
Mainoo lifts lid on 'difficult' Amorim experience at Man Utd
Kobbie Mainoo opens up about his challenging experience with Amorim at Manchester United.
Ohio State's offensive line is gaining attention for its tackle battle, but Josh Padilla is an underrated X-factor. His performance could significantly impact the team's offensive success in 2026.
Ohio State Buckeyes offensive lineman Josh Padilla (62), offensive lineman Davontae Armstrong (73) and offensive tackle Ethan Onianwa (78) line up during spring football practice at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center on March 17, 2025. | Adam Cairns/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Most of the attention surrounding Ohio State’s offensive line entering 2026 has centered around the tackle battle.
Can Ian Moore make the expected sophomore jump? Does Austin Siereveld permanently settle at tackle after his strong season this past year? Can Phillip Daniels lock down a full-time tackle role and be consistent in that?
Those questions dominate the conversation because tackle play tends to shape the ceiling of elite offenses.
But there is another possibility quietly emerging that could completely reshape the outlook of the line, and perhaps stabilize it more than people realize.
If Siereveld and Daniels ultimately secure the two tackle spots and stay there, which increasingly feels plausible depending on Moore’s development trajectory, the conversation shifts inward. Suddenly, Ohio State is no longer scrambling to patch together five competent starters.
Instead, it is searching for the best answer at one remaining interior spot. And in that scenario, Josh Padilla may quietly become one of the most important players on the roster.
That is partly because of what Padilla is as a player, but also because of what Ohio State needs him to become. The Buckeyes do not necessarily need an All-American guard. They need consistency. They need communication. They need someone capable of stabilizing protection and avoiding the volatility that hurt stretches of the offensive line last season.
If Padilla develops into a dependable interior starter and provides steadier play than Tegra Tshabola gave Ohio State at times in 2025, the ripple effects across the offense could be enormous.
Josh Padilla is an offensive lineman for Ohio State, considered an underrated X-factor whose performance could greatly influence the team's offensive success.
Key questions include whether Ian Moore can make a sophomore leap, if Austin Siereveld will settle permanently at tackle, and if Phillip Daniels can secure a consistent role.
Tackle play is crucial as it shapes the ceiling of elite offenses, impacting both the protection of the quarterback and the effectiveness of the running game.
The offensive line battle is significant as it will determine the overall effectiveness and success of Ohio State's offense in the upcoming season.

Kobbie Mainoo opens up about his challenging experience with Amorim at Manchester United.
Newcastle faces West Ham on May 17 in a crucial Premier League clash. Preview and predictions inside!
Watch USA Hockey defend its title against Switzerland in the IIHF World Championships!
Join us in celebrating the state soccer champs at the Coastal Empire All-Star event!
Milan Momcilovic is exploring a return to college basketball, with Kentucky as a leading option.
Eagles' 2026 schedule reveals a chance for multiple wins during midseason.
See every story in Sports — including breaking news and analysis.
Padilla arrived in Columbus as one of the more technically advanced interior offensive line recruits in his class. Coming out of Wayne High School in Ohio, he was widely viewed as a high-floor prospect with positional versatility, intelligence, and advanced hand usage.
Unlike some offensive line recruits who enter college needing major physical transformation before they can compete, Padilla’s appeal was always rooted in polish and football IQ.
At roughly 6-foot-4 and 300 pounds, Padilla does not necessarily overwhelm defenders with rare measurables, but his game has never been built around raw traits alone. His value comes from leverage, positioning, balance, and processing speed.
Ohio State’s coaching staff has consistently praised his understanding of assignments and ability to play multiple interior spots, which matters significantly in a modern offense built around communication and adjustment.
That versatility could become critical in 2026. Interior offensive line play is about much more than simply winning one-on-one blocks. It requires identifying stunts, passing off rushers cleanly, handling late pressure looks, and staying structurally sound in protection.
Those details often separate functional offensive lines from championship-level ones. Padilla profiles as the type of player capable of helping clean up those areas.
There is also a developmental aspect here worth acknowledging. Offensive linemen, especially interior linemen, rarely develop in a perfectly linear fashion. Ohio State has often leaned on naturally gifted players at guard spots over the years, but sometimes the players who ultimately stabilize lines are the ones who simply become reliable and assignment sound over time and development. Padilla increasingly feels like that type of candidate.
The offensive line conversation last season often revolved around inconsistency, particularly in pass protection against elite defensive fronts.
In Ohio State’s biggest losses, protection breakdowns repeatedly disrupted offensive rhythm and placed too much stress on the quarterback. Some of that stemmed from tackle play, but interior inconsistency was also a big factor. That is why the potential emergence of Padilla matters so much.
If Siereveld successfully remains outside at tackle after showing promise there last season, Ohio State gains athleticism and stability on the edge. If Daniels claims the opposite tackle spot, the Buckeyes suddenly have a much clearer picture of their front. At that point, the interior becomes less about surviving and more about maximizing cohesion.
Padilla’s game may fit that goal particularly well. He is not a flashy lineman who constantly generates viral pancake clips or wows with his athleticism, but his skillset projects well into the kind of offense Ohio State wants to run under Arthur Smith.
Smith’s offensive philosophy historically values physicality, communication, and reliability up front. Guards are expected to process quickly, execute combo blocks consistently, and avoid negative plays that derail drives. That is where Padilla’s strengths could become especially valuable.
Compared to the inconsistency Ohio State dealt with from Tegra Tshabola last season, Padilla may offer a much steadier floor. Tshabola’s physical talent and raw power were undeniable, but the week-to-week consistency was not always there.
Padilla’s value projects much differently. Rather than overwhelming defenders purely with athleticism and traits, his impact could come through limiting mistakes, improving communication in protection, and helping the offensive line operate with greater cohesion snap after snap.
On elite offenses, that kind of reliability can matter just as much, or even more, than raw traits and upside.
Ohio State’s 2026 offense will ultimately be judged by stars like Julian Sayin and Jeremiah Smith, but offensive ceilings are often determined by the infrastructure surrounding them. The Buckeyes have enough skill and talent to score with almost anyone in the country.
The bigger question is whether the offensive line can become reliable enough for the offense to consistently operate on schedule against elite competition. That is why Josh Padilla feels like one of the more underrated pieces on the roster entering the season.
If the tackles solidify themselves early, Padilla suddenly becomes more than just rotational depth or lineup flexibility. He becomes a player capable of anchoring the interior alongside Carson Hinzman and Luke Montgomery and helping stabilize the entire operation.
His emergence would not simply improve one position group; it would strengthen pass protection, improve communication, help the run game stay on schedule, and allow Ohio State’s offense to function with greater consistency overall.
And that is often how championship-level offensive lines are built. Not always through stars alone, but through reliable players who eliminate weakness.
Padilla may never become the most talked-about lineman on Ohio State’s roster. But if he develops into the dependable, assignment-sound guard the Buckeyes believe he can be, he could quietly become one of the biggest reasons the offense reaches its full potential in 2026.