Buckskin86
Head Coach
Jim Reichenbach, area football standout and coach, dies at 76
By Todd Porter
CantonRep.com staff writer
Posted May 12, 2009
Jim Reichenbach![]()
MASSILLON Long after Jim Reichenbach finished plowing fields and defenders for Howard ?Hopalong? Cassady, he still plowed the fields. Reichenbach, who farmed 125 acres while he was raising Stark County football players as one of the area?s best coaches, died Monday morning after a six-year battle with Alzheimer?s. He was 76.
Not many freshmen started for Woody Hayes at Ohio State. Reichenbach did. He was prepared to play early at Washington High School under Chuck Mather during one of the greatest periods in Tiger football.
With Reichenbach at one guard and Jim Parker the other, they paved the way for Cassady and helped Hayes earn fans. Hayes struggled a bit in his first three years, until 1954.
Reichenbach was an All-American on Ohio State?s ?54 national championship team.
After his playing days, Reichenbach coached briefly at Baldwin-Wallace College under Lee Tressel. Then he returned to his Stark County roots and coached and taught high school football here for nearly 30 years until 1988. He coached at Glenwood, McKinley, Tuslaw and Dover.
?You grow up, and I don?t think I?ll ever change very much from when I was 16 years old playing for Coach Reichenbach,? said Pro Football Hall of Fame offensive lineman Dan Dierdorf, who played at Glenwood for Reichenbach. ?I was deathly afraid of him. He looked to me ... to be eight feet tall. He was an imposing guy.
?He got me ready to play for Bo Schembechler. (Reichenbach) was such a taskmaster ... but he wasn?t stern. He wasn?t mean. When I played for him, I preferred he didn?t know my name.?
Jim Reichenbach, area football standout and coach, dies at 76 - Canton, OH - CantonRep.com
An excellent player? ... 'a tremendous coach'
By CHRIS EASTERLING
The Independent
Posted May 11, 2009
MASSILLON, OH ? Football always was an important part of Jim Reichenbach?s life.
As a player, he became one of Massillon?s first three-time starters, then went on to become the first freshman offensive lineman to start at Ohio State. He then spent 27 years as a head coach at Glenwood, Tuslaw and Dover high schools.
But football was also a part of Reichenbach?s life away from the playing field, right up until Monday, the day the 76-year-old passed away.
?Even while he was in the hospital, he was talking about fullbacks and halfbacks,? his wife of over 48 years, Ruth, recalled.
Bucking trends
After graduating from Washington High School, Reichenbach arrived on Ohio State?s campus and almost immediately stepped foot into the Buckeyes? starting lineup. During the early 1950s, freshmen were eligible to play for the varsity team due to the Korean War.
So, when starter Thor Ronemus suffered an injury during the preseason, Reichenbach was right there waiting for the chance. And when the Buckeyes opened the season against Southern Methodist at Ohio Stadium ? in Woody Hayes? first game as head coach ? Reichenbach made history as the first freshman offensive lineman to start at the school.
?It was very exciting to say the least,? Reichenbach said in a 1994 interview with The Independent. ?Chuck Mather and the other coaches told me I could play and I did.?
He would be joined that season in the lineup by another former Tiger teammate and classmate, Jerry Krisher. Krisher, who also lettered four years for Ohio State from 1951-54, played at the other guard spot.
There was little pressure from others, Krisher recalls, on the two freshmen from Massillon who rapidly ascended into the starting lineup.
?That kind of feeling wasn?t really evident in those days,? Krisher said. ?Coach said you were starting, and there weren?t any questions asked.?
Reichenbach and Krisher were sandwiched around another former Tiger, Mike Takacs, at center.
?They called it the ?Massillon Wall,?? Krisher recalled.
The Buckeyes won the national championship in 1954, the final year for Reichenbach and Krisher in Columbus. After graduation, Reichenbach went into the Air Force and was elevated to captain before leaving the service and returning to Massillon.
Back to Massillon
‘An excellent player’ ... 'a tremendous coach' - Massillon, OH - The Independent