Ohio State enters another season with the kind of expectations most programs can only dream about, but Greg McElroy thinks the Buckeyes may have one very real problem: the schedule.
The Buckeyes have been a model of consistency for years. Outside of the COVID-shortened 2020 season, when Ohio State reached the national championship game, the program has produced double-digit wins every year but one since 2005. It has also claimed two national championships in the College Football Playoff era, including the most recent one in 2024.
That’s why Ohio State is once again being projected among the sport’s elite. Ryan Day has a roster headlined by quarterback Julian Sayin and wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, and the Buckeyes have the talent to stay in the title mix.
But the road to another playoff run looks far rougher than usual.
Ohio State’s schedule includes road games at Texas, Iowa, Indiana, USC and Nebraska, along with home matchups against Michigan, Oregon and Illinois. McElroy, speaking on ESPN’s "Always College Football," said that kind of slate can become a grind fast.
"It is a peculiar tax for being great," McElroy said. "...
The schedule makers are like, 'Perfect. All right.
Sounds good. You got all that.
Here's a minefield.' The road schedule is where this turns into a little bit of a survival test... no other team in America has two road games against teams that are this good.
The Buckeyes go to Texas. They go to the defending national champion, Indiana.
They also go to USC. They go to Iowa."
The challenge is especially stark because Ohio State hasn’t had to deal with anything quite like this recently. The schedule features six teams projected to land in the preseason polls, and over the past two seasons the Buckeyes faced only three ranked teams in the regular season each year.
That makes this fall feel like unfamiliar territory for a program that has spent so much time near the top.
Ohio State has the pieces to keep rolling, and Day’s team still has the look of a playoff contender. But if the Buckeyes are going to get back to the championship stage, they’ll have to survive a schedule that McElroy sees as one of the toughest tests in the country.
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