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LEGENDS & GREATS

LEGENDS & GREATSCOACHESPAUL BROWNHead Coach – 1941-43 HAYESWOODY HAYESHead Coach – 1951-78 205-61-10 Ohio State Record College Football Hall of Fame (1983) Three-time National Coach of the Year(1957, 1968, 1975) Five National Championships(1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 1970) 13 Big Ten Championships 54 All-Americans 18 Academic All-AmericansWayne Woodrow “Woody” Hayes was the heartand soul of Ohio State football for 28 seasons,between 1951-78. A worshipper of tough men,he preached self-reliance, education and thatthe more you give, the more you get in return.He took the Buckeyes to heights never beforeachieved in the school’s rich football history,and he touched countless lives along theway. While stalking the Ohio State sidelines,Hayes led the Buckeyes to five nationalchampionships (and narrowly missed fourothers), 13 Big Ten Conference championshipsand to eight Rose Bowls. A two-time nationalCoach of the Year, Hayes coached, taughtand tutored 56 All-Americans, three HeismanTrophy winners and some of the greatestplayers ever to play college football: HopalongCassady, Jim Parker, Rex Kern, Jack Tatum,John Hicks, Randy Gradishar, Chris Ward and,of course Archie Griffin, the only two-timewinner of the Heisman Memorial Trophy.18-8-1 Ohio State Record1942 National ChampionsFirst head coacch of the Cleveland BrownsFirst head coach of the Cincinnati BengalsPro Football Hall of Fame (1967)Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame (1991)Considered the “father of the modernoffense”Paul Brown is considered by many to be the“father of the modern offense” and was highlyacclaimed for his many ideas on planningand organization that changed the game offootball. Under Brown, the Buckeyes went 18-81 and were known for their speed, intelligenceand love of contact. In his first season atthe helm at OSU, Brown went 6-1-1, tied forsecond place in the Western Conference andfinished 13th in the AP poll. The next year, 1942,despite losing many lettermen to graduationor military service in World War II, Brown ledOhio State to its first national championship.Following military service, Brown became thefirst head coach of the Cleveland Browns andalso the Cincinnati Bengals. He won four AAFCchampionships and three NFL championshipswith the Browns, and was named professionalcoach of the year six times. Born in Norwalk,Ohio, Brown grew up in Massillon. He wasinducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in1967 and the Ohio State University AthleticsHall of Fame in 1991. He died in August, 1991,but forever left his influence on the game offootball throughout Ohio and beyond.BROWN862018 Ohio State FootballBRUCEEARLE BRUCEHead Coach – 1979-87 81-26-1 Ohio State RecordCollege Football Hall of Fame (2002)National Coach of the Year (1979)Four Big Ten Championships5-4 record vs. Michigan11 All-AmericansSeven Academic All-AmericansOhio State graduate and former playerEarle Bruce led Ohio State for nine seasons,compiling an 81-26-1 record that included a5-4 record vs. Michigan and a 5-3 record inbowl games. A former assistant coach underWoody Hayes, Bruce was fiery like his mentorand demanded nothing short of excellenceon and off the playing field. His Buckeyesdelivered, winning four Big Ten Conferencechampionships, including in 1979 when Brucewon his first 11 games as coach and was namedcollege football’s national Coach of the Year.He also guided Ohio State to Big Ten titles in1981, an outright crown in 1984 and a return tothe Rose Bowl, and in 1986. Bruce’s last gameas Ohio State coach came on Nov. 21, 1987:a 23-20 win at Michigan. The game also wasthe last game coached at Ohio State for onegraduate assistant coach: Urban Meyer until2012. Coach Bruce passed away on April 20,2018. He had turned 87 on March 8, and hewatched his last Ohio State practice on thatday as well.

LEGENDS & GREATSCOACHESif it continues, will enable him to reach 200victories faster than any other coach.JOHN COOPERHead Coach – 1988-2000JIM TRESSELHead Coach – 2001-2010 111-43 Ohio State Record;192-84-6 overall (24) College Football Hall of Fame (2008) Three Big Ten Championships 22 All-Americans Six Academic All-Americans AP National Coach of the Year (1986) Rose Bowl Hall of Fame (2012)Explosive offenses, tons of points and excellentdefenses were the hallmarks of John Cooper’s13 years as Ohio State head coach between1988-2000. Cooper, the only coach to winRose Bowls as coach of a Pac-10 school and aBig Ten school, won 111 games, three Big TenConference championships and the 1997 RoseBowl when his Buckeyes finished 11-1 and No.2 in the nation. Cooper’s teams still own threeof the top four single season passing totalsin school history and two of the top four totaloffense totals. Ohio State finished in the Top 10nationally five times under Cooper, includingthe 1998 team that joined the 1996 team asNo. 2 in the nation. Buckeyes won all the majorawards during Cooper’s era, including theHeisman, Outland, Lombardi, Butkus, Thorpeand Biletnikoff awards. Additionally, 17 werefirst-round NFL draft picks, including RobertSmith, Dan Wilkinson, Eddie George, OrlandoPace, Shawn Springs and Andy Katzenmoyer.COOPER MEYERURBAN MEYERHead Coach – 2012-present 73-8 Ohio State Record National Champion: 2006, 2008 & 2014 Three-time National Coach of the Year(2003, 2004 & 2006) Sporting News Coach of the Decade(2000-09) Sports Illustrated Coach of the Decade(2000-09) 31 All-Americans 11 Academic All-AmericansUrban Meyer is 73-8 through his first fiveseasons as head coach at The Ohio StateUniversity and 177-31 overall. He set an NCAArecord for wins by an FBS coach in his first15 seasons (165). Meyer’s 2015 Buckeyesenior class was the first Power 5 school toachieve 50 wins, and this group of seniorswas impressive across the board. Consider:they won a national championship and aBig Ten championship in 2014; they won aBig Ten Conference and national-record 30consecutive conference games; they setthe school record with a 24-game winningstreak plus had a second, 23-game winningstreak; and they were unbeaten on the roadat 18-0. These five seasons at Ohio State, ontop of an equally impressive 10-year run ashead coach at three previous schools, haveallowed Meyer to build a resume that hashim positioned among the best collegiatecoaches ever. He has the highest winningpercentage – .851 – among coaches with atleast 10 years of coaching experience at afour-year college, and he has the third-highestwinning percentage all-time among all DivisionI coaches. His current, 11-victory per year pace,94-21 Ohio State RecordCollege Football Hall of Fame (2015)National Champion: 2002National Coach of the Year (2002)Six Big Ten Championships24 All-AmericansFive Academic All-AmericansJim Tressel was exactly right when heannounced to the crowd at a basketballgame in 2001 that it would be proud of theBuckeyes “ most especially in 310 days inAnn Arbor, Mich.” Tressel’s Buckeyes owned“that team up north,” winning all but onegame, including an Ohio State-record sixconsecutive wins. His teams were among thefinest in the nation during his tenure between2001-10. The Buckeyes captured the 2002national championship with a 14-0 season. TheBuckeyes went to two additional BCS nationalchampionship games and won six Big Tentitles, including five consecutive at one point.Ohio State went to seven BCS bowl gamesand won 10 or more games seven times. Offthe field, 133 Buckeyes earned their degreesand more were named Academic All-Big Tenthan from any other team. Buckeyes also wonall the national awards, including the HeismanTrophy (Troy Smith) and the Draddy Award (theacademic Heisman; Craig Krenzel).TRESSEL87

LEGENDS & GREATSHEISMAN TROPHY WINNERS45 ARCHIE GRIFFINRunning Back – 1972-75 Heisman Trophy Winner (1975) First-and-only two-time Heisman TrophyWinner Held NCAA record with 5,177 rushing yards College Football Hall of Fame (1986) Rose Bowl “Player of the Century” (2013)GRIFFIN45 ARCHIE GRIFFINRunning Back – 1972-75 Heisman Trophy Winner (1974)Chicago Tribune Silver Football Award (1974)Walter Camp Player of the Year (1974)UPI Player of the Year (1974)Then school-record 1,695 rushing yardsWoody Hayes famously said of Archie Griffin:“He’s a better young man than he is a footballplayer and he’s the best football player I’veever seen.” It didn’t take long for Griffin’sgreatness to emerge. He rushed for an OhioState single-game record 239 yards againstNorth Carolina in the second game of hisfreshman season (1972) and the followingseason he became the first Ohio Statesophomore to rush for more than 1,000 yards(1,577) and he was named All-American and theChicago Tribune’s Silver Football award winneras the Big Ten player of the year.Griffin, from Columbus and Eastmoor HighSchool, won his first Heisman Trophy as a juniorin 1974 when he rushed for a school record1,695 yards and led the Buckeyes to a third ofwhat would become a conference-record sixconsecutive Big Ten championships. He wasalso a unanimous All-American, the repeat BigTen Silver Football award winner and the UPIand Walter Camp player of the year. Griffin,who graduated from Ohio State with a degreein industrial relations and received the NCAA’sprestigious Top Five Award for combinedexcellence in athletics, academics andleadership, would go on to achieve legendarystatus in the world of college football as anOhio State senior in 1975.882018 Ohio State FootballArchie Griffin achieved legendary status in 1975when he won his second Heisman Trophy. And,to this day, he is still the only two-time winnerof the bronze statue that symbolizes the mostoutstanding player in college football. Griffinrushed for 1,450 yards as a senior in 1975 and,in addition to his second Heisman Trophy,he earned unanimous All-America honorsand the UPI and Walter Camp player of theyear awards. He closed his brilliant collegiateplaying career with a then-NCAA-record 5,177yards rushing (excluding bowl game yards), 27touchdowns and additional NCAA records for100-yard games (33) and consecutive 100-yardgames (31).The next four decades would be full ofachievement and accolades for the only playerto ever start in four Rose Bowl Games andwho was president and CEO of the Ohio StateAlumni Association from 2004 to 2015. He waselected to the College Football Hall of Famein 1986. In 2006 he was named one of theNCAA’s “100 Most Influential Student-Athletes”.In 2011 he was the first recipient of the BigTen’s Ford-Kinnick Leadership Award. In 2013he was named the Rose Bowl’s “All-Century”Player. Griffin’s name, along with that of RedGrange, graces the Big Ten championshipgame MVP award. Ohio State retired his jerseynumber “45” Oct. 30, 1999.GRIFFIN’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYearAtt.YardsAvg. 19752621,4505.54Totals9345,5896.027HORVATH22 LES HORVATHBack – 1941-42, 1944 Heisman Trophy Winner (1944) Ohio State’s first Heisman Trophy Winner Chicago Tribune Silver Football AwardWinner Led Big Ten in rushing and total offense College Football Hall of Fame (1969)Les Horvath made Ohio State history in 1944by becoming the school’s first Heisman Trophywinner. Playing both quarterback and halfbackon offense and safety on defense, Horvathled the Buckeyes to a perfect 9-0 recordand the Big Ten championship in 1944. Inaddition to leading the Big Ten in rushing witha conference-record 669 yards, and in totaloffense with 953 yards, the Parma, Ohio, nativeaccounted for 1,248 all-purpose yards and wasnamed the Big Ten’s MVP. Ironically, Horvathalmost didn’t play in 1944. After helping the1942 Buckeyes to a 9-1 record and the school’sfirst national championship, Horvath entereddental school at Ohio State and did not play in1943. But when Coach Carroll Widdoes askedhim to play in 1944, Horvath, who had an extrayear because of wartime rules, agreed toreturn to the gridiron.Horvath went on to play professional footballwith the Los Angeles Rams and ClevelandBrowns. Following his professional career,he returned to Los Angeles and practiceddentistry. Horvath, who died in November of1995, is a member of the College Football Hallof Fame (1969) and the Ohio State Athletics Hallof Fame (1977). His jersey number “22” wasretired Oct. 6, 2001.

LEGENDS & GREATSHEISMAN TROPHY WINNERSHORVATH’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYearG Att.Yards Avg. TDs19418331454.40194210 1004814.86194491639245.712Totals 27 2961,5505.218JANOWICZ’S CAREER PASSING STATSYearG Att. Comp. Yards TDs1949 425001950 7732561121951 257742Totals 10641 6851431 VIC JANOWICZBack – 1949-51 Heisman Trophy Winner (1950) “Great runner, passer, blocker, kicker andpunter” Chicago Tribune Silver Football Award Punted 21 times for 685 yards vs. Michiganin “Snow Bowl” College Football Hall of Fame (1976)How good was Vic Janowicz? Good enoughto win the 1950 Heisman Trophy as a junior ona team that posted a modest 6-3 record. Andgood enough that, to this day, most historiansconsider him among the greatest athletesever to play football at Ohio State. Janowiczaccounted for 16 touchdowns and 875 yards intotal offense in 1950. The Elyria, Ohio, nativealso led the Buckeyes in scoring with 65 points.In an 83-21 win over Iowa, he ran for twotouchdowns, passed for four more and set aBig Ten record with 10 extra points. Perhapseven more remarkable was a 27-yard field goalagainst Michigan in the now famous 1950 SnowBowl. The kick was into a driving snow stormwith the goal post barely visible. Janowicz, whowas a consensus All-American in 1950, also settwo more records in the Snow Bowl, punting 21times for 685 yards.After graduation, Janowicz played two yearsof professional baseball with the PittsburghPirates and a year of football with theWashington Redskins. A member of the CollegeFootball Hall of Fame (1976) and the Ohio StateAthletics Hall of Fame (1977), Janowicz died inFebruary of 1996. His jersey number, “31” wasretired Sept. 23, 2000.JANOWICZ’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYearG Att.Yards Avg. TDs1949 301123.711950 1143142.841951 163763.51Totals 2508023.26CASSADYJANOWICZCassady finished his collegiate career with2,466 rushing yards and 37 touchdowns. Aftergraduation, he was a first-round pick of theDetroit Lions. He also played for Clevelandand Philadelphia before retiring. Cassady,from Columbus, is a member of the Ohio StateAthletics (1997), College Football (1979) andColumbus Baseball (2005) Halls of Fame. Hisjersey number “40” was retired Nov. 18, 2000.40 HOWARD “HOPALONG”CASSADYRunning Back – 1952-55 Heisman Trophy Winner (1955) First Heisman Trophy winner to exceed2,000 voting points Chicago Tribune Silver Football Award Associated Press Athlete of the Year College Football Hall of Fame (1979)It didn’t take Ohio State fans long to realizeHoward “Hopalong” Cassady was somethingspecial. In his first game, against Indiana in1952, he came off the bench to score threetouchdowns and lead the Buckeyes to a 33-13victory. From then on, “Hop” was a regularin the OSU lineup, playing in 36 of 37 gamesand leading the Buckeyes to a record of 29-8during the next four years. In 1954, Cassadywon unanimous All-America honors and helpedthe Buckeyes to a perfect 10-0 record and thefirst of five national championships for CoachWoody Hayes. Cassady again won All-Americaacclaim in 1955, when he rushed for 958 yardsand 15 touchdowns. He won the HeismanTroph – he was the first winner to exceed2,000 points in voting – and was named bythe Associated Press as the 1955 Athlete ofthe Year.CASSADY’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYearG Att.Yards Avg. TDs1952 652934.541953 865145.961954 1237015.761955 1619585.815Totals 36 435 2,4665.73127 EDDIE GEORGERunning Back – 1992-95 Heisman Trophy Winner (1995)School-recordd 1,927 rushing yards in 1995Chicago Tribune Silver Football AwardCollege Football Hall of Fame (2012)Namesake: Big Ten Offensive Player ofthe YearAt the start of the 1995 season, Eddie Georgewas, at best, a long-shot contender for theHeisman Trophy. By season’s end, he wasthe runaway choice and became Ohio State’ssixth Heisman recipient. George rushed for aschool-record 1,927 yards and 24 touchdownswith three 200-yard games, one of which wasan Ohio State record 314 yards against IllinoisNov. 11, 1995. George’s honors in 1995 includethe Doak Walker Award, the Maxwell Award,the Walter Camp Player of the Year Award andBig Ten MVP.89

LEGENDS & GREATSHEISMAN TROPHY WINNERSGeorge, who attended Abington (Pa.) HighSchool, rushed for 1,442 yards as a junior andcompleted his career as the second leadingrusher in Ohio State history with 3,768 yards.Set school record for receptions by a runningback with 47 in 1995. Selected by the HoustonOilers in the first round of the NFL Draft, hewas the 1996 NFL Rookie of the Year andplayed nine years in the NFL, earning fourPro Bowl berths. George earned a bachelor’sdegree in landscape architecture from OhioState. He was a 2006 inductee into the OhioState Athletics Hall of Fame. His jersey number“27” was retired Nov. 10, 2001. In July 2012he was inducted into the College Football Hallof Fame. The Big Ten’s top offensive playerreceives the Graham-George Offensive Playerof the Year award.GEORGEGEORGE’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYear G/GS Att.Yards Avg. TDs199211/0 371764.85199311/0 422235.33199413/11 2761,4425.212199513/13 3281,9275.924Totals 48/24 6833,7685.5 44902018 Ohio State Football10 TROY SMITHQuarterback – 2003-06 Heisman Trophy Winner (2006) Second-largest margin of victory inHeisman voting 3-0 record as starting QB vs. Michigan Chicago Tribune Silver Football Award(2006) NCAA record for pass efficiency(400-499 comps.)Troy Smith may not have been Ohio State’s starrecruit in the spring of 2002, but by the endof the 2006 football season and his Buckeyecareer there were few Buckeyes with a brighteraura. Smith led the Buckeyes to a 4-1 recordas a sophomore in 2004, including a 37-21 winover Michigan, in which he accounted for threetouchdowns and 386 yards in total offense.In 2005, Smith guided the Buckeyes to a 10-2record that included a thrilling come-frombehind victory at Michigan and a decisive winover Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl.Smith saved his best for last, piloting the No.1 ranked Buckeyes to a 12-0 regular seasonrecord and a spot in the national championshipgame as a senior in 2006. He threw for aschool single-season record 30 touchdownsand became just the second quarterbackin Ohio State history to post a 3-0 recordagainst Michigan as a starter. The consensusAll-American was a landslide winner in theHeisman Trophy voting, recording the secondlargest margin of victory ever in the balloting.Smith, who recorded a 25-3 record as a starterand is the NCAA record holder in passingefficiency for 400-499 completions (157.1),entered the Ohio State Athletics Hall of Famein 2014 and he had his jersey No. 10 enshrinedNov. 10, 2014.SMITH’S CAREER PASSING STATSYearG/GSAtt. Comp. Int.Yds. 0613/1331120362,542 30Totals 33/28 670420135,720 54SMITH2,282 16

LEGENDS & GREATSALL-TIME GREATSBARRETT’S CAREER RUSHING STATSYear GP/GSAttYds TD Avg.201412/1217193811 5.5201511/511568211 5.9201613/13 20584594.1201714/14165798124.8Totals 50/44 656 3263 43 5.0BARRETT16 J.T. BARRETTQuarterback – 2014-17 Three-time Big Ten Quarterback of the Year(2014, 2016, 2017) Only three-time captain in school history Chicago Tribune Silver Football Award (2016)Joe Thomas “J.T.” Barrett is one of the greatquarterbacks and leaders in the history of OhioState football. He led the team to two Big Tenchampionships (2014 and 2017). He started44 games and set the school record with 38victories, including starting four wins overMichigan. He set a total of 39 Ohio State (34)and Big Ten Conference (five) records, includingsome of the most prestigious for a quarterback:Big Ten records for career total offensive yards(12,697), TD passes (104) and TDs responsiblefor (147), and Ohio State records for careercompletion percentage (63.5), touchdownpasses (104), passing yards (9,434

college football’s national Coach of the Year. He also guided Ohio State to Big Ten titles in 1981, an outright crown in 1984 and a return to the Rose Bowl, and in 1986. Bruce’s last game as Ohio State coach came on Nov. 21, 1987: a 23-20 win at Michigan. The game also was the last game coached at Ohio State for one

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