INDIANAPOLIS – When Ryan Day made his appearance at Big Ten football media days on Wednesday at Lucas Oil Stadium, he did so without the title that's regularly been attached to Ohio State's coach: reigning conference champion.
That honor instead went to Michigan's Jim Harbaugh, whose Wolverines beat the Buckeyes in last year's regular-season finale, then dispatched Iowa to win the Big Ten Championship Game. That ended Ohio State's four-year run as conference champion and proved that the Buckeyes actually are human.
Ohio State's dominance had reached the point to where reporters this week asked if the Buckeyes losing was a breath of fresh air for the conference.
"Yeah, I kind of wish it was us,'' said Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald, whose 2018 and 2020 teams fell to Ohio State in the Big Ten title game. "… That's what we're all trying to do. You've got to give credit where credit's due. Urban [Meyer, former Buckeyes coach] did a great job, and Ryan's done a great job. This isn't anything new.''
It is, however, a new wrinkle for this crop of Buckeyes, who went 23-2 in Day's first two-plus seasons as coach after taking over for Meyer. Now, Ohio State is trying to show that its 11-2 record in 2021 was an aberration.
"I'm excited about what this team is,'' Day said. "I've kind of described them as edgy this offseason.''
Edgy with a boatload of talent, too. Ohio State was a unanimous pick to win the Big Ten by 36 media members in the Cleveland.com poll, and a trio of Buckeyes — quarterback C.J. Stroud, running back TreVeyon Henderson and wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba — were among the nine Big Ten preseason honorees. No other conference team had more than two.
"We don't have anything to prove,'' said Stroud, who passed for 4,435 yards and 44 touchdowns as a freshman last year for an offense that averaged a nation's-best 561.2 yards per game. "We don't have to prove anybody wrong but just prove ourselves right.''