The Ohio State Buckeyes knocked off a game Washington Huskies that started off on OSU's level but ended far below it on Saturday, in what'd end up being a one-sided win for the defending national champions.
Ohio State defeated Washington off the strength of a Heisman-level performance from Julian Sayin, whose performance was so dominant and in sync with Jeremiah Smith that the sophomore wide receiver wunderkind propelled into the top-five in Heisman odds in most sports books.
The Columbus Dispatch's Joey Kaufman lauded Sayin for handling Husky Stadium's unique homefield advantage, unreal noise at altitude, in his first start since his high school career in Carlsbad, California.
"The road trip put more on the plate of Sayin, who had made his first three starts behind center at Ohio Stadium," Kaufman wrote.
"Husky Stadium’s sold out crowd forced the Buckeyes to use a silent count, and communication before the snap was difficult.
"It wasn’t as flashy as nonconference routs the previous weeks, a stretch in which he showed off his deep ball, but he displayed a level of composure, handling a hostile environment in his first game away from the Horseshoe."
Buckeyes head football coach Ryan Day gave Sayin his flowers after the 22-of-28 passing, 208-yard, two-touchdown, zero-interception effort.
"He does a great job of communicating what he sees on the field. There are times where I see one thing on the field, and I watch the film, and he's right," Day said postgame.
It was colorful coach-speak, but Day came from the heart as a happy man who knows he has the type of talent under center to win it all. Best yet, when he won it all, he had Will Howard, an accomplished veteran transfer, show Sayin the ropes.
Sayin respects and appreciates it. It definitely shows out on the football field.