COLUMBUS, OHIO
James Laurinaitis could have taken the easy way out. He could have stuck with a verbal commitment to Minnesota and earned starting status in a program where playing at home against Florida Atlantic can be considered a revenge game.
Laurinaitis chose a greater challenge. He took a recruiting visit to Ohio State, and saw what Buckeyes football meant to the masses here, and decided that he could earn playing time when many people in his home state were skeptical.
"I had more than a few coaches and other football people tell me they thought James was making a huge mistake -- that he would get lost among the four- and five-star recruits at Ohio State," Wayzata coach Brad Anderson said.
"I also was pretty sure he could play because he was such a well-prepared athlete. There are a lot of people with the skills who don't have what it takes mentally. We saw the way James prepared -- better than any athlete we had before or since -- and that's what put him over the top.
"I didn't know how long it would take, but I did think that James would be in the mix somewhere for the Buckeyes."
The Buckeyes' top linebackers when Laurinaitis was a freshman in 2005 were A.J. Hawk and Bobby Carpenter, both NFL first-rounders. The Minnesota kid played with zeal on special teams and moved up during the fall to second team on the depth chart.
The Buckeyes were playing Michigan in the traditional finale on Nov. 19. Laurinaitis covered a kick and went to the bench.