
Ohio State's Pryor under fire before meeting with Penn State
The heat got turned up on Ohio State senior Todd Boeckman in the Buckeyes' third game last season, when he was intercepted twice in a 35-3 loss at Southern California. Boeckman was considered a game-manager, not a difference-maker, and apparently not only by disgruntled boosters. Coach Jim Tressel benched Boeckman in favor of electrifying true freshman Terrelle Pryor the following week, the beginning of what most observers believed would be a long, mutual love affair between hard-to-please members of Buckeye Nation and the 6-6, 235-pound wunderkind who became the nation's most sought-after quarterback prospect after leading Jeannette (Pa.) High to a 16-0 record and the PIAA Class AA football championship in 2007.
The honeymoon appeared to have ended after Pryor was booed following Ohio State's 26-18 upset by Purdue on Oct. 17, when he threw two picks and lost two fumbles. Some fans even suggested that Pryor - who has eight interceptions and three fumbles this season - be replaced by untested redshirt sophomore Joe Bauserman.
The crisis abated somewhat after Ohio State won its next two games by a combined margin of 83-7, but it'll be interesting to see how Pryor is treated by still-skeptical OSU fans and those of jilted Penn State (8-1, 4-1 Big Ten) when the 11th-ranked Nittany Lions host the No. 15 Buckeyes (7-2, 4-1) in a nationally televised contest Saturday afternoon in Beaver Stadium.
It's a pretty safe bet that every Pryor miscue will incite disbelief among Ohio State fans, and smug satisfaction from Penn State supporters who never forgave him for rejecting his home-state school.
Penn State players, at least publicly, are insisting that Pryor has improved upon his reasonably impressive freshman campaign.
"You just try to keep him in the pocket," Penn State safety Drew Astorino said when asked how he and his teammates planned to contain Pryor, a long strider whose running ability is reminiscent of Randall Cunningham and Vince Young. "He's a good passer. He's gotten a lot better at that. But he's also a dangerous runner. When he starts scrambling, he makes things happen."
Many other Penn State students were put off by his comments when he signed his national grant-in-aid with Ohio State on March 19, 2007. In casting his lot with the Buckeyes, Pryor said he considered Penn State "too country."
"I just don't like the area," Pryor said at the time. "I just don't like that place."
The fact that it was Pryor who fumbled the ball away, setting up Penn State's winning touchdown in last season's 13-6 victory in Ohio Stadium, made the outcome especially satisfying. A photo of Pryor on the bench, his head in his hands following the fumble, is still making the rounds in State College.
Now the chance to stick it to Pryor again has brought out the creative instinct in Penn State Marketing Association president Dan Sturman, who has produced a $10 T-shirt of the Nittany Lion handing a tissue to a sad-looking Pryor, whose name has been changed to "Terrelle Cryer."
One potential problem for Chapter 2 of the revenge scenario is the fact that Pryor, who is being "mentored" by Cleveland Cavaliers superstar LeBron James, is still an athlete so wondrously gifted that he can turn a busted play into a huge gain. In what figures to be a low-scoring game, that quick-strike capability can be the difference.
Penn State coach Joe Paterno is well aware of what Pryor brings to the table.
"If you don't do something to at least slow him down, you're never going to be in the game," JoePa said.
Nit-picking
Sophomore tailback Stephfon Green, who has missed the last two games, still is a bit gimpy with a sprained ankle . . . Coach Joe Paterno cited defensive linemen Ollie Ogbu and Jack Crawford as the players who have most pleasantly surprised him this season. *




