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Top freshman Pryor to test veteran. Media pick OSU as champ

Associated Press

CHICAGO: Ohio State quarterback Todd Boeckman was on the sideline when Florida's Chris Leak and Tim Tebow carved up Ohio State's defense in the 2007 BCS National Championship Game. So he knows how deadly a one-two punch at quarterback can be to an opposing defense.

Boeckman, a fifth-year senior and returning starter, also knows he might have to make room for highly touted freshman Terrelle Pryor.

''He's a special player, a special talent,'' Boeckman said Friday on the second day of the Big Ten preseason kickoff conference. ''I haven't seen what he can do on the field, so we're looking forward to seeing what he can do on Aug. 4.''

Ohio State coach Jim Tressel landed perhaps the top recruit in the country in Pryor, a 6-foot-6 dual threat out of Jeannette, Pa. Pryor could be the second coming of Tebow, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner who helped spark the Gators to a blowout win over Ohio State two seasons ago.

Tressel, however, is confident the reliable Boeckman will lead this team, picked again to win the Big Ten.

''I think Ohio State is important to him and he's going to lay it on the line for Ohio State,'' Tressel said. ''He did it as an 18-year-old and he's doing it now as a 35-year-old, or whatever he is. That's why you root for him so hard.''

Boeckman came out of tiny St. Henry in western Ohio, a football powerhouse in a town of just over 2,000 people. Tressel said they initially offered him a scholarship before his junior year, in the summer of 2002, but later pulled back to pursue Brady Quinn, the Dublin, Ohio, native who ended up at Notre Dame. Boeckman ended up as a ''grayshirt,'' entering school as a part-timer before enrolling full time in the winter of 2004.

His perseverance paid off last season, when he was first team all-conference, led the Big Ten in passing efficiency and took the Buckeyes to the BCS National Championship Game in New Orleans. Now he's had an offseason knowing that he's No. 1 on the depth chart, and his confidence is growing.

''It's definitely different than last year,'' Boeckman said. ''I'm more confident dealing with my teammates and more confident with my coaches. I think I can speak up and say things after what I've been through.''

Boeckman has answered hours of questions about the situation, which could get sticky, but said he and Pryor already have a good relationship.

''Going through 7-on-7 [drills], he's been asking me questions, how to do this, how to do that,'' Boeckman said. ''It's been helpful, and beneficial, for him.''

Regardless of Pryor's potential, Tressel isn't ready to commit to any time-sharing under center.

''We always say, regardless of the position or what year someone is, you get as your work deserves,'' he said. ''If Terrelle deserves to rotate in at quarterback [he will]. The only little difference is at quarterback, there's a rhythmic thing to work out.''

It's not like Tressel hasn't thought about it.

''I'm as anxious as everybody to find out what it looks like,'' he said.

Associated Press

Get the full article here.


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