You ask, we answer. Sometimes we ask, others answer. And then other times, we ask, we answer.
Throughout the Ohio State football season, we will be asking and answering questions about the team, college football, and anything else on our collective minds of varying degrees of importance. If you have a question that you would like to ask, you can tweet us @LandGrant33 or if you need more than 280 characters, send an email HERE.
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Question 1: After the Penn State win, where do you think Ohio State ends its season?
Not gonna lie, this one surprised me more than a little bit. As I look across the landscape of college football, I don’t see any great teams. I see a bunch of good, but flawed teams. Coincidentally, that is also how I see the Buckeyes, but when I stack their “goodness” next to the “goodness” of other teams, I think that Ohio State comes out considerably further ahead in nearly every case.
I think the same is true for their weaknesses. No doubt that the OSU offensive line has been a point of concern for the past two seasons, and while I’m certainly not saying that it has all of a sudden become an elite unit based on one game, I do think that it is substantially better than it was just a few weeks ago.
By combining two seasoned starters on the rebuilt left side of the line with a more creative call sheet from Chip Kelly, I do believe that the offensive line has gone from a negative to at least a push, and — with two games against sub-par competition before the stretch run — has the chance to become a positive.
If that happens, I think that it becomes increasingly difficult to find a team that is better than Ohio State. Obviously, the coaching staff needs to continue to up its game as well, from schemes to creativity to play calling to rotation, but their backs are against the wall, and there is no reason for them not to go for broke at this point.
Question 2: What will the margin of victory be in Saturday’s game against Purdue?
Look, Purdue is bad… like 1-and-8 bad. Ohio State should be able to name its score against the Boilermakers. The only questions should be how long they keep the starters in the game and how hard they actually try to score in the second half. Ohio State Buckeyes enter the game as a 37.5-point favorite and the gold-standard college football analytics model projects SP+ has the Buckeyes to win by a score of 47-5.
You can check out the predictions of a handful of Land-Grant Holy Land experts in the link above, but I am going with the Ohio State Buckeyes: 49, the Little Engines That Couldn’t: 3.
Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Ohio State fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.