• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Wayne Woodrow "Woody" Hayes (5x National Champion, OSU HOF, CFB HOF, R.I.P.)



Between 1951 and 1978, while Woody Hayes stalked the Ohio Stadium sidelines, the Buckeyes won five national titles (and narrowly missed out on four others), captured 13 Big Ten crowns and won 205 games, including 152 conference games.

Hayes coached at Ohio State from 1951-78, winning his titles in 1954, 1957, 1961, 1968 and 1970.

Well, back then you frequently had multiple teams claiming a National Championship; regardless, that's still an impressive number of National Championships for 1 coach. I'm pretty sure that no other Ohio State football coach will top (or equal that) in my lifetime.
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

REMEMBER WHEN: EARLE BRUCE TOOK THE OHIO STATE FOOTBALL TEAM TO SEE EASY RIDER AND WOODY HAYES LOST HIS MIND​

147700_h.jpg


The Ohio State football team used to go out to movies on Friday nights before games.

They still watch movies as a team the night before they play, but with technological advances, they no longer need to head out to a theater and can watch something in the team hotel.

For decades, however, that's exactly what they'd do. One coach would be in charge of finding a movie for the players to watch, the staff would make arrangements with the theater – whether it be the State Theatre on campus or the RKO Theater in downtown Columbus – and the team would go to the movies to think about something other than football for a few hours as kickoff inched near.

In 1969, Ohio State's “movie coach” was Earle Bruce, who also happened to be in charge of coaching the interior of the defending national champion's offensive line. But we're going to focus on his duties as the movie coach and one hilarious choice he made that season.

“Woody only had two rules about our movies,” star middle guard Jim Stillwagon told the Columbus Dispatch in 1996. “We weren't supposed to see any love scenes, and we were never allowed to see any hippies. We couldn't see any sex, but violence was okay. I think Coach Hayes thought that was something that could fire you up."

“If you could find a John Wayne movie, you were doing pretty good,” former OSU assistant Bill Conley told the Dispatch. “He liked those shoot'em-ups. Now Earle, he was a Clint Eastwood fan.”

In later years, Woody's teams saw plenty of Patton, starring George C. Scott as General George Patton. But this was 1969 and Patton had not been released yet, and the team was evidently tired of seeing John Wayne movies.

Earle had to pick a movie and thought he was picking an action movie about motorcycles for the team. From Michael Rosenberg's classic War as They Knew It: Woody Hayes, Bo Schembechler, and America in a Time of Unrest:

watki-passage-1.png


Oops.

“We were sitting there watching these guys up on the screen smoking grass, and we're saying, 'This is great!'” Stillwagon said. “Earle was so upset. He got us out of that theater so fast you wouldn't believe it. He about lost his job when Woody found out.”

watki-passage-2.png

.
.
.
continued

Just sayin': It's always enjoy reading about those great "old Woody stories".......8D
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top