The Lantern - August 28 2018

Page 1

TUESDAY

CORDRAY

THURSDAY

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

P2

College Dems promote civic engagement with Cordray visit

SHORT NORTH

P6

A non-profit turns a construction inconvenience into local event

BREAKAWAY

P4

Despite hiccups, Breakaway performances went above and beyond expectations

FOOTBALL

THE LANTERN thelantern.com

@TheLantern

‘I’m built for this’

P8

Day focuses on “win the moment” mentality as home opener approaches

The student voice of the Ohio State University

Year 138, Issue No. 30

Board of Trustees: What’s on the agenda? ZACH VARDA Campus Editor varda.6@osu.edu

AMAL SAEED | ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Ryan Day ready for interim head coaching job COLIN GAY Sports Editor gay.125@osu.edu In his first press conference as Ohio State’s acting head coach, Ryan Day wanted to talk about football. Day began by saying he was not a part of the investigation of head coach Urban Meyer: he was not interviewed and he had nothing to add. “Today I would like to talk about football and this team,” Day said. “Out of respect for everybody involved, I’m not going to speak today on the independent investigation, the report, or any speculation regarding it.” As Day takes over as acting head coach for the first three games of the 2018 season and Meyer serves his three-game suspension, the repercussions of his absence still loomed as the season opener neared. Even though he did not want to talk about the investigation, Day made clear he was not there to re-

place Meyer. He said his role in the first three games of the season will be to to empower the coaching staff and his players and just keep the program up and running. Day has taken on increased responsibility, not only tasked with becoming acting head coach, but guiding redshirt sophomore Dwayne Haskins during his first snaps as the starter as the quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator. “There’s been times where I felt like I’ve been drinking through a fire hose, to be honest,” Day said. “The expectation of Ohio State is you win every game and I understand that. So there’s that added pressure there that you feel.” As he addressed Ohio State as interim head coach, Day used the phrase “win the moment” to define the transition he has gone through. Instead of focusing on the future and what was to come, Day got his players to focus on the present, encouraging them to use their energy on the moment.

That is exactly the focus Day has on his first career game as a head coach. “I’ve been trying to focus on today, and then tomorrow we’ll focus on tomorrow and then we just go from there,” Day said. “Because there is no script, so we’ve just been working forward.” When Meyer was placed on administrative leave on Aug. 1, Day was contacted by athletic director Gene Smith, telling him he was going to be the acting head coach at Ohio State until the investigation and subsequent punishment was complete. Even with two former head coaches on Meyer’s coaching staff in defensive coordinator Greg Schiano and offensive coordinator Kevin Wilson, the message Day received from Smith after he was hired was to trust his instincts. Day had never been a head coach before. Prior to being hired as a quarterbacks coach and, eventually, promoted to offensive coordinator at Ohio State, he was

a quarterbacks coach with both the Philadelphia Eagles and the San Francisco 49ers. During this time of adjustment, he leaned on one of the former coaches that mean the most to him. “I got a text message and I get it just about every other day from one of my mentors, Chip Kelly, and he says, ‘you’re built for this,’” Day said. “That’s what he told me. And that’s the thing I keep going to every morning when I wake up, is that I’m built for this.” As a head coach, Day said he has to watch the game a bit differently, noticing the whole picture as opposed to just the quarterbacks or the offense as a whole. He said his perspective has widened over the past month by watching players on and off the field, their attitude and mentality as they go through each aspect of a specific practice. Being on staff with him for one season, Schiano, as a defensive coordinator, said he has not di-

DAY CONTINUES ON 8

Your New OSU Campus Target is Now Open. Now Accepting

Save big on grab & go food, dorm and apartment essentials & more. Visit us at 16th & High.

©2018 Target Brands, Inc. The Bullseye Design and Target are registered trademarks of Target Brands, Inc. C-000806-12-017

While it will not attract the same national attention or create the same suspense as the special session to decide Urban Meyer’s employment standing, the Ohio State Board of Trustees will convene for their regularly scheduled meetings Tuesday through Friday. Although the focal point is not Ohio State football, some noteworthy topics will come up before the trustees for either votes or discussion. Starting Tuesday, the Wexner Medical Center Board meeting will decide whether or not to approve entering into a contract for professional services for a new optometry building, among other things. The building will be constructed at the corner of Neil and 11th avenues, taking the place of the University Flower Shop and Adriatico’s old location, the latter of which moved to a new location this summer on Neil and 10th. Meanwhile, the rest of the Board’s committees will meet on Thursday and Friday. Following a summer full of developments, the Audit and Compliance Committee will discuss updates on the investigation of alleged sexual abuse by former Ohio State trainer Richard Strauss. Each year, the Board and President Michael Drake must agree on and present the presidential goals for the fiscal year. The Talent and Compensation Committee will meet Thursday to discuss that. The proposed goals, according to Board documents released Monday morning, include advancing the strategic plan for the university and academic health center, strengthening the quality and affordability of teaching and learning programs, establishing Ohio State as a national and global leader in higher education practices, policy and research, furthering sustainability and demonstrating “best-in-class leadership.” TEXTBOOKS CONTINUES ON 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.