PSU Wins Big with
Big D
"THE" Ohio State couldn't do anything
on O
Don't look now, all the Penn State fans are coming out of
the woodwork like cockroaches after you turn out the lights at
a Chinese Buffet. "Oh I have supported them throught he good
and bad" or "I never doubted them for a minute".
You pussies are worse than the people that talk shit when they
root for a shitty team. PSU Fan waits until the Lions win big
games until they START smack. "Look see how good they did,
I told you they were good!" No you didn't, I haven't heard
from you until you beat OSU. Don't buy your roses yet, 78 yds
in the air isn't going to get you to Pasedena.
Penn State 17, Ohio State 10
Penn
State vs. Ohio State |
| Since PSU entered Big Ten
in '93 |
Year |
PSU W-L |
Result vs. OSU |
2005 |
5-0 |
Won 17-10 |
1998 |
3-0 |
Lost 28-9 |
1996 |
5-0 |
Lost 38-7 |
1995 |
3-1 |
Lost 28-25 |
1993 |
5-1 |
Lost 24-6 |
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) -- Joe Paterno's team is back to where
some thought the 78-year-old coach could no longer take Penn State.
Back on top of the Big Ten and back in the hunt for a national
title.
Michael Robinson and Derrick Williams ran for touchdowns less
than three minutes apart in the second quarter and Paul Posluszny
and the Nittany Lions' defense did the rest in a 17-10 victory
over No. 6 Ohio State on Saturday night.
Win No. 349 for Paterno was the type of victory some thought
was only in the past for the second-winningest coach in major
college football. The 16th-ranked Nittany Lions (6-0, 3-0) hadn't
beaten a team so highly ranked since knocking off No. 4 Arizona
to start the 1999 season.
"I've been as conservative as I could in evaluating my football
team," Paterno said. "I think we're a good football
team. I think we can be better."
On a chilly and damp night -- just perfect for a slugfest between
two of the Big Ten's best defenses -- Penn State was out to prove
that Paterno's once-powerful program could again compete with
the nation's elite after winning just three conference games the
past two seasons.
The Nittany Lions did more than just hold their own against the
Buckeyes (3-2, 1-1) and their vaunted defense, led by linebacker
A.J. Hawk. Penn State bested the team considered the class of
the league and a Rose Bowl contender.
When Tamba Hali sacked Troy Smith, knocked the ball loose and
it was recovered by Scott Paxson with about a minute and a half
left, all that was left was for Robinson to take a couple knees
to kill the clock.
"It felt great," Hali said of his game-clinching sack.
Now, for the first time since '99, Penn State is a player in
the national title picture.
"Everyone feels that Penn State is back," said linebacker
Dan Connor, who had 12 tackles and a sack. "We're back on
the map."
Defense was the lynchpin of that '99 team with linebacker LaVar
Arrington and defensive end Courtney Brown providing the big plays.
Now it's Posluszny, Hali and Connor leading the way.
The Lions bottled up the two-way threat Smith and took Ohio State's
big-play receivers, Ted Ginn, Jr. and Santonio Holmes, out of
the game. Not until the final drive did either have a catch over
20 yards.
"Well, we got behind in the count and allowed them to pin
their ears back and they did a good job with that," Ohio
State coach Jim Tressel said. "When you're behind the count
against a veteran secondary and a veteran front, you give them
a better chance."
Posluszny had 14 tackles and chased down Smith for a 10-yard
loss with about five minutes left to help keep the Buckeyes scoreless
in the second half.
"I don't think you can play any better than he [Posluszny]
played," Paterno said. "He's like Shane Conlan."
The Buckeyes had 230 total yards with Smith passing for 139.
"Things weren't clicking for some reason," Buckeyes
center Nick Mangold said. "It just didn't seem like we could
get two plays strung together."
Penn State managed only 195 yards -- Robinson passed for 78 and
ran for 52.
"I haven't been around for much winning, but it's definitely
a highlight of my career," Robinson, a fifth-year senior,
said of the win.
Ohio State was the highest-ranked opponent to visit State College
since No. 2 Miami played at Beaver Stadium in 2001. High-stakes
games like this used to be common at Penn State, but during four
losing seasons in the past five years Happy Valley's been kind
of a sullen place.
With the Nittany Lions back in the rankings and a win a way from
having first place in the Big Ten all to themselves, the student
body was re-energized. Some camped out for a week in what was
dubbed "Paternoville" around Beaver Stadium for the
first-come-first-serve seats.
The Nittany Lions rewarded their patience with a performance
worthy of Paterno's two championship teams. In return, the bouncing
crowd of 109,839 literally had the stadium rocking up and down
after Penn State scored two TDs in a span of 2:33 to take a 14-3
lead in the second quarter.
Williams sped 13 yards with a simple toss sweep for a touchdown
that gave Penn State its first lead.
Moments later, Calvin Lowry picked off Smith's pass and returned
it 36 yards to the Ohio State 2. On third-and-goal from the 1,
Robinson scored on a keeper with 7:55 to go in the half.
"We knew they'd come out -- with the atmosphere of the game
and electricity in the air -- they'd come out ready to play,"
said Hawk, who had nine tackles, three for losses. "And we
knew we had to match that. I think coming out and giving up that
early touchdown hurt us a little bit."
The Buckeyes responded to the Penn State defense and the thunderous
roars of the crowd with an 81-yard, 14-play drive that Smith capped
with a 10-yard TD run and reach across the goal line with 33 seconds
left in the half.
But that was Ohio State's one and only sustained drive and the
Buckeyes dropped to 17-7 against Top 25 teams under Tressel.
The only scoring in the second half was Kevin Kelly's 41-yard
field goal early in the third, which made it 17-10 and was the
last time Ohio State's defense would let the Nittany Lions even
threaten to score.
"I thought the defense was absolutely superb," Paterno
said. "There was a lot of pressure. One mistake and it's
the entire ballgame."
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