BY GENARO C. ARMAS
AP Sports Writer
STATE COLLEGE, Pa.(AP) -- Welcome home, Terrelle Pryor.
No. 15 Ohio State and its talented dual-threat quarterback visit
No. 11 Penn State in a high-stakes Big Ten game. For Pryor, it
will be his first game at Beaver Stadium since the western
Pennsylvania native spurned Penn State last year to end one of
the most publicized recruiting races in recent memory.
Nittany Lions fans haven't forgotten, and Pryor knows it.
"It's going to be a crazy atmosphere, but that's what we come
here for," said Pryor, a sophomore. "We're going (in) as a team,
so if I get spit on, they spit on the whole team and stuff like
that."
As if the annual grudge match between the Buckeyes (7-2, 4-1 Big
Ten) and Nittany Lions (8-1, 4-1) needed any subplots.
Both teams could use a signature win to solidify their
credentials for a BCS bowl berth.
The game also will break their tie for second place in the
conference, putting the victor in better position for at least a
share of the Big Ten crown should unbeaten Iowa falter down the
stretch.
"We definitely feel like we have something to prove. There's a
whole bunch of talk that we haven't played anybody yet," Penn
State receiver Derek Moye said.
The Nittany Lions have won five straight by lopsided margins,
though they lost their toughest game this season when they fell
to the Hawkeyes in late September.
A loss could put the Buckeyes in more late-season trouble. Their
goal to win at least a share of their fifth consecutive Big Ten
title is already in jeopardy, and they host Iowa next week.
But there's not a Buckeye that's looking beyond the Nittany
Lions, a team that leads the Big Ten in total offense (429 yards
per game) and total defense (84 yards).
"It starts up front, very physical, very strong, aggressive
style, not unlike ours," Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said.
That sounds a lot like something his Penn State counterpart,
Hall of Famer Joe Paterno, would say. Games between the Nittany
Lions and Buckeyes usually hinge on field position and big
defensive plays, whether in Happy Valley or the Horseshoe.
Tressel, like Paterno, often likes to play things close to his
sweater vest. Their styles pay off given that the two big-name
coaches have 616 victories between them - Paterno the leader
among major college coaches with 391, Tressel with 225.
In fact, Saturday's game will be the first time two FBS coaches
with a combined 600 or more wins will have met in the regular
season, according to Penn State's sports information department.
The other time it happened was in the 2006 Orange Bowl, when
Penn State and Paterno beat Florida State and Bobby Bowden, who
is five behind Paterno on the career victory chart.
But Paterno doesn't like to talk about his career stats, or to
compare himself to Tressel or any of his other colleagues, for
that matter.
"No, I'm not going to compare myself, heck," Paterno said when a
reporter broached the topic this week. "I'll compare your
writing with somebody else's writing if you want me to do that,
or something like that, but that's not - no."
He's had more immediate concerns on his mind, like containing
Pryor.
If there's any defense that's up to the challenge, it's a Penn
State unit that is the stingiest in the nation in allowing just
9.3 points per game.
The Nittany Lions' defense leads the league in sacks, while the
athletic linebacking trio of Navorro Bowman, Josh Hull and Sean
Lee is one of the best in the country.
Mobile Northwestern quarterback Mike Kafka lit up the Penn State
defense early last week before getting hurt, though the Nittany
Lions have done a good job this season in containing other
running quarterbacks such as Illinois' Juice Williams and
Michigan's Tate Forcier.
While Ohio State's defense (11.7 points and 260 yards per game)
can go toe-to-toe with the Nittany Lions, the offense has
struggled at times, with much of the blame pinned on an
inconsistent Pryor.
Pryor started out slow "but the last two games he's been very,
very overpowering, really. He's running well, he's throwing the
ball well deep," Paterno said.
Pryor would love to do the same against the Nittany Lions at
Beaver Stadium, especially after his fourth-quarter fumble last
year set up Penn State's go-ahead score in a 13-6 loss in
Columbus.
Penn State fans are ready to pounce on Pryor's every move. Many
blue-and-white backers still recall that during recruiting,
Pryor called the Penn State campus in rural central Pennsylvania
too "countryside" for his taste.
"I came here to Ohio State to play in this type of game. I have
my teammates with me, all 70 guys," Pryor said. "We'll feed off
of that, whether it's our fans or their fans. It's going to be
exciting, electric."
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