Position battles that will decide Ohio State’s ceiling

Ohio State enters 2026 the way elite programs often do. Loaded enough to contend for a Big Ten title and a national championship, but unfinished enough that a handful of position battles will determine whether the roster becomes merely very good or truly championship-caliber.

That distinction matters because the Buckeyes are replacing major production in several spots while also trying to integrate a large wave of newcomers, transfers, and second-year players into meaningful roles.

The roster still has stars like Julian Sayin, Jeremiah Smith, Jermaine Mathews Jr, Austin Siereveld and Jaylen McClain, but Ohio State’s ceiling will be determined by the places where the answer is not yet obvious. And the spots where Ryan Day and his staff still need clarity, trust, and consistency.

The most important thing about these battles is that they are not all equal. Some are about filling snaps, others are about preserving the structure of the entire team. Ohio State can survive a wide receiver rotation that takes until late September to settle.

It cannot easily survive uncertainty on the right side of the offensive line, a defense that cannot settle its second safety and nickel responsibilities, or an unsettled running back room if injuries continue to linger into the fall.

Championship teams usually show who they are by how quickly they lock in the positions that define them. For Ohio State in 2026, that identity starts up front and shapes everything else.

The offensive line battle may decide everything else

No battle looms larger than the one unfolding across the offensive line, particularly on the right side. Ohio State returns four of five starters and significant cumulative experience, but that surface-level stability masks the central issue.

The line’s weakest moments were the reason the 2025 season ended the way it did. Losses against Indiana and Miami exposed protection issues, including multiple five-sack performances that disrupted the offense’s rhythm. While Austin Siereveld was a bright spot at left tackle, the right side remains the clearest area in need of resolution.

That competition is wide open. Ian Moore is pushing for a starting tackle role, while Joshua Padilla, Gabe VanSickle, and Phillip Daniels are all part of the conversation as the staff searches for its “best five.” That outcome will shape everything else Ohio State wants to be offensively.

With Arthur Smith now influencing the offensive structure, the goal is clear. More balance, more physicality, and more consistency in the run game. But none of that matters if protection remains unstable. A reliable offensive line allows Sayin to be aggressive, keeps the run game on schedule, and unlocks the full depth of the skill positions.

If it doesn’t come together, even a talented offense can become predictable and limited. On a roster filled with high profile storylines, this remains the most important and least glamorous battle.

WR3, RB2, and the shape of the offense

Wide receiver may appear settled at the top, but the battle for the next layer of the rotation still matters.

Jeremiah Smith is the focal point, and Brandon Inniss brings experience and leadership, but the competition behind them will help define how the offense functions. Transfers Devin McCuin and Kyle Parker bring experience, while Chris Henry Jr. adds high-end upside as a freshman.

Ryan Day has hinted at a deeper rotation this season, which would represent a shift from the top heavy receiver usage of past years. That decision will shape how the offense distributes touches and handles key situations. If one player clearly emerges as the third option, the offense gains structure and defined roles.

If multiple players remain interchangeable, Ohio State gains flexibility but risks lacking a consistent secondary option in critical moments. The question is not just who plays, it’s how the hierarchy develops.

Running back presents a different kind of challenge, largely due to injuries. Bo Jackson and Isaiah West missed spring recovering from shoulder surgeries, while Legend Bey dealt with a hamstring issue. That left players like Ja’Kobi Jackson and Favour Akih to take the majority of reps.

The result is an incomplete evaluation. A healthy Bo Jackson provides proven production, but the shape of the room behind him remains unclear. Whether Ja’Kobi Jackson becomes a trusted complement or Bey’s explosiveness demands touches will determine how versatile and dynamic the offense can be.

Until the room is fully healthy, this remains one of the most difficult positions to project.

The defensive battles that will define the ceiling

On defense, the question is not whether Ohio State will be good, it’s whether it can remain elite. Replacing players like Caleb Downs and Lorenzo Styles Jr. creates uncertainty in the secondary, particularly at safety and nickel.

Jaylen McClain provides stability, but the rest of the group, including Terry Moore, Earl Little Jr, and Leroy Roker III, will determine how the defense structures itself on the back end. Until those roles are clearly defined, the defense remains less settled than it was a year ago.

Linebacker carries a different kind of importance. With Arvell Reese and Sonny Styles gone in the top ten of the NFL Draft, Ohio State must replace not just athleticism, but communication and consistency. Christian Alliegro looks to be positioned for a major role, but the competition between Riley Pettijohn and Payton Pierce will shape the unit’s identity.

At defensive end, the spot opposite Kenyatta Jackson Jr. remains wide open. With Zion Grady, Qua Russaw, and Beau Atkinson all competing. The pieces are there, but like much of the defense, the unit’s ceiling depends on how quickly those roles are solidified and which one of those guys steps up.

The verdict: Ceiling is about solving the right problems fast

Ohio State’s 2026 roster is talented enough that it does not need every position battle to produce a star. But it does need to solve the right ones, and solve them quickly.

The offensive line must stabilize to support everything else. The running back room must get healthy enough to create balance. The receiver rotation must find clarity, whether through hierarchy or depth. And the defense must define its structure at safety, nickel, and linebacker quickly enough to play with confidence and instinct.

These are not secondary storylines. They are the difference between a team that has championship talent and one that fully realizes it.

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