Football: Basham earns Defensive Player of Year, Hagan Freshman of year; others make All-MAC teams
Defensive end Tarell Basham and safety Javon Hagan were given postseason awards today by the Mid-American Conference.
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Defensive end Tarell Basham and safety Javon Hagan were given postseason awards today by the Mid-American Conference.
The matchup of the Friday game, or at least the one everyone will watch, will be the Ohio defense against the Western Michigan offense.
Ohio has faced NFL talent season long, routinely squaring off against players such as Tennessee's abundance of talent like Cameron Sutton and Joshua Dobbs, or Central Michigan's Cooper Rush.
Here's what you need to know for Monday, Nov. 28:
For 11 weeks, Ohio's defense has been the backbone of its entire team.
To the outsider, it will look like a normal football game.
All was quiet as Quinton Maxwell began his snap count. First one clap, then another, as he started the play out of Ohio's pistol offense.
All season long, Ohio's defense has been the team's backbone.
Watching college football isn't always fun.
Quinton Maxwell fought with everything he had left just to get up.
Special teams players have always searched for a way to announce their significance. With three of the four specialists on the Bobcats being underclassmen, they needed some way to come together as a unit. They wanted something that they could claim as their own. So they grew out their hair.
Blair Brown did what he always does. He attacked. The hard-hitting linebacker forced pressure, which led to a sack of Kent State quarterback Nick Holley, which ended a Kent State drive. But something was wrong.
It's natural to look at the Central Michigan roster and immediately be drawn to quarterback Cooper Rush.
Ohio's fate might be sealed before coach Frank Solich leads his team out of the tunnel next Tuesday against Central Michigan.
For the first time since August, coach Frank Solich took to his weekly press conference without an opponent to talk about.
If someone were to look in a glass ball before the season of the storylines surrounding the 2016 Bobcats, they'd shriek in horror.
Thursday night contained no nerve-wracking final moments. No worrisome final possessions. Not even late game heroics.
If Buffalo's running defense was its problem, the team's running offense might be its biggest strength.
Buffalo isn't a great team by any stretch of the imagination.
For the first time since 1988, Ohio got the better of Toledo, beating the team Thursday night 31-26.