1. I would definitely put Schlister and Kern ahead of Smith. Tomczak and Krenzel? You could make an argument that Smith was as good, or even better than them. I only brought them up because you asked for specific examples of previous Ohio State quarterbacks that could perform a specific quarterbacking task (progressing through reads) as well as Smith. As for beating Michigan? Teams beat other teams. There were at least a dozen other QBs around college football that could have led the Buckeyes to the same wins over Michigan that Troy Smith did. So Troy Smith did not single-handedly beat Michigan.
2. The reality of your analysis of the OSU offenes during Tomczak's era is that it is, at best, speculation. You tell me you don't know much about Tomczak, and then offer some kind of "analysis" of the offense during his time? How can you analyze the offense, if you "don't know much" about the QB!?!?!? Are you serious? You gave no statistics to back up your wild claims about the inability of Tomczak to spread the ball around. There was nothing there but uninformed opinion, so don't be surprised if people don't try to counter it.
Much like your namesake, you are getting to be an annoying pest. You act as if I am saying that Smith sucked. I'm certainly not. What I am saying is that I don't think he is even CLOSE to being the best QB in Ohio State's long and storied history. If you can't handle the fact that someone doesn't see your man-crush as the greatest thing since sliced bread, then I'm done with you.
Enjoy your day, ant.
2004: Smith has a field day against tsun. He puts up more yards against them than any one single player has ever put against them. It is the breakout game for him.
2005: Fourth quarter. OSU behind by two scores.
Facing third and long. Smith rolls right, tries to find an open receiver, can't. Runs left. Makes two guys miss, continues run, makes a third guy miss and gets a first down and runs out of bounds.
Around a minute left, OSU down by 1 or 2 points, TS is unable to find a receiver, starts to run, sees a linebacker about to tackle him, backs out, rolls right, and completes a pass to Gonzo who makes an acrobatic catch to give a first down inside the scUM 5. Pitt scores a TD.
I want you to name one other QB that could've made the plays he did with his legs... other than Vince Young. (Please don't say brady quinn, I'll puke)
2006: Well, Troy Smith passes for 240 yards and 3 TDs in the first half. The rest is history.
Teams beat other teams. But teams are made up of individuals. Without these individuals, things happen very differently. For example, Henne singlehandedly kept scUM in the 2005 game by himself, no doubt about it. If he hadn't been there, it would've been a blowout. Troy Smith is, like it or not, more often than not, that kind of a player. He single-handedly won the game against scUM 3 years in a row.
Statistics, well, my entire point has been that statistics do not completely reveal the effect the presence of Smith has on the field. But if you want to play that argument, great. (while I also note that you don't provide any "statistics" to validate your claims either)
You ask how I can analyze the offense without knowing anything about the QB? Because I know the system. Byars ran for over 1700 yards in 1984, 2nd highest season record in OSU history. I tried, but I can't dig up receiver stats for 1984, the final year of Tomczak, though I know he threw for 1952 yards with a completion % of 0.594, which is his highest for a single season, a joint ninth for the single season with Krenzel's stats for the 2002 season (both their career stats being lower). This is a far well grounded analysis than your wild claim that Herbstreit is "a better QB than Smith". LMAO. Then you contradict yourself by saying he "just couldn't move quickly enough to evade even his own shadow". And you have the gall to make personal attacks on me. Ya, right.
Let's look at other numbers. Troy Smith's career completion % is 0.627. He holds the 2nd and 3rd place for OSU's completion % for season in 2005 and 2006. Boeckman's stats this year is .663, the highest for the season and career (.665). We'll see if he maintains it at the end of this year and next. Schlichter and Kern do not figure in the top 10 for Buckeye completion % career or season. Troy Smith holds 2nd highest completion % for career at .627. The next is Joe Gremaine with .592. Your Herbie stands 9th among all time buckeye QBs for completion % with .564. Nowhere else is he found among the top 10.
Troy is 3rd among all time for TD passes with 54. Only Gremaine (56) and Hoying (57) surpassed him. Four-year starter Schlichter, had 50. Remember Troy started for 2.5 years, and still missed the Alamo bowl game and a couple of other games in between. Troy has 30 TDs in a season, maximum in a single season. Noone else has more. Hoying (29), Gremaine (25). Boeckman has 21 and counting this year.
Troy had 6888 total offense, 3rd among buckeyes, all time. He was within striking distance of Hoying's 7151 yards when the bowl game debacle happened. Schlichter has 8850 yards. Again, pretty good for someone who didn't start until the seventh game of his sophomore season.
The only slight on him is that he is 6th in passing yardage, behind Schlichter, Hoying, Gremaine, Frey and Bellisari. Again, everyone before him was a 3-year starter.
My point is that Troy Smith is more than just his numbers. He was such a good runner that defenses had to account for that every game. Accurate, and very safe. You yourself said "The ONLY thing Troy Smith did better than any other QB in Buckeye history is use his legs to not only get out of trouble, but to actually gain yardage". Don't you think that made defenses think twice about committing to the pass?
Kern is nowhere to be found in the list, completion percentage or pass efficiency. Schlichter doesn't appear often either. Just like Schlichter, Troy has redefined what a quarterback is for the buckeyes. The QBs that you state, Kern and Schlichter, were dinosaurs of a bygone era. Kern defined excellence during their era. Schlichter initiated a new era. Similarly, there is a new era in town. This is the Troy Smith era. He will be used as a measuring stick to assess every quarterback that rolls into Ohio State. Make no mistake about it.