Tom Herman, Ohio State’s offensive coordinator who has already accepted the job as Houston’s head coach, met with Sugar Bowl reporters on Sunday evening:

He opened with: “Never a dull moment.”

Q. How have you managed it, at home, doing two jobs, how have you managed it?

COACH HERMAN: It hasn’t been terrible. The dead period, extended dead period from the NCAA has kind of alleviated a little bit of the stress from having to worry about getting guys out on the road recruiting and so on. So I’ve been able to focus most of my energy where it belongs. And if it’s no disrespect, I’d rather stick to those questions regarding this game and our guys that have earned an opportunity to be here.

Q. You look at Alabama’s defense, what do you see?

COACH HERMAN: I see an extreme amount of depth. They are very big, very physical up front. They’ve got defensive ends that are weighing in at 280, 290 pounds. They’ve got defensive tackles that are 320, 330 pounds. They have linebackers 255, 260 pounds. So they’re really big, really physical, very difficult to move. And they don’t just … it’s not just one group that’s going. They’ll probably play nine to ten defensive linemen and two sets of linebackers. So they’re very deep up front and then good mix of speed and size in the back end.

Q. Better than anybody you’ve faced, better than Michigan State?

COACH HERMAN: Better is tough to gauge. They’re different in terms of just the sheer size of their defensive line, it will be the biggest defensive line that we’ll have played. Does that make them better, I don’t know. That’s for the result probably to decide, because they will have been so different from any other defense that we’ve played.

Q. Talk about challenges for Cardale there?

COACH HERMAN: Not a ton in terms of … the challenges come when they bring pressure. The challenges come from reading coverages. I don’t know that the size and depth of their front six or seven is really anything he needs to concern himself with.

Q. Cardale, how has he evolved the last few weeks, leadership-wise especially?

COACH HERMAN: He was on the cover of two magazines. I’m not sure. I kind of liked it when he was the underdog.

He’s doing great, to be honest with you. I think the confidence that he showed in himself, the confidence that we had in him as a staff and then for him to go out and put forth the performance that he did really just reinforced that. So I don’t know that he has just emerged as this leader. He’s still Cardale. But just the fact that the confidence I guess was put to the test and he answered the test and so I think the guys kind of now — it might have been, hey, we’ve got his back because we’re supposed to have his back, but now it’s, we have his back because we know. It’s not a guessing game anymore.

Q. Do you worry about overconfidence with him, maybe trying to play outside of where he’s capable of in a game like this?

COACH HERMAN: I worried about that in the Big Ten championship game. Not maybe stemming from overconfidence, but stemming from my team’s counting on me to — I’m the new guy. So I gotta do more than what is asked of me. So I get worried about that, yeah, this week as well. But not due to overconfidence but more so that he thinks that he’s got to go out and win the game by himself, which he doesn’t. And he showed that against Wisconsin. But he’s just got to reinforce that with him.

Q. You know the history of the game pretty good. Obviously Alabama/Ohio State, Urban and Saban, guys that did it better than anybody else in the last 12 years. Do you have an appreciation, first college football playoff semifinal night, do you have an appreciation kind of what is coming this way on Thursday in terms of the magnitude of the game and the programs and all that?

COACH HERMAN: Yeah, I think, peripheral level, maybe. But as coaches we get so tunnel visioned and locked into this singularity of purpose you kind of lose sight of maybe of all the things that all these cameras are here for and all you guys are here for. But maybe when it’s over and kind of come up for air and take a deep breath, I think the enormity of it might sink in a little bit more. But I think you kind of know it but you just can’t even think about anything other than your tunnel vision.

Q. Does the layoff give Cardale any advantage getting ready for Alabama or does it give Alabama an advantage in getting ready for …

COACH HERMAN: I never knew what that meant in terms of defenses having to prepare for specific quarterbacks. I think defenses prepare for systems and plays and personnel groups and backfield sets and where the tight end lines up and what do they like to run on first down, what do they like to do on third and medium. They say okay this is this guy’s strengths, this is his weaknesses, maybe, but I don’t know that you formulate an entire game plan around that.

So I’m excited for him because he has had an opportunity now to kind of spend some time as a starting quarterback at Ohio State and sink his teeth into preparing to win the game and working out some of the things that he needs to improve on and got the rust taken off him pretty good in the Wisconsin game. Now it’s his show and doesn’t really have much to prove.

Q. Almost four weeks between the Big Ten Championship and this game, what do you expect to see in terms of these guys getting back into condition?

COACH HERMAN: Probably the biggest thing that you try to combat so much in bowl games is ball security on offense. We’ve got to take care of the football, whether it be in terms of fumbles and interceptions.

Ill-prepared teams get sloppy a little bit with ball security. On the other side, maybe a little bit with tackling. Some conditioning, you haven’t really played a full game in a month almost. So as an offensive coach, ball security really is the one that kind of worries me a little bit. The timing and all that stuff, I think you simulate all that stuff at full speed in practice, I don’t know that that’s ever an issue. So really focused on ball security from an offensive standpoint.

Q. Saban’s defense has historically been some of the best or some of the best in all of the conference?

COACH HERMAN: They’re really good.

Q. They really are. If there’s been a style that’s gotten to them the last few years has been the style you play, spread, tempo, great teams, like Johnny Manziel, and other teams, certainly Auburn had success with them. Can you take anything from that with your style, the successes those teams have had?

COACH HERMAN: Yeah, you try to. A&M is a little bit different because they throw the ball so much more than us or Auburn. I think the one you look at is Auburn the most in terms of mixing the gun runs with tempo. And they had yards, and I know they beat them two years ago to go play for the national championship. But last time I checked that was a tie ballgame with one second left or whatever it was. So it wasn’t — and then they lost this year. Yeah, they did some good things offensively, but at the end of the day it’s not like they found some secret formula that just blew these guys out. Yeah, they had limited success, I guess, which is better than no success. You try to take from it as much as you can.

Q. How about Landon Collins what you’ve seen for him consensus All-American first team?

COACH HERMAN: Yeah, that’s 26, right? Yeah, he’s really good. He deserves everything he’s got. I don’t know any superlatives that haven’t been said about him. He’s a big, physical dude that can run and hit and really smart. He’s always around the ball. He’s everything you want in a free safety.

Q. Really active in the run stop?

COACH HERMAN: Very active. Their scheme allows him to do it and he just happens to be really good at it, too.

Q. Did you get a chance to visit with Lane Kiffin at all at the Broyles Award, have you ever met him before, was it the first time you described your perception of him?

COACH HERMAN: I had never met him. Spent a little bit of time, not a ton. They kind of whisk you in, you’re doing this, doing that. You go to this luncheon and fly home. So we chatted a little bit at the lunch, actually, while we were up there saying whatever they were saying that we were probably supposed to be paying attention to. Yeah, I never met him before but seemed like a down-to-earth genuine guy. Couldn’t say anything bad about him.

Q. You take a running quarterback against this kind of defense is an advantage? When LSU had that they were able to move the football with some kind of effectiveness against them in the past years. Do you think having that extra guy that they have to account for makes it a little difficult for them?

COACH HERMAN: Yes, and without being a smart aleck, that is kind of the thought process every week. It’s not just for Alabama. It’s for every defense to have to account for the quarterback in the run game and allow us to equate numbers or at least get numbers close to equal as we can in the run game. So that’s kind of our philosophy. From a general standpoint, so will it help us in this game, we think so. But just probably no more than we think it would help us in any other game.

Q. Can you talk about your record against Big Ten teams since Urban Meyer arrived. Have you noticed a difference the difference between Ohio State recruits and the rest of the Big Ten recruits, because the prevailing times is that Ohio State looks like an SEC team?

COACH HERMAN: I don’t know what that means. Again, when you start putting your nose to the grindstone and you’ve got this tunnel vision even when it comes to recruiting, you really don’t have time to worry about how other people are recruiting or what they’re doing or the kids they’re bringing in. You just go about your business and recruit your tail off and try to bring the best players in the country.

We think we’re a program that merits the ability to go find the best players in the entire country whether they be in Ohio or Florida or Texas or Georgia or California or you name it, we’ll go find them. With an emphasis on our footprint, obviously. If there’s a tie, so to speak, then we’ll obviously take a kid from Ohio or a kid from Big Ten country. But we’ll try to go sign the best 25 guys that fit our need every year and how other teams in the Big Ten do it, I’m not quite sure. But I know that’s how we do it. And if that helps us, I’m excited about that.

Q. I guess what I was asking is there more a … do you take more speed into account, because the Big Ten is perceived, whether it’s right or wrong, as a plodding conference.

COACH HERMAN: I don’t know, because I don’t perceive it that way. I know the guys — to me we’re like every other conference. You roll Michigan State and Wisconsin and Nebraska out there, you are telling me Ameer Abdullah and the Coleman kid at Indiana and Melvin Gordon, that they’re plodders, I would argue that they’re not. I would say those guys could probably play tailback anywhere in the country. So, I think we’re just like any other conference, we’ve got some really good teams at the top. We’ve got some teams that are just okay in the middle and then we’ve got some teams that are working towards getting better, to be politically correct.

And so I think that’s the same without naming names, I don’t know that there’s a conference that that’s not the case. Where you’ve got a few really good teams at the top and you’ve got most of the conference in the middle. And then you’ve got a few guys trying to get better. So I don’t think we’re — shoot, I played Michigan State three years in a row. Those guys don’t seem very plodding to me. And the last I checked the Jim Thorpe award winner was from their school last year, first rounder at corner and we had a first rounder at corner last year. So I don’t fall into that mode of thinking.

And I will say this, they’ve won seven straight national championships, so they’re doing something right in that league. They’re elite. They probably have maybe one or two more elite teams than the Big Ten does. But you take our two or three elites versus their two or three elites, and I’m good. Let’s go.

Q. (Question in terms of getting the offensive line to where it was and Taylor Decker)?

COACH HERMAN: A ton, I don’t know how to quantify it, other than he’s a really good player. He’s a guy that comes to work every day, sick, achy, joints hurt, banged up, he’s played, Lord knows, how many game reps this year, probably 900 to a thousand game reps.

So he’s not a big “Win one for the Gipper” rah-rah guy in the locker room. We have guys up front that are more like that, Jacoby Boren, probably more of a vocal leader and Pat Elflein maybe a little more. But I think Taylor is a really, really sharp kid that is one of the smartest O linemen I’ve ever been around and he’s really good. And so I think just his steadiness of play and just the ability to count on him doing his job every single time he steps out on the field is just that confidence has allowed the other guys to kind of feel their way and grow into the roles that they’ve grown into.

Q. Do you tell your kids to play for themselves in this game, because there’s going to be a tendency with what’s transpired, they may want to play for you?

COACH HERMAN: No, I tell them to play for each other. We haven’t changed that in three years. And nobody’s going to change that. So I coach for them. They play for each other. And on a certain level they play for me every week, just like they do Coach Meyer just like they do Coach Fickell and Coach Warinner and all the position coaches we’ve got. A lot of teams preach about family atmosphere, I think … not think, I know that this is the most lived of that culture that I’ve been a part of, especially this year.

The three years here with Coach Meyer, certainly this year, but certainly this team more than any other team I think has a selflessness about them that they really genuinely want to succeed not for themselves but for their brothers and for the coaches and for Ohio State and for everybody but themselves.

Q. Have you ever been a part of a program that hasn’t had that but still has success, or is this chemistry, they take a lot about it, is that essential to the kind of success?

COACH HERMAN: Elite success, yeah. I mean, like go win it all success, I think it’s paramount. And that is built on culture. That doesn’t just happen. You don’t just show up the first day of two-a-days and, hey, this team has really good chemistry. You build that within your program over years and years of hard work and training and some teams get it more than others. Some leaders get it more than others. Some senior classes get it more than others. But it’s definitely a learned trait that we try really, really hard to teach our guys.