Joey Bosa’s Ohio State’s teammates had to tell the defensive tackle that he’d just finished off Penn State with a sack in the second overtime.
The sack on a fourth-and-5 play gave the No. 13 Buckeyes a 31-24 victory Saturday night.
Bosa was the last to know.
“I was so tired I didn’t even know it was a sack,” said Bosa, who had 2 1/2 sacks and finished with six tackles. “The guys started hugging me and I just went to the ground. This might have been a double-overtime win, but it doesn’t make it any less important, winning in a crazy environment like this.”
Ohio State quarterback J.T. Barrett had two touchdown runs in overtime after Penn State overcame a 17-0 deficit to tie it.
“There are no moral victories at Penn State,” Nittany Lions coach James Franklin said. “There never will be.”
The Buckeyes (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten) built a 17-0 lead and were cruising when Penn State defensive tackle Anthony Zettel intercepted Barrett’s pass and returned it 40 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter.
Christian Hackenberg threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to Saeed Blacknall early in the fourth, and Penn State (4-3, 1-3) tied it on Sam Ficken’s 31-yard field goal with 9 seconds left.
“It comes down to execution,” Hackenberg said. “Consistently, we executed better in the second half. There’s still a little bit of inconsistency there. I think we picked that up and that allowed us to get things going,” he said.
Hackenberg finished 31-of-49 for 224 yards and a touchdown.
In the first overtime, Penn State tailback Bill Belton took a direct snap from the Wildcat formation and scored on a 1-yard run. The Buckeyes countered when Barrett carried two straight times, the first for 17 yards and the second 5 yards for a touchdown.
Penn State was called for a personal foul on the touchdown, giving Ohio State the ball at the 12 to start the second overtime. With a third-and-2 from the 4, Barrett powered through the middle of Penn State’s defense for a touchdown.
“I just read the play each time (on the option),” said Barrett, who rushed for 75 yards on 20 carries and completed 12 of 19 mostly possession-type passes for 74 more yards. “They were giving us the inside. I was going to do whatever I had to do to get in the end zone.”
Ezekiel Elliott ran for 109 yards on 26 carries for Ohio State. The Buckeyes have won five straight games and 19 in a row in the conference.
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