Sport: | football |
Year: | 1998 |
Team: | Ohio State Buckeyes |
Conference: | Big Ten Conference |
Short Conf: | Big Ten |
Coachrank: | 2 |
Aprank: | 2 |
Record: | 11–1 |
Conf Record: | 7–1 |
Hc Year: | 11th |
Off Coach: | Mike Jacobs |
Oc Year: | 2nd |
Dc Year: | 3rd |
Captain: | Joe Germaine |
Captain2: | Jerry Rudzinski |
Champion: | Big Ten co-champion Sugar Bowl champion |
Bowl Result: | W 24–14 vs. Texas A&M |
The 1998 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented the Ohio State University in the 1998 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head football coach was John Cooper. The Buckeyes played their home games in Ohio Stadium. The team finished the season with a win–loss record of 11–1, and a Big Ten Conference record of 7–1. They were co-champions of the Big Ten Conference with the Wisconsin Badgers and the Michigan Wolverines and played in one of the premiere Bowl Championship Series bowl games, the 1999 Sugar Bowl.
Led by senior quarterback Joe Germaine, the Buckeyes were the preseason number one team and remained top-ranked throughout the majority of the season. The Buckeyes only loss came late in the season to the Michigan State Spartans. The team blew a 15-point lead late in the game to fall 28–24.
Because of the late loss, Ohio State was kept out of the National Championship Game, the 1999 Fiesta Bowl. Their regular season "miss" of not playing fellow tri-champion Wisconsin also cost the Buckeyes a trip to the 1999 Rose Bowl because Ohio State was the last to play in the Rose Bowl in 1997, Wisconsin last played in 1994.[1] The Buckeyes beat Texas A&M in the Sugar Bowl to finish second in both polls behind the Tennessee Volunteers after their victory over Florida State in the Fiesta Bowl.[2]
See also: 1998 West Virginia Mountaineers football team.
See also: 1998 Toledo Rockets football team.
See also: 1998 Missouri Tigers football team.
See also: 1998 Penn State Nittany Lions football team.
See also: 1998 Illinois Fighting Illini football team.
See also: 1998 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team.
See also: 1998 Northwestern Wildcats football team.
See also: 1998 Indiana Hoosiers football team.
See also: 1998 Michigan State Spartans football team.
See also: 1998 Iowa Hawkeyes football team.
See also: 1998 Michigan Wolverines football team and Michigan–Ohio State football rivalry.
Ohio State secured a share of its 28th Big Ten title as the fans stormed the field with less than 30 seconds to play. Joe Germaine completed 19-of-24 passes for 330 yards, his seventh career 300-yard game, and his favorite target was David Boston, who finished with 10 receptions for 217 yards, most ever by a Michigan opponent. Boston also broke his own single-season reception mark and moved past Cris Carter on the school's all-time yardage list.[4]
See also: 1999 Sugar Bowl.
Q[5]
See also: 1998 NCAA Division I-A football rankings.
Player | Round | Pick | Position | NFL club | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 8 | Wide Receiver | Arizona Cardinals | ||
1 | 23 | Defensive Back | Buffalo Bills | ||
1 | 28 | Linebacker | New England Patriots | ||
2 | 49 | Running back | New York Giants | ||
4 | 101 | Quarterback | St. Louis Rams | ||
4 | 128 | Defensive Back | Philadelphia Eagles | ||
6 | 192 | Punter | Miami Dolphins | ||
6 | 196 | Wide Receiver | Green Bay Packers |