• 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!

RB Jim Otis (All B1G, 1st Team All-American, National Champion, Pro Bowl)

BB73

Loves Buckeye History
Staff member
Bookie
'16 & '17 Upset Contest Winner
Jim Otis is on the 2008 ballot for the College Football Hall of Fame. Jim played fullback on the 1968 National Championship team, and as a senior finished 7th in the Heisman Trophy in 1969.

Jim scored 4 TD's against TSUN in 1968, giving him a school record 16 for the season (breaking Hopalong Cassady's record from his 1955 Heisman season). His last TD was the final points of the day, since it was followed by an unsuccessful pass attempt on the two-point conversion - which inspired the famous "because I couldn't go for three" quote attributed to Woody after The Game.

Here are Jim Otis's statistics for the biggest games of the 1968 NC season:

#4 tOSU 13, #1 Purdue 0 - 29 carries for 144 yards
#2 tOSU 50, #4 TSUN 14, - 34 carries for 143 yards, 4 TDs
#1 tOSU 27, #2 USC 16 - 30 carries for 101 yards, 1 TD

official,site

Jim Otis, Ohio State-Fullback-Named consensus First Team All-America in 1969... Member of the 1968 National Championship team... Named First Team All-BIG TEN conference in 1969 and led the Buckeyes to two conference titles... Led the team in rushing three times.

wikipedia.Jim_Otis

Jim's son was a walk-on QB and special teams player for tOSU from 2001 through 2003.
 
Last edited:
It's funny what you remember from college. I can't remember anything from
Psychology 300 and I took the course twice (I got a "D" the second time). :biggrin:

I do remember the following: During my sophomore year (1967) in Smith Hall another 9th floor resident (a freshman football player who later became a Rose Bowl MVP) told us after the Illinois game that during halftime Woody fell over three rows of benches to hit Jim Otis over the head with his clipboard after he fumbled twice in the first half. Note: The freshman football player wasn't laughing, the players took Woody very seriously.

Background: In 1966 the Buckeyes were 4-5. In 1967 Ohio State was 2-3 after losing to Illinois: However, they did finish 6-3. That year Woody was actually "hung in effigy" on the oval.

Neat article, it brings back memories:

Excerpt from War As They Knew It

From the book [ame="http://www.amazon.com/War-As-They-Knew-Schembechler/dp/0446580139"]"WAR AS THEY KNEW IT: Woody Hayes, Bo Schembechler, and America in the Time of Unrest"[/ame] by Michael Rosenberg. Copyright 2008 by Michael Rosenberg. Reprinted by permission of Grand Central Publishing, New York, NY. All rights reserved.

"Towards all this external evil, the man within the breast assumes a warlike attitude, and affirms his ability to cope single-handed with the infinite army of enemies. To this military attitude of the soul we give the name of Heroism."
? Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Heroism" It was time for Woody Hayes to adjust. Halftime, late October 1967: Hayes' Ohio State Buckeyes trailed Illinois. Hayes stood at the locker-room chalkboard, like any other football coach, to perform the most basic football-coach task: diagramming a play. And Hayes tried, he really did, but then he caught a glimpse of his fullback, Jim Otis, who had fumbled twice in the first half, and suddenly Hayes wanted to smack Otis.

Did it matter that Otis was one of Hayes' favorite players? Or that Otis' father roomed with Hayes for two years at Denison University? Or that Hayes had known Otis for years ? and that Otis had spent his whole life preparing to play fullback for Woody at Ohio State?
Hell yes. Of course it mattered. With such close ties to Woody Hayes, Otis knew darn well not to fumble.
Hayes turned and rammed through the first two rows of players, then attacked Otis with such force that Otis' Coke popped up in the air. And as he pounded away, Hayes screamed that Otis would never play for Ohio State again.
The Buckeyes had seen the flash of Hayes' temper many times. Normally, there was a way to prepare for it: make him stand on your right side. Hayes was left-handed. When he stood on your right side, Hayes had to take a step back to throw that left hook, and you had a chance to get out of the way.
But Otis, wedged into the third row, had nowhere to go, and at that moment, so much seemed to be ending. The season was lost ? Ohio State's record was about to fall to 2-3. There were rumblings that if Hayes lost the big season finale at Michigan, he would be fired. Otis, a sophomore, thought his career was finished (and in fact, he would be benched for the rest of that Illinois game and the two after that).
Had a picture been taken at that moment ? an image frozen and passed around the nation, designed to provoke an instant reaction ? most people would have reached quick, obvious conclusions: Hayes and Otis would never speak again; the coach would lose the respect of his players; and the Woody Hayes era at Ohio State would probably end. Every conclusion would have made sense ? and every one would have been wrong.
Jim Otis never considered leaving Hayes' program; his love for the coach only grew stronger over time. As for the other players, Hayes sometimes angered them, but he never lost them. His influence on them was overwhelming.
The sheer size of a football team limits individual interactions between the head coach and each player, but Hayes was so powerful in those moments that many Buckeyes would say he was like a second father to them. Hayes insisted that they graduate, and when they did, he coaxed many of them to go to law school. Some players considered him so morally incorruptible that long after they left Ohio State, they feared disappointing him.
Hayes told his players that their closest friends in the world would always be their Ohio State teammates. That was true, but when those friends got together, they inevitably started talking about Hayes so much that they started to sound like him. Hayes had such a profound effect on his players that years after he died, they would often speak of him in the present tense: "Woody has two rules: No drugs and no haters," they would say. Or: "He is the best teacher. When he goes to the board in a classroom, he is magnificent."
And on the topic of endings: The Buckeyes would win their final four games of 1967, saving Hayes' job. From there, they would put together one of the most dominant stretches in football history. And their excellence would trigger the greatest decade in the most storied rivalry in college football.
Nothing ended in that cramped locker room at Ohio Stadium. This was actually one of the great beginnings in the history of sports.
But the Buckeyes could not possibly know that at the time. They just knew the Old Man was ticked off again. And that somebody ought to detach him from Jim Otis. One of Woody's assistant coaches, Hugh Hindman, pulled him off.

Entire article: FOX Sports on MSN - COLLEGE FOOTBALL - Excerpt from War As They Knew It
 
Upvote 0
Jim Otis

As a Buckeye

The Celina, Ohio, native was one of Hayes' favorite players. Otis was OSU's career rushing leader when he left school, and was the Buckeyes' top rusher three seasons in a row (1967-69). In 1969, he became Ohio State's first 1,000-yard back.

As a pro

Otis was the rare hard-nosed running back who did the bulk of damage late in his tenure. He finished his 116-game career with 4,350 rushing yards, nine 100-yard games, one 1,000-yard season (1975) and a Pro Bowl appearance, almost all in his final six seasons in the league, with St. Louis.

The skinny

Otis was more or less a bust in one year with New Orleans, which drafted him in the ninth round, and in two years with Kansas City (he totaled 487 yards in those three seasons). But he found his legs as a member of the Cardiac Cards of the mid-1970s and led the NFC in rushing in 1975.

OSU ON SUNDAY | The Columbus Dispatch
 
Upvote 0
Otis fueled OSU ground game from fullback position
The Lantern reveals its choice for the Ohio State Football Player of the 1960s, Jim Otis
By Kirk McElroy
[email protected]
Published: Monday, May 3, 2010

As football has changed through the years with the advancement of the west-coast offense, the spread formation and a focus on the passing game, it might be hard to imagine the player of the decade going to a player at the fullback position. However, in the 1960s, the fullback position was the workhorse of the team under coach Woody Hayes.

?The fullback off tackle was the bread-and-butter play, and sometimes you would run that fullback up the middle,? said Jack Park, author of The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia. ?People used to joke that the only deception that Woody had in his offense was whether that fullback was going to go off the left tackle or the right tackle.?

In the late 1960s, Jim Otis became a crucial part of Hayes? game plan as he took over at fullback.

Otis led the team in rushing in each of his three seasons, from 1967 to 1969. In the 1960s, freshmen were not eligible to play, so Otis led the team in rushing in each of his three years of varsity competition.

?What I remember about him as much as anything is that he had such a quick takeoff,? Park said. ?He could hit the hole very quickly, he was rugged and he was a very powerful runner. In 1968 and 1969, he ran behind some excellent offensive lines, but Jim also had the ability to make his own hole. If there wasn?t a hole there, he was powerful enough and quick enough that he could gain a few yards anyways.?

Otis ranks eleventh in career rushing yards at OSU with 2,542 and ranks second in average rushing yards per game with a 94.4 average.

He is fifth in career 100-yard games at OSU with 13.

Otis was the first fullback to rush for over 1,000 yards in a single season, as he rushed for 1,027 yards in 1969, when he was an All-American.

?That season of 1,027 yards is even better than it looks because at that time, OSU only played a nine-game regular season,? Park said. ?Today we play 12 games and a bowl game.?

The Lantern - Otis fueled OSU ground game from fullback position
 
Upvote 0
A good game for Otis to score 4 TDs:

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRzQmx3CbgQ"]YouTube - 1968 Ohio State Michigan[/ame]

Announcer (at end of video)...For the first time in 11 years Ohio State is going to the Rose Bowl...It's party time!!!

Otis scored in this game too.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=il32mM0r768"]YouTube - 1969 Rose Bowl: Ohio State v. USC (Drive-Thru)[/ame]

:osu:
 
Upvote 0
I find it amazing that Jim Otis, who is now 64 years old, is not in the College Football Hall of Fame. He was the battering ram for three of the most imposing Ohio State football teams ever. Those Woody Hayes teams went 27-2. And yet Otis remains on the outside, looking in.

Read more: http://azstarnet.com/sports/footbal...89b-5d73-bc2f-b66acf83c34c.html#ixzz1v268F2pq

2012 Hall of Fame Class - The Big Snubs
By Pete Fiutak
CollegeFootballNews.com
Posted May 16, 2012

14. Jim Otis, FB Ohio State (1967-1969)

A consensus First Team All-American in 1969, he was even better a year after leading the team in rushing on the way to the 1968 national title. On the Ohio State All-Century Team, he led the team in rushing all three years for a team that liked to throw the ball as much as it liked wearing Maize and Blue. After starting the 1967 season 2-3, the Buckeyes won 24 straight games with Otis being the main man earning team MVP honors in 1969. The juggernaut of a 1969 squad was better in the regular season than the 1968 team, but the great run ended with the classic 24-12 loss to Michigan.

http://cfn.scout.com/2/1186613.html
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0
Back
Top