Wildcats’ ground game to test Buckeyes
But quarterback's status in question
Tempe, Ariz. ? Kansas State considered its Fiesta Bowl matchup with Ohio State the biggest game yet for a once-downtrodden program.
The euphoria over the team’s first BCS appearance faded, though, with news that quarterback Ell Roberson has been accused of sexually assault.
The accusation was made early Thursday by a 22-year-old woman, Paradise Valley police Lt. Ron Warner said.
Kansas State athletic director Tim Weiser said it would be up to coach Bill Snyder whether Roberson, the Wildcats’ career total-offense record holder, would play tonight against Ohio State.
Freshman Dylan Meier is the backup quarterback.
“I’ve know coach Snyder for several years now, and I know he’ll do the right thing,” Weiser said.
If Roberson plays, the double-barreled running threat of the standout quarterback and All-America running back Darren Sproles will present a major challenge to the Buckeyes.
In Ohio State’s regular-season finale at Michigan, Chris Perry shredded the Buckeyes’ run defense for 154 yards rushing and two touchdown in the Wolverines’ 35-21 victory.
Kansas State has a ground game that might be better than Michigan’s because Roberson is a threat to run as well as pass.

Kansas State coach Bill Snyder talks to the media at Sun Devil Stadium. Snyder's Wildcats will meet Ohio State tonight in the Fiesta Bowl at Tempe, Ariz.
“That makes it exponentially more difficult, when the quarterback has to be accounted for,” Ohio State coach Jim Tressel said. “That’s a whole new world and you have to do a good job of maybe keeping them off balance.”
No team entered the bowl season on a bigger roll than K-State. The Wildcats, seemingly finished after a three-game losing streak, have won seven in a row, outscoring their opponents 271-60 in the process.
Kansas State burned then-No. 1 and unbeaten Oklahoma for 519 yards in a stunning 35-7 victory in the Big 12 championship game, earning the Wildcats their first Bowl Championship Series berth.
“It’s going to be extremely difficult,” Ohio State defensive tackle Tim Anderson said. “This is probably one of the most high-powered offenses in the country. They obviously have a tremendous backfield with Sproles and Roberson, a receiving corps that’s very good, and probably one of the best offensive lines we’ve seen all year, if not the best.”
Sproles rushed for a school-record 1,948 yards this season, 1,021 in the last five games. Roberson, despite missing 21/2 games with a wrist injury, needs 57 yards rushing to be the third player in NCAA Division I history to rush for 1,000 yards and pass for 2,000 in the same season.
“I couldn’t ask for a better year in the way we came back and showed everybody that we still are a team, when a lot of people doubted us,” Roberson said earlier in the week.
The Michigan debacle has motivated the Buckeyes.
“Everybody on defense knows that’s not how we normally play,” Anderson said. “I know nobody’s happy with that performance. This is a way for us to kind of come back and redeem ourselves.”
The No. 8 Wildcats (11-3) were one-touchdown favorites over the No. 7 Buckeyes (10-2) before the Roberson situation came to light. Ohio State was a decided underdog in the Fiesta Bowl a year ago, but beat Miami 31-24 in double-overtime to win the national championship.
Tressel and his players say their practices leading up to this game have been at least as intense as they were a year ago, when the stakes were higher.
“I think there’s no question they will give the same kind of effort they did last year,” Tressel said. “We’re going to have to play better than we did a year ago to be successful, but I’m convinced that emotionally they’re going to be ready to go.”
Craig Krenzel, the MVP of last season’s national title game, will be playing his last game for Buckeyes. He is 23-3 as a starter.

