2008 Ohio State Buckeyes football team

The 2008 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented Ohio State University during the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Buckeyes were coached by Jim Tressel and played their home games in Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. They finished with a record of 10–3 (7–1 Big Ten) and were Big Ten Conference co-champions.

2008 Ohio State Buckeyes football
Big Ten co-champion
Fiesta Bowl, L 21–24 vs. Texas
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 10
APNo. 9
Record10–3 (7–1 Big Ten)
Head coach
Offensive coordinatorJim Bollman (8th season)
Offensive schemeMultiple
Defensive coordinatorJim Heacock (4th; 13th overall season)
Co-defensive coordinatorLuke Fickell (4th; 8th overall season)
Base defense4–3
Captain
Home stadiumOhio Stadium
(Capacity: 102,329)
Seasons
← 2007
2009 →
2008 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 8 Penn State $+   7 1     11 2  
No. 9 Ohio State %+   7 1     10 3  
No. 24 Michigan State   6 2     9 4  
Northwestern   5 3     9 4  
No. 20 Iowa   5 3     9 4  
Wisconsin   3 5     7 6  
Minnesota   3 5     7 6  
Illinois   3 5     5 7  
Purdue   2 6     4 8  
Michigan   2 6     3 9  
Indiana   1 7     3 9  
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • % – BCS at-large representative
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

Before the season

edit

The Buckeyes lost 2007 starters RT Kirk Barton, FB Dionte Johnson and LB Larry Grant to graduation.

Junior DE Vernon Gholston declared for the 2008 NFL draft.

Number 1 high school recruit Terrelle Pryor officially signed with the team.

Sophomore backup quarterbacks Rob Schoenhoft and Antonio Henton transferred to the University of Delaware and Georgia Southern University respectively.

Offensive lineman Justin Boren transferred to Ohio State University from the University of Michigan.

In July Defensive Back Eugene Clifford was dismissed from the team and transferred to Tennessee State University. Clifford was also suspended for the 2008 BCS National Championship Game.[1]

Schedule

edit
DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
August 3012:00 p.m.Youngstown State*No. 2BTNW 43–0105,011
September 612:00 p.m.Ohio*No. 3
  • Ohio Stadium
  • Columbus, OH
ESPNW 26–14105,002
September 138:00 p.m.at No. 1 USC*No. 5ABCL 3–3593,607
September 2012:00 p.m.Troy*No. 13
  • Ohio Stadium
  • Columbus, OH
BTNW 28–10102,989
September 2712:00 p.m.MinnesotaNo. 14
  • Ohio Stadium
  • Columbus, OH
BTNW 34–21105,175
October 48:00 p.m.at No. 18 WisconsinNo. 14ABCW 20–1781,608
October 113:30 p.m.PurdueNo. 12
  • Ohio Stadium
  • Columbus, OH
ABC/ESPNW 16–3105,378
October 183:30 p.m.at No. 20 Michigan StateNo. 12ABC/ESPN2W 45–777,360
October 258:00 p.m.No. 3 Penn State No. 10
  • Ohio Stadium
  • Columbus, OH (rivalry, College GameDay)
ABCL 6–13105,711
November 812:00 p.m.at NorthwesternNo. 12ESPN2W 45–1047,130
November 1512:00 p.m.at IllinoisNo. 10ESPNW 30–2062,870
November 2212:00 p.m.MichiganNo. 10
ABCW 42–7105,546
January 5, 20098:00 p.m.vs. No. 3 Texas*No. 10FOXL 21–2472,047
  • *Non-conference game
  •  Homecoming
  • Rankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
  • All times are in Eastern time

Game summaries

edit

Vs. Youngstown State

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Penguins 0 0 0 0 0
#3 Buckeyes 13 13 7 10 43

The Buckeyes began the season against Jim Tressel's former team for the second straight year. Going into the game, Tressel planned to play all three quarterbacks within the first half. Top recruit Terrelle Pryor led the Buckeyes to a field goal on his first drive. Pryor also rushed for a touchdown in the second half. However, the 43–0 victory was marred when star running back Chris Wells left the game in the third quarter with a toe injury.

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 12:06 OSU Wells 43-yard run (Pretorius kick) 7–0 OSU
  • 7:54 OSU Pretorius 28-yard field goal 10–0 OSU
  • 0:08 OSU Pretorius 31-yard field goal 13–0 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 12:51 OSU Pretorius 26-yard field goal 16–0 OSU
  • 5:17 OSU Pretorius 50-yard field goal 19–0 OSU
  • 1:16 OSU Robiskie 31-yard pass from Boeckman (Pretorius kick) 26–0 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 2:01 OSU Posey 25-yard pass from Boeckman (Pretorius kick) 33–0 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 12:48 OSU Pryor 18-yard run (Pretorius kick) 40–0 OSU
  • 5:08 OSU Pettrey 54-yard field goal 43–0 OSU

Vs. Ohio

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Bobcats 0 7 7 0 14
#3 Buckeyes 3 3 6 14 26

With Chris Wells watching from the sideline with a foot injury, the Buckeyes struggled to move the ball in the first half against the lightly regarded Ohio. The Buckeyes scored first with a 3–0 lead but finished the first half down 7–6. Six minutes into the 3rd quarter quarterback Todd Boeckman fumbled a snap in the Buckeyes end zone which was recovered by Ohio for a touchdown to increase their lead to 14–6. The Buckeyes quickly responded with a Dan Herron 1-yd TD with 2:51 left in the 3rd capped by a missed point-after kick. The Bobcats then began to falter. Parson fumbled a punt, with Ohio State's Shaun Lane falling on the ball as it tumbled out of bounds at the Ohio 25. The recovery was confirmed on video review. Ohio State then capped their 6-play drive with a 2-yd TD run by Brandon Saine to take the 19–14 lead. With around 6 minutes left to play, Ray Small returned an Ohio punt 69 yards for a touchdown which sealed the sluggish win for the Buckeyes.

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 5:00 OSU Pretorius 27-yard field goal 3–0 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 6:56 OHIO Harden 15-yard run (Way kick) 7–3 OHIO
  • 5:02 OSU Pretorius 38-yard field goal 7–6 OHIO

3rd Quarter

  • 9:00 OHIO Meyers recovered fumble in end zone (Way kick) 14–6 OHIO
  • 2:51 OSU Herron 1-yard run 14–12 OHIO

4th Quarter

  • 14:00 OSU Saine 2-yard run (Pretorius kick) 19–14 OSU
  • 5:57 OSU Small 69-yard punt return (Pretorius kick) 26–14 OSU

At USC

edit

at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California

1 2 3 4 Total
#5 Buckeyes 3 0 0 0 3
#1 Trojans 7 14 14 0 35

This game between two perennial powers had long been identified as a major non-conference game with potential championship implications for either program.[2][3] In the preseason it was named as the most anticipated regular-season game of 2008.[4]

By the end of the 2007–08 season, the non-conference game between the Buckeyes and Trojans garnered interest as a possible early-season battle between top-10 teams.[5] USC or Ohio State had played in five of the last six BCS title games. The teams have not faced one another since September 29, 1990, when Todd Marinovich led the Trojans to a 35–26 victory in Ohio Stadium in a game that was called because of a thunderstorm with 2 minutes 36 seconds to play.[6] In naming it the top potentially season-defining game of 2008, Sports Illustrated highlighted a theme of credibility: Ohio State enters the game trying to move past the BCS title game losses of the previous two seasons and USC enters trying to show it remains highly competitive with its new starting quarterback and four of five new players on the offensive line.[4][7]

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 11:00 USC Ayles 1-yard pass from Sanchez (Buehler kick) 14–3 USC
  • 2:49 USC Maualuga 48-yard interception return (Buehler kick) 21–3 USC

3rd Quarter

  • 6:02 USC Williams 24-yard pass from Sanchez (Buehler kick) 28–3 USC
  • 1:33 USC Williams 17-yard pass from Sanchez (Buehler kick) 35–3 USC
 
Ohio State at USC

Vs. Troy

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Trojans 0 10 0 0 10
#14 Buckeyes 7 7 0 14 28

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 13:35 TROY Glusman 22-yard field goal 7–3 OSU
  • 9:08 OSU Hartline 39-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 14–3 OSU
  • 1:49 TROY Jernigan 45-yard pass from Hampton (Glusman kick) 14–10 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 13:28 OSU Robiskie 38-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 21–10 OSU
  • 4:46 OSU Hartline 16-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 28–10 OSU

Vs. Minnesota

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Golden Gophers 3 0 3 15 21
#13 Buckeyes 7 13 7 7 34

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 12:47 OSU Pryor 33-yard run (Pretorius kick) 7–0 OSU
  • 7:01 MINN Monroe 33-yard field goal 7–3 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 9:45 OSU Pretorius 22-yard field goal 10–3 OSU
  • 4:10 OSU Pretorius 44-yard field goal 13–3 OSU
  • 0:33 OSU Robiskie 8-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 20–3 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 10:40 MINN Monroe 28-yard field goal 20–6 OSU
  • 7:37 OSU Pryor 1-yard run (Pretorius kick) 27–6 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 14:55 OSU Robiskie 31-yard pass from Boeckman (Pretorius kick) 34–6 OSU
  • 8:24 MINN Spry 3-yard run (Monroe kick) 34–13 OSU
  • 1:13 MINN McKnight 22-yard pass from Weber (Decker pass from Maciejowski) 34–21 OSU

At Wisconsin

edit

at Camp Randall Stadium, Madison, Wisconsin

1 2 3 4 Total
#12 Buckeyes 7 0 3 10 20
#17 Badgers 0 10 0 7 17

This game was seen by many as the toughest conference game on the Buckeyes' schedule. With a healthy Chris Wells, the Buckeyes would start the game out strong, with a touchdown on the opening drive. Momentum would begin to turn in the second quarter as the Badgers would intercept a long pass from Terrelle Pryor. The game went into halftime with the Buckeyes trailing 10–7.

Late in the fourth quarter, down 17–13, Terrelle Pryor orchestrated a late drive and would rush in the game-winning touchdown with 1:08 left. In a last chance for the Badgers, the Buckeyes intercepted a pass to seal a 20–17 win. The game was unusual for the Wisconsin fans as the Wisconsin Marching Band was suspended for the game due to accusations of alcohol abuse, hazing and sexual misconduct. The crowd had to rely on music played over the loud speakers.

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 4:35 WISC Turner 9-yard pass from Evridge (Welch kick) 7–7
  • 0:01 WISC Welch 20-yard field goal 10–7 WISC

3rd Quarter

  • 7:43 OSU Pretorius 21-yard field goal 10–10

4th Quarter

  • 10:52 OSU Pretorius 34-yard field goal 13–10 OSU
  • 6:31 WISC Hill 2-yard run (Welch kick) 17–13 WISC
  • 1:08 OSU Pryor 11-yard run (Pretorius kick) 20–17 OSU

Vs. Purdue

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Boilermakers 0 0 3 0 3
#11 Buckeyes 10 3 0 3 16

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 11:41 OSU Sabino 20-yard return of blocked punt (Pretorius kick) 7–0 OSU
  • 0:57 OSU Pretorius 24-yard field goal 10–0 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 4:54 OSU Pettrey 49-yard field goal 13–0 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 11:03 PUR Wiggs 53-yard field goal 13–3 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 14:30 OSU Pretorius 22-yard field goal 16–3 OSU

At Michigan State

edit

at Spartan Stadium, East Lansing, Michigan

1 2 3 4 Total
#12 Buckeyes 21 7 0 17 45
#20 Spartans 0 0 7 0 7

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 8:25 OSU Pryor 18-yard run (Pretorius kick) 7–0 OSU
  • 4:33 OSU Robiskie 7-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 14–0 OSU
  • 2:44 OSU Wells 1-yard run (Pretorius kick) 21–0 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 6:34 OSU Wells 12-yard run (Pretorius kick) 28–0 OSU

3rd Quarter

4th Quarter

  • 14:41 OSU Gibson 69-yard fumble return (Pretorius kick) 35–7 OSU
  • 5:27 OSU Pettrey 40-yard field goal 38–7 OSU
  • 0:15 OSU Hines 48-yard fumble return (Pettrey kick) 45–7 OSU

Vs. Penn State

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
#3 Nittany Lions 0 3 0 10 13
#10 Buckeyes 0 3 3 0 6

For the fourth straight year, ESPN's College GameDay crew broadcast from the site of the Penn State–Ohio State match-up.[8][9]

In front of an Ohio Stadium-record crowd of 105,711, the Nittany Lions got their first win at Ohio State since 1978 by defeating the Buckeyes 13–6 in a game where both offenses were held below their season averages. The turning point of the game occurred early in the fourth quarter with the Buckeyes holding a three-point lead and facing a third-and-1. Penn State safety Mark Rubin tackled Terrelle Pryor, and forced a fumble which was recovered by Penn State. Nittany Lions' backup quarterback Pat Devlin, playing for injured starter Daryll Clark, scored on a quarterback sneak for the only touchdown of the game. After PSU placekicker Kevin Kelly's second field goal, the Buckeyes last drive was ended by an interception at the goal line—Pryor's second turnover of the game. The Buckeyes were limited to their lowest point total in Ohio Stadium since 1982, and the Nittany Lions were charged with zero penalties.

Clark completed 12 of 20 passes for 121 yards before leaving, while the Nittany Lions defense held the Buckeyes running game in check, holding Pryor to six yards on nine attempts, and Beanie Wells to 55 yards on 22 carries.[10][11] The Buckeyes were the only team in 2008 to hold the Lions below 20 points, and the only team to prevent Penn State from scoring a touchdown in the first half.

Scoring summary

edit

2nd Quarter

  • 1:33 PSU Kelly 31-yard field goal 3–0 PSU
  • 0:00 OSU Pettrey 41-yard field goal 3–3

3rd Quarter

  • 3:19 OSU Pettrey 36-yard field goal 6–3 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 6:25 PSU Devlin 1-yard run (Kelly kick) 10–6 PSU
  • 1:07 PSU Kelly 35-yard field goal 13–6 PSU

At Northwestern

edit

at Ryan Field, Evanston, Illinois

1 2 3 4 Total
#12 Buckeyes 7 17 7 14 45
#24 Wildcats 7 0 3 0 10

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 14:03 OSU - Wells 55-yard run (Pretorius kick) 14–7 OSU
  • 10:04 OSU - Pretorius 33-yard field goal 17–7 OSU
  • 1:26 OSU - Robiskie 15-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 24–7 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 11:03 NW - Villarreal 25-yard field goal 24–10 OSU
  • 0:34 OSU - Nicol 6-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 31–10 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 7:36 OSU - Robiskie 34-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 38–10 OSU
  • 0:07 OSU - Herron 16-yard run (Pretorius kick) 45–10 OSU

At Illinois

edit

at Memorial Stadium, Champaign, Illinois

1 2 3 4 Total
#10 Buckeyes 9 14 0 7 30
Fighting Illini 7 6 0 7 20

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 14:15 OSU - Wells 3-yard run (Pretorius kick) 16–7 OSU
  • 6:30 OSU - Sanzenbacher 20-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 23–7 OSU
  • 2:39 ILL - Eller 28-yard field goal 23–10 OSU
  • 0:00 ILL - Eller 44-yard field goal 23–13 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 11:55 OSU - Herron 12-yard run (Pretorius kick) 30–13 OSU
  • 0:42 ILL - Duvalt 24-yard pass from Williams (Eller kick) 30–20 OSU

Vs. Michigan

edit

at Ohio Stadium, Columbus, Ohio

1 2 3 4 Total
Wolverines 0 7 0 0 7
#10 Buckeyes 7 7 14 14 42

Ohio State extended their win streak over Michigan to a record five and enjoyed their second biggest victory margin (35) in the series, superseded only by a 38–0 shutout in 1935.

Scoring summary

edit
 
Beanie Wells scored the first touchdown of the game.

1st Quarter

2nd Quarter

  • 13:10 OSU - Hartline 53-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 14–0 OSU
  • 2:51 MICH - Minor 1-yard run (Lopata kick) 14–7 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 11:04 OSU - Herron 49-yard run (Pretorius kick) 21–7 OSU
  • 3:34 OSU - Robiskie 8-yard pass from Pryor (Pretorius kick) 28–7 OSU

4th Quarter

  • 14:52 OSU - Herron 2-yard run (Pretorius kick) 35–7 OSU
  • 13:16 OSU - Hartline 18-yard pass from Boeckman (Pretorius kick) 42–7 OSU

2009 Fiesta Bowl - Ohio State vs. Texas

edit

at University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Arizona

1 2 3 4 Total
#10 Buckeyes 3 3 0 15 21
#3 Longhorns 0 3 14 7 24

Scoring summary

edit

1st Quarter

  • 7:28 OSU - Pettrey 51-yard field goal 3–0 OSU

2nd Quarter

  • 11:45 TEX - Lawrence 27-yard field goal 3–3
  • 5:39 OSU - Pretorius 30-yard field goal 6–3 OSU

3rd Quarter

  • 8:29 TEX - McCoy 14-yard rush (Lawrence kick) 10–6 TEX
  • 1:04 TEX - Cosby 7-yard pass from McCoy (Lawrence kick) 17–6 TEX

4th Quarter

  • 13:22 OSU - Pettrey 44-yard field goal 17–9 TEX
  • 7:26 OSU - Pryor 5-yard pass from Boeckman (two-point conversion failed) 17–15 TEX
  • 2:05 OSU - Herron 15-yard run (two-point conversion failed) 21–17 OSU
  • 0:16 TEX - Cosby 26-yard pass from McCoy (Lawrence kick) 24–21 TEX

Rankings

edit
Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
( ) = First-place votes
Week
PollPre123456789101112131415Final
AP2 (21)3 (15)5 (1)131414121210131210101010109
Coaches3 (14)3 (10)5 (1)1413121111101312101010101011
HarrisNot released12131012111010101010Not released
BCSNot released912111110101010Not released

Coaching staff

edit
  • Jim Tressel – Head coach (8th year)
  • Jim Bollman – Offensive line/OC (8th year)
  • Joe Daniels – Quarterbacks (8th year)
  • Luke Fickell – Co-defensive coordinator / linebackers coach (7th year)
  • Jim Heacock – Defensive coordinator / defensive line (13th year)
  • Paul Haynes – Defensive safeties (4th year)
  • Darrell Hazell – Assistant head coach / wide receivers (5th year)
  • Traver Johnson – Defensive cornerbacks (2nd year)
  • John Peterson – Tight ends coach / recruiting coordinator (5th year)
  • Dick Tressel – Running backs (8th year)
  • Bob Tucker – Director of football operations (14th year)
  • Stan Jefferson – Director of player development (5th year)
  • Eric Lichter – Director of football performance (3rd year)
  • Butch Reynolds – Speed coordinator (4th year)
  • Doug Davis – Strength coordinator (2nd year)
  • Troy Sutton – Strength coordinator (1st year)

Roster

edit
Wide Receivers
  • 9 Hartline, Brian - Junior*
  • 89 Hummel, Garrett - Sophomore
  • 18 Lisko, David - Senior
  • 86 Potokar, Dan - Junior
  • 80 Robiskie, Brian - Senior*
  • 15 Ruhl, Kyle - Senior
  • 12 Sanzenbacher, Dane - Sophomore
  • 82 Small, Ray - Junior
  • 10 Torrence, Devon - Sophomore
  • 5 Washington, Taurian - Sophomore
  • 11 Stoneburner, Jake - Freshman
  • 8 Posey, DeVier - Freshman
  • 7 Thomas, Lamaar - Freshman
Offensive Tackles
  • 75 Boone, Alex- Senior *
  • 65 Ebner, Doug - Senior
  • 66 Moses, Andrew - Junior
  • 77 Smith, Connor - Sophomore
  • 76 Sika, Scott - Junior
  • 69 Slagle, Zach - Sophomore
  • 76 J.B Shugarts - Freshman
  • 74 Mike Adams - Freshman
Offensive Guards
  • 68 Blankenship, Evan - Freshman
  • 70 Browning, Bryant - Sophomore
  • 67 Mitchum, Kyle - Senior
  • 63 Person, Ben - Senior *
  • 71 Rehring, Steve - Junior*
  • 79 Skinner, Jon - Senior
Centers
  • 64 Cordle, Jim - Junior*
  • 57 Malone, Chris - Junior
  • 50 Brewster, Michael - Freshman*
Tight End
  • 86 Ballard, Jake - Junior
  • 46 Larson, J.D - Junior
  • 82 Miller, Andy - Sophomore
  • 88 Nicol, Rory - Senior *
  • 87 Smith, Brandon - Senior
  • DiLillo, Nic - Freshman
Quarterback
 
Running Back
  • 46 Christian, K.C. - Sophomore
  • 35 DeLande, Bo - Sophomore
  • 33 Gantz, Joe - Junior
  • 1 Herron, Daniel - Freshman
  • 3 Saine, Brandon - Sophomore
  • 28 Wells, Chris - Junior*
  • 34 Wells, Maurice - Senior
  • 24 Williams, Marcus - Sophomore
Fullback
  • 49 Lukens, Ryan - Senior
  • 43 Olson, Aram - Sophomore
  • 48 Smith, Spencer - Sophomore
  • Martin, Jermil - Freshman
Defensive Lineman
  • 92 Denlinger, Todd - Junior
  • 90 Gray, Bryan - Junior
  • 95 Rietschlin, Chris - Senior
Defensive tackles
  • 93 Abdallah, Nader - Senior
  • 97 Heyward, Cameron - Sophomore *
  • 72 Larimore, Dexter - Sophomore *
  • Rowell, Shawntel - Freshman
  • 53 Goebel, Garrett - Freshman
Defensive End
  • 90 Gibson, Thaddeus - Sophomore *
  • 57 Ingham, Tom - Junior
  • 44 Johnson, Mark - Sophomore
  • 9 Rose, Robert - Sophomore *
  • 98 Thomas, Solomon - Freshman
  • 87 Wilson, Lawrence - Junior (Out for season)
  • 84 Worthington, Doug - Junior
  • 96 Mobley, Willie - Freshman
  • 94 Wells, Keith - Freshman
Cornerbacks
Defensive Backs
  • 5 Chekwa, Chimdi - Sophomore*
  • 36 Daniels, Matt - Senior
  • 39 Dougherty, Michael - Senior
  • 30 Evege, Donnie - Freshman
  • 24 Schwartz, Grant - Sophomore
  • 11 Scott, James - Sophomore
  • 20 Washington, Donald - Junior
  • 17 Willis, Zach - Senior
 
Linebackers
  • 1 Freeman, Marcus - Senior *
  • 7 Hines, Jermale - Sophomore * (safety)
  • 51 Homan, Ross - Sophomore *
  • 33 Laurinaitis, James - Senior*
  • 59 Libby, Kyle - Sophomore
  • 26 Moeller, Tyler - Sophomore
  • 36 Rolle, Brian - Sophomore
  • 38 Spitler, Austin - Junior
  • 55 Terry, Curtis - Senior
  • 6 Sabino, Etienne - Freshman
  • 42 Sweat, Andrew - Freshman
  • Williams, Nathan - Freshman
Safety
  • 8 Gant, Aaron - Junior
  • 3 O'Neal, Jamario - Senior
  • 14 Oliver, Nate - Freshman
  • 23 Patterson, Nick - Senior
  • 25 Pentello, Rocco - Freshman
  • 21 Russell, Anderson - Junior*
  • Domicone, Zach - Freshman
  • Johnson, Orhian - Freshman
Long Snappers
  • 52 Curtis, Don - Sophomore
  • 53 Howe, Patrick - Sophomore
  • 96 McQuaide, Jake - Sophomore
Kickers
  • 12 Barclay, Devin - Sophomore
  • 39 Good, Andrew - Junior
  • 41 Mattimoe, Matt - Junior
  • 20 Pettrey, Aaron - Junior *
  • 85 Pretorius, Ryan - Senior
  • Buchanan, Ben - Freshman

Players drafted into the NFL

edit
Round Pick Player Position NFL Club
1 14 Malcolm Jenkins CB New Orleans Saints
1 31 Beanie Wells RB Arizona Cardinals
2 35 James Laurinaitis LB St. Louis Rams
2 36 Brian Robiskie WR Cleveland Browns
4 102 Donald Washington CB Kansas City Chiefs
4 108 Brian Hartline WR Miami Dolphins
5 154 Marcus Freeman LB Chicago Bears

References

edit
  1. ^ Green, Kristofer (July 27, 2008) BIG TEN FOOTBALL: Ohio State's Eugene Clifford to Transfer, bleacherreport.com, Retrieved August 5, 2008.
  2. ^ Mandel, Stewart (May 7, 2008)Why a 'plus-one' was shot down; post-Perrilloux LSU and more, SI.com, Retrieved May 9, 2008.
  3. ^ Walters, John (June 9, 2008) Top 10 impact games Archived 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine, NBC Sports, Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  4. ^ a b Feldman, Bruce (July 21, 2008) Ohio State-USC tops must-see games of 2008, ESPN.com, Retrieved July 30, 2008.
  5. ^ Schlabach, Mark (January 8, 2006) Georgia takes top spot in early look at 2008's Top 25, ESPN.com, Retrieved January 8, 2008.
  6. ^ Crowe, Jerry (January 10, 2008). "Trojans Can Buck Recent Trend". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 10, 2008.
  7. ^ Mandel, Stewart (July 1, 2008) Ten season-defining games in '08, SI.com, Retrieved July 2, 2008.
  8. ^ "PSU vs. OSU Countdown". Altoona Mirror. October 21, 2008. Retrieved October 21, 2008.
  9. ^ Black, John (October 27, 2008). "The Football Letter: Notes from the Cuff". The Penn State Alumni Association. Archived from the original on December 16, 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  10. ^ Musselman, Ron (October 26, 2008). "PSU Football: Ends Jinx in Columbus with 13–6 Win". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved October 26, 2008.
  11. ^ "No. 3 Nittany Lions Top No. 10 Buckeyes, 13–6". October 25, 2008. Archived from the original on October 29, 2008. Retrieved October 26, 2008.