Jeremiah Smith keeps etching his name in the Ohio State record books.

Last year, he became the first Buckeye freshman ever to record 1,000 receiving yards in a season. In the 12th game he played of his sophomore campaign, Smith crossed the 1,000-yard threshold once again, joining Marvin Harrison Jr. as the only two Ohio State players to record back-to-back 1,000-yard seasons. Emeka Egbuka, a teammate of Smith’s in 2024 and of Harrison’s from 2021 through 2023, also posted two career 1,000-yard receiving seasons in 2022 and 2024.

A 52-yard catch in the second quarter of the Big Ten Championship Game against No. 2 Indiana put Smith above the benchmark. It’s the 13th 1,000-yard receiving season in Ohio State history, eight of which have happened in the last five years.

Ohio State’s 1,000-Yard Receivers

Player

Year

Games to Reach 1,000

Final Yards

CRIS CARTER

1986

12

1,127

TERRY GLENN

1995

8

1,411

DAVID BOSTON

1998

10

1,435

MICHAEL JENKINS

2002

13

1,076

PARRIS CAMPBELL

2018

14

1,063

JAXON SMITH-NJIGBA

2021

10

1,606

GARRETT WILSON

2021

12

1,058

MARVIN HARRISON JR.

2022

11

1,263

EMEKA EGBUKA

2022

12

1,151

MARVIN HARRISON JR.

2023

10

1,211

JEREMIAH SMITH

2024

13

1,315

EMEKA EGBUKA

2024

16

1,011

JEREMIAH SMITH

2025

12

TBD

In total, nine of Ohio State’s 13 1,000-yard receiving campaigns were by players coached by Brian Hartline. The newly minted head coach of South Florida will leave behind an untouchable legacy at the position when he departs after the College Football Playoff.

Entering Saturday’s game, Smith had 72 receptions for 942 yards and 11 touchdowns this year. He was already up to 148 receptions, 2,257 yards and 26 touchdowns for his less-than-two-year career. Excluding his current stats against the Hoosiers, that puts Smith 58 catches from the Buckeyes’ career receptions record, 642 yards from its receiving yardage record and 10 touchdowns from its receiving touchdowns record.

With a playoff run and another full season remaining before he becomes draft eligible, those are marks that Smith should easily clear to go down as the best receiver in school history. His trophy case is already overflowing, being named first-team All-Big Ten by the conference’s coaches and media and Big Ten Receiver of the Year for the second year in a row on Thursday.

Smith is a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given to the best receiver in college football.