Tag Archives: Cristobal

Miami and coach Mario Cristobal are retiring the turnover chain

Enjoy retirement, turnover chain. You were a beacon of college football light.

Miami coach Mario Cristobal confirmed Thursday at his ACC media days appearance that Miami would no longer be breaking out the iconic jewelry after forcing a turnover.

The turnover chain was introduced in 2017 and its various iterations have been a big part of the Miami program for the past five seasons. Former coach Manny Diaz was the team’s defensive coordinator when the chain made its debut. But the turnover chain era is now over, just like Diaz’s tenure as Miami head coach. And Cristobal really didn’t seem too inclined to talk a lot about the chain being put out to pasture on Thursday.

“I think probably the media has put more thought into this than I have,” Cristobal said Thursday when he was asked why Miami had retired the turnover chain. “We just really focus on getting better as a program and have focused on technique, fundamentals, regimentation, academics, strength and conditioning, sports science, community service, and that’s what the focus has been on.”

“It is not a shot or form of disrespect to anybody or anyone. Certainly history is history, and whether it’s positive, whether it’s inconsequential, whatever it may be, it’s still history and part of your program. We’re just moving in a direction that right now doesn’t involve it. That’s really the best way to address it.

“Let’s put it this way. We’ve been working so hard and paying attention to so many other things that, in my opinion, are much more critical to winning football games and having success that it really hasn’t been a subject or a topic. We won’t be using it. You guys OK with that? We good now? Everybody got the chain stuff? OK. All right. Thank you.”

We will not see a turnover chain on the Miami sidelines in 2022. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

A Miami native, Cristobal came to the Hurricanes from Oregon after the team zeroed in on him as the replacement for Diaz. Cristobal played football at Miami and is very familiar with the outward displays of emotion that happen at Miami. He was part of the legendary Miami teams of the late 1980s and early 1990s that took the college football world by storm with their brash attitudes.

But Cristobal clearly doesn’t think Miami should be celebrating defensive success with the chain. At least not right now. Hopefully, it makes a comeback in the future. The turnover chain was fun. And Miami being successful and having an attitude makes college football fun, too.

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Miami Hurricanes to retire ‘turnover chain,’ according to new football coach Mario Cristobal

The Miami Hurricanes are ditching the “turnover chain” for the 2022 season, first-year coach Mario Cristobal told the Action Network on Wednesday.

“It’s not part of our culture,” Cristobal said, according to a tweet from the publication.

Miami’s turnover chain is an oversized 36-inch, 2.5-kilogram, 10-karat gold chain worn by players on the sideline after forcing a turnover. It has been used by the school since the first game of the 2017 season.

The Hurricanes hired Cristobal as their new coach in December, after four seasons leading Oregon. A Miami native, Cristobal won two national championships at the school as a player and earned two degrees from his time here.

Cristobal is scheduled to meet with reporters on Thursday morning at ACC Media Days in Charlotte, N.C.



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Miami hires Mario Cristobal: Hurricanes make brash move luring Oregon coach home, but will it work?

The latest domino in the coaching carousel has fallen. Miami announced Monday that Oregon coach Mario Cristobal has agreed to return home and take over the Hurricanes. 

“My family and I are excited to return home to the University of Miami, which has been so instrumental in shaping me as a person, player, and coach,” said Cristobal in a statement. “This program has an unparalleled tradition and an exciting future ahead of it. I can’t wait to compete for championships and help mold our student-athletes into leaders on and off the field who will make our University, our community, and our loyal fan base proud.”

In taking the Miami job, Cristobal replaces Manny Diaz, who was fired Monday morning after three seasons leading the Canes. Cristobal, who won two national championships as a Miami player between 1989-92, was 35-13 (23-10 Pac-12) in four seasons leading Oregon. Diaz finished 21-15 (16-9 ACC) but won five of his last six games this season.

Cristobal’s hiring comes at a tumultuous time for both the coach himself and the Hurricanes. Miami’s negotiations with Cristobal became extremely public for an extended period of time over the weekend despite Diaz still being employed by the team.

Miami is simultaneously trying to hire Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich, a UM graduate who was reportedly waiting on the Canes to snag Cristobal before himself agreeing to leave the Tigers. Miami has neither made an announcement about Cristobal nor Radakovich at this time.

Cristobal will be tasked with helping the Hurricanes emerge from mediocrity. The Canes only have one season of double-digit wins since joining the ACC in 2003. Miami clearly believes in Cristobal given it has chosen to pay more than $12 million combined to buy out his contract from Oregon and end Diaz’s deal.

“We are incredibly excited to welcome Mario, his wife, Jessica, and their sons Mario Mateo and Rocco home to Miami,” said school president Julio Frenk said. “Mario’s legacy as a student-athlete at the U is well established. And the standard for competitive excellence that he and his teammates helped establish is one to which we continue to aspire. Our selection, however, was not one based in nostalgia for a proud past, but rather in a bold vision for a promising future.

The Miami Herald reports Miami will pay Cristobal more than $8 million a year and has made additional financial commitments to support the football program as a whole.

Miami entered the 2021 season regarded as a top contender in the ACC Coastal; however, a disastrous 2-4 start doomed its chances of competing for a league title and national relevance. The Canes did win five of their final six games, a stretch that included victories over ranked foes NC State and Pittsburgh as Diaz finally identified a star quarterback in Tyler Van Dyke.

Those victories, and the team’s resolve after a tough start, suggested that perhaps Diaz would get another season as Miami’s coach. But with athletic director Blake James fired, Diaz’s future was put into question. 

Cristobal is a Miami native who spent six seasons as coach at FIU before working under Nick Saban at Alabama from 2013-16. He served as Oregon’s offensive coordinator for a season before replacing Willie Taggart as coach. Cristobal previously worked as an assistant at Miami from 2004-06 under Larry Coker.

Beyond his obvious ties to the university as an alumnus, Cristobal’s mother lives in South Florida. She has been dealing with an extended illness, and Cristobal had been making frequent trips to the area from Eugene, Oregon, which was a 6,400-mile round trip. 

Miami’s big gamble

Trying to pull off an athletic director change and a coaching change simultaneously is a bold move, and the Canes should expect some ridicule for how they treated Diaz. However, if it all works out and Miami returns to prominence in a mediocre ACC, no one will remember the process, just the results. Should it fail, though, the Canes will receive an epic amount of blowback and endless jeers for their sloppy handling of the situation.

Diaz showed in the second half of the 2021 season that he still had the pulse of his team, and the Canes never altogether bottomed out under his direction. On the other hand, Cristobal is just 11-6 over his last 17 games at Oregon, and his offenses aren’t exactly the most fan-friendly to watch. Cristobal’s tenure ended with a 38-10 blowout loss to Utah in the 2021 Pac-12 Championship Game just two weeks after the Ducks were similarly dismantled by the Utes, 38-7 in Salt Lake City.

Cristobal is a former offensive lineman, and while he was a player in the Miami program during its days of swagger, he isn’t a particularly flashy coach. However, like Diaz, he’s a Miami guy who is tied to the community in a way that few other coaches are to their respective universities.

No long-term guarantees

Nobody has held the Miami job for more than seven seasons since Andy Gustafson had the gig from 1948-63. The program’s last two coaches have lasted just three years and none of its last four have made it through five full seasons. Cristobal being a prominent former player does not guarantee that he’ll bring stability to a program that badly needs it.

Diaz is from the city of Miami and was the program’s defensive coordinator before getting the head coaching gig. Prior to Diaz’s tenure, former UM QB Mark Richt was coach for just three seasons after a long run at Georgia. Another of the program’s fairly recent coaches, Randy Shannon, was also a former player and defensive coordinator who didn’t work out in the long run, either.

So while Cristobal’s connection to a great era of the program’s history may help sell season tickets, it’s not necessarily reassuring for the program’s long-term stability. That’s especially true given the strange circumstances under which he’s been hired.

Where hope will come for Miami is the reported investment into the football program as a whole. The Canes’ facilities are far behind many top 25 programs, and their lack of on-campus stadium has long been an issue. However, there is a massive amount of talent for Cristobal — a top-tier recruiter — to scout in South Florida (and the state as a whole). If Cristobal can land star-studded recruiting classes, that coupled with the supposed increased investment into the team and a potential big-name AD leading the effort provide reasons for optimism.

Another major job opens

Did you think the coaching carousel was just about done? Think again. Cristobal’s decision to leave Oregon opens up the best job in the Pac-12 North, and now, the league’s three best jobs will have changed hands in the same cycle. With Lincoln Riley leaving Oklahoma for USC, Kalen DeBoer replacing Jimmy Lake at Washington and Oregon starting fresh, it’ll be a clean slate of sorts for the conference next season.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing. This season marks five straight that the Pac-12 has failed to get a team to the College Football Playoff. Oregon has not made it since the CFP’s inaugural season in 2014, and USC has never played in the CFP. Utah is in a stable place under 17th-year coach Kyle Whittingham, but the Pac-12 needs some fresh energy. Perhaps these coaching changes will bring it.

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Miami fires Manny Diaz with Oregon coach Mario Cristobal expected to fill Hurricanes’ vacancy

Miami has fired coach Manny Diaz, the school announced on Monday, setting off the first domino of a potentially blockbuster coaching carousel at The U. 

Diaz’s firing opens the door for the Hurricanes to hire Oregon coach Mario Cristobal, a former Hurricanes offensive tackle and graduate of Miami, who has led the Ducks to three consecutive Pac-12 Championship Games. The program has reportedly targeted Cristobal and Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich to lead the program into the future. 

“We are grateful to Coach Diaz for his many contributions to our campus community and to his native South Florida, and for the strong leadership and exemplary character he exhibited during his tenure at the University,” Miami president Julio Frenk said in a statement. “We wish him and his family the very best as they move forward.”

Miami hired Diaz to replace Mark Richt, who retired from as Hurricanes coach after the 2018 season. Diaz, the defensive coordinator on Richt’s staff and a native son of the city, was hired to build on the success; however, Miami went just 21-15 in three seasons, including a 7-5 campaign in 2021 marred with injuries. 

After dropping to No. 1 Alabama in the opener, the Hurricanes fell against Michigan State, Virginia and North Carolina before suffering a bad loss to Florida State that might have sealed Diaz’s fate. Miami accepted a bid to face Washington State in the Sun Bowl, a relative disappointment after entering the season ranked in the top 15. 

Diaz’s long nightmare is over

Rumors of Miami targeting Cristobal started in the middle of last week while Diaz was still out recruiting and preparing for a bowl game. It was one of the more publicly embarrassing coaching searches of the offseason as Diaz had to very publicly wait for Miami to make a decision while still trying to figure out whether he should still work. 

Miami is going through a critical time for the future of the program. If the Hurricanes can land both Radakovich and Cristobal, the display will have been worth it. But still, the way Miami went about handling Diaz throughout this whole process is a masterclass in what not to do. It made Diaz coming back to Coral Gables completely untenable.   

What’s next for Diaz

All of a sudden, Diaz becomes perhaps the best defensive coordinator on the market. He earned the head coaching job thanks to his outstanding work rebuilding the Hurricanes’ defense, bringing the unit to No. 9 in yards per play and No. 12 in scoring defense to become a Broyles Award finalist in his first season. The unit only got better over his coordinating tenure. 

If Diaz wants to stay in the ACC, there’s a fancy defensive coordinator opening down the road at Clemson after Brent Venables left to take the Oklahoma head coaching job. With 25 coaching changes in college football — and counting — there are a number of other coordinator jobs up for grabs. With Virginia connected to other candidates following the abrupt departure of Bronco Mendenhall, it’s unlikely that Diaz would immediately get another head coaching job — but the carousel hasn’t come to a stop quite yet. 

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Miami targets Oregon coach Mario Cristobal, Clemson AD with Manny Diaz still employed, per reports

The University of Miami is planning to pursue Oregon coach Mario Cristobal as its next head coach, according to multiple reports, despite still having a sitting head coach and no athletic director. Barry Jackson reports Miami is expected to ‘make a run’ at Cristobal while the Oregonian‘s John Canzano notes that Miami brass hopes to speak to Cristobal after the Pac-12 Championship Game on Friday.

To cement its pitch, Canzano reports that Miami is targeting Clemson athletic director Dan Radakovich. However, CBS Sports’ Dennis Dodd reports that no decision had been made. Radakovich started his athletic administration career by getting an M.B.A. from Miami, but is best known for transforming Clemson into a national power after taking the job in 2012. 

Oregon isn’t going down without a fight, however. Canzano reports the university has put together a monster contract extension, described as “Brian Kelly and Lincoln Riley dollars.” While Riley’s contract at USC is not public, Kelly’s deal at LSU will pay him more than $100 million over 10 years if he lasts through the contract. An announcement on Cristobal’s decision is expected by Tuesday. 

Cristobal was born in Miami, played for the Hurricanes and was previously head coach of FIU, which is located in Miami. Cristobal, the first Cuban American coach in FBS football, is as intimately associated with one city as any coach in college football. However, even if his alma mater opts to move on from current coach Manny Diaz in the coming days, it could have a hard time luring Cristobal from his perch atop the Pac-12. 

In four seasons as the coach of the Ducks, Cristobal has a 35-12 record, including two consecutive Pac-12 championships. He can earn a third straight on Friday in against No 17 Utah, which would make him the first coach since Chip Kelly in 2011 to reach the mark. In defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux, the Ducks likely have their third straight top-10 NFL Draft pick. 

Miami, conversely, is in disarray following the resignation of athletic director Blake James after eight years. After leading the Hurricanes to an 8-3 record and No. 22 postseason ranking, Diaz was shaky in 2021. Miami started the year No. 14, but finished just 7-5 after a wave of injuries. Offensive coordinator Rhett Lashlee just left to become the head coach at SMU. 

Diaz, notably, is equally as tied to the city of Miami as Cristobal. The fellow Cuban American was also born in Miami and is the son of a former Miami mayor of the same name. However, landing Cristobal and Radakovich would be a transformational set of hires at Miami, and would show commitment to athletics that the university has not shown since the glory days. 

“I want to make clear that the Board of Trustees and I, as president, recognize the essential part of our brand and reputation derived from athletics,” Miami president Julio Frenk wrote in an open letter in September. “We are fully committed to building championship-caliber teams at the U.” 

The university has not won a team championship of any sort since winning the football and baseball national championships in 2001. Miami football has not won the ACC since entering the league in 2004. Since the ACC brought back the conference championship game in 2005, the Hurricanes are tied for last in ACC Coastal titles with Virginia, North Carolina and Duke. 

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What Mario Cristobal said after Oregon Ducks beat Washington State

EUGENE — No. 3 Oregon beat Washington State, 38-24, Saturday night at Autzen Stadium.

Mario Cristobal recapped the Ducks’ six conference win.

Below are intial live update of Cristobal’s postgame press conference. A full transcript will follow.

MARIO CRISTOBAL

— Made halftime adjustments to handle pressures

— Proud of how hard Oregon played entire game

— Says Byron Cardwell Jr. plays with “older eyes” and is a quick study for a young guy

— Mykael Wright kickoff return to open second half was a “huge boost” to team

— On Brandon Dorlus: “He’s as explosive and as effective of a defensive lineman as you’ll find now.” He makes opponents have to focus away from Thibodeaux.

— Drastic improvement on special teams

— Says WSU’s ability to force fumbles was a point of emphasis all week. On one hand “disappointing” the fumbles occurred. On the other, sticking with those players and them coming through was “awesome” to see as well.

— Says Anthony Brown Jr. had to run tonight based on what WSU’s defense was doing. “He used every bit of everything he has to make it a reality.”

— Holding WSU to 3 after Brown’s fumble was very important

— No update on Johnny Johnson III’s right foot/ankle

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What Mario Cristobal said after Oregon Ducks rallied past Cal

EUGENE — No. 9 Oregon beat Cal, 24-17, Friday at Autzen Stadium.

Mario Cristobal recapped the Ducks’ second conference win.

Below is a transcript of Cristobal’s postgame press conference.

MARIO CRISTOBAL

Q. Talk about the performance in the fourth quarter and finding a way to win…

CRISTOBAL: Well it was just a really gutsy performance. Again it was a battle. I think all conference games are battles and with Cal its been some really tight football games. This was another one. I think we started off doing some of the self-inflicted stuff and then we found our rhythm offensively. The defense found their rhythm in the first half and our offense got it going more in the second half when they started moving the ball a bit more on us as well when it came down to those last couple of drives. There were some difficult situations for some guys, but all in all we just found a way to close out a game, which was an improvement from the week before when we were trying to close out a game and came up short. So all in all I’m proud of the effort and the toughness to play a game like that and see it through because when you’re backed up that far and they had multiple opportunities to punch it in our defense found a way to get it done. There’s a lot to be commended on that and a lot we have to work on as well.

Q. On Anthony Brown’s performance…

CRISTOBAL: He did a lot of really good things and was very resilient. They’ve got a couple really good edge rushers and those guys are very hard to block. I think the little things like stepping up in the pocket, his pocket presence and avoiding some issues. On paper there are a few sacks on there, but there were also a few high-difficulty protections against some pressures and movement stuff our guys accomplished when they needed it most. Overall, hats off to all of those guys. They all played really hard and Anthony did some good things tonight.

Q. On Travis Dye playing as the lone feature back…

CRISTOBAL: He did [play with heart] and he always does. And he probably got a few more touches tonight than he usually does but his style of play, his energy, his leadership – which really stood out all week long and made a tremendous impact – he was the guy who spoke to the team before the game as well and his message was strong and from the heart. I think it really carried through and showed up in the fourth quarter.

Q. Noah Sewell had 11 tackles and 1 TFL. Talk about his ability…

CRISTOBAL: I think he’s the best. He’s the best I’ve been around at that position. I mean it’s almost deja vu with when Penei was here and I felt that way. I feel the same way about Noah. That’s a guy that last year didn’t get a lot of time to train and only played in 6 or 7 games. Now we’re in this season and every single game he is taking over. He’s doing so many great things and he does it in a physical manner. He is a knock back tackler who changes the game at the line of scrimmage, he can rush the passer, he covers a lot of ground from sideline to sideline and makes up for sometimes when there is a missed tackle. He’s an elite player and elite human being.

Q. On the young guys growing up on defense…

CRISTOBAL: We’re trying. We have to grow up faster. That’s the bottom line. We have some moments where we have some great 3-and-outs and some great defensive stops and some other ones with eye discipline here, mental alignment there and all the sudden we have an extended drive. Those are some things we’re working on. And we need to work on it better. We need to coach it better. We’ve got to teach it better. Hopefully, we will have Mace Funa back next week. He certainly is different when it comes to setting edges. And if we can get some of our front-line guys back – hopefully Alex Forsyth is back as well. It was good to see Bradyn Swinson back as well. It was his first action since he started practicing fully this week. All in all, we had some progress but there is some work to be done.

Q. Talk about coming out of a game with no major injuries…

CRISTOBAL: You always want to see guys come out with as little injury as possible. You really don’t know sometimes until the next day. That’s the honest truth. It seems that way on the surface and I hope that it’s that way tomorrow when we wake up.

Q. How do you think Anthony Brown handled the criticism?

CRISTOBAL: I think Anthony played a really good game and did a lot of good stuff. I know you have a job from a media standpoint with narratives or whatnot, but I think over here it’s always going to be about turning up the volume and intensity on what we do as opposed to anything on the outside. Things like that sometimes happen in sports and it has to be irrelevant in terms of our process and how we go forward. It never has played a part in what we do or how we do it and it can’t be. But in terms of Anthony handling himself in the game, he made a lot of good plays tonight, a lot of big plays. He showed a lot of poise. He made some plays with his feet, with his arm. I thought we stretched the field better in the first half and then a couple in the second half. I thought our passing game improved a bunch. Obviously, a lot of those throws were good and he used his feet. Overall a really good performance.

Q. How significant did the stop at the end feel after the Stanford game?

CRISTOBAL: Without a doubt [it felt good]. In our conference there are so many strong passing teams that you have to be able to affect the quarterback. That certainly was the case tonight. To close out a game like that where there were multiple possessions inside the 10-yard-line not to mention in our territory, I’m just really proud of the effort, resiliency and toughness because you see that it’s hard to get it done down there and they did. They just kept playing and found a way to get it done. It’s a great opportunity to build momentum of off. Because along the way there are some really good moments and others that you have to improve upon but all in all you have the opportunity to build on a really gutsy finish to a game that was a real battle, a real dogfight. It seems that every time we play this opponent it is [a battle] and that’s what conference play should be.

Q. Did you know Travis Dye’s performance would be this important tonight?

CRISTOBAL: We all did. We knew the whole time anyways. If you look over the years, Travis has always been a tremendous offensive weapon for us in everything. Certainly, we are going to miss CJ [Verdell]. CJ is a tremendous player as well, but these two guys together did so much and maybe some of it gets lost because of some of the attention that goes to different players. But Travis has always been the complete, ultimate teammate and competitor. Tonight, he got some more opportunities and just played really, really tough and physical. His hard work in the offseason really showed up and paid off in different ways. He was all over the place tonight, so he will keep getting those opportunities as long as it works out for him.

Q. What was behind the decision to play with more tempo in the first half?

CRISTOBAL: I don’t know if there was much difference in the play clock when the ball was actually snapped, but you could say there we definitely moved faster. We wanted to move faster last week, we were in third downs and just in more difficult situations. Our first down success was higher this week so it allows you to move a bit faster. That probably dictated a lot of it.

Q. What’s your message to your players to clean up penalties?

CRISTOBAL: We have worked it really hard, and it has not paid off like we expected it to. I have to look at myself because I preach a really aggressive brand of football. We work it that way, we also work to avoid penalties – we have officials at every practice – but it is just not getting through. On certain counts we had nine and they had ten. While our penalty count has gone up, we have also forced opponents to have more penalties against us. There is a clear line that we can not cross, and some of these penalties are unavoidable but some are just selfish. I have to find a way to get through in some way, shape or form, and I am going to do that.

Q. What areas did you improve in after the bye week? Where do you want to see more growth?

CRISTOBAL: We saw some growth in the passing game, getting the ball down the field. We threw the ball better. We thought that our big plays, our big runs, were more explosive this week than we had the previous week. We got to the passer better, obviously Kayvon [Thibodeaux] was a big factor in that as well. We did not see the type of improvement in the penalty department. We saw improvement in finishing the game and attempting a 50-yard field goal is something that we had been working on for a long time. Again, [Lewis] just continues to make a difference for us. We worked on the return game a bunch, that kickoff return by Kris Hutson certainly gave us a spark, and we were able to score on that. I thought with our red-zone defense there were a couple opportunities that we had a pretty good feel after settling down after the second drive. There is some more stuff to evaluate on tape.

Q. How did Travis prove his durability over the last two weeks?

CRISTOBAL: I don’t know if it’s a matter of asking him, but I think that there is one football, and a lot of different people touch it. He has been close to that number of counts, in games where it has been 12 and 15 or whatnot. His durability has never been a question to us. Football is football. People get nicked up, people get banged up. He is a tough guy. You saw him in. He went an extended series, and made big plays and just kept going. If he came out to catch his breath he went right back in. I don’t have any concerns there. I am proud of Byron going in there. I thought he hit that one split-zone really well, it was a really good run by him. Trey is really, really close and a really good player, and so is Seven [McGee]. Just the touches today went with Travis, and a few with Byron, and Anthony [Brown] ran the ball a few times as well and had success. There is no concern about his durability. We only had 62 offensive plays tonight. They really ran some of that time off the clock down, they ran the shot clock to 4-5 seconds, so we did not get to get as many snaps as we wanted to. But if we did, Travis would have carried.

Q. What’s changed for Devon Williams since the Arizona game where he didn’t see the ball at all?

CRISTOBAL: Him. Taking more accountability in his approach to practice. Allowing [Bryan McClendon} to push him, and push him hard. It is really important that he fully entrench and invest himself into being the very best that he could be. Because he could be a real special player. He has come a long way, and has done really good things, and he showed up tonight. We expect him to take another step and make a tremendous difference for us in the pass game.

Q. How much does Anthony’s experience factor into his ability to come through in the fourth quarter?

CRISTOBAL: He’s really resilient. I wish you could see on tape some of the things that he did that I saw with my own eyes. Dealing with some of the things that were coming at him, some of the coverages that were being thrown at him. With the injuries he’s had, the number of games he’s played in and the stadiums he’s played in, it means a lot. It means he’s not going to be shaken. He’s not gonna flinch. I think the best thing a guy like that has is the ability to – like all of us should – if you don’t have your best day to look your teammates, your coaches right in the eye and say ‘I’ve got to do better because that commands respect and the trust of people. Because they know how much it means to you. He wants to play well all the time but he wanted to make sure he did everything he could to make his teammates successful. He did that tonight. I’m proud of him.

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What Oregon’s Mario Cristobal said about Ohio State pregame

After finding a way to take advantage of opportunities in the second half to take control of the game up in Minneapolis to go 1-0 on the season, the Buckeyes now head back home and prepare to face a highly ranked Oregon Ducks squad.

As most coaches do, Ducks head coach Mario Cristobal met with the local media up in Eugene to preview the Ohio State game and the challenge and opportunity ahead for Oregon. There were no shortages of superlatives and compliments about the Buckeyes coming from the Ducks head coach.

In the event that you didn’t hear all that Cristobal said about Ohio State, we’re repurposing his press conference here thanks to Max Torres of Ducks Digest.

Watch below and watch Cristobal provide updates on some injured players, how dangerous Ohio State is on offense, how well-coached the Buckeyes are, the challenge ahead, and more.

Ohio State and Oregon are set to do battle at Noon EDT on Saturday. FOX has the call in a national broadcast.

Contact/Follow us @BuckeyesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Ohio State news, notes and opinion.



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