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Five things we think we learned from Ohio State football’s beatdown of Iowa

It looked like a game for a while, but Ohio State buttoned down and ran away with a 54-10 victory over Iowa on Saturday afternoon. The victory allowed the Buckeyes to remain undefeated at 7-0 and in the conversation for some really big things.

As with every game, we reflect on what we saw and try to pull out five things that we feel are the most important takeaways from the action we saw — so why stop now?

It was a bit of a weird, clunky game at first, but that’s kind of what you expect when you play this Iowa program. Here are five things we think we learned about this Buckeye squad after yet another impressive performance.

Winning ugly?

This wasn’t exactly a beauty pageant for the Ohio State offense. Iowa made quarterback C.J. Stroud and his weapons work for everything in the first half. But yet, Buckeyes went into halftime up 26-10 and in pretty good command of the contest.

And that’s the point. Ohio State smoked and sputtered a bit and still ended up winning very, very easily. This team is built to win in multiple ways even when there are some struggles because of what the opposition is doing.

Defense is the difference for Ohio State this year

There are much bigger fish to fry, and it’s hardly a watermark point to do well against this Iowa offense, but through seven games, this Ohio State defense continues to look better and better. Joel Klatt — whom we love by the way — kept gushing about the Hawkeye defense in this one, but it was the OSU defense that was setting the tone with three turnovers, a touchdown, and several three-and-outs forced in the first half.

That continued in the second half until the frontline sat out and watched Iowa start to gain more yards, but that’s not the point. Last year it was offense or bust and this season Ohio State has a championship-caliber defense.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba might not be right all season

The fact that Ohio State is putting up these types of scores each game without its best wide receiver, Jaxon Smith-Njigba, says a lot about the depth of the wide-receiving unit.

And the team might have to do without him being fully healthy all year.

Hamstring injuries take a long time to get over and we’re seeing that. Smith-Njigba has been in and out of the lineup at times and at other times completely shut down. I’m optimistic and hopeful that he’ll be 100% coming up here, but there’s a good chance that he may not be.

Ohio State can't abandon the running game

There are times when I feel like Ryan Day gives up on the running game. It makes sense sometimes because of the quarterback and receivers the team has, but there are times when running the ball is the recipe for success.

Day has gone away from it too early at times and you feel like that happened a wee bit in the first half. At one point Ohio State gained six yards on first down then proceeded to try and throw the ball two-straight times for incompletions then had to settle for a field goal.

Stick with it a little more to open things up because OSU will need that running game coming up.

Zach Harrison showed what he can be

Zach Harison had himself a game today, especially in the first half when he had a sack, a tackle for loss, a forced fumble, and a batted-down pass on third down. He showed a lot of the explosiveness we’ve all been waiting to see more consistently from the former five-star prospect.

I don’t know why, but Harrison looked more explosive coming off the edge and closing in on the quarterback, and Ohio State sure could use him to be at that level going forward. Now, it might have had something to do with the Iowa offensive line, but hopefully, we see that same production and effort going forward.

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Story originally appeared on Buckeye Wire