COLLEGE FOOTBALL LOOK AHEAD

No. 6 Ohio State looks to shrug off loss

The Sports Xchange

October 27, 2016 at 11:15 am.

Sep 10, 2016; Columbus, OH, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes running back Mike Weber (25) takes the hand off from quarterback J.T. Barrett (16) in the first half against the Tulsa Golden Hurricane at Ohio Stadium. Photo Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports

Sep 10, 2016; Columbus, OH, USA; Ohio State Buckeyes running back Mike Weber (25) takes the hand off from quarterback J.T. Barrett (16) in the first half against the Tulsa Golden Hurricane at Ohio Stadium. Photo Credit: Aaron Doster-USA TODAY Sports

COLUMBUS, Ohio — For the first time in five seasons under Urban Meyer, Ohio State lost a Big Ten regular-season road game. And its 20-game road winning streak also ended last Saturday night in State College, Pa., when Penn State pulled off a 24-21 upset.

After a rare conference loss and a narrow overtime win on the road the previous week, the Buckeyes dropped from No. 2 to No. 6 in the latest Associated Press poll. They now trail Michigan by a game in the Big Ten East Division standings.

It was the first defeat for Ohio State in October under Meyer, whose record dipped to a still-spectacular 56-5 with the Buckeyes.

The good news for Ohio State (6-1, 3-1 Big Ten) is the loss doesn’t damage its title aspirations. Win out the rest of the way, including a victory over Michigan in the traditional regular-season finale, and the Buckeyes will go to the Big Ten championship game in December in Indianapolis.

“Every goal is still alive,” Meyer said after the loss. “We’re not a great team right now.”

Ohio State returns home this weekend to face Northwestern (4-3, 3-1) on Saturday (3:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) in the first of two straight games in Ohio Stadium that could define the season. The following Saturday, the Buckeyes play host to No. 7 Nebraska.

Neither game figures to be easy. Northwestern brings a three-game winning streak to Columbus. Nebraska, which plays at Wisconsin this weekend in his first reason test of the season, is unbeaten.

“Wow, that is as improved a team as I’ve ever seen from beginning to now,” Meyer said of Northwestern. “They’ve had three big wins with two on the road. Their defense is outstanding.”

While the Wildcats are on a roll, the Buckeyes are licking their wounds after falling at Penn State. Though the Buckeyes have lost only five times since Meyer’s first season in 2012, they do have some experience bouncing back from tough losses.

Last year, they fell at home to Michigan State late in the season but responded the following week with a win over Michigan. In 2014, after the stunning early-season loss to Virginia Tech at home, Ohio State ran the table and won the College Football Playoff national championship.

Meyer’s Ohio State teams have lost two straight only once — in 2013 when the Buckeyes were beaten by Michigan State in the Big Ten championship game and Clemson in the Orange Bowl.

“We have to move forward,” Meyer said. “You have to let it hurt for a while. If you lose a game, you’re not a loser. If you lose a game, you accept it. That was the message to our players. … It happened, so move on and get ready for a very good team coming in here.”

Northwestern has rebounded after losing three of its first four games to start the season, winning three straight Big Ten games against Iowa, Michigan State and Indiana.

Wildcats coach Pat Fitzgerald realizes the Buckeyes are a little different animal than their previous opponents.

“Now the heavy lifting starts,” Fitzgerald said. “Nobody has a stiffer challenge than us. We have to take on the Buckeyes.”

Northwestern has some weapons on offense to throw at Ohio State. Justin Jackson leads the Big Ten in rushing with 792 yards, Austin Carr is the conference’s leading receiver with 50 catches for 720 yards and nine touchdowns, and Clayton Thorson is the third-leading passer, averaging 240.9 yards per game with 14 touchdowns.

On defense, Columbus-area native Godwin Igwebuike is sixth in the Big Ten in tackles and Ohio native Ifeadi Odenigbo leads the conference in sacks with eight.

Odenigbo definitely will catch Ohio State’s attention after the offensive line struggled against Penn State’s pass rush, giving up six sacks.

The Buckeyes uncharacteristically let a 21-7 lead slip away against the Nittany Lions, when they were outscored 17-0 in the fourth quarter.

Ohio State outgunned Penn State 413-276 in total yards and had a 17-minute advantage in time of possession, yet still couldn’t come away with a win.

The loss raised questions about Ohio State’s passing games — in particular its offensive line play — that had been bubbling toward the surface the past two games. Quarterback J.T. Barrett doesn’t believe it’s a catastrophic issue.

“Overall, the passing game, I think we put our O-line in bad spots early on in drives, so we were second-and-long,” said Barrett, who is closing in on a Big Ten career record with 90 combined touchdowns rushing and passing. “I think that harmed us.”

Meyer doesn’t expect any personnel changes this week on the offensive line, which gave up two sacks at the end of the game that stopped Ohio State’s final drive.

“There are a multitude of things (that went wrong),” Meyer said. “We did not play very well in a couple of areas on offense. What do you do? You identify it and work on it.

“(The offense) has regressed a little bit. Certainly there were plays to be made. If we hook up on those plays, we go on and win the game.”

Ohio State is a three-touchdown favorite to get back on track against Northwestern, which hasn’t visited Columbus since 2007 and has lost 29 of the last 30 games between the teams.