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Inside College Football For Ohio State to stand a chance in the Fiesta Bowl, three key defenders have to clamp down on the CanesPosted: Tuesday December 24, 2002 2:34 PMFor Ohio State to stand a chance in the Fiesta Bowl, three key defenders have to clamp down on the Canes By Tim Layden
Matt Wilhelm , middle linebacker . The 6'5", 245-pound senior led the Buckeyes with 111 tackles. At the vortex of a 4-3 alignment, he gets most of the inside running plays and cutbacks funneled to him. For Ohio State to succeed, he must stop McGahee. Easy to say. Consider the play McGahee made against Pittsburgh on Nov. 21, when Miami trailed the Panthers 14-7 with just over two minutes left in the first half. On first-and-10 from his 31, McGahee ran left, found little room, quickly slashed to the inside, cut abruptly right and ripped into the open field. Sixty-nine yards later the game was tied and Pitt was deflated. Miami went on to win 28-21. "We had the play stuffed," says Pitt defensive coordinator Paul Rhoads. "We had people in every gap, we had every zone covered. A great runner made a great cut, and our guys just froze. He broke three sets of ankles on one play. On that kind of play, I think Miami's speed is going to surprise Ohio State." Mike Doss, strong safety . A three-time All-America, he is the Buckeyes' best player, a physical run-stopper who likes to attack the line of scrimmage but is also effective in zone pass coverage. "They never let Doss get very far away from the ball," says Chaney. To control the Miami run, Ohio State will often have to outnumber the Hurricanes' blockers, with eight players in the box and three defensive backs against Miami's favored two-back set. Doss, a senior, will be the X factor, the player who either commits to the run or drops into coverage. He must hide his intentions from Dorsey as long and as convincingly as possible, because if Dorsey sees Doss moving up, he'll know he's getting single coverage and exploit it. If he sees Doss sitting back, he'll give the ball to McGahee. "You have to make Dorsey read your defense, postsnap," says Rutgers coach Greg Schiano, who was an assistant coach at Miami when Dorsey arrived. "He can still be effective, but it's a lot harder for him that way." Chris Gamble, cornerback .A sophomore, he started the season exclusively at wide receiver but finished it as a 60-minute man in the mold of Charles Woodson -- and as one of the best corners in the country. Against Miami he'll likely find himself in man-to-man coverage against Johnson, Roscoe Parrish or Ethenic Sands, because Ohio State will probably cheat senior free safety Donnie Nickey to whichever side sophomore corner Dustin Fox is playing. "Nine of the 11 guys on their defense are probably the best in the conference at their position," said one Big Ten offensive coordinator. "Fox is one of the other two. Teams were able to do some things against him. Ohio State is going to have to roll their coverage to give him some help. That's going to leave Gamble on an island. He's good, and he's going to have to be." "Look at Miami's wide receivers," says Schiano. "Andre Johnson is as good as you get. Winslow is just like a wide receiver, and he's as good as you get. And Dorsey is not only bright but physically talented, which he doesn't get credit for." The key for Gamble, and for the combination of Doss, Fox and Nickey, is to disrupt Miami's flow. "It's all rhythm with Miami," says one Big East coach. "Once the receiver plants his foot and commits to the route, the ball is gone. And they get big chunks. They don't drive the field -- they make big plays." But here's the killer: It's possible to do everything right against Dorsey and still lose. On Nov. 30 in Syracuse, Miami was leading 14-0 early in the second quarter. On second-and-goal from the Syracuse four, Dorsey took a quick drop. "He looked for Roscoe Parrish on the fade, but Syracuse had outside leverage on him, so no sale there," says a coach who has seen the Miami-Syracuse tape. "Then he looked for Winslow in the middle, but he was bracketed [covered front and back]. Nothing there. So he saw Andre Johnson at the back of the end zone to his right. He was covered, but Dorsey sat on his back foot, fully cocked, then just gave Johnson a little head shake to the middle. Johnson cut, and -- boom! -- touchdown. Dorsey read three receivers, improvised and completed the ball." If he does that on Jan. 3 in Tempe, class dismissed. Issue date: December 30, 2002
For more Inside College Football see this week's issue of Sports
Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, December 25. Click
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