Ohio State Defense Exposes Texas and Silences the Arch Manning Hype
If Texas wanted to prove it belonged among college football’s elite, Saturday night in Columbus was its chance. Instead, Ohio State turned the Longhorns into pretenders and sent Arch Manning’s much-hyped debut crashing back to reality.
From the opening snap, Ohio State’s defense dictated the game. The Buckeyes’ front seven overwhelmed Texas at the line of scrimmage, collapsing the pocket and forcing Manning into hurried throws. Every time the highly publicized quarterback tried to settle in, another scarlet jersey was in his face. The result was a stat line that will haunt him: he finished 17/30 for 170 yards 1 TD and 1 Interception. The statline will not show the bad throws and the rushed throws either.
This wasn’t just Manning struggling—it was Ohio State sending a message. The Ohio State defense looked disciplined, fast, and physical, bottling up the Texas run game and daring the young quarterback to beat them. He couldn’t. Cornerbacks blanketed Texas’ receivers, linebackers jumped passing lanes, and the defensive line lived in the backfield. It was a clinic in how to dismantle a so-called high-powered offense.
For all the noise surrounding Arch Manning, Ohio State stripped it away in four quarters. The Buckeyes treated him like any other quarterback—confusing him with disguised coverages, punishing him for every mistake, and reminding the nation that hype doesn’t win football games.
Meanwhile, the win reaffirmed what Ohio State has been building under Ryan Day: a defense capable of winning championships. If this unit plays with the same intensity the rest of the season, the Buckeyes won’t just contend for the Big Ten—they’ll be in the thick of the College Football Playoff conversation.
Texas, on the other hand, leaves Columbus with more questions than answers. Is Arch Manning the next generational quarterback or does he just have a generational last name? Can Steve Sarkisian adjust after being completely outclassed? Or was this simply the Longhorns being exposed as a team still not ready for the national stage?
One thing’s certain: Ohio State didn’t just beat Texas. They exposed them. And they turned Arch Manning’s big moment into a nightmare.
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