COLUMBUS, Ohio -- There was no Dwayne Haskins package for Ohio State quarterback Dwanye Haskins in Saturday's game against Army. The hope was that the Buckeyes would be up by enough points late to allow Haskins to make his college debut.

That happened. And Haskins let the ball rip.

Yes it was against Army's second-team defense with Ohio State's second-team offense in the final minutes of a blowout. But it wasn't about who else was on the field with Haskins. It was how he handled the first few minutes of his college career.

"I thought he performed well when he was in there," Urban Meyer said. "He was 4 for 4. I wanted to throw him more, but you just didn't want to do something silly. So I thought he did very well when he got in there."

Haskins completed all four of his pass attempts for 46 yards. He would've led a touchdown drive, but Meyer called off the dogs when the Buckeyes got into the red zone inside of a minute to play with a 38-7 lead.

But Haskins did what we expected: Make strong, confident throws and confirm that, for everything else that goes into playing quarterback, his arm is much stronger than J.T. Barrett's. Haskins looked much like he looked in the spring game.

There were questions immediately after (and frankly long before) Ohio State's loss to Oklahoma last week over whether Haskins should replace Barrett, or at least play more than he had prior to Saturday. Meyer admitted he had questions of whether Haskins was "game ready" and wasn't going to throw a green quarterback in against the Sooners when he has a fifth-year senior and three-time captain at the position.

What now? Barrett isn't getting replaced, but did you see a game-ready quarterback when Haskins was out there? And what should that mean for Ohio State moving forward?

Watch the video above to see what Doug Lesmerises, Bill Landis and Tim Bielik thought about Haskins' debut.