
It was a designed handoff,he wasn't forced because the lineman on the left side had to engage lineman long enough for Sanders to get going on the right,listen to Herbie,listen to Franklin,go to Black Shoes Diary or Audibles.Yes I saw the video Brutas posted.Sanders I believe had 43 yds,Franklin knew the defense would be focused on McSorley who had 175 yds rushing,he tried fooling them it didn't work
This from Blue-White Illustrated:
"The quarterback is their guy, obviously," said head coach Urban Meyer. "He's a winner, he's competitor, and he's a great, great player, so the conversation was that somehow they were going to get him involved in that play. So [defensive coordinator Greg Schiano] came up to me and said, OK, let's burn a timeout. Let's see what they're in. Right before the snap we did and we could hear over the head sets that they were going to get a zone read and get the quarterback involved."
But they didn't. After Ohio State's timeout, Penn State called another one, exhausting two of their three timeouts and ultimately putting the outcome of the game on the weight of this one play. With only one timeout remaining, Ohio State only needed that fourth-down stop before it could run out the clock. That's just what it did – but not by stopping McSorley.
Rather, Penn State handed the ball off to running back Miles Sanders, who had been contained to fewer than 3 yards per carry on the evening. This time – the last time – Ohio State bottled him up for a loss of three yards.
By trying to outsmart the coaches across the line of scrimmage, Penn State went away from its captain – a decision that head coach James Franklin later regretted.
"Obviously we should've called something different there," Franklin said in the opening statement of his postgame press conference. "I'm pretty upset right now because I'm hurting for those guys in that locker room."
https://www.elevenwarriors.com/skull-sessions/2018/10/97133/ohio-state-football-terry-mclaurin-legendary-block-survive-quarterback-run-binjimen-victor-touchdownRead the comments by Pete Thames from Yahoo Sports.
As I told you, a Zone Read. If you don’t see the RPO part of it with the WR, #12, I can’t help you. If you really think they would call a play that is a dive, with no other options, I can’t help you understand how these plays are designed.
Is a simple constraint play. Trips left (to the boundary) move the RB and offensive line right( to the field) at the snap, read the left DE (defenses right DE) to keep or give, and once you do keep, read the safety for whether he covers Wr or plays QB run, and make him wrong every time.
Again, if you watch the play which I have posted, you will see the left side, the dT, Jones, immediately penetrates upfield, making the read of DE over, and forcing the handoff.
https://imgur.com/tZ0sbc7.gifWatch the PSU left tackle. He moves to his right and turns to seal of Dre’Mont, surely thinking he crashes down to his own left, but he doesn’t. The play is designed to leave Johnathon Cooper unblocked.
PSU had run this play earlier, from a slightly different formation, for a huge gain by McSorley.