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OSU 27, PSU 7
Pryor's play puts Buckeyes in control

OSU back in tie atop conference as defense handles Nittany Lions

By Genaro C. Armas
Associated Press

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.: Terrelle Pryor tiptoed his way around the Penn State defense, then smiled and danced all over the Beaver Stadium turf.

Quite the happy homecoming Saturday for the dual-threat phenom from western Pennsylvania.

Pryor threw for two touchdowns and ran for another in his first game back in his home state, and No. 15 Ohio State reclaimed control of the Big Ten race after beating No. 11 Penn State 24-7 in a duel of the league's top two defenses.

As an added bonus, the Buckeyes (8-2, 5-1) vaulted into a tie for the conference lead with Iowa after Northwestern handed the Hawkeyes their first loss of the season earlier Saturday.

After a demoralizing loss at Purdue last month, Ohio State's hopes for a fifth consecutive league title look much brighter. A showdown with Iowa at the Horseshoe awaits next week.

''November is for contenders, we always say that,'' Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. ''It's hard to get too ecstatic right now because you know the Hawkeyes are coming to town.''

They'll head home to Columbus with a confident Pryor, the native of Jeannette who came up with several clutch plays against the team he turned down as a highly touted high school prospect.

On Saturday, Pryor showed Happy Valley why he was such a prize. He finished 8-for-17 passing for 125 yards and rushed for 50 yards and a 7-yard
touchdown on five carries.

''It was huge. They were making a big deal about it and people were doubting us, 'Buckeyes can't do this or this.' A lot of that stuff motivates us, but we knew we could do it,'' Pryor said.

Ray Small burned Penn State (8-2, 4-2) with two long punt returns, and Ohio State's defense held dangerous Penn State quarterback Daryll Clark in check with constant pressure.

The Buckeyes scored the game's final 17 points to silence the crowd of 110,033, the fourth-largest in Beaver Stadium history.

''We broke down on a kicking play, had a couple tough penalties; we didn't get any field position,'' Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. ''It was a tough ballgame for us, it really was, against a good football team.''

Leading by three, Pryor connected with open receiver DeVier Posey in stride down the left sideline for a 62-yard touchdown pass with 1:47 left in the third to extend the lead to 17-7.

A pumped Pryor rushed down the field to meet Posey, then skipped back to the sideline in delight.

''This was my first time to lead the team and lead the offense and score some touchdowns against another big team,'' Pryor said. ''It felt pretty good to lead the team.''

After another three-and-out by the Penn State offense, Small lit up the Nittany Lions' porous punt coverage unit for a 45-yard return to the Nittany Lions 47 to end the third quarter.

Getting good protection, Pryor led the Buckeyes again on a drive with two third-down conversions before rolling right to hit Brandon Saine for a 6-yard touchdown pass on another third-down play to give Ohio State a 17-point cushion.

Fittingly, Saine dove into the corner of the end zone in front of the sliver of cheering Buckeyes fans dressed in scarlet gear that stood out in the sea of blue and white.

For the most part, Pryor played mistake-free football, and his offensive line kept the defense away from the most-sacked quarterback in the Big Ten.

''We failed . . . Our game plan was to go in and stop him,'' Penn State defensive tackle Ollie Ogbu said. ''We didn't do it on a consistent enough basis, so I would say we failed.''

Pryor's 7-yard touchdown run in the first quarter was set up by a 41-yard punt return by Small to the Penn State 9. Special teams, especially the punting unit, has been a season-long problem, though the Nittany Lions have been able to overcome those woes against less-talented teams.

Not against Ohio State, though.

Ross Homan's diving interception of Clark with 9:20 left — Penn State's first interception in four games — sent Nittany Lions fans scurrying for the exits.

Clark's touchdown plunge from a yard out on fourth down capped a nice second-quarter drive to tie the game at 7. It was the 21st rushing score of his career, breaking the mark for a Penn State quarterback set by his mentor, Michael Robinson.

Otherwise, Penn State struggled all day.

The Buckeyes smothered Clark's receivers except for Graham Zug (seven catches, 96 yards) and pressured him up front. Cameron Heyward had two sacks and 11 tackles.

Clark finished 12-of-28 for 125 yards and the interception. He ran for 20 yards on 11 carries. Evan Royster managed just 36 yards on 13 carries, and a couple of dropped passes didn't help the offense, either.

''It's just hard to put points on the board when you don't have a consistent rhythm,'' Clark said.

Ohio State's Ray Small (82) is tackled by Penn State punter Jeremy Boone (41) during the second half of an NCAA college football game in State College, Pa., Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009. Ohio State won 24-7.(AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

UNIVERSITY PARK, PA.: Terrelle Pryor tiptoed his way around the Penn State defense, then smiled and danced all over the Beaver Stadium turf.

Quite the happy homecoming Saturday for the dual-threat phenom from western Pennsylvania.

Pryor threw for two touchdowns and ran for another in his first game back in his home state, and No. 15 Ohio State reclaimed control of the Big Ten race after beating No. 11 Penn State 24-7 in a duel of the league's top two defenses.

As an added bonus, the Buckeyes (8-2, 5-1) vaulted into a tie for the conference lead with Iowa after Northwestern handed the Hawkeyes their first loss of the season earlier Saturday.

After a demoralizing loss at Purdue last month, Ohio State's hopes for a fifth consecutive league title look much brighter. A showdown with Iowa at the Horseshoe awaits next week.

''November is for contenders, we always say that,'' Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. ''It's hard to get too ecstatic right now because you know the Hawkeyes are coming to town.''

They'll head home to Columbus with a confident Pryor, the native of Jeannette who came up with several clutch plays against the team he turned down as a highly touted high school prospect.

On Saturday, Pryor showed Happy Valley why he was such a prize. He finished 8-for-17 passing for 125 yards and rushed for 50 yards and a 7-yard
touchdown on five carries.

''It was huge. They were making a big deal about it and people were doubting us, 'Buckeyes can't do this or this.' A lot of that stuff motivates us, but we knew we could do it,'' Pryor said.

Ray Small burned Penn State (8-2, 4-2) with two long punt returns, and Ohio State's defense held dangerous Penn State quarterback Daryll Clark in check with constant pressure.

The Buckeyes scored the game's final 17 points to silence the crowd of 110,033, the fourth-largest in Beaver Stadium history.

''We broke down on a kicking play, had a couple tough penalties; we didn't get any field position,'' Penn State coach Joe Paterno said. ''It was a tough ballgame for us, it really was, against a good football team.''

Leading by three, Pryor connected with open receiver DeVier Posey in stride down the left sideline for a 62-yard touchdown pass with 1:47 left in the third to extend the lead to 17-7.

A pumped Pryor rushed down the field to meet Posey, then skipped back to the sideline in delight.

''This was my first time to lead the team and lead the offense and score some touchdowns against another big team,'' Pryor said. ''It felt pretty good to lead the team.''

After another three-and-out by the Penn State offense, Small lit up the Nittany Lions' porous punt coverage unit for a 45-yard return to the Nittany Lions 47 to end the third quarter.

Getting good protection, Pryor led the Buckeyes again on a drive with two third-down conversions before rolling right to hit Brandon Saine for a 6-yard touchdown pass on another third-down play to give Ohio State a 17-point cushion.

Fittingly, Saine dove into the corner of the end zone in front of the sliver of cheering Buckeyes fans dressed in scarlet gear that stood out in the sea of blue and white.

For the most part, Pryor played mistake-free football, and his offensive line kept the defense away from the most-sacked quarterback in the Big Ten.

''We failed . . . Our game plan was to go in and stop him,'' Penn State defensive tackle Ollie Ogbu said. ''We didn't do it on a consistent enough basis, so I would say we failed.''

Pryor's 7-yard touchdown run in the first quarter was set up by a 41-yard punt return by Small to the Penn State 9. Special teams, especially the punting unit, has been a season-long problem, though the Nittany Lions have been able to overcome those woes against less-talented teams.

Not against Ohio State, though.

Ross Homan's diving interception of Clark with 9:20 left — Penn State's first interception in four games — sent Nittany Lions fans scurrying for the exits.

Clark's touchdown plunge from a yard out on fourth down capped a nice second-quarter drive to tie the game at 7. It was the 21st rushing score of his career, breaking the mark for a Penn State quarterback set by his mentor, Michael Robinson.

Otherwise, Penn State struggled all day.

The Buckeyes smothered Clark's receivers except for Graham Zug (seven catches, 96 yards) and pressured him up front. Cameron Heyward had two sacks and 11 tackles.

Clark finished 12-of-28 for 125 yards and the interception. He ran for 20 yards on 11 carries. Evan Royster managed just 36 yards on 13 carries, and a couple of dropped passes didn't help the offense, either.

''It's just hard to put points on the board when you don't have a consistent rhythm,'' Clark said.



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osu1

Posted 02:35 AM, 11/08/2009

You may want to change the the score above the headline.


Noodles Jefferson
Paradise, Oh

Posted 11:53 AM, 11/08/2009

The Buckeyes stiffened a few Pennsylvania "necks" yesterday. What will the do with those thousands of anti Pryor T shirts?

It is fitting that the ABJ has the wrong score at the head of this page. It gives instant exposure to the fact that they are too cheap to hire a proof reader.

Hey, go ahead and put the score in wrong...it's only a newspaper? Right?
















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