November 30, 2025

Ohio State ends 5 years of misery vs. Michigan with no-doubter

ANN ARBOR, MI – You can have your College Football Playoff race, where multiple games that can and will impact the 12-team field played out Saturday all over the nation. They’ll take The Game, thank you. 

You know what’s bigger and better than a nouveau riche playoff? Life and death between Ohio State and Michigan. 

And if you don’t think that’s what this menacingly marvelous piece of Americana is after the Buckeyes mercifully ended five years of misery with a dominating 27-9 win, you’re not watching closely enough. 

‘I’ve thought, as you can imagine over the years, what I’d say in this press conference,’ Ohio State coach Ryan Day said. ‘I’m going to save all those comments, because I think the best thing to do is win with humility.’

Not in this game, not with everything it means and everyone it impacts. So others did it for him.

Like Ohio State players laying on the turf at Michigan Stadium, joyfully spreading snow angles all over the joint. Or the OSU mascot, Brutus Buckeye, using his foot to pen Script Ohio at the south end zone goal line, and scraping an ‘X’ over the ‘M’ in Michigan.

Because not only do they not give a damn about the whole state of Michigan, they refuse to even use the letter M. In any way, shape or form.

‘We ended up clearing out the stadium,’ said Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin. ‘And had a lot of red in there.’

Forgive the sophomore from Carlsbad, Calif., if he committed a venial sin. It’s scarlet, Julian.

Don’t forget it when you’re picking up that bronze trophy next month in New York City.

‘They had a great look in their eye,’ Day said of his team that had lost four straight to Michigan, and hadn’t won The Game since 2019. ‘I don’t think there was any doubt when we walked into the stadium what was going to happen.’

That statement was utterly laughable before it all played out on a typically snowy and blustery late November in Michigan. The Game is full of doubt ― in the greatest way possible.

Only in The Game can Day look like a battered, bruised and lost puppy one season, and a flawless work hanging in the Louvre a year later.  

Only in The Game, can Michigan do no wrong since 2021, and stumble around for the better part of three quarters like a team and a coaching staff lost in the largest moment of their lives. 

Only in The Game can Ohio State take those years of debilitating discontent, years of having their toughness and manhood questioned, and shove them right down Michigan’s throat.

The Buckeyes played bully ball, using an unrelenting run game in poor conditions, some critical throws from Sayin, and a nasty defense to escape a recurring nightmare that had suffocated the program. 

Late in the third quarter and into the fourth, Ohio State used a masterfully patient and punishingly effective 20-play, 81-yard drive (16 runs) that used 12 minutes of game clock to kick a 23-year field goal and put Michigan to sleep. Finally and fittingly.

That’s really the only way this losing streak could end. The only way Ohio State could reclaim who and what it has been, and now is again. 

Physically leaving no doubt.

Because not even winning the national championship last season — after losing The Game — could soothe the pain of what Michigan has inflicted.

The rout in 2021 that snapped Ohio State’s eight-game winning streak, and gave Michigan coach and alum Jim Harbaugh the only win that mattered in his first seven seasons. Seven.

The rout in 2022 that led to Michigan finally breaking through and reaching the CFP, and made it clear that Ohio State now had a Harbaugh problem. 

The one-possession win in 2023 that gave Michigan the confidence and momentum it needed to win its first national championship since 1997. 

And the three-point win in 2024 that salvaged a five-loss season for first-year Wolverines coach Sherrone Moore, and nearly got Day fired.

Imagine that, a coach who has won 82 of 92 career games in the biggest fishbowl of all in college football, nearly lost it all because he couldn’t beat That Team Up North. Absurd, yes — but that’s The Game, everyone.    

‘To tell you the last four years have been easy is not true.,’ Day said. ‘When you don’t accomplish those things, you take it personally.’ 

Until you’ve experienced it, there’s nothing like Michigan vs. Ohio State, this annual march to the inevitable and pulsating three hours of it means everything. The 365-day buffer doesn’t diminish the hate and hurt, it only magnifies it to unimaginable proportions.

Ohio State not only had 2,190 days between wins (but who’s counting?), the team it despises like no other not only got better over those five years and four losses (they didn’t play during the pandemic season of 2020), but won the whole damn thing in 2023 at the Buckeyes’ expense. 

Then followed that up with a soul-sucking win unlike any other in the history of the series (that’s not hyperbole).

So when Michigan ripped off a long run on the first drive of the game, and led 3-0, and after Sayin threw a bad interception into double coverage and Michigan turned it into a six point lead, all of those gut-punches of the past started bleeding through.

A series later, it all ended with a perfectly thrown 35-yard touchdown pass from Sayin to Jeremiah Smith ― on fourth and five, no less ― and Ohio State never trailed again. In fact, was never really threatened.

‘We had to stay even-keeled,’ Sayin said. ‘We had to keep battling.’  

The shifts of emotion and momentum are so intense in this rivalry, the flaws of execution so scrutinized, every play and every decision falls under the most extreme of fanatically unrelenting microscopes. 

Only in this game can a $12 million quarterback, Michigan freshman Bryce Underwood, look like a dime store replacement (8-of-18, 63 yards, INT).

Only in this game can a Cali kid ― who grew up surfing on Solana Beach and never played a game in colder than 50 degree weather ― play the game of his brief Ohio State life in the freezing snow. And strengthen his already impressive Heisman Trophy measurables.

Ohio State has played 12 games now, and hasn’t really been tested. While the rest of college football is jockeying for position in their wake, the Buckeyes haven’t lost since the last time they played The Game.

Since the loss and the resulting fight between the teams and the mayhem that followed.

But instead of wilting in the moment, Ohio State not only got better, it got meaner and tougher and mentally stronger. A year later in this moment, everything changed. 

Ohio State rushed for 77 yards in last year’s game — after a season of an emphasis on the run game with the hiring of UCLA coach Chip Kelly to run the offense — and freshman tailback Bo Jackson had 77 yards rushing in the first half. By the time the Buckeyes were salting away a huge win late in the fourth quarter, they had 186 yards rushing.

Ohio State ran 73 plays, Michigan ran 42. Ohio State had the ball for 40 minutes, Michigan for 20.

Ohio State beat Michigan ― hold onto your Bucknuts, everyone ― by playing like Michigan. The very thing the Buckeyes tried to do last season and failed spectacularly.

‘During the season, when things are going well, I always say that’s all great,’ Day said. ‘But how’s it going to look when it’s snowing sideways in late November?’

Like a thing of beauty for the first time since 2019.

Hang it in the Louvre.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY