COLUMBUS, Ohio -- In the world of college football, there are teams that win with methodical precision and teams that win with overwhelming talent. Then there’s the 2025 Ohio State Buckeyes, who possess a nuclear option that may render all their flaws irrelevant.
The first half against Ohio University wasn’t pretty. It was, as the Buckeye Talk podcast hosts described, like watching “your favorite team at night spend 30 minutes having practice.” Personnel packages changed seemingly every play. Execution was spotty. Red zone opportunities fizzled.
Then, as if flipping a switch, Julian Sayin started launching missiles downfield that transformed the entire complexion of the game.
“This team is really, really dangerous because like there might be a moment this year where to, you know, pardon