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Ryan Day needed to do a little tinkering with tradition. And he found the perfect solution before Ohio State packed its bags to go to Seattle for a time zone battle. Instead of the usual Friday fly-in, the Buckeyes hopped on a plane Thursday, giving themselves an extra day in the Pacific Northwest before their Big Ten opener at Washington. The move didn’t go unnoticed. 

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Dillon Davis summed it up perfectly in an X post on September 30. “Ryan Day said the plan to go out to Seattle on Thursday worked well. He said the team watched the UVA/FSU game together on Friday night, and there was a great sense of camaraderie throughout. ‘It reminded me of last year and the playoff, which was sort of the plan,’ he said.” That’s the nugget Ryan Day wanted out there, a subtle reminder that Ohio State’s road blueprint isn’t random. It’s playoff-tested.

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A year ago, Ohio State bulldozed through three postseason games on the road by an average of 15 points. Chemistry off the field eventually shows up on the scoreboard. And in Seattle, it sure looked that way. The Buckeyes HC told reporters this week, “Going all the way to the West Coast, it’s a long trip out to Seattle… I thought we actually got closer over those two days. We were able to spend some time in the meal room. We watched that Florida State-Virginia game. And just the amount of camaraderie that was going on and bonding in those meal rooms during that time, I think, was good.”

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It’s the kind of detail coaches love. Film study happens at practice, but culture gets built in hotel banquet rooms. The Thursday leap gave his players more than rest because it also gave them memories, and in Ryan Day’s eyes, that matters. The HC insists the move is science-backed. “We talked to a lot of people in the NFL and other sports on how they travel multiple time zones. We felt like this is the best way.” Practice is bumped earlier on Thursdays, walkthroughs get relocated to the road city, and the schedule otherwise stays on script. But here’s the catch. When you add a travel day, something else gets subtracted.

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Could Ryan Day’s travel tweak disrupt Ohio State’s academic perfection? 

Every Thursday flight is a Thursday class missed. And at a place like Ohio State, that’s headline material. The Buckeyes are more than just national champions on the field. They’re also the gold standard in the classroom. Right now, OSU football is the only Division I program with a perfect multi-year Academic Progress Rate of 1000. Alabama sits just behind at 998, Harvard at 997. Across all sports, the Ohio State posts an elite 990, with six other Buckeye teams matching that flawless 1000. But shaving a study day every road week is a question mark.

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For now, the results are clear. Ohio State looks connected, fresh, and undefeated. But when you’re balancing perfect GPAs with playoff trophies, even small tweaks have ripple effects. As Ryan Day said, “We wiped the slate clean on Sunday like we do every time we walk off the field on Sunday. That game’s behind us, and it’s on to Minnesota. And they bring their own set of challenges.” This weekend, the Buckeyes are back home, eyeing a 13th straight win over Minnesota in their 55th all-time meeting. QB Julian Sayin, sitting atop the nation in completion percentage at 78.8%, is flirting with an Ohio State single-season record.

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The wins are piling up. The camaraderie is real. But if Ryan Day keeps playing the long-travel game, the biggest obstacle may not be another team. It might just be the fine line between culture-building and classroom sacrifice. 

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Written by

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Khosalu Puro

3,289 Articles

Khosalu Puro is a Primetime College Football Writer at EssentiallySports, keeping a close watch on everything from locker room buzz to end zone drama. Her journalism career began with four relentless years covering regional football circuits, where she honed her eye for team dynamics on the field. At EssentiallySports, she took that foundation national, leading coverage across the college football space. For the past two seasons, she has anchored ES Marquee Saturdays, managing live weekend coverage while sharing her expertise with the team’s emerging writers. She also plays a key role in the CFB Pro Writer Program, a unique initiative connecting editorial storytelling with fan-driven content. Khosalu ensures her experience is passed on to the rest of the team as well.

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Arvind Manoharan

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