Glendale is where it's all going to finally come together.

That's how the season script you wrote in your head reaches its exciting conclusion. It's where Ohio State develops in all of the areas you've identified as being less-than-title worthy, or more pessimistically - championship repellant. Your list of needs begins with refinement in J.T. Barrett's footwork and passing accuracy - oh, sure. Isaiah Prince's pass-blocking at right tackle solidifying - of course!

BUT THERE'S MORE - a pass rush that reaches Deshawn Watson just half a second faster than it's been getting to lesser quarterbacks - obviously. Wide receivers that can actually get open and also catch the ball - yesssss. The offense must remember to not ignore Curtis Samuel - eureka! Why didn't anyone think of these sooner.

Glendale is the perfect setting for this to all finally come together. The emergence of those gaps was just the journey, and these stubborn bad guys will meet their demise in the desert. Only a true student of the game could pick up on those deficiencies in just a dozen games' worth of observation. Good job!

Still, there are some other gaps that aren't quite as easy to pick on as #ZoneSicks or #SlobProbs. The Buckeyes were fortunate to reach the desert for New Year's Eve and they cannot blink. They got into the playoff with no historic precedent. The fun history is what lies before them, and it is up to them.

So let's peel this onion a little further to reveal some of the sneakier tears - and potentially - the keys to securing Fiesta Bowl victory.

1. Repair the Director's Chair

The end-of-regulation sequence against Michigan was - this is a highly-refined scientific football term - an unvarnished clusterfuck. All the times you've rewatched Curtis Samuel's Game-winning grand jété into the endzone were medicine for what occurred as the 4th quarter was slipping away while Ohio State's coaching staff and younger players did not control the R.

Equally important - they couldn't get multiple plays called and executed in a timely manner with the most important game in the world on the line. Go ahead and rewatch those miserable moments ahead of Fight Club's game-tying field goal as J.T. Barrett stared furiously at the sideline and his teammates while they fumbled around trying to decide on a play and line up correctly.

Up until that point the Buckeyes were barreling toward the endzone, not the uprights - they fell apart and settled for the tie instead of an outright regulation victory. Ohio State beat Michigan in spite of its late 4th quarter puckering, and its reward was a full month to get this kind of crisis management fire drill better organized for college football's brightest stage.

2. HERO BALL WITH A LEAD IS UNWISE

When both teams are loaded, momentum becomes an asset. WARNING - overused John Cooper quote forthcoming: You win the game the surest way possible.

Momentum is to be captured, groomed and protected at all costs. To wit, the last time the Buckeyes played the Tigers they had the momentum - and their foot on Clemson's throat - before they squandered it:

The biggest play of the game came in the third quarter when Ohio State led 29-20. (Philly) Brown attempted to field a punt with pressure bearing down on him and fumbled. Clemson scored on the ensuing possession and again on its next possession. In barely more than three minutes, the Tigers went from down nine to up by five.

More specifically, Philly attempted to field a punt, in traffic, while executing a spin move to create a momentum play in Ohio State's favor. Instead, the opposite happened. We've repeatedly seen this take place on punt returns even since he matriculated to the NFL - The Philly Brown Experience was succeeded by The Jalin Marshall Experience and then The Dontre Wilson Experience.

Secure the punt. Advance the ball wisely. Preserve momentum. Win the surest way possible.

3. No October Surprises...

The Buckeyes were favored by 19 at Penn State but, if you recall, they failed to cover the spread by in-excess of those 19 points. That was unexpected. While the offense was in pieces for much of the evening, the game teetered from W to L on two plays and both involved Ohio State's kickers. That was also unexpected.

The Nittany Lions were able to flip the field by getting to Cam Johnston on a punt deep in Ohio State's territory, and then they were able to turn a lead-extending field goal attempt by the Buckeyes into the deciding score in their favor. Ohio State had that stupid game won despite ignoring Samuel for most of the evening, having no real offensive intent and just playing horrendous, fundamentally unsound football in general.

So it's not just about preserving momentum when fielding a kick. One of the hardest things to do in football is win despite having a kick blocked. Penn State did it twice that night in October. The preferred number for Glendale - and the rest of eternity - is zero.

4. ...AND No "October Surprises" EITHER

In the spirit of this Election Year, this is with regard to unexpected negativity popping up at the least opportune time. Ohio State had too many of these the last time it faced Clemson.

Noah Spence became abruptly unavailable in the lead-up to the Orange Bowl. The team was also beat up far more badly than previously thought; possibly the result of Ohio State tampering down on that type of intel (also a product of having played an extra game in Indianapolis; a task from which the Buckeyes were spared this time around).

But as it turned out, Curtis Grant could barely run. Bradley Roby pulled his gimpy self out of the game. And on top of all that, a fucking flu virus made its way through the roster and spread quickly. Braxton Miller's QB career ended in the middle of that game and he still played through it. That wasn't Ohio State at 100% strength losing to Clemson. Sixty would be generous.

None of that 11th hour shit again, please. It's a big ask to control the uncontrollable, but it cannot be worse than it was last time.

5. RELEASE THE Death Machine

We saw it emerge in those three postseason games to end that glorious 2014 run.

We witnessed it in Ann Arbor last season only after the Buckeyes had forfeited their repeat bid, and then in Glendale after that. It's when every heart on the Ohio State sideline calibrates into a single terrifying drum beat. It's that moment when an Urban Meyer football team gels and comes to the confident realization that it is unfuckingbeatable.

Ohio State becomes self-aware and shreds everything in its path. There's no bit of bad luck that can stop it, either - not Wisconsin's clodding strategy of suffocating everything fun out of football, not Alabama's roster full of aliens and dozens of shadow coaches, and not even going 0 for 6 recovering fumbles against the Rose Bowl champions in Arlington. Everything in the Buckeyes' path gets burned to the ground.

They were not there yet against Michigan. There were moments - too early in the season, against Nebraska, at Maryland - but that machine hasn't been fully engaged yet. That moment is still to come.

But if that team makes an appearance in the desert on New Year's Eve, Ohio State will find itself preparing to play in the final football game of the season.