Ohio State’s 2026 slate does not offer many soft spots, even if the Buckeyes are favored to walk into most Saturdays with the better roster.
The opener should give Ryan Day’s team a clean runway. The Cardinals simply do not have the talent or depth to match Ohio State, and this looks like the kind of game where the Buckeyes can break in new starters and build confidence before the schedule tightens. Kickoff is set for 12:30pm ET on The Big Ten Network.
Kent State brings another matchup that should tilt heavily toward Ohio State. The Golden Flashes remain in rebuilding mode and face one of the biggest talent gaps on the Buckeyes’ schedule. That game is set for 12pm ET on Fox, and it should give the staff a chance to lean on the backups throughout the second half.
Maryland has had moments of competitiveness in recent years, but the Terrapins have not shown they can consistently hang with the Big Ten’s top teams. Ohio State’s roster strength should be too much. Kickoff has not been announced yet, though it will be either 3:30pm ET or 8pm ET.
Northwestern gets a bit more interesting because of Chip Kelly’s presence. The former Ohio State offensive coordinator is now Northwestern’s offensive coordinator, and he has a close relationship with Ryan Day, something underscored by the recent news that R.J.
Day will be heading to Evanston in 2027. Still, this game lands in the middle of the November Big Ten grind, and Ohio State should be turning up the pressure.
Anything short of a comfortable win would be a surprise.
Illinois could be one of the more stubborn stops on the schedule. The Fighting Illini have become one of the conference’s tougher, more physical teams, and they may be able to drag things into a slower, tighter game early before Ohio State’s athletic edge takes over.
Nebraska is another game that looks trickier than the record might suggest. Memorial Stadium remains one of the league’s toughest places to play, and Ohio State has had problems with the Cornhuskers the last two times they met: 2021 Ohio State 26, Nebraska 17; 2024 Ohio State 21, Nebraska 17. Nebraska’s physical style and its crowd could keep it close for a while.
Iowa, too, brings the kind of trouble that can turn a routine afternoon into a grind. Kinnick Stadium has long been rough on highly ranked teams, and Ohio State’s last visit there in 2017 ended badly, with Iowa winning 55-24. The Hawkeyes’ defense and special teams can make things messy enough that the Buckeyes may need a late touchdown drive to escape Iowa City with a win.
The trip to Los Angeles also carries real danger. USC’s skill talent will challenge Ohio State’s defense, and the Trojans will circle this one as one of the biggest opportunities on their schedule.
Ohio State does have a built-in edge, though, since it will be coming off a bye week while USC will be coming off a road trip to Wisconsin on October 24th. A one-possession game entering the fourth quarter feels likely.
Texas is the headline act. This is the toughest game on Ohio State’s schedule, a hyped night matchup on ABC at 7:30pm ET. The Week Two trip to Austin brings together two programs with national championship expectations, and it could come down to whether Arch Manning of Texas or Julian Sayin of Ohio State makes one more play late.
Indiana adds another layer of intrigue because the Hoosiers enter with elevated expectations after winning the national championship in 2025. They will not be intimidated by Ohio State, and they’ll be chasing their first home win over the Buckeyes since 1988, when John Cooper was in his first season as Ohio State’s head coach.
Oregon is right there with Texas in the upper tier of this schedule. The Ducks have established themselves among college football’s elite, recruit at a level comparable to Ohio State, and have the talent to win anywhere.
They’ll also be looking for payback after being routed in The College Football Playoff on January 1st, 2025 in The Rose Bowl. That matchup could shape the Big Ten Championship race and playoff seeding.
Then comes Michigan, where records rarely seem to matter. Ohio State fans know that better than most after the Wolverines’ trip to Ohio Stadium in 2024. Michigan has repeatedly shown it can rise to the moment no matter what people thought before the season, and while Ohio State should be favored at home, rivalry games often come down to a few plays late.
Taken as a whole, this looks like a schedule where Ohio State should be favored in every game except maybe the trip to Texas. The Buckeyes have enough talent to finish 11-1 or 12-0 if they handle the stretch that includes Iowa, USC, Oregon, Nebraska and Michigan.
The most likely regular-season finish is 11-1, with at Texas, at Indiana, Oregon and Michigan standing out as the biggest tests. If Ohio State can win three of those four marquee games, another Big Ten Championship Game appearance should be in reach, and a College Football Playoff berth would feel like the expectation rather than the objective.
In Other News...
Ohio State Awaits A Five-Star Decision That Could Shift Everything
Marcus Fakatous decision is almost here, and Ohio State is right in the middle of one of those recruitments that can linger over a program long after the announcement ends. The five-star defensive line prospect has become a major target for the Buckeyes, who have spent years leaning on Larry Johnsons track record of developing front-seven talent and turning the defensive line into a calling card on the trail.
His commitment is set to be streamed live on YouTube Monday afternoon, giving fans a front-row seat to a choice that could matter well beyond one signing day. Ohio State wants Fakatou to keep the pipeline strong up front, and the bigger question now is whether the Buckeyes can turn all that recruiting momentum into one more major win when the camera goes live. [Read more 🡒]
Ohio State Has A Bigger Arvell Reese Problem Than Expected
Replacing Arvell Reese was never going to be a one-for-one job for Ohio State, but the scope of the problem looks bigger now that the Buckeyes have to sort out a hybrid linebacker-edge role that had become central to what Reese did. Drafted fifth overall by the New York Giants, Reese took time to develop into the kind of player who could change how the defense lined up, and that matters because the next answer may not be a single player so much as a committee trying to cover all the same ground.
Riley Pettijohn, Wisconsin transfer Alliegro and freshman Johnson are the names in the mix, but each comes with a different kind of uncertainty. Pettijohn has the athleticism to help off the ball, Alliegro brings size and experience, and Johnson looks like the cleanest physical fit, yet none of them is a simple replica of what Reese gave the Buckeyes. However this settles, Ohio State may have to piece together the role rather than hand it to one player and move on. [Read more 🡒]
Ohio State Faces New Pressure After Missing On Key Receiver Target
Ohio States wide receiver board took a hit this week when one of its top 2027 targets came off the table, a reminder that even the Buckeyes cant simply assume every blue-chip pass catcher will end up in Columbus. The staff has spent plenty of time building out that class, and the search for difference-makers at the position remains very much alive as recruiting battles keep tightening across the country.
The good news for Ohio State is that there is still plenty of high-end talent in play. The Buckeyes remain involved with five-star Monshun Sales and four-star Benny Easter Jr., both of whom are still navigating crowded recruitment sweeps, and they already have a commitment from three-star Jordan Donahoo in the 2027 class. Missing on one priority receiver only sharpens the focus on what comes next, especially for a program that expects to keep stacking options at a premium position. [Read more 🡒]
