Ohio State’s 2026 football schedule looks like a far tougher road than the one the Buckeyes just cruised through in 2025.
That’s the big takeaway when you stack the two seasons side by side. Last year’s most dangerous spots were easy to identify: at Illinois, vs.
Penn State, at Michigan, vs. Texas, and at Washington.
On paper, those were the heavy hitters. In reality, only Texas really pushed Ohio State, and that one made sense because the Longhorns came in with revenge on their minds after losing to the Buckeyes in the College Football Playoff semifinals in their previous meeting, while Ohio State was breaking in a first-year starter at quarterback.
The rest of those games? Ohio State handled Illinois, Penn State, Michigan, and Washington with little drama, winning by an average of 19.5 points.
That’s almost three touchdowns. So yes, those were the toughest games on the 2025 slate, but they still didn’t give the Buckeyes much of the kind of strain that prepares a team for postseason battles with the likes of Indiana or Miami.
The 2026 version should be different.
Two matchups stand out immediately: the road rematch at Texas and the trip to Indiana. Texas will be an early-season test in a loud setting, and the Buckeyes will at least have one game under their belt before heading to Austin.
But the Longhorns will also have their own tune-up in Week 1, when Texas State comes to town on Sept. 5.
That’s not meant as a shot at Texas State - the Bobcats rallied from a rough first half to reach the Armed Forces Bowl and beat Rice - but they were the fifth-place team in the Sun Belt West in 2025, so they should not be a real threat to Texas.
That makes the game in Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium look like a serious early checkpoint for Matt Patricia’s rebuilt defense.
Indiana is the other big one, and it’s the one that really jumps off the page. Fernando Mendoza is gone, and losing a Heisman Trophy winner hurts, but Curt Cignetti has earned the benefit of the doubt. He’s already done something wild: finishing ahead of Ohio State in 2024, even after losing 38-15 in Columbus that year, and then winning the whole thing in 2025.
Yes, Indiana. The Hoosiers.
That happened, even if it still sounds a little unreal. And because the game is in Bloomington, it looks like one of the hardest matchups on the Buckeyes’ entire 2026 schedule - arguably tougher than anything Ohio State faced in 2025.
There’s more to worry about than just those headline games. Oregon is still expected to be in the mix for a College Football Playoff spot, and Ohio State gets the Ducks just one week after traveling to USC. That’s a demanding stretch, especially with USC also trending upward and a road trip to California rarely offering any comfort.
And then there’s the rest of the Big Ten grind.
Illinois has to come to Columbus, but the Illini have been getting better and better, and this one could come down to turnovers or special teams even if Ohio State is still favored. A week later, the Buckeyes go to Iowa, where winning has never come easily. Iowa City has tripped up plenty of talented Ohio State teams before, and the Hawkeyes’ physical style and the atmosphere there always make life difficult.
Nebraska is another road game that can get tricky. Ohio State should win, but nobody should assume it will be simple.
Northwestern also deserves attention after David Braun’s group took a big step forward in his third season in Evanston. The Wildcats went from 2-7 in 2024 to 7-6 last year, then capped it with a 27-point win in the GameAbove Sports Bowl in Detroit.
They were a tougher out than the record might suggest, losing by seven at Illinois, by two to Michigan at Wrigley Field, and by a touchdown at Nebraska. Their three double-digit losses came against Tulane in Week 0, Oregon, and ranked USC.
Ohio State should still take care of Northwestern, but Braun has made that team harder to deal with.
And, of course, there’s Michigan. The rivalry game is in Columbus this time, but the Wolverines are under new leadership with Kyle Whittingham taking over in Ann Arbor.
It’s impossible to know exactly what that will look like right away, but Whittingham’s Utah teams were always disciplined and hard to play against. Put that into a rivalry game, and nothing about it feels automatic.
So yes, the 2026 schedule looks more demanding, more crowded with real threats, and more likely to test Ohio State in ways the 2025 slate simply didn’t. And if recent history is any guide, the Buckeyes may actually be better served going into the postseason with a loss or two than arriving unbeaten and heavily favored.
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 🡒]
