NCAAF
Carmen Ohio Couldâve Played by Halftime. This Game Was a Wrap by the First Commercial Break.
There are tune-up games, and then there are bloodbaths dressed as football contests. What went down in Columbus on Saturday afternoon fell hard into the second category.
Ohio Stateâs 70-0 curb-stomping of Grambling State wasnât just domination â it was football gentrification. The No. 1 team in the country did exactly what it was supposed to do against an FCS visitor, but did it with such ruthless precision that youâd think Ryan Day had a personal vendetta against the city of Grambling.
Freshman phenom Julian Sayin came out slinging, completing his first 16 passes (yes, in a row) and finishing the day 18-of-19 for 306 yards and 4 touchdowns â all in the first half. On the other side? A Grambling State offense that may as well have been in witness protection.
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Letâs break this chaos down chronologically â not because it was close, but because itâs the only way to even remotely process what happened.
Ohio State scored on five of its six first-half possessions. The only stop Grambling managed? A goal-line interception that honestly felt more like a pity turnover from the football gods than an actual defensive stand.
Then came the second half⌠and with it, the freshman showcase.
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If youâre an Ohio State fan, youâre going to be annoying at Thanksgiving dinner for the next three years bragging about this freshman class. And rightfully so.
Also, shoutout to Lincoln Kienholz for slinging his first career TD pass in the fourth quarter â a 4-yard dart to Jelani Thurman that made it 63-0.
This game was basically a 3-hour TikTok hype video for Ohio Stateâs underclassmen.
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This wasnât a game where momentum shifted. It was a game where one team had a Ferrari and the other brought a unicycle. The turning point was the existence of the matchup. As soon as the opening kickoff went up in front of 100,624 fans at The Shoe, the result was academic.
But if you have to pick a moment, itâs that second drive â the one-play, 87-yard bomb to Jeremiah Smith. It wasnât just explosive; it was disrespectful in the most beautiful way. That was the drive where everyone watching realized: âOh. This is going to get ugly.â
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Letâs be honest: this wasnât about Grambling. They showed up, played hard, and got a nice memory. Head coach Mickey Joseph called it âa great experienceâ and was proud of his team. He should be â itâs not easy to walk into the Coliseum and get trucked with dignity.
For Ohio State, this was about execution and growth. After a shaky opener against Texas where the offense didnât quite click, Sayin and the Buckeyes looked sharper, faster, and meaner. This was supposed to be a cupcake game â but OSU treated it like Thanksgiving dinner.
Ryan Day said the 48 hours leading up to the game were âbusiness-like,â and it showed. There was no sloppiness. No mercy. Just execution at a professional level.
And perhaps most importantly: the depth showed out. You expect drop-off when the backups come in. Instead? They extended the lead.
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Ohio State isnât going to get credit nationally for this one â they werenât supposed to lose, or even be close. But how they won tells you everything. This wasnât a tune-up; it was a warning shot. To Michigan. To the SEC. To anyone with playoff dreams.
Julian Sayin is him. The freshman class is already them. And if you squinted hard enough on Saturday, you could already see the confetti.
Letâs just hope the next opponent brings a little more fight. Because right now, the Buckeyes look like theyâre playing on rookie difficulty â and putting up legendary numbers.
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