thelantern Tuesday January 13, 2015
year: 135 No. 2
2015 National Champions
‘THE CHASE IS
COMPLETE’
MARK BATKE / Photo editor
Coach Urban Meyer and sophomore running back Ezekiel Elliott celebrate after winning the first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship game on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. With the win, OSU captured its 8th national title in program history.
OSU overcomes adversity to win 8th National Championship TIM MOODY Sports editor moody.178@osu.edu ARLINGTON, Texas — Ohio State’s 13th win in a row was the one that mattered most as the Buckeyes toppled No. 2 Oregon to win the first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship under the lights in North Texas. After falling behind in the opening minutes, No. 4 OSU piled up 21 straight first-half points before sophomore running back Ezekiel Elliott led
continued as Championship on 3A
MARK BATKE / Photo editor
Oregon redshirt-junior quarterback Marcus Mariota lays on the ground in pain after being tackled by OSU sophomore defensive lineman Joey Bosa during the College Football Playoff National Championship game on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20.
CAR 2 GO AD!!!! ROOMY ENOUGH FOR A COUPLE OF QUARTERBACKS
AND A NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP TROPHY
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football Ezekiel Elliott sets sights on history after record-setting performance Tim Moody Sports editor moody.178@osu.edu ARLINGTON, Texas — After leading Ohio State to a win against Oregon in the College Football Playoff National Championship, Ezekiel Elliott named off a few Buckeye greats that came before him. The sophomore praised the legacy of fellow running backs Archie Griffin, Eddie George and Beanie Wells, but Elliott’s performance gave him something those three never had: a national title. “Just being able to accomplish something that all of them weren’t able to accomplish, it means the world to me, and I’m happy that I was able to carry on that lineage this season,” Elliott said. In order to get the spark the No. 4 Buckeyes needed to pick up their 42-20 win against the No. 2 Ducks, Elliott piled up 246 rushing yards and four touchdowns on 36 carries — all career highs. And he did it to cap a run of three postseason games in which he rushed for at least 220 yards. In total, Elliott had 696 yards and eight touchdowns on the ground in postseason wins against Wisconsin in the Big Ten Championship, Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and Oregon in the title game. But as the individual accolades continue to pile up — he was the Offensive Player of the Game in both the Sugar Bowl and the playoff final — Elliott saved credit for the players leading the way around him. “Just getting the MVP, I credit that to my big boys up front, actually everybody on the offense,” he said. “Everybody does their job, and nothing would be possible without that team effort.” While coach Urban Meyer saved some credit for the Buckeye
mark batke / Photo editor
Redshirt-junior tight end Nick Vannett celebrates during the game on Jan. 12. offensive line as well, it took him just two words to describe his feature running back — “A monster.” He said Elliott is a humble player, but he stressed that Elliott doesn’t get the recognition he deserves. “He’s the most underrated back in America,” Meyer said. “He’s one of the best post-contact yard guys I’ve ever been around, and on top of that he’s a great human being.” Beyond his off-field attributes and single-game performances, Elliott peppered his name in the single-season OSU record books, despite not starting any games as a freshman last year. Elliott’s 1,878 yards on the ground this season are good for second-most in program history, while his four touchdowns against Oregon were a postseason-game OSU record. Looking back to the beginning of the season, OSU co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Tom Herman said he knew what kind of player Elliott could be, as long as the pieces came together around him. “We knew he was a special
mark batke / Photo editor
Sophomore running back Ezekiel Elliott (15) runs in front of redshirt-sophomore quarterback Cardale Jones (12) during the National Championship game on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. talent last year as a freshman, and all we needed was the offensive line a little bit to grow up a little bit and improve,” Herman said. “And they did that, and you saw the fruits of that in his performances.” Herman and Meyer both said they saw the type of player Elliott was last season, but the St. Louis, Mo., native had just 30 carries for 262 yards and two touchdowns last season. Just a year later, he totaled 273 attempts for those 1,878 yards and 18 touchdowns, while also
adding 28 receptions for 220 yards through the air. And after the breakout season, Elliott could find himself in the company of players like Griffin and George on another stage, this time as a Heisman Trophy candidate. George won the award in 1995 and Griffin won it in 1974 and 1975 to become the only two-time recipient, but Elliott has already won it in his own right — even if it came in the virtual world. “It’s something you dream about as a kid when you’re playing
‘NCAA Football’ and you create your little player, and he wins the Heisman,” Elliott said. “Just thinking that I’m going to have the opportunity next year to compete for the Heisman, just it means everything.” But even with the trophy in mind, Elliott stressed the potential to contend won’t change his attitude going forward. “I’m not going to change, I’m going to keep grinding,” he said. “I’m going to do all I can to win it.”
W W W. J A PA N M A R K E T P L A C E . U S
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Tuesday January 13, 2015
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continuations Letters to the editor
Championship from 1A
a second-half surge that culminated with a 42-20 victory. Elliott finished To submit a letter to the game with a national championthe editor, either mail ship game record 246 yards and four or email it. Please put touchdowns Monday night at AT&T your name, address, Stadium. phone number and Elliott said after the game that the email address on the Buckeyes had reached their goal, letter. If the editor and he could barely believe it. decides to publish it, “This is a surreal moment,” he he or she will contact said. “It’s why we all came here. After you to confirm your all we went through, this is crazy. It identity. doesn’t feel real.” Redshirt-sophomore quarterEmail letters to: back Cardale Jones said the win lanternnewsroom@ was even sweeter because the gmail.com Buckeyes fought through injuries to two Heisman trophy-candidate Mail letters to: quarterbacks, an early-season loss The Lantern to Virginia Tech and the death of Letters to the editor teammate Kosta Karageorge to get Journalism Building there. 242 W. 18th Ave. “Long story short, we weren’t Columbus, OH 43210 supposed to be here,” he said. “We had every — all the odds were stacked against us through the whole season, and for us to be sitting right here as national champs, it only means a lot to me, but our The Lantern corrects community, Buckeye nation, and our any significant error hometowns.” brought to the attenThe Buckeyes (14-1, 8-0) picked tion of the staff. If you think a correction up the eighth national title in program history, and improved to 9-0 all-time is needed, please against the No. 2 Ducks (13-2, 8-1). email Liz Young at Elliott was named the game’s young.1693@osu.edu offensive player of the game, while Corrections will be redshirt-sophomore safety Tyvis printed in this space. Powell picked up the defensive equivalent. The win gave OSU its first national title since 2002 and moved coach Urban Meyer to 3-0 all-time in national title games. Meyer is just the second coach to win national championships at more than one school, as he won two while coaching at Florida. “The chase is complete,” Meyer said after the game. “These guys accepted their final mission and did it. It was our final mantra the past few weeks and I’m very grateful for the work these guys put in.” Meyer — an Ashtabula, Ohio, native and former Cincinnati football player — said he’s honored to win his third championship, this time for his home state. “I played college football here, and to bring now a national title to the great state of Ohio, it’s almost surreal,” he said. Jones — who started all three of OSU’s postseason games after redshirt-freshman J.T. Barrett fractured his ankle — dedicated the win to the Buckeye seniors, who had not won a bowl game before this season. “It’s even better than I thought. It’s an unreal feeling,” Jones said after the game. “The seniors never could win a bowl game in four years. This is for them.” The game started with redshirt-junior quarterback and Heisman
Correction Submissions
Trophy winner Marcus Mariota leading his team down the field to take an 7-0 lead after just 2:39. Jones took over at his own 25-yard line. The teams traded punts on the next two drives, before Elliott weaved through the Oregon defense for a 33-yard touchdown, tying the game at seven with 4:36 to play in the first quarter. OSU scored again on its next drive after an Oregon punt, taking a 14-7 lead on a touchdown pass from Jones to redshirt-junior tight end Nick Vannett. After an Oregon punt and a Jones fumble, the Ducks drove down to the OSU three-yard line, but came up short on fourth down. OSU fumbled on the next drive, but a sack of Mariota by junior defensive lineman Adolphus Washington forced a three-andout for Oregon. OSU took a 21-10 halftime lead, but Oregon pulled within one in the second half. Elliott tacked on a touchdown late in the third quarter and another in the fourth to extend the margin, helping the Buckeyes stay ahead, despite turning the ball over four times. Meyer said the win came in part because of the play of Elliott and the offense, but stressed the importance of the improved play of the OSU defense as well. “And it’s also a testimony to the improvement our defense has made,” he said. “We won that game because of course Zeke Elliott and of course our offensive line, but our defense, to hold (Mariota) — I know he threw for a bunch of yards, 300-plus yards, but our defense, we tackled tonight and did a great job.” A fumble on OSU’s second drive of the second half marked the team’s fourth turnover of the game and second in the third quarter. A defensive stand inside the 10-yard line by the Buckeyes forced an Oregon field goal with 6:39 to play in the third quarter, making it 21-20. After the field goal, Elliott ran for 44 of 75 yards on a 12-play drive, capped by a nine-yard scoring run to give the Buckeyes a 28-20 lead at the start of the fourth quarter. Elliott piled on another 20 yards on OSU’s next drive, and punched in his third touchdown of the game to make it 35-20 with 9:44 on the clock. Oregon coach Mark Helfrich said Elliott is a “tremendous player,” and credited the OSU offensive line for some of his success against the Ducks. “He is an exceptional player, as is their offensive line,” Helfrich said after the game. “Their offensive line did a really nice job.” OSU stopped the Ducks on fourth down with less than four minutes to play, taking over in Oregon territory. Elliott capped a short Buckeye drive with another touchdown for the final points of the game. Elliott finished the season with 1,878 rushing yards, good for second-most in program history. In addition to Elliott’s third-straight game with 220 yards or more, Jones finished the night 16-of-23 on pass attempts for 242 yards and a touchdown with one interception. Jalin Marshall led the Buckeyes with five receptions while redshirt-junior wide receiver Corey Smith totaled 76 yards through the air. Powell led OSU with nine total tackles while Washington and sophomore safety Vonn Bell each tallied sacks of Mariota. Mariota finished the game with 333 passing yards and two touchdowns, while Byron Marshall tallied eight receptions for 169 yards and a score. OSU redshirt-freshman cornerback Eli Apple forced Oregon’s only turnover with an interception of Mariota on the game’s final play. The 14 wins are tied for the most in OSU history, and the 15 games played by both teams marks the most by any program in a single season.
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football
Jones on championship: ‘It’s an unreal feeling’ JAMES GREGA, JR. Asst. sports editor grega.9@osu.edu ARLINGTON, Texas —Not many people expected the Ohio State football team to be standing at the podium on the winning side of the National Championship at the start of the 2014-15 season. Not even coach Urban Meyer. “To say we had this vision back in September or even August, not a chance,” Meyer said. “I thought this was a team that would battle and battle and find a way to win a bunch of games.” Despite that, Meyer said the challenge he posed to his team at the end of the 2012 season is now finished. “The chase is complete. These guys accepted their final mission and did it. It was our final mantra the past few weeks and I’m very grateful for the work these guys put in,” he said. En route to completing Meyer’s challenge, OSU tied an NCAA Division I record and school record for wins in a season with 14 and doing it after losing senior quarterback Braxton Miller and then redshirt-freshman quarterback J.T. Barrett to injury. The man who replaced Barrett, redshirtsophomore Cardale Jones, led the Buckeyes to three straight wins over Wisconsin, Alabama and Oregon to help OSU to its eighth national title, and the first since the 2002-03 season. Jones threw for 242 yards and accounted for two touchdowns in the victory. He said after the game that the feeling is something he couldn’t even imagine. “It’s even better than I thought. It’s an unreal feeling,” Jones said. “The seniors never could win a bowl game in four years. This is for them.” One of those seniors, wide receiver Devin Smith, said after the game that he told himself when he was getting recruited that he would have a chance to play for a title in his time as a Buckeye. “It means a lot. I’m really at a loss for words,” Smith said. “It hasn’t sunk in yet, but I think here pretty soon it is just going to hit me like, ‘Damn, we just did it.’”
MARK BATKE / Photo editor
Redshirt-sophomore quarterback Cardale Jones celebrates with redshirt-junior tight end Nick Vannett (81) during the National Championship game on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU beat Oregon, 42-20, to capture its 8th national title. Leading the way for the Buckeyes in their 42-20 title game victory over Oregon was sophomore running back Ezekiel Elliott, who rushed for a national championship game record 246 yards and four touchdowns. Elliott, who was awarded Offensive Player of the Game for his performance, said after the game that overcoming adversity brought the season full-circle. “It means everything to us, winning the National Championship after everything we went through this season,” Elliott said. “Losing Braxton, then losing to Virginia Tech and how we rebounded against that … then losing J.T. It seems like we’ve been through everything, and it made us who we are.” It wasn’t just the loss of two Heisman
hopefuls or the death of a teammate the Buckeyes had to overcome — they also had to overcome hurdles in the game, like four turnovers in order to defeat the Oregon Ducks and Heisman Trophy winner redshirt-junior quarterback Marcus Mariota. Redshirt-freshman linebacker Darron Lee said after the game that he told his teammates his side of the ball would be the reason the Buckeyes would come out on top. “I told these guys in here, ‘DWC: defense wins championships,’” Lee said. “To hold a team like that to 20 points, it’s huge.” OSU senior wide receiver Evan Spencer, whom Meyer has repeatedly called the team’s MVP despite a statistical lack of production, said after the game that he is honored to
receive such praise from his coach, especially now that the Buckeyes are national champions. “Honestly I was just thinking about that,” Spencer said. “It’s an unbelievable feeling, unbelievable accolade. This is amazing.” Despite graduating the likes of Spencer, senior tight end Jeff Heuerman and senior defensive lineman Michael Bennett, Smith said he believes the Buckeyes will continue to be successful under Meyer. “The future is very, very bright for this program. It’s left in the right person’s hands with coach Meyer and how good of a coach he is,” Smith said. “I really think he is going to lead this team to greatness. It’s just going to keep going.”
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Tuesday January 13, 2015
Tuesday January 13, 2015
5A
classifieds Unfurnished Rentals OSU/GRANDVIEW KING ave 1 & 2 bdrm garden apts. AC, Gas heat, and hot water. Laundry facilities. Off-street partking 294-0083.
Unfurnished 1 Bedroom 1 BDRM Apartments, 161 E. Norwich Ave. Great Location, Walk-In Closet, A/C, OSP, NO Pets. $575-$600/Mo. Call 961-0056. www. cooper-properties.com AVAILABLE FOR fall 2015 16th Ave between Summit and Fourth 1 bedroom, first floor, remodeled kitchen w dishwasher, free/washer dryer in unit off street well lit parking. $480.00 per month. call or text steve @ 614-582-1618 PERFECT FOR Graduate Student. Victorian Village Area. $600/mo. 231 W 4th Ave near Neil Ave. No Pets! Available Jan. 1. Call 614-486-5543. Great Deal!
Unfurnished 2 Bedroom #1 CORNER of King and Neil. 2 bedroom. Water and Parking included. A/C. Laundry, Phone Steve 614-208-3111 shand50@aol.com
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205 E. 13th Ave. Large 4 bdrm townhouse with carpeting throughout, kitchen appliances, W/D hookups. Parking, 1 year lease. $1704/month. Available Aug 23, 2015. 614-565-0424. E 16TH between Summit and Fourth, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, half of double, new kitchen, free washer/dryer in unit, large living/dining room, large porch, 4 lit parking spaces, $1580.00 per month, can view at skrentals.net call or text steve @ 614-582-1618
Unfurnished 5+ Bedroom 9 BEDROOM 4 bath North Campus House. 2254 Indianola. This has central air, dishwasher, disposal. It was remolded several years ago and has new fixtures, windows appliances etc... Front porch and plenty of off street parking. $3870.00 614-507-1267 GREAT 6 bedroom 3 bath house. North campus at 2263 Summit. Large front porch, hardwood floors, off street parking, central air, dishwasher, disposal. This house was remodeled 3 years ago and has new windows, and fixtures. $2580.00 614-457-6545
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For Rent Miscellaneous
Crossword Los Angeles Times, Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
RESERVED PARKING available near OSU main campus. This convenient location is great for local business owners, students and university employees looking for walking-distance parking. Snow is coming, so don’t miss your chance to rent a spot in our gated parking garage! Parking spots located at 250 W. Norwich Avenue near Tuttle Park and OSU North Campus. Limited availability - only $60 per month. Call to reserve your spot-614-487-9811
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1 “Say it isn’t so!” 5 Slick 9 Japanese poem with 17 syllables 14 More than simmer 15 Natural skin soother 16 Caravan stop 17 ‘50s-’60s Ramblers, briefly 18 Grand Prix series designation 20 Brings in, as salary 22 Geeky types 23 Controversial Vietnam War defoliant 26 Onetime Leno announcer Hall 29 Salt, in France 30 “__ we there yet?” 31 Add to the staff 33 Serving at Popeyes 36 Gutter site 37 Avon or Fuller Brush work, e.g. 42 Too 43 Country bumpkins 44 “I hope you’ve learned your __!” 47 Pro vote 48 Little white lie 51 “__-hoo! Over here!” 52 What Al Capone led 56 Collar attachment for Spot 57 “MASH” setting 58 “Shh! Don’t tell!” and hint to what can precede the starts of 18-, 23-, 37- and 52-Across 63 Cheesy sandwich 64 Dance in a line 65 Actress Garr 66 Autobahn auto 67 Like a truck climbing a steep hill 68 Flower part 69 Tiff
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MARK BATKE / Photo editor
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MARK BATKE / Photo editor
1. OSU redshirt-junior wide receiver Corey Smith runs upfield during the National Championship game against Oregon on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20. 2. OSU coach Urban Meyer lifts the College Football Playoff National Championship Trophy after OSU beat Oregon, 42-20, in the National Championship game Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. 3. OSU redshirt-sophomore quarterback Cardale Jones is congratulated by his teammates during the National Championship game against Oregon on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20. MARK BATKE / Photo editor
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MARK BATKE / Photo editor
MARK BATKE / Photo editor
4. Sophomore running back Ezekiel Elliott salutes during the National Championship game against Oregon on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20. 5. OSU coach Urban Meyer embraces redshirt-sophomore quarterback Cardale Jones during the National Championship game on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20. 6. OSU players hug and celebrate during the National Championship game against Oregon on Jan. 12 in Arlington, Texas. OSU won, 42-20.
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MARK BATKE / Photo editor
Tuesday January 13, 2015
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