Good story, can't wait to watch our rb's over the next four years.....
http://www.theozone.net/football/2010/SugarBowl/RodSmith.htm
Rod Smith Turning Heads in Showtime
By Brandon CastelCOLUMBUS, Ohio — Rod Smith won’t get a chance to show Buckeye fans what he can do this year, but if bowl prep is any indication, they have a lot to look forward to.
The freshman running back out of Fort Wayne, Ind. is taking a redshirt during his first season in Columbus, but that hasn’t stopped him from taking Ohio State’s “showtime” by storm.
“Oh man, today everyone was talking about Rod Smith, he's going to be an unbelievable back,” senior captain Ross Homan said.
“I'm telling you, he's humble he has a great work ethic and he's going to be an unbelievable back here in the next couple years.”
“Showtime” is the term for Ohio State’s portion of practice where the young kids take center stage in front of their veteran teammates. It’s a chance for the stars of the future to show what they’ve got, and Smith appears to be just that.
The No. 6-rated running back in the class of 2010 by Rivals.com, Smith had some incredible runs during Tuesday morning’s practice that caught everyone’s attention, including that of Ohio State’s head coach.
“The guy that had a couple good runs was Rod Smith,” Jim Tressel said during his bowl media day press conference.
“He went and took his team down and scored a touchdown and did a good job. He's the first guy I can think of.”
At 6-foot-3 and 200 pounds, Smith with the ball in his hands is like trying to bring down a bull. Like most big backs, he is strong and powerful, but what separates him from other ball-carriers his size is his deceiving quickness and stunning burst.
“It's just how he runs, where he finds creases, explosion and stuff like that,” senior defensive tackle Dexter Larimore said.
“He cuts very well for a bigger back, and I just watch him and think, ‘Man, that kid's going to be good.’”
That unusual blend of size, strength, speed and vision has already led to a number of lofty comparisons for Smith, including one of the all-time greats in Eddie George. Like the Heisman Trophy-winner, Smith dominated the prep ranks, rushing for over 6,000 yards in his career at Paul Harding High School.
It’s comparisons to another former Buckeye tailback, however, that has Smith’s teammates buzzing.
“He has all the physical assets, he's got size, speed, but Rod he really just sits back and takes everything in,” Homan said.
“He's a humble guy, he's always in the weight room, I always tell him ‘there's Beanie Wells’ and he always smiles, but he's going to be an unbelievable player.”
The Buckeyes already have a stable of running backs, or else Smith might be on the field Jan. 4 when they face Arkansas in the Allstate Sugar Bowl.
Considered to be one of the prize recruits in Ohio State’s 2010 class, Smith was a later arrival because of academics. He had to finish up some summer courses and logistical work, which kept him away during all of fall camp.
Even after missing the first game of the season, the OSU coaches did not rule Smith out as an automatic redshirt. Ultimately, missing 29 fall practices and a game-week was too much for the young kid to overcome from a mental standpoint.
By the time he would have been ready to contribute, redshirt junior Boom Herron had already established himself as the feature back in Ohio State’s offense. Despite sharing time with senior Brandon Saine and sophomore Jordan Hall, Herron went on to rush for over 1,000 yards and 15 touchdowns in 2010 as the Buckeyes finished 11-1 during the regular season.
The Buckeyes lose Saine after this season, but they return a talented group of tailbacks, including Hall and current freshmen Jaamal Berry and Carlos Hyde.
The key, however, will be Herron. The fourth-year junior filed paperwork with the NFL to see where he might go in next April’s draft. If that comes back favorable and Herron opts to make the jump, the position breaks wide open for Smith in 2011.
Hall and Berry are both talented back, but they are smaller, shiftier speed backs.* The emergence of Smith would give OSU a more traditional power back to offset those two.
“He's a bigger guy, which Ohio State always loves,” Larimore said of Smith.
“I mean, obviously, he's not going to juke somebody out of his shoes - actually, he probably could do that if he wanted to. But he's able to be physical in the hole, which we always kind of liked.”
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imex99
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imex99
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Thu, Dec 16, 2010 3:26 PM
Dec 16, 2010 3:26 PM
Dec 16, 2010 3:26pm