History will show Jim Tressel was the savant who looked at the raw
material that was once Troy Smith and spotted the Heisman Trophy winner
buried within.
Revisionist history, that is.
Truth is, Tressel was the knucklehead who insisted for more than a year
that Justin Zwick -- not Troy Smith -- was the Buckeyes' best
quarterback. If it weren't for the separated shoulder Zwick suffered in the
sixth game of 2004, Smith wouldn't be the 2006 Heisman winner and Ohio
State wouldn't be days away from spanking Florida in the BCS national title
game.
Just two seasons ago, Tressel treated the immobile Zwick and the
immortal Troy Smith as equals, letting them compete for the quarterback job. Which
is like letting LeBron James and Eldridge Recasner compete for a job in
the NBA. Zwick couldn't run and could only marginally throw. Smith,
then as now, was superior at both.
And this isn't hindsight. Until he got hurt, Zwick was ick. He
completed just 52.4 percent of his passes, averaged 0.7 yards per rush and had
OSU fans begging for Tressel to switch to Smith. Zwick's injury on Oct.
16, 2004 -- during the Buckeyes' third straight loss with him as
starter -- gave Tressel no choice. One month later Troy Smith threw for 241 yards
and ran for 145 in a blowout of Michigan, running his record to 4-1.
Tressel's a genius!
Not quite. As late as the second game of 2005, with Troy Smith back from a
suspension, Tressel was still treating them as equals. It was Zwick who
started the Buckeyes' season-defining loss to Texas in the second game
of 2005. Only after that defeat did Tressel finally make Smith his lead
quarterback.
Fun as it would be to pick on Tressel for the remainder of this column,
he's not the only coach who has been obtuse at analyzing the
quarterbacks on his own roster.
At Texas, Mack Brown didn't settle on Colt McCoy until five days before
the 2006 opener.
McCoy went on to throw for 2,262 yards, 27 touchdowns and just seven
interceptions, and is fifth in the country in pass efficiency. Which
leads to one of two conclusions: Either the guy who nearly beat out McCoy,
Jevan Snead, will be a star when he becomes eligible at Ole Miss in
2008. Or Mack Brown is dumber than a daisy.
There ought to be a self-help group for coaches who just don't get it,
with a reserved seat for Georgia Tech's Chan Gailey, who allowed Reggie
Ball to become the worst four-year starter in NCAA history. Ball's
completion percentage was an awful 51.7 percent as a freshman ... and got
worse every year. This season he completed 44.4 percent of his passes.
You probably would have been a better choice to play QB. And you suck.
You weren't available, but as it turns out Gailey did have another
option. His name is Taylor Bennett, and with Ball being academically
ineligible for the Gator Bowl -- bad quarterback, bad student, bad legacy --
Bennett threw for 326 yards and three TDs. Georgia Tech still lost
38-35 to West Virginia, probably because Gailey doesn't realize his best
linebackers are on the sideline with their, er, helmet in their hand
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