JONES IS NOT IMPRESSED
For Ohio State fans, a win is a win. It doesn’t matter how much you win by or how you won, it just matters that you won. That’s not the case for quarterback Cardale Jones.
After the Buckeye’s 38-0 win against the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors, Jones spent time reflecting on his mistakes and immediately thinking about what he could do better. Despite the win, everyone knew that this was not the Cardale Jones that everyone knew last season.
“I’ve got to catch the ball, no matter where it is.” Jones says, adding that he expects his receivers to catch the ball when it hits their hands,” I dropped every one. It wasn’t like I didn’t touch one. Every one I dropped is on me, not the center.”
At the end of the first half, J.T Barret took over for Jones, obvious that it was a rough first half for the offense. Cardale Jones came back in the second half with the whole offense ready and alert. Thankfully for the Buckeyes, the second half served as an improvement.
Jones finished the game 12 for 18 for 111 yards against Hawaii, with 6 runs for 5 yards.
“I’m kind of glad we hit this pothole early in the season because it’s given us something to look forward to,” He says, “It was a reality check not just for me but for the offense, basically saying we’re not as good as we thought we were.”
There’s still another ten weeks of football to determine that.
After the Buckeye’s 38-0 win against the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors, Jones spent time reflecting on his mistakes and immediately thinking about what he could do better. Despite the win, everyone knew that this was not the Cardale Jones that everyone knew last season.
“I’ve got to catch the ball, no matter where it is.” Jones says, adding that he expects his receivers to catch the ball when it hits their hands,” I dropped every one. It wasn’t like I didn’t touch one. Every one I dropped is on me, not the center.”
At the end of the first half, J.T Barret took over for Jones, obvious that it was a rough first half for the offense. Cardale Jones came back in the second half with the whole offense ready and alert. Thankfully for the Buckeyes, the second half served as an improvement.
Jones finished the game 12 for 18 for 111 yards against Hawaii, with 6 runs for 5 yards.
“I’m kind of glad we hit this pothole early in the season because it’s given us something to look forward to,” He says, “It was a reality check not just for me but for the offense, basically saying we’re not as good as we thought we were.”
There’s still another ten weeks of football to determine that.