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tibor75;639356; said:agreed. Interesting how people are willing to forgive assault on a campus because an athlete was the one who did the assaulting.
Imagine the reaction if an OSU student had beaten up and robbed an OSU football player instead of the other way around.
Ira Guilford, known as "The I-Train" during his Hoboken playing days, has resurfaced at William Paterson and will play for the Pioneers this fall.
Guilford first went to Ohio State and ran into some legal problems there, causing his dismissal. He then transferred to Troy State and has now ended up at William Paterson with his former coach and former teammate. There are a host of other Hudson County products with Stinson and head coach Mike Miello at William Paterson, so the team will be one to watch this fall with all the local flavor...
starBUCKS;901685; said:Too bad the "I-Train" never made a stop in Columbus.
NFL | Guilford works out at Pro Day
Fri, 4 Apr 2008 19:19:55 -0700
John Murphy, of Yahoo! Sports, reports William Patterson RB/DB Ira Guilford measured a height of 5-foot-11 1/2 and a weight of 204 pounds at the TEST Sports Club Pro Day Thursday, April 3. He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.42 and 4.48 seconds and the short shuttle in 4.04 seconds. He measured a 39 1/2-inch vertical jump, a 10-foot-5 broad jump and completed 22 repetitions on the 225-pound bench press.
Buckskin86;1132683; said:
More than 10 other local players took part in the day as well, including one-time Buckeyes Albert Dukes and Ira Guilford.
This highlight tape popped up in my suggestions and was just wondering if this is the same cat?
Tresselball encapsulated in one game...The Buckeyes won that game 19-10 thanks to a punt return TD, and blocked punt TD, a FG, and a safety.
How bad was Ohio State's rushing attack in 2003 after MoC left?
Defensive back Ira Guilford had 28 carries for 64 yards (2.3 average). He was 4th in carries behind Lydell Ross (193); Craig Krenzel (109); and Maurice Hall (97).
2.3 yards per carry is pretty bad. But the entire team averaged only 3.3 yards per carry that year. No, that's not a typo: 3.3 yard per carry.
Against Iowa, the Buckeyes ran the ball 42 times for 56 yards (1.3 ypc). The Buckeyes won that game 19-10 thanks to a punt return TD, and blocked punt TD, a FG, and a safety.
Amazing that Ohio State went 11-2 that season with a BCS bowl victory.