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So many great wins to pick from, obviously. Many of them have been outlined already. My favorite game of all-time is the 2002 Michigan game, because I was in the stands and experienced it with everyone first-hand. Undefeated season on the line, final pass into the end zone...and the bedlam afterwards. There will never be anything like it again for me. The National Title game that year, watching with family, including with my mom, who had been diagnosed with Stage IV cancer but got to see one more title after 1968.
But I would say that the most "satisfying" is what I would argue is the most important victory in the history of Ohio State football. Others will disagree, possibly vociferously, and that's cool. I can see other POVs. But, in making that distinction, I am considering 1) everything that college athletics has turned into. The billion dollar industry. The recruiting war. The TV deals. The national branding. The BCS and then the playoff. The southern dominance brought about by the rise of the evil Alabama empire, the ascension of Clemson, and ESPN's desire to turn the SEC into their own personal moneymaking playground. Also, 2) the old adage "what would have happened had they lost that game?" So...with that said...
The 2001 Michigan game is the most satisfying and important game in OSU history. Why? Too long for me to post everything. But, in Cliff Notes style, look at where we were. Look at the build-up. Look where we went after winning in. Look where we could have been had we NOT won it. People forget, and young fans don't even know, how bad it was.
We were coming off of 10 losses in 13 years to our biggest rival. Many of those times we were the more talented team. The two wins we got in the Cooper era came during seasons where we had arguably 2 of the 3 most embarrassing losses in program history. We were coming off of back-to-back losses, including at home in 2000, a game I sat through somehow without vomiting. Woodson had won the Heisman 3 years earlier. We were coming off of 2 seasons where we had 1 where we went 6-6, lost 3 in a row at the end of the year, and missed a bowl, and 2000, where we went 8-3 but came off of that home loss to get embarrassed 24-7 to "Mr. Football" who we didn't even recruit, with a team that John Cooper had clearly lost completely. We were known for Reggie Germany and his infamous 0.0, and for Ken Yon-Rambo and his...Rambo shit. We then did a coaching search, and instead of getting a name du jour like Mike Bellotti, we got a guy from I-AA that half of the fanbase didn't even know who he was. And the first thing he did...was basically go Joe Namath and promise a victory in The Game. At Michigan. The Following Year. Michigan was coming off of a 3-loss season where they had beaten Auburn in the Citrus Bowl as a springboard into 2001. They were 10-2 the year before that and had beaten Alabama in the Orange Bowl. We opened Tressel's career with what should be called a mediocre season up until Week 11. Senior talent was thin. Bellisari was the QB. They were 6-4, the horrible come-from-ahead loss at Penn State to give Paterno a landmark victory #, and losses to Wisconsin and Illinois. Michigan came in #11, 6-1 in conference, ready to claim a conference title at home against a team they had throttled for a decade. Ohio State would go on to lose their bowl game to Mr. Football and South Carolina...again. BUT...that Michigan game. 26-20. A day that will live in Ohio State lore. The rebirth of Buckeye football. The ULTIMATE spring board. In confidence. In winning big games. In recruiting. In accepting the "no-name" coach who people asked "who the fuck?" just a year earlier. An undefeated season and a national title the next year. And 17 out of the last 19 against the fuckers from the peninsula.
None of that happens, none of it, if they lose that game. What happens when the "no-name" coach finishes 6-5 and can't back up his "guarantee"? How does 2002 turn out? How is recruiting affected, particularly in Ohio? Would we ever have turned the tide in the rivalry? Would we ever have won another title? Ever gotten Urban Meyer? Ever locked down Ohio in recruiting? Would Tressel have even made it 2 or 3 years? No one knows any of these answers for sure, but...one thing I can say in my humble opinion...nothing that has happened since 2001 would ever have happened had it not been for that win. None of it.