BY ERIK BOLAND
April 29, 2008
As Ohio
State coach Jim Tressel
watched the NFL draft and the accompanying video of Vernon Gholston Saturday
afternoon, he was a little bothered.
"You know, in all the highlights on Saturday, I never saw any of those
plays where he carried Jake Long into the quarterback's lap," Tressel said
in a telephone interview yesterday from Columbus.
Tressel wasn't besmirching Long, Michigan's All-American left tackle selected
No. 1 overall by the Dolphins, and he was happy that his standout defensive
end, who will play outside linebacker in his new team's 3-4 defense, was taken
by the Jets.
Tressel has had several players do well with the Jets over the years, including
Mike Nugent and Nick Mangold. But he was perplexed at some of the criticisms
directed at Gholston before, during and after the draft. His primary objection
was to the charge that Gholston took plays - and sometimes entire games - off.
The one highlight played consistently was of Gholston beating Long for a sack -
the only one Long gave up all season - but Tressel said that wasn't the only
play in which Gholston bettered Long. There just wasn't a sack to show for the
other ones.
It was part of the larger point Tressel wanted to make: The reason Gholston's
sack and tackle numbers fluctuated was that his role in Ohio State's
4-3 defense wasn't always the same. For example, Ohio State
occasionally had the speedy Gholston drop into coverage.
"When you're a D-end who is sometimes a drop guy, there are going to be
times where you're not going forward," said Tressel, who later in the
interview said he didn't see any difficulties ahead for Gholston in the Jets'
3-4 defense. "There are times where you'll be in the scuffle and sometimes
when you're out in your zone."
In explaining the disparate reports on Gholston - many glowing, many not so
much - Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum said in an interview yesterday that
scouts don't always consider the factors Tressel mentioned.
"Scouting is very subjective," Tannenbaum said. "You don't
necessarily know what a player's responsibility is on a given play, what the
coach has him doing on a particular play. That's why scouting is an inexact
science. We're very comfortable with Vernon.
We feel the best days are ahead of him."
Tressel agreed, recalling the rapid development of Gholston, who arrived in Columbus having played
only two years of high school football. He left the Buckeyes having recorded 22
1/2 sacks in his last two seasons, including a school-record 14 in 2007.
"I think his upside ... a lot of times you ask yourself, 'Is what we're
getting a finished product or the tip of the iceberg?'" Tressel said.
"I think this is the tip of the iceberg with Vernon, which is frightening."