Chase Young, the one-person wrecking crew, is at it again. The Ohio State University defensive end is continuing to show his athletic prowess again this weekend as 17 minutes into the game Saturday, and he already had two sacks. Watching this guy play the game is a thing of art. He is a half step off the snap faster than everybody else on the field.

He's lightning personified. He goes from the backfield to tackling the receiver in about a second, seriously "The Flash" is sitting there watching this guy play football and wondering why he's not out there in pads.

He knows where he is going before the quarterback ever snaps the ball. This is leaving offensive lines looking like they are tackling dummies in the practice field. He picks his spot and reads the defense like a technical manual; something gets in his way; he slams through it or goes around. He's fast. Wherever the ball is on the field, that's where he is going to be. Quarterbacks at all levels go to bed at night having nightmares about people they can play like this guy.

ohio state buckeyes
Reuters

Young has amassed 12.5 sacks this season. Some players never even get that in their entire collegiate career, and this guy's doing it in one season and making it look easy. The NFL Scouts have to be sitting there in the stands salivating like Pavlov's dogs waiting for the draft day because this guy is going to go places. The Twitterverse lit up like a Christmas tree the minute he got his first sack; when the second one came the kid was more popular than air!

Watching Young play the game of football is like watching a precision surgeon operate. How is it possible that an opponent would ever leave him unblocked on a play -- that doesn't make any sense. The Wisconsin Badgers figured this out pretty quick when they left him unblocked on a play, and he slipped in the backfield and just demolished everything. Maybe they should stack the line and use everybody to block him.

Young went on to finish the day with a stunning four sacks. The Buckeyes smashed the Badgers 38 to 7.