Ohio State, Michigan and College Football Playoff
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MLive - GrandRapids/Muskegon/Kalamazoo on MSN
Can Michigan beat Ohio State again? Podcast crew debates with game looming, Buckeyes dominant
MLive's Wolverine Confidential recaps the win over Purdue and ends with a question: How do you feel Michigan is positioned with Ohio State looming later this month?
2hon MSN
Ohio State’s College Football Playoff ranking doesn’t matter, only one thing does: Stephen Means
Ohio State's first spot in the College Football Playoff rankings means nothing. Only one thing matters the rest of the season.
Practice. Ryan Day was talking about practice at his weekly press conference on Tuesday when he previewed Ohio State’s game at Purdue on Saturday.
3. Nobody needs the head coach to throw his team under the bus after a win, or anytime, really. But Moore’s defenses of the passing game are starting to ring hollow as the Wolverines and their five-star quarterback continue to muddle through mistakes and missed opportunities.
Three Big Ten teams made the bracket: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 2 Indiana and No. 9 Oregon. There's a big jump in the rankings before a bundle of Big Ten teams closing out the top-25 teams with USC (19), Iowa (20), Michigan (21) and Washington (23).
Michigan football just keeps taking care of business as its path to the College Football Playoff continues to solidify. Tony and Andrew open the show by discussing Michigan's win over Michigan State and how the Wolverines were able to beat the Spartans while not playing their best.
Trademark lawyers are representing a Michigan bar free of charge after Ohio State University challenged the name of its draft “Buckeye Tears.” The Brown Jug, an Ann Arbor-based bar near the University of Michigan campus,
Ohio State coach Ryan Day talks during a news conference about why the football program moved up traditional band visit to practice.
3don MSN
Ohio State got a Michigan test against Penn State on Saturday -- it passed with flying colors
On Saturday, Ohio State played a game in November against an opponent that wanted to control the lines of scrimmage, force timely turnovers and not give its quarterback too much to handle. Its opponent wanted to shorten the game and get after Ohio State’s quarterback,