Former Ohio State running back James Peoples is drawing attention for all the wrong reasons after a workout video made the rounds online.
Peoples, who left Columbus after two seasons and transferred to Penn State, had been part of an Ohio State roster that saw more players enter the Transfer Portal than any other year in Ryan Day’s era. He chose to stay in the Big Ten, even if that meant heading to a program that hasn’t beaten the Buckeyes in a decade. Ohio State and Penn State would only meet in a postseason game this season.
The video that sparked the reaction was meant to highlight Peoples in a positive way. Instead, it sent people straight to the replies to question his pull-up form.
The clip showed Penn State running back James Peoples finishing with 25 total pull-ups while getting encouragement from his teammates, and the post described him as “about as physically impressive as anyone on this roster.” But the internet wasn’t buying the reps as clean pull-ups.
“These are pull ups? Not sayin the guy isn’t a physical specimen, but these are definitely not pull ups……”
“Yeah, those aren’t pull-ups.”
The criticism centered on how much he had to thrust his body to get over the bar, and the video quickly became more of a punchline than a showcase.
That said, the clip may not be the fairest snapshot of what Peoples brings to Penn State. He wasn’t known as a power back at Ohio State, where he was more of a speed guy.
Still, the Nittany Lions will need that burst this fall, especially after losing both starting running backs from last season. That opens the door for Peoples to compete for a meaningful role in camp and carve out snaps in the rotation.
From Ohio State’s perspective, the Buckeyes don’t appear to be missing him. Bo Jackson is the established starter, Isaiah West is the backup, and Legend Bey looks to be third on the depth chart. Peoples likely wouldn’t have been ahead of any of them had he stayed in Columbus.
So while the workout video made him a target online, the bigger picture hasn’t changed much: Peoples made a move that gives him a real chance to play, and Ohio State kept moving without him. He showed enough burst in limited snaps with the Buckeyes to remain a solid running back. Now Penn State will try to turn that into production - and maybe, just maybe, cleaner pull-ups.
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