Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ohio State’s Meyer not looking past Rebels

No. 10 Buckeyes have ‘so many areas to fix’ to chalk up UNLV win

- By Bill Rabinowitz The Columbus Dispatch

If you’re an Ohio State football fan, the temptation is unavoidabl­e. If you’re Urban Meyer, it’s unwise. No. 10 Ohio State (2-1) mostly had its way in a 38-7 victory against Army on Saturday, and the rest of the month figures to be even easier. UNLV (1-1), which lost to Howard in its opener, visits Saturday. The Buckeyes then travel to play Rutgers. The next big test for Ohio State figures to come Oct. 28 against Penn State.

Buckeyes followers might view this stretch of the schedule as a way to stretch their team. Tinker with schemes, give extended looks to young players and start devising a strategy for the big games to come.

With some of his prior teams, Meyer said, that might be the path he’d consider pursuing. But the OSU coach said his current team remains flawed enough that he and his staff can’t afford to look beyond the present.

“There’s been times in my mind and maybe in a couple of key members of the staff when maybe we’d have some of those conversati­ons,” Meyer said. “We are not there yet. We have so many areas to fix that were exposed early in the season. We’re trying to get better and better and win games. We’re not at that point.”

Meyer said the biggest issues are pass defense and “continued growth on offense.” He also mentioned the lack of a punt return game and the Buckeyes’ struggles when kicking off.

“Kickoff coverage is a mess right

now,” Meyer said. “We don’t have a kicker that can kick the ball. If you notice, one almost went in the seats. There are a lot of issues we have to clean up. Our focus is on that.”

But some issues are unavoidabl­e. Redshirt freshman quarterbac­k Dwayne Haskins Jr. made his debut against Army. He looked sharp in completing four pass attempts in the final minutes.

“I thought he played very well,” Meyer said, adding that he wanted to get Haskins more throws but didn’t want to run up the score against Army.

But it’s not clear that Haskins is even the top backup. Joe Burrow, the 2016 backup, is close to being healed from the broken hand sustained in training camp.

“We’ve got to make some decisions about who is the first one in there,” Meyer said.

As for the starter, Meyer was happy that J.T. Barrett bounced back from a loss to Oklahoma a week earlier. The senior completed 25 of 33 passes for 270 yards and two touchdowns and did a superb job running the zoneread option.

“He’s a very intelligen­t player,” Meyer said. “He’s a guy that works extremely hard. He puts in more hours than anybody on our team.”

Though Barrett isn’t as flashy as predecesso­r Braxton Miller, he is, Meyer said, an excellent decision-maker with the ball.

“J.T. doesn’t have that skill set, but he’s got a great sense of space on the field,” Meyer said. “And we need to continue to utilize him more (with the zone read). I think you’re going to see more and more of that as we move forward.”

Bill Rabinowitz can be reached at brabinowit­z@dispatch.com.

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