Ohio State enters 2026 with the kind of roster that usually keeps the rest of the Big Ten up at night, but CBS Sports’ latest projection has the Buckeyes taking an early hit that changes the whole feel of the season.
Brad Crawford’s game-by-game picks have Ryan Day’s team finishing 10-2 overall, which would leave Ohio State out of the automatic conference-champion path and leaning on an at-large playoff berth instead. That’s a sharp turn for a program where the expectations never budge: win the Big Ten, beat Michigan and chase a national title.
The first crack in the projection comes fast. After expected tune-up wins over Ball State and Kent State, Crawford sees Ohio State heading to Austin in Week 2 and leaving with a loss to Texas. For a team bringing back quarterback Julian Sayin and wide receiver Jeremiah Smith, that kind of September setback would immediately put the Buckeyes in a pressure-packed spot with little room left for error.
Even so, Crawford still has Ohio State rolling through most of its Big Ten schedule. The Buckeyes are projected to post big wins over USC, Oregon and Michigan, while also getting through tricky road trips to Iowa and Nebraska.
But the model doesn’t stop at one surprise. It also calls for a road loss at Indiana, a result Crawford says would show that even this Ohio State roster “won't be immune to a pair of regular-season stumbles against championship-caliber opponents.”
That still leaves the Buckeyes at 8-1 in conference play, good enough to reach Indianapolis for the Big Ten Championship Game. The problem, according to Crawford, is that the title game would bring another letdown. He projects a rematch with Oregon, and this time the Ducks come out on top.
"The Ducks' experience, quarterback play and overall roster balance prove to be the difference in a tightly-contested title game, sending the Buckeyes into the playoff as an at-large team rather than conference champions," Crawford wrote.
For Ohio State, that would mean a season loaded with talent but marked by the kind of missteps that keep a fan base restless. A loss to Texas, a head-scratching defeat at Indiana and no Big Ten crown would make 2026 feel awfully familiar in Columbus.
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