Ohio State Buckeyes Head Coach Ryan Day To Take On An Increased Role In College Football Playoff
If youโve ever tried to finish a major project at work two weeks after putting in your notice, you know exactly what Brian Hartline is going through right now. Itโs awkward, and you probably shouldn’t be in charge. That seems to be the logic in Columbus this week. Ryan Day, realizing that the College Football Playoff is perhaps not the best time for a distracted offensive coordinator, has decided to take matters into his own hands.
Day announced on Monday that he will be taking over offensive play-calling duties for the Buckeyes as they gear up to face Miami in the Cotton Bowl, relieving Hartline of the burden as he transitions to his new head coaching gig at South Florida.
Day Steps Up As Hartline Packs His Bags
The timing here is absolutely brutal. Hartline accepted the USF job just days before the Big Ten Championship, and the subsequent offensive showing against Indiana was, to put it mildly, a disaster. The Buckeyes managed a paltry 10 points, rushed for fewer than 60 yards, and watched quarterback Julian Sayin hit the turf five times. It wasn’t the high-octane machine weโre used to seeing.
It is hard to blame Hartline entirely. Juggling a national championship run while simultaneously building a staff and recruiting for a program over a thousand miles away is a recipe for burnout. There were even reports of Hartline offering scholarships to USF while still prepping the Buckeyes. That is a lot of plates to spin. By taking over the play-sheet, Day is essentially letting Hartline focus on what he does best: coaching those elite wide receivers, without the pressure of scripting the entire game.
Why Day Calling the Shots Matters
This isn’t just a panic move; itโs a return to form. Before he decided to take a “CEO approach” and hand the keys to Chip Kelly and then Hartline, Day was one of the premier play-callers in the sport. Remember the 2022 Peach Bowl against Georgia? That was Day in his bag, aggressively dialing up shots for C.J. Stroud against one of the scariest defenses in recent history.
Day knows this offense because itโs his offense. He knows the rhythm, he knows the personnel, and frankly, he knows that if this ship goes down against the Hurricanes, he wants to be the one steering it.
The Stakes For Day and the Buckeyes
The pressure is squarely on the head coach now. By removing the middleman, Day removes the scapegoat. The Buckeyes are staring down a Miami team that just upset Texas A&M, and they need to wake up an offense that looked comatose in Indianapolis.
He needs to get Sayin comfortable again. He needs to figure out how to get the ball to Jeremiah Smith and Carnell Tate without getting his quarterback killed. And he needs to re-establish a run game that vanished when it mattered most.
It is a bold gamble to switch operational voices this late in the season, but given the circumstances, it feels like the only card the head coach could play. If the offense explodes in the Cotton Bowl, Day looks like a genius who steadied the ship. If they struggle? Well, at least Hartline will be enjoying the Florida weather by then.
