the "Coach of the Year" in the Big Ten, nor has he received any national honors. OSU placed no one on the AP Team this year, not 1st, 2nd or 3rd team. Doesn't that say something to you fans. "Tressel Ball" does not work.....Tressel is not effective calling the plays on offense.

Terrell Pryor is not a "Super" quarterback and should not even be leading this team. Pryor has had TWO years to mature as a quarterback and hasn't even come close to to being successful. Most games he can't even complete 50% of his passes. Ohio State can't even beat a top nationally ranked team let alone win a bowl game. Beating Iowa without their first string quarterback means nothing. Podunk U could have done that and yet OSU struggled to win the game. Penn State was totally untested before they played OSU. Beating them showed nothing more than beating a Purdue...Oh, sorry, OSU couldn't even do that.

It's time to get real OSU fans. Tressel wasn't hired to be a nice guy...He was hired to win the big games and he can't even do that. Even Oregon is favored to beat OSU in the Rose Bowl. One more thing...the Defense is average too. When you play nothing teams the entire season what would you expect???

Tressel may have been great in Division II football. He certainly hasn't got it for Division I.

FIRE Tressel and get a coach worthy of coaching a team like THE BUCKEYES!!!!

Your name
Wed Nov 25 2009 21:26
tressel was great until he got pryor...bring back Earl!
John
Wed Nov 25 2009 16:21
Expectations-That is really the essence of the award. Is Ohio State expected (based on prior history and results) to be a dominant figure in not only the Big Ten but also on the national level? Yes. But can the same be said for Iowa? Not really. They surpassed "the expectation" level. The award isn't based on results, but more, expected results. If Tressel did win this year, it would be extremely difficult to justify with a devastating loss to Purdue, and nailbiters against Navy, Iowa, and USC. Should he have won in prior years, probably. Should he win this year? Probably not.
Wins against Michigan the past two years, although still wins, really was a Michigan team that lost to Appalachian State and a rebuilding Michigan team. They weren't the dominant team they once were.
Laura
Wed Nov 25 2009 11:02
I agree totally with the viewpoint in this article. I am just so proud of the integrity Coach Tressel brings to the program. He knows how to win, and we BEAT Iowa, so Ferentz makes no sense to me. Tressel deserved the honor. He is being slighted by the Big Ten.






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