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(BOOK EXCERPT) 1968: The Year that Saved Ohio State Football

Clarity

Will Bryant
Staff member
We've been provided an excerpt from a new book about the 1968 Buckeyes by David Hyde which has been well received by a number of members of that team. This text has been copied and adapted from the original .pdf files, and in transition may have lost some formatting. David wanted to bring this to BuckeyePlanet in particular, and worked with his publisher to make this section available. Many thanks go to BB73, in particular, for helping edit out the artifacts created by the transfer from one character set to another.

Because of the length, we're breaking this up into 3 sections, what follows is part 1 of 3.


From Dave:
The book is called "1968: The Year That Saved Ohio State Football." It's essentially a re-creation of that season starting with the 1966 season, when Woody Hayes had a losing record, was burned in effigy, fans started chanting, "Good-Bye Woody" in Ohio Stadium ... and he re-invented himself and the program. He brought in bright, young assistants (Lou Holtz, Bill Mallory, George Chaump ...), changed the offense from the Robust T-Formation, began to recruit nationally for the first time and saw the universes align with the recruiting class that became known as the Super Sophs (Rex Kern, Jack Tatum, Jim Stillwagon ...) This is the story of that time and that team.

[ame="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1933197609?ie=UTF8&tag=mpog-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1933197609"]1968, The Year that Saved Ohio State Fooball[/ame]
by David Hyde
------------------------------

III. Change In The Air

Question turned to concern, then doubt, and ultimately to panic as George Chaump sat in a meeting with the coaching staff in February of 1968. At a blackboard, Woody Hayes had written, "ROBUST," and proceeded that morning to lecture about his Robust T-formation's off-tackle play for three hours. For three more hours, that is.

Hayes already had spent the previous day sermonizing on every nuance of it. How tackles set up a precise 24 inches from guards. What foot blockers should lead with. Where helmets were placed.

"Mark this down," he'd say.
"Underline this," he'd say.
"Write this," he'd say.

All the assistants would, too. No one said anything. For going on two days! Over this most vanilla of plays! These were some of Chaump's first tactical meetings since being hired that winter out of John Harris High School in Harrisburg, Pa., where he had been undefeated the previous three years running a wide-open offense. Dennis Green, who went on to NFL coaching fame, had played for him. So did Jan White. Hayes had visited Harrisburg to recruit Chaump's latest quarterback, Jim Jones, and ended up taking the coach to lunch. It turned into a job interview. Hayes knew, like it or not, he had to upgrade the offense some as confirmed in those talks with Ellison. So the trip to Harrisburg ended up differently than anyone foresaw. Jones signed with Southern Cal after hearing about the quarterback waiting to take over Ohio State, Rex Kern. But Hayes got a recruit that trip, after all. Chaump signed a few weeks later as its quarterback and receivers coach.

For his first two months that winter, while the existing staff finished the recruiting season, Chaump studied film from the previous year. He watched every practice, every game, every frame of film there was. And he marveled at what he saw. The freshman class had more athletic talent than the varsity. It was at the impact positions, too. Quarterbacks. Running backs. Receivers. What speed. What size. What fun toys these would be for an offensive coach, he figured.

But now, hour after hour, all he heard about was this same, off-tackle play. "Robust 26" and "Robust 27," as it was called in the Ohio State playbook, depending on if it was run to the left or right. The other coaches were accustomed to this. The players, too. They would practice this play endlessly. Everything had to be precise. Hayes would show the running backs where to take their first step. He'd go over in minute detail the quarterback's handoff. He would ensure the splits between linemen were perfect.

"If you were one inch too close, he'd stomp on your foot,", tackle Dave Foley said. "Woody being 250 pounds, you learned pretty quickly you didn't want to be stomped on."

This play was an extension of Hayes. Direct. Aggressive. No nuance at all. "Three yards and a cloud of dust," wasn't some line arbitrarily hung on Hayes' offense. It was who he was. It is how he saw himself. Punch them in the face. See if they can take it. Keep punching them, too. That's what this play did. Before moving to the secondary in 1968, Gerry Ehrsam was a reserve quarterback and would be drilled in meetings on what plays would work in different situations. Whenever Ehrsam was stuck for a play, he would answer it looked like a good place for "26" or "27."

"You're damn right, Gerry, good job,", Hayes would say.

When the fullback ran the ball, Hayes kept control of the game. He was renowned for lines like, "The only pass I like is the one in the classroom.", and how, "Three things can happen when you throw the ball and two of them are bad." But when a fullback carried, the ball was in Hayes' hands. Fullbacks, therefore, were his babies. He treated them different through the years from other players. He recruited them by the dozen, too. Just on this team, Jim Otis, Paul Huff, James Coburn, Alan Jack, John

Brockington, Leo Hayden, Mark Debevec, Ralph Holloway and John Dombos all had been recruited as fullbacks. Hayes' philosophy was to grab as many as possible. He needed a great one in his offense, he figured, and they generally were talented enough to help elsewhere if they didn't become The One. Jack became a starting guard, Debevec an All-Big Ten defensive end and Holloway and Coburn provided depth on the offensive line.

But, as with everything important to Hayes, he had exacting ideas on how the fullback should run the ball. He wasn't hesitant to share them, either. Brockington, in his first scrimmage, saw the off-tackle hole was plugged and juked outside for a nice seven-yard gain. Next play, same thing. That time, he gained six yards. As he kneeled down to put on a shoe that had come off, he noticed two legs straddling him. It was Hayes. Glowering down at him.

"If you ever run the football like that again, you'll never play a down at Ohio State,", Hayes told him.

Anyone who carried the ball had a similar experience. Tatum, who ran fullback as a freshman, bounced an off-tackle outside and ran for a long run in a scrimmage. Hayes was livid.

"Tatum, what the hell did I tell you to do", he screamed.

He didn't want any back bouncing out of that hole, no matter how much they gained that play. Hit the hole. Punch the defense in the face. Don't be twinkle-toes. This philosophy was crucial in Hayes deciding who would be his fullback.

Chaump didn't have this background in his first weeks as an assistant. He just saw a lot of time was spent on this one simple play. He didn't understand it. Nor did he understand why Hayes stood at the front of class and lectured while no one else added anything.

"Is this how you handle meetings here", Chaump asked the other assistants at lunch that second day of meetings. "Woody just talks and you listen" There's no give-and-take? No one wondering if there's another way to do something?"

Chaump understood, as the new guy, his voice was diminished. And he didn't want to upset protocol. But that afternoon, when Hayes began lecturing again about his off-tackle play, Chaump raised his hand.

"Coach, I'd just like to ask a question, if I could,", he said. "Is this what we plan to do on offense this year?"

"Yeah,", Hayes said, "unless you think of something better."

"Well, you gave me film to look at. The only thing I really saw that I liked was the talent we have. Starting with Rex Kern at quarterback, we ..."

"You think Kern is better than Billy Long", Hayes asked.

"Coach, I think Rex Kern is far ahead of Long in talent,". Chaump said.

Hayes snickered. He was constitutionally opposed to playing young kids, and Long had been a two-year starter.

"I'm sorry, coach,", Chaump said. "I see a lot of talent. I don't think this tight formation is going to utilize this talent. We've got to open it up both running and throwing the ball."

When Hayes asked for suggestions, Chaump said to put a big, speedy receiver like White out wide. Throw a quick-out pattern. Force the defense to double-team him. That would open up the running game. Also, start employing the I-formation, he said, with a wingback in the slot, instead of the old-fashioned T-formation.

"Show me,", Hayes said, holding out a piece of chalk for Chaump. So Chaump went to the blackboard and began designing short-passing plays. Quick outs. Little flare patterns. Anything to take advantage of this team's size and speed.

"OK, enough of throwing the ball,", Hayes said. "What would you run?"

Chaump drew the I-formation's off-tackle play. The formation was more spread out. The tackles moved more. The ...

"That won't work in college,", Hayes. He cited a Notre Dame defense stopping Southern Cal's I-formation years earlier to back this up.

"A lot of people do it, and a lot of people do it successfully,", Chaump said.

Hayes, by now, was becoming madder with each give-and-take with Chaump. His volume was going up, and up, until at this point he finally shouted, "No high school coach is going to tell me what to do! You don't belong here! You can leave!"

"Coach, I didn't mean to .."
"You're gone,", Hayes said.
"What?"
Hayes took a step forward and said, "You. Are. Gone."

Getting fired, every assistant knew, was part of the Hayes process. Each of them had been fired. Some had been several times. Bo Schembechler, then coaching Miami University, counted 15 times he was fired by Hayes. But, again, Chaump didn't know any this in his opening weeks. Nor did he feel support from the other assistants. He left the room and packed up his desk. He began walking down the hall to the door, wondering what the heck had just happened, when a voice called after him.

"Get back in here,", Hayes said. "I've never fired a coach, and I'm not going to break the record on you."

Back in the room, the mood had broken a little. Something had happened. The staff had rallied, after all. Hugh Hindman, who coached the offensive tackles and tight ends, was saying how he understood Hayes better than anyone. He had played for Hayes at Miami University. He had been an assistant under him for years.

"But, quite frankly, this way hasn't worked the last couple of seasons,", Hindman said. "I think this would be a perfect time to see if we can do something and change."

Earle Bruce, the offensive-line coach, agreed. Hayes began to budge. Just a little. But it was like the Walls of Babylon had cracked, so crucial was this moment for what it meant and how the offense would shift this upcoming season.

"OK," Hayes finally said, "if we're going to do this, we'd better do this right."

He wanted film of Arkansas under Frank Broyles, Oklahoma under Chuck Fairbanks and Southern Cal under John McKay. They ran I-formations and open offenses. They'd copy from the best, Hayes said, not some high-school coach.

"But inside the 20,", Woody told his staff that day, "we're going to run it my way. We?re going to go the Robust formation."

Thus began the daily battle between the assistants to open the spigot of this offense and tap its talent and Hayes' constitutional desire to control everything in a way he understood. The players saw what was happening. They preferred to open up the offense, too. Kern became known for changing plays in the huddle. Bruce Jankowski would run full speed in pre-game warm-ups with the thought of catching Hayes' eye and selling him on throwing the ball that day. Quiet, bordering on bashful, Jankowski then would position himself close to Hayes on the sideline and say of some defensive back, "I can beat him, coach. Throw me the ball."
"We've got to be careful,", Hayes would say. "We'll watch for it."

Many weeks, Hayes would tell the offense in practice they would throw more that week. Then they?d focus on the passing game more, often very successfully. But in the game Hayes would revert to his comfort zone of great running backs and a power running game. The challenge wasn't to change that. The idea was to shift it by degrees through education. Mike Polaski, a junior defensive back in 1968, once walked past Hayes' office at Room 142 to see Lou Holtz, the secondary coach. Hayes was looking at film and yelling for Chaump to come in there. Some opponent was running a 4-4 defensive alignment, meaning eight men were set up close to the line to stop the run.

"How the hell we gonna block that in this offense", Hayes said.
"We're not,", Chaump said.
"What the hell are you talking about", Hayes said.
"I've seen this tape,", Chaump said. "Run it three plays ahead."
The offense put a man in motion. The defense immediately switched to a more-balanced 5-2 alignment.
"Coach,", Chaump said, "we're not going to block it, because we're going to make sure they're not going to be in that formation."

As the years turned, and their careers rolled, Chaump would leave Ohio State after 11 seasons to join McKay at the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He never met two coaches more different. Woody was brash; McKay smooth. Woody drove an old truck; McKay drove the newest-model luxury car. Woody had said during Chaump's interview no assistant could play golf because it took too much time and was too expensive. On Chaump's second day at Tampa Bay, McKay asked for his golf handicap. When Chaump said he didn't have one, McKay said he better get one because everyone on his staff played golf. Most pertinently, Woody plotted everything about his team carefully and deliberately. McKay would draw up plays on the sideline at games and try them out.

Success was their only common denominator. It showed Chaump there were many ways up the mountain. It also told him that the most important job of the head coach was to get the most from his assistants and players in the mode of his personality. Chaump felt Woody could push people hard, because, deep down, they knew he cared for them. They felt his passion. It reminded Chaump of a saying: "No one cares how much you know until they know how much you care."

That first season at Ohio State, Chaump's fight for opening the offense didn't end with his firing and re-hiring in that off-season meeting room. It would go on for all his years with Hayes. At the end of spring practice, each assistant wrote a critique of his area of responsibility. In a report dated May 7, 1968, Chaump wrote about Hayes' favorite Robust-formation, off-tackle play:

"It is my opinion that this is a real good, sound, football play. However, it is vastly overemphasized in our system even to the point of monotony. Statistics bear out that other plays have as good a consistency and average, and I venture to say if they were given as much emphasis and practice time in game-like scrimmages or games they would be equal or superior in basis."

In pen, Hayes wrote one word in response, which he underlined for emphasis:
"BULLSHIT!"
 
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[ame="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1933197609?ie=UTF8&tag=mpog-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1933197609"]1968, The Year that Saved Ohio State Fooball[/ame]
by David Hyde
Part 2 of 3.

(2)

As always, the offensive staff sat on one side of the long table in the meeting room, the defensive staff on the other. Only this morning in the spring of 1968, they weren't here to watch game film, lay strategy or discuss personnel.

They were here to flip a coin.
And chart a future.
"Whattya call", Woody Hayes asked.
"Heads,", Lou McCullough answered.

One way to measure how Hayes was adjusting to tough times, little by little, was with the offense he would allow to be run that coming season. This coin flip was a second way. For the past several years, McCullough had been on Hayes to divvy up the roster more equitably between offense and defense. Part of that was because McCullough was the defensive coordinator and wanted better players. But most of it, all the coaches felt, was because Hayes hoarded talent for his offense like a child would toys. The offense was his creation. It was where he put his time, what defined his coaching. He didn't just want to win against Purdue and Michigan on Saturday. He wanted to win against McCullough's defense on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

The best way to assure this would happen was to grab the better players. That's what Hayes did, year after year, too. In one previous class of 33, McCullough counted, Hayes had hand-picked 24 players for his offense.
"The rest is for the defense,", he said.

Through the years, some of the players who couldn't get off the bench on offense would have helped on defense. Or so the defensive coaches thought. They?d mutter among themselves. And grow frustrated at their lack of depth. And daydream what would happen if they could ever get some of the talent wasting away on offense.

This wasn't just about ego. It was about winning. The defense was fine against good offenses. But against an offense with the best talent, like Purdue the previous season, the defensive coaches felt out-gunned. And they felt this got back to a fundamental philosophy of Hayes keeping the best players for himself. How could Ohio State ever be a contending team if the defense wasn't given as much attention? Didn't defense win championships? These were some of the issues McCullough raised with Hayes, year after year, Finally, after the recent dips of the program, Hayes relented during the '67 season.

"I'll tell you what we'll do,", Hayes said one day. "Next year I'll take a player from this freshman class and then you'll take one. And I'll take another one and you'll take one."

"Will you remember that?" McCullough said.
"That's what we'll do,", Hayes said.
"You remember it,", McCullough said.

So on this March morning in 1968, as McCullough called heads, Hayes flipped a coin in the air. Everyone in the room felt their stomachs rise with it, knowing this was a new way of doing things. There were two players especially up for grabs: John Brockington and Jack Tatum. Both had the speed and talent to be stars no matter where they played. The only question was which side got them. The coin came down ... and down ... and Hayes caught it and turned it over on his forearm.

Tails.
Hayes got the first pick.
"Rex Kern,", he said.

That only made sense. Kern had starred both ways in high school. He mixed in a defensive-back drill as a freshman. But he was Woody's idea of a quarterback, everyone knew. He was full of the leadership gene, too. And he had to be taken first, because Hayes couldn't trust McCullough enough to pass on him.

Now it was McCullough's turn. The defensive staff had talked about this among themselves. There was some debate who to take. They also had agreed, since they'd be happy with either Brockington or Tatum, to appease Woody a little. Let him draw first blood.

"Mike Sensibaugh,", McCullough said.
Like Kern, this pick didn't especially hurt the other side. Like Kern, Sensibaugh had played quarterback in high school as well as defensive back. But Sensibaugh had made his choice clear. On the opening days of practice the previous summer, two of the freshman quarterbacks were scheduled to practice on offense and a third would rotate to defense. That's not quite how it worked out. Sensibaugh had watched Kern and Maciejowski throw those opening practices and, when it came his turn to rotate to the defense, he stayed there. He never returned to the offense. He saw how much better Kern and Maciejowski were at quarterback than him. On defense, he figured, he had a chance to play.

It was Hayes' turn again.
"John Brockington,", he said.
"Wild Horse,", Brockington was called by freshman coach Tiger Ellison for the manner he thundered with high-pumping thighs through the line. Kern had to be careful in handing off to Brockington not to brush against him or he might be knocked sideways by his power. At the same time, the defensive coaches knew he could be a linebacker with that size and that speed. Now they knew something else: Blood had been drawn.

The game was on.
McCullough's turn. He was ready. In a clear and defined voice, as if announcing royalty, he said:
"JACK - TATUM."

Hayes' face scrunched. He took a waste basket and flung it across the room. "You sonuvabitch!z" he said. "I knew you were going to take him!"
Mallory watched and couldn't help chuckling inside. Tatum would be the test case, all the coaches knew at this point, as to whether Hayes actually would follow through with this idea. He was a rare athlete. Fast. Smart. Fearless. And he had only played fullback his freshman season. He possessed such magic there that Sensibaugh, who would become an All-America safety, said he was the only player he could never tackle in his career.

Catuzzi had raised an independent concern: Recruiting. By now, Catuzzi had left Columbus for Williams College, where he would be the youngest head coach in college football. But whenever the idea of Tatum playing defense was raised, he expressed a concern over recruiting repercussions. Tatum had been recruited as a running back. He was All-New Jersey at that position. How could a recruiter go to some kid's home in New Jersey and not have this thrown in his face? Wouldn't their promises mean little in light of this?

Fortunately, Tatum saved the decision. He said he was fine with the move. He preferred it, actually. It wasn't so much the jam in the offensive backfield that concerned him. It was Woody. He liked Woody, for the most part. He just didn't like how he always was telling running backs how to run, where to run, what hole to run in. Nor did he like that he wielded such control over who would play at running back. He saw problems ahead with his running style and Hayes' running beliefs. It wasn't just the day Hayes corrected him for bouncing an off-tackle play outside. Once returning a punt, Tatum reversed field, retreating several yards in an arc across the field, before breaking a long run. He came back to the sideline laughing, enjoying his moment.

"Goddammit, that's not the way you play football here,", Hayes said. "You run straight upfield."

As Hayes walked away, Columbus Citizen-Journal reporter Kaye Kessler stood on the sideline and watched how Tatum would react. Tatum shrugged. "Damn, the Old Man's crazy,", he said to some teammates.
Still, in years past, Hayes wouldn?t have let such a talent move from his offense. Now, if he didn't like it, at least he didn't block it. He let the decision run its course. And so went the rest of the most important draft in Ohio State football history.

Defense, for the first time, was on an equal playing field as the offense. The defensive staff walked out of that room, exhaled, congratulated each other and went to work deciding how to use their new talent.

(3)

That March, the team gathered for dinner at the Jai Lai restaurant before the start of spring practice. At the table for the defensive backs, Mike Polaski found his name tag and sat down. The only other person already at the table was a short, scrawny guy with glasses. Polaski figured he was a student manager.

"Hi,", the guy said, holding out his hand, "I'm Lou Holtz, your new coach."
Adding a lisp to the first impression of short and scrawny, Polaski thought to himself: Uh-oh, we're in big trouble.

Holtz, in turn, was wondering the same about his new job. He grew in East Liverpool, Ohio, and, from the angle of a child's view, saw Ohio State as football Nirvana. He never shook that ideal working for Iowa, William and Mary, Connecticut and South Carolina in the first seven years of his apprenticeship. While coaching defensive backs at South Carolina in 1967, he told a coaching friend he'd love to learn under Woody Hayes at Ohio State. A lunch meeting was arranged between Holtz and Esco Sarkkinen, the long-time Hayes assistant.

That led to Holtz meeting Hayes at a coaches' convention that winter and being offered an assistant's job on his 31st birthday. It was the second job Holtz had been offered at the convention. The first was from Georgia Tech and offered $13,000 plus moving expenses, a down payment on a home, a car allowance and a Florida vacation every year.

Hayes offered $13,000. No moving expenses. No down payment. No perks at all. Take it or leave it. Holtz took it. But a week later he called Hayes and said he'd changed his mind. He didn't want the job. What he didn't say was he turned it down after hearing South Carolina coach Paul Dietzel warn what a crazed personality Hayes could be.

Hearing Holtz back out of the job, Hayes seemed to confirm Dietzel, cursing to the point Holtz nearly hung up. Finally ratcheting his voice down, Hayes said, "OK, you're not taking this job. But whatever voice told you to take it, whatever voice inside you convinced you this was the job for you, that's the voice you'll have to listen to the rest of your life. It won't go away. You'll always wonder why you didn't follow it."

Hayes had pushed the right button. Holtz reversed himself again and re-took the job. But when he arrived at his first staff meeting he wondered again if he had done the right thing. He was smoking a pipe, as usual, using a self-mixed blend of tobacco that players joked, "smelled like it came from the bottom of a shoe."

"What are you doing smoking a pipe", Hayes said upon entering the room. "Paul Brown wouldn't let you smoke a pipe. He says pipe-smokers are soft and lazy."
"That's why you're smarter than Paul Brown," Holtz said. "You don't believe that stuff."

A few minutes later, Hayes began cursing Bill Mallory because one of the defensive linemen had skipped Hayes' 8 a.m. football class that morning. After it went on a while, Mallory rushed around the table at him, fists up, and the other assistants had to step between them. Sitting there, watching this, Holtz asked himself for the first of many times that season, "Lou, what have you gotten yourself into?"

On the way out of the meeting, Holtz asked Tiger Ellison if this was a normal day at the office.
"Don't worry,", Ellison said, "you'll get used to it."

Holtz would come to view Hayes as a brilliant motivator and one of the most remarkable people he ever met. But he'd never get used to some of it. He'd always wonder about the tantrums Hayes threw, even as he knew many were calculated. He'd inject in conversations about Hayes, "While I didn't agree with everything ..."

At the Jai Lai dinner that first night, Holtz watched his defensive backs arrive. Four of them would have professional careers, three for at least five seasons. But he didn't yet knew the talent at the table. Nor did these defensive backs know, as each would say, how Holtz would be the perfect teacher for all of them.

"Let me tell you why I took this job,", Holtz told them. "I came to Ohio State for one reason. I came to go to the Rose Bowl."
He said they'd beat Purdue next season.
They'd beat Michigan.
They'd go to the Rose Bowl.

For a short, scrawny guy with a lisp, he sure did expect big things. What's more, he expected his players to think them. Soon, they discovered, they actually believed them. Forty years later, in Polaski's playbook, those three goals were listed precisely as Holtz said them that night.
 
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Upvote 0
[ame="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1933197609?ie=UTF8&tag=mpog-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1933197609"]1968, The Year that Saved Ohio State Fooball[/ame]
by David Hyde
Part 3 of 3.

(4)

"HE FARTED IN OUR FACE!" Hayes yelled.

He stood before the team, before the first day of spring practice, talking about Purdue coach Jack Mollenkopf. And how Mollenkopf had acted during the second half of that 41-6 win against Ohio State the previous season. He didn't even stand on the sideline

"HE SAT ON THE BENCH WITH HIS ARMS FOLDED!"
And there was his derby hat.
"IT WAS TIPPED OVER HIS EYES!"

He was worked up now. He wanted his players worked up, too. Did they know Purdue's starters sat almost the entire second half" And that Leroy Keyes, the great Purdue running back, was so worn out by playing them he played golf the next day? That's what he said! Golf! That won't happen again!

"And if you guys don't beat Purdue, I guarantee you one goddamn thing,", Hayes said. "When Mollenkopf comes out to shake my hand after the game, I'll beat him up at midfield!"

With that, he took a framed glass picture and threw it against the wall. The players began yelling. And jumping. And woofing.
"WOOO-WOOO-WOOO!"

They ran out to practice field like a stampede on the Western plains. George Chaump, attending his first Ohio State practice, thought this was a speech a coach would give before a national championship game, not before the first of 20 spring practices, six months before the next meaningful kickoff.

But then it was a spring full of surprises. And decisions. Never before, never after, would these coaches have the smorgasbord of talent in one incoming class. The question was how to blend it among some talented upperclassmen. How to create the best team of it all. Who would start? Who would play where? And if you moved this guy over here, could you move that guy over there? It was a game of chess, with knights becoming bishops, bishops becoming rooks, players moved to new positions and coaches measuring the team's overall strengths against individual talents.

Take Jan White. He liked track more than football. He set the Pennsylvania high-school 110-meter hurdles record as a senior. He had only started playing football in junior high, because the coach promised to teach him to run faster. He quickly discovered that was a line to get him on the field. Even as he starred in football, even as coaches beat a path to his doorstep, White had considered attending Southern Cal mainly because the warm weather and palm trees spoke to his runner's heart.

But this spring the team needed a tight end, since senior Rufus Mayes was moving from there to his natural position of tackle. The coaches struck on White as the obvious choice. Never mind that at 6-2 and 205 pounds he didn't have the prototypical tight end's build. Never mind his speed would be lost much of the time at tight end. Never mind, too, that White argued against the move, saying he liked running free as a receiver more than playing inside amid bumper-car traffic.

White was their best option at tight end. So he now was one.
"I don't know anything about blocking in the line,", White said.
"We'll teach you,", said Hugh Hindman, who coached the tackles and tight end.
"But I don't want to learn,", White said.

Suddenly that spring, instead of lining up wide by himself, White was a measured 24 inches from a 250-pound Mayes or Dave Foley. Across from him, a defensive end or linebacker acted like a sledgehammer against him all year. Even when he went into a pass pattern, there were bodies bumping him. He went into survival mode, just trying to get through each day in one piece. Gone, forever to White that spring, were the days of running free as a receiver. And since he now was a tight end?

One day that spring, Bruce Jankowski looked at the lineup posted before each practice and saw he was now a receiver. That's how the news was broken to him. Unlike White, he was pleasantly surprised. He had arrived the previous fall and discovered one hole in his halfback game for this offense: He didn't know how to block. He didn't need to know in high school, since he always has been the guy getting the ball. But as a halfback in Hayes' offense, blocking was a primary role. He had to learn. And he had to block well, if he wanted to play. And that was a problem at first.

"I was a crappy blocker," he said.
He developed quickly enough to become a decent blocker that season. But it didn't solve the underlying issue Jankowski faced involving the backfield being loaded with stars. Three of the players he had competed with as a freshman - Brockington, Hayden and Tatum - eventually would be first-round NFL draft picks. Then there was Dave Brungard, the returning starter. And Jim Otis was the returning starter at fullback, so he'd get the ball most of the time, anyhow.

Jankowski saw enough talent to figure his future wasn't at running back. Wingback, maybe. Except Larry Zelina had been put there with the previous year's starter, Ray Gillian. He also had played some split end in practice as a freshman. He liked it, too. He quickly realized that he was a more natural receiver than a running back. So when he saw his name listed as a receiver, he readily accepted it.

That spring, there were no games won, no championships grabbed, no stadium applause given. Yet something tangible had happened in practice. The upperclassmen, who had merely practiced against these freshmen the previous fall, realized it in the most routine of moments. Just running sprints after practice felt different, linebacker Mike Radtke sensed. He saw what speed the team now had, what gifted athletes the freshmen-turning-sophomores were. They had known they were good from practicing against them the previous season. But it was different now. They were eligible to play now. Radtke pushed himself harder in practice to stay up with them. In so doing, he knew, all of the upperclassmen were being pushed to be better.

The coaches could see it all coming together, even if there were moments that suggested otherwise. Some plays, Lou McCullough would order his defense to blitz an offense trying to learn the nuances of George Chaump's changes. Just for fun. Just to watch Mt. Woody erupt. -Megaton - was what these tantrums were called, a code word passed down through the years inside the team that typically referred to the unit of measure for a nuclear weapon's power.

"We got him mad now,", McCullough would chuckle to his defense. "Look at that megaton!"

This would have an added affect on Hayes beyond just a momentary meltdown. He would question anew this newfangled offense. Its I-formation and more-open alignment took him beyond his comfort level. At 56, he wasn't sure about such dramatic change. Hadn't he been successful with the Robust T? And now he was changing a central principle of that success?

Some days it was too much for him.
"Men, we're all going to get our ass fired, listening to some damn high school coach," he'd tell his assistants.

The other coaches talked him off the ledge at such moments and the learning would resume. For the previous two seasons, these coaches had wondered about their jobs. Now they were breathing a bit easier. They was how much better this team was than the previous seasons. They understood why, too. In the spring report every assistant was required to write for Hayes, Tiger Ellison summed up all the coach's thoughts in these three sentences:

"Most of our freshman came through as expected. Our future rests with 14 sophomores. Lose them and we start packing."

(5)

One morning near the end of his freshman year, Rex Kern woke up and realized he couldn?t get out of bed.

Worse: He could barely move at all.

As Kern had moved from basketball season to spring football, he was nagged by what seemed like a hamstring problem. It had flared up in basketball. It hampered him in football. He had to miss some practice and, during the spring game, taped the hamstring heavily so he could play.
But now, as doctors investigated this latest issue, the diagnosis wasn't a hamstring issue anymore.

It was his back.

Nor was it something he could tape up and play on. He had a ruptured disc that needed surgery. His athletic career was in jeopardy. So was his college education.

At the time, many players didn't return to big-time sports after major back surgery. And it was an unwritten rule in college sports that the scholarship actually was tied to playing. The team physician, Jud Wilson, said everything would be fine, that they'd just go in and clip off the offending piece in his back. Kern trusted him. His faith told him whatever happened was for the best. But for a 19-year-old whose life had revolved around sports to that point, and whose game revolved around speed and passing and being hit, this was serious business.

Kern had never been seriously hurt before, much less undergone surgery.
What added to the strangeness was he didn?t even know how this injury had occurred. As best he could guess, he had injured his back while high jumping in a physical education class. As he twisted his body one day, he felt a twinge in the back. But it hadn't even kept him from playing basketball that day or football that spring.

After surgery on June 19, 1968, Kern was resting in his hospital bed when Hayes asked to see his parents in the hall. When they returned, they informed their son what Hayes had said: No matter whether he plays another down of football, his scholarship would be honored, as would Hayes' recruiting pledge to make sure a degree was earned. It was Earle Bruce's story from 1951 all over again. For a family preparing for the worst-case scenarios, this lightened the concern considerably.
The Kerns were a quintessential Midwestern story. Trenton ran a two-chair barber shop in Lancaster. Rex would sweep the floors as a youth. He once tried to cut a friend's hair, and the comical result suggested he'd find a career elsewhere.

Rex means "king" in Latin, so people imagined greatness had been forecast for Kern from the start. Of course, his parents joked the only Rex either of them knew in naming their second son was a dog on his mother's side.
Trenton played baseball growing up, but his wife supplied the athletic genes for Rex. Jean Ritchie was all-everything in Amanda, a star in softball, basketball, track, seemingly whatever sports she tried. Trenton would tell their sons that if their mom and her sister weren't saddled with the daily chores of the family farm they could have competed in the Olympics.

Sports came naturally to Rex, too. He stood out at every level in any sport. At 5, he began playing baseball, and, perhaps since it was his first sport, his first goal was to make the major leagues. At Lancaster High, he was a three-year starter at third base, hit .460 as a senior and led the school to the state semifinals. The Kansas City Athletics drafted Kern that summer. Later, as people marveled that he played football and basketball at Ohio State, George Hill, who was Kern's high-school basketball coach and later an Ohio University assistant, said in 1969, "As good as he is in football and basketball, the boy could be a major league baseball player."

Basketball quickly became his favorite sport as a kid. That isn't surprising. Woody Hayes gave the personality of football by remarking no one ever made a tackle with a smile on his face. But basketball players smiled. It was a fun game to play. Even in winter, Kern would sleep with his clothes on so he could wake up and immediately play basketball before school with his older brother, Keith. Just like with many teammates, the championship Ohio State basketball teams of the early 1960s inspired him. He often would be Mel Nowell, John Havlicek or Larry Siegfried on the Lancaster courts.

"I could never be Jerry Lucas,", he said. "I could never throw up the little "Johnson & Johnson soft baby hook." - That was the expression TV announcer Jimmy Crum coined for the shot. It showed just how closely Kern followed the games.

He was a three-year starter at Lancaster High, averaged 23 points as a senior and left with the school's scoring record. He also jumped center despite being only 6 feet and typically guarded the opponent's biggest man. As his sophomore turned to his junior year, it was the college basketball coaches who began to come around. Ohio State coach Fred Taylor reached out to Kern then, a full year before Woody Hayes would make contact.

Football, meanwhile, was all sandlots and backyards for Kern until seventh grade. One day, watching a Pop Warner team practice, he began throwing passes on the side with a friend. He immediately was asked to play quarterback. Unlike the other two sports, football appealed to his unbounded aggressiveness. As the starting safety, he led the team in tackles his junior and senior years. By then, his quarterback talents were obvious, and he was blessed with sound coaching, which he would accelerate his progress in the coming years. The quarterback option he became renowned for at Ohio State, for example, wasn't learned in college. He was taught its intricacies at Lancaster High.

At 6-feet and 175 pounds, Kern didn't cut an imposing figure. He did have one physical gift that contributed to his reputation as a magician with the ball in the coming years. As George Chaump marveled at Kern's ball-handling skills, he was struck by the size of Kern's hands. Chaump measured them. They were 8 1/2 inches from the tip of his finger to the start of his wrist and middle. The stretched span from his thumb to his index finger was 9 1/2 inches. Decades later, when Chaump was asked to write a chapter on "Perfecting Quarterback Fakes" in a coaching book, he would offer Kern's hands as an example of how size does matter.

Still, from normal size to boyish looks, the first impression of Kern didn't translate into a superstar. When tackle Dave Cheney met him in August of 1967 at the annual Ohio All-Star Game, he observed Kern closely in practices. He had read all about Kern's talent, and they were part of Ohio State's incoming freshmen class. But in those practices leading up to the game, Cheney detected nothing special in Kern's play.

"Then we got in the game and you saw it right away,", Cheney said. "We didn't practice a lot together, as you can imagine, and Rex was a master of the broken play. That's when I first noticed how good he was. We'd run a play and, if something broke down, Rex would take off. You could just see he was a different talent."

Kern's athletic gifts were matched by a good aura he projected. He carried himself in a way teammates admired. The first word most of them used to describe Kern was: Leader. The second word: Tough. One description backed up the other in the athlete's world, and he expected those attributes of himself, too.

His leadership was an invisible force, like gravity, something tangible that
all players felt, black or white, young or old, star or reserve. He had a gift, Bruce Jankowski observed, to match the moment with not just the proper thing to say, but the proper tone to say it. In the huddle, he could be serious and tell Foley, "Duke, we need this block," or Jankowski, "Ski, you've got to beat him. You got to get open." But after a good play in the tensest of games he also could smile and say, "Hey, we got that one, didn't we? Let's keep it going."

"He made everyone feel part of the team,", Jankowski said. "And he made you feel real good about yourself, made you feel like an instrumental part no matter what your role was."

If Kern's in-game manner was serious, the full scope of his personality stretched far beyond that. He had all the red-haired look and mischievous nature of Huck Finn. In this regard, he wasn't the stuffy star on the marquee. He was just one of the boys. He threw water balloons at passersby with some teammates from the high up in their dorm room. He'd tickle a piece of grass against Hayes' neck in a practice, and they'd all silently chuckle when Hayes slapped at it like a mosquito. He had one of the team-best impersonations of Hayes, too.

"Do a Woody,", teammates would ask him. If he felt the moment was right, he'd jut his jaw and rock on his heels and bust into a, "Mmm-hmmm, sons-of-bitches, mmm-hmm."

Hayes sometimes, would catch Kern in the act. But if he cared, he didn't show it. He, too, was caught under Kern's spell. Teammates quickly picked up on it. Jim Stillwagon would break into a Woody imitation around Kern and tease, "Aw, my boy, Rex. This is my son. You can't hurt my son."

On the 1968 team's picture day, Hayes looked at Sensibaugh wearing jersey No. 3. "That's not your high-school number,", Hayes said. "Don't you want to wear your number from high school? What was it anyway?"
"No. 10,", Sensibaugh said.
Kern's number.
"Oh,", Hayes said, walking away.

If Kern's personality and leadership skills were tangible, his toughness gave him credibility. What later became evident on the football field before millions was seen in the privacy of a basketball practice Kern's first winter in Columbus. Since freshmen weren't eligible, he was relegated to helping the varsity. Being a newcomer, he was tested. One practice, Kern saw a lane to the basket and went in strong for a lay-up. As he went up with the ball, he was nearly decapitated by a beef sandwich consisting of Bill Hosket, a 6-8, 225-pound senior who would be an Olympian and NBA star, and Dave Sorensen, a 6-8, 220-pound sophomore who also would have an NBA career.

Kern's nose was broken. His lip was bleeding. Trainer Ernie Biggs took one look and told Taylor to sub in another player. But as Taylor motioned to do so, Kern went back on the court and took the ball. He ran the same play. He made the same move. This time, when he went up for the lay-up against Hosket and Sorensen, he made sure to score the basket.
Even that freshman basketball season, the tug of football always was there. Hayes called him to the side one day before basketball practice began or the coaches had hit the court.

"Rex, come with me, I need you to help me recruit,", Hayes said.
Kern said he couldn't. He had to practice. There was a game the next night. Hayes insisted. "Have you talked to Coach Taylor?" Kern asked.
Hayes stomped off. Ten minutes later, he returned and said it was fine for Kern to come with him. They drove a few hours through a wicked snowstorm to Avon Lake to watch Dick Wakefield play a basketball game. The storm was so bad Hayes actually had sent Wakefield a telegram saying he wouldn't be attending the game as he had promised. But there Hayes was, driving 60 mph in awful conditions. "All of a sudden we hydroplane, do a complete 360, and come out heading in the same direction,", Kern said. "I'm scared to death. Woody stopped talking for 10 minutes."

They made the game and Wakefield became a star receiver at Ohio State. But the upshot for Kern, other than being told by football coaches never to ride in a car when Hayes is driving, was the basketball starting lineup the next night. He wasn't in it. He sat the bench. All the other players were put in the game. Finally, an assistant told Kern, "We're under orders not to play you tonight." They thought he skipped practice the day before. Hayes hadn't asked anyone to take him.

One of Kern's disappointments at Ohio State would be that he never had a real chance to play basketball. He started on the freshmen team. But the football season ran so long and his body was so damaged in 1968 that he never would have the time to be the Nowell or Havlicek from his youth. Football quickly became his public identity. By that sophomore season's end, a sign would be placed at the city limits of Lancaster: "Welcome to Kernville."

But as he sat at home the summer before that season, waiting for his back to heal, wondering what his athletic future was, such a possibility seemed far away. He did very little for nearly six weeks. The question of his back was always there, but he didn't dwell on it. His optimism carried him through, as did his faith. For the first several weeks after surgery, his most significant exercise he didn't involve any running or jumping or stretching at all.

It consisted of bowing his head in prayer.
 
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Re: "Hi,", the guy said, holding out his hand, "I'm Lou Holtz, your new coach." Adding a lisp to the first impression of short and scrawny, Polaski thought to himself: Uh-oh, we're in big trouble.


Dr. Lou :slappy::slappy::slappy:
 
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"It is my opinion that this is a real good, sound, football play. However, it is vastly overemphasized in our system even to the point of monotony. Statistics bear out that other plays have as good a consistency and average, and I venture to say if they were given as much emphasis and practice time in game-like scrimmages or games they would be equal or superior in basis."

In pen, Hayes wrote one word in response, which he underlined for emphasis:
BULLSHIT

:lol:
 
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Thanks

Thanks for all the comments here. I grew up in Westerville, ushered Ohio State games as a kid (it's why I joined the Boy Scouts) and eventually came back to writing this story in a career of sportwriting. One of the fascinating aspects of it was the 1960s time period. A player off the team was killed in Vietnam. There was the on-campus and in-team reaction to the assassination of Martin Luther King. Amidst the craziest time to be on a college campus this team came together and assembled a season to remember. What's more, now that they're grown men, they're able to put it all into perspective. Anyway, thanks again for the comments.

--David Hyde
 
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Understanding Woody

As the author, I want to follow up on the comments about Woody. The excerpts here do paint him as, uh, difficult to work with. And he was. It's true. But just when I'd heard stories like this that made me wonder about him, there would be another story that would make him consider him a saint. Here's one that comes in the epilogue, the part where I tell what the players did after playing at Ohio State:

"After serving in the Army, Pollitt returned to Ohio State as a graduate assistant in 1970. Running the freshman defense in practice against Hayes? varsity offense, he grew to know the coach in a way he hadn?t as a player. When Pollitt decided to attend law school, Hayes promised to help.

The problem was Pollitt?s grades. Never a disciplined student, his law school test scores were among the lowest 2 percent in the country. ?The bottom of the bottom,?? as he said. Hayes personally attended Pollitt?s interview with the dean of the Ohio State Law School, where the average test score among students was 600. Pollitt had a 396.

The dean told Hayes that if Pollitt just had a 500, he could be accepted. But there was no way to take someone with such a low score. Likewise, every law school Pollitt applied to rejected him. Capital University was his final chance. He scheduled an interview. Hayes couldn?t attend, but wrote a letter of recommendation.

Pollitt walked into the interview and the assistant dean of the Capital Law School immediately asked, ?Are you good with your hands??

?Give me a knife and I?m hell on a buffet table,?? Pollitt said, thinking a question-and-answer session was part of the interview process.

?Well, that?s good, because you should go to trade school,?? the assistant dean said. ?Plumbers are making $10 an hour. Quite frankly, having looked at your scores, you?re wasting our time and we?re wasting yours.?

When Pollitt told Hayes the interview hadn?t gone well, Hayes ?went berserk,?? he remembered. ?He began throwing stuff around, knocking things off his desk. He was banging on tables. He threw a legal pad on the floor. Then he stopped and looked at Pollitt, who began backing up for fear the left hand would be cocked.

?Goddammit, do you want to go to law school?? Hayes then yelled.

Pollitt said he did.

?Will you make it?? Hayes yelled.

Pollitt said he would.

?You?d better,?? Hayes said. ?Because if you screw up, you?ll not only screw it up for you. You?ll screw it up for every player who comes after you. My word won?t mean shit.?

Three days later, Pollitt got a letter of acceptance from Capital. With the fear of Woody in him, Pollitt ranked fourth in his class after his first year. He graduated and became a private attorney. When former Ohio State tight end Greg Lashutka was elected Columbus city attorney, he appointed Pollitt a city attorney in 1978. That began his climb inside the public legal system.

Today, Judge H. William Pollitt, Jr. presides over Courtroom 12A in the Franklin County Municipal Court in Columbus.

Decades later, Pollitt can only surmise what Hayes did to get him in Capital. John McCormick, the dean of the Capital Law School, was a part-time referee who worked the Ohio State spring game. McCormick was out of town that day Pollitt interviewed with the assistant dean at Capital. Hayes somehow convinced McCormick to accept him, Pollitt figures.

?Here I was, a reserve player who didn?t help him win anything, and he changed my life,?? Pollitt said. ?Nobody can say anything bad about Woody Hayes in front of me. He gave me an opportunity no one else could have.?

--David Hyde
 
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DavidHyde;1345166; said:
As the author, I want to follow up on the comments about Woody. The excerpts here do paint him as, uh, difficult to work with. And he was. It's true. But just when I'd heard stories like this that made me wonder about him, there would be another story that would make him consider him a saint.

--David Hyde

I should have said it better. Thank for the the clarification. He was an amazing person despite any personality faults, I'm sure. After all, we are who we are, both good and bad. The bad is just as important in shaping us as humans. I am very interested in your book as it seems to be totally unafraid of shying away from showing both sides to the man.

As a relatively new "Buckeye" it is sometimes difficult to understand certain facets of being a Buckeye. A book like yours is actually more intriguing to me than another that might do nothing but paint a glowing picture as it will serve to flesh out the man, Woody, instead of the myth, Woody, if that makes sense.
 
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