Ohio State football: To whom much is given, much is expected.

There are now a lot of expectations for Ryan Day and Ohio State football going into 2024. It’s win now or lose forever for Day.

Would you believe me if I told you that a 58-8 college football head coach was under pressure? That’s a little harder to respond to in modern sports. It might not be as shocking, though, if you later disclose that the coach in question is Ryan Day, the head coach of the Ohio State football team.

With the exception of the COVID-19 season, when the Buckeyes only dropped one game—the national title against Alabama—they have won eleven or more games each of Day’s seasons, for a cumulative winning percentage of.875 under his leadership. Not a single program in the nation would not be pleading for that at this very moment.

But in college football, there is no such thing as equal opportunity or equity, and program-to-program standards are wildly inconsistent. For example, Pat Fitzgerald had only eight winning seasons in his 17 years as head coach, with only three of those seasons totaling ten victories, prior to his firing by fellow Big Ten team Northwestern due to claims stemming from a hazing controversy.

Or how about Mark Richt, the former head coach of Georgia, who was sacked after 15 years in Athens with a 145-51 record? Alternatively, let’s get a little closer to home with the Buckeyes against their bitter rival Michigan, who recently captured their first national title since 1997—an accomplishment that took head coach Jim Harbaugh nine years to achieve.

Day at Ohio State won’t go nine years without winning a national championship. He won’t make it another season without a win over Michigan.

This autumn, Day will begin his sixth season as Ohio State’s head coach. But because of The Game, he has been under increasing pressure over the last few seasons. That’s correct. Ohio State uses one game to judge whether or not a season is successfully concluded. That is the extent of the Ohio State supporters’ and the program’s surrounding community’s importance in winning over Michigan. Because of this, employment at Ohio State is entirely different from any other position in the nation.

Day has been under intense scrutiny after suffering three straight defeats to Michigan, his only Big Ten setback to date. However, he also did not help himself with his crushing defeat to Alabama in the 2020 College Football Playoff national championship. Defeating the most successful team and head coach in the previous 20 years could have helped to quell some of the fervor if they had won at least one title. However, nothing else can lessen the pressure that Ohio State’s head coaches and program face because winning is such a high standard. Either you win or get a new job. Day has therefore fully committed to 2024.

In 2024, Ryan Day will strengthen the Ohio State football team’s roster.

The collegiate football season of 2024 will usher in a brand-new era in the sport, the details of which are still unknown. With the CFP expanding from a four-team to a 12-team field, there will be more teams that can make the playoffs and bigger, albeit smaller, conferences.

The Big Ten is one of those larger conferences; in its penultimate season, USC, UCLA, Oregon, and Washington—four schools that comprised the fiercely competitive Pac-12—will join the conference. If the Buckeyes are not playing Oregon in the Big Ten title game, they will only have to face one of the new clubs (Oregon) the following season. Even still, there is more competition, and nobody can predict with certainty how much room there will be for error. Day decided to enhance his staff and expand his roster for this reason.

Day and Ohio State football were losing some important players that were a part of their 2023 squad, including wide receiver Marvin Harrison Jr., defensive tackle Michael Hall Jr., quarterback Kyle McCord, and wide receiver Julian Fleming, whether through the transfer portal or the NFL Draft. However, the site has given just as much as it has taken.

Day and Ohio State acquired Will Howard, a former Kansas State quarterback; Julian Sayin, a former Alabama five-star quarterback; Quinshon Judkins, an Ole Miss running back; Seth McLaughlin, a former Alabama center; and Caleb Downs, a former Alabama safety.

That’s a significant victory for just one squad. Even if it’s impressive, everything about it exudes desperation.

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