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MG Mark Sullivan (official thread)

WoodyWorshiper

THINK, Before You Speak
Former College Pick'Em Champ
Terry Glenn and Andy Groom are obviously the two most prominent walk-ons we've ever had here. From "nothing" to All-Americans.

Going back a few years, a local kid from here in Lake County (Mark Sullivan) probably would have won the MVP of the 1980 Rose Bowl if not for the last drive of the game for USC. Mark was a 5'9" 220 pound MG walk-on from Lake Catholic and he was absolutely dominating that game. Mark's younger brother's Mike and John (twins) came here to play in the mid-80's and were great players as well.
 
October 26, 1987
Once More With Feeling
Ex-Buckeye Mark Sullivan has a big time at John Carroll
Pat Putnam

The last anyone remembers of him, Mark Sullivan was playing middle guard for Ohio State and receiving the Woody Hayes Memorial Trophy for being the most valuable player in the Buckeyes' 9-3 loss to Michigan. That was in 1980, the same year Sullivan acquired a two-foot alligator as a pet. The gator is long gone?it froze to death?but there was Sullivan last Saturday, pulling on the pads and suiting up for John Carroll University, a Division III school in University Heights, a Cleveland suburb.

In the seven years since he left Ohio State, Sullivan, 27, has become balder, and more soft-spoken, and less of a wild man. But his slow-building grin remains, and he's still looking to knock down the ballcarrier, even if he has to run through three or four blockers to reach his target. So what if there are only 3,000 fans in the stands, not the 87,000 he was used to playing before at Ohio State; so what if the opposition is the likes of Hiram College?which beat John Carroll 26-3 on Saturday as Sullivan had nine tackles?instead of Iowa or Michigan State?

This time Sullivan isn't getting any money for tuition, books or room and board in return for putting on a uniform. At Ohio State he was a walk-on football player with a partial wrestling scholarship, which is the way the late Woody Hayes had Sullivan's ticket punched. "Everybody else said I was too small," says the 5'9", 225-pound Sullivan, who was an all-state middle guard his senior year at Lake Catholic High in Mentor, Ohio. " Bear Bryant said he liked my ability, but he didn't have enough scholarships to take a chance on my size. Woody just said come on down and wrestle, and, by the way, football practice starts in August."

That was in 1978, the year Hayes was fired after throwing a right hook at a Clemson middle guard, and Sullivan, a homesick freshman, lost his mother, Marilyn, to leukemia. The combination was more than Sullivan could handle; he carried his grief nightly to local saloons, where he became the unofficial and undefeated barroom bare-knuckle champion. "I was just a misguided young man," he says. "I come from a real close family, four brothers and a sister, and we will do anything for each other, literally. Halfway through my freshman year Mom died, and it started to wear and tear on me, being alone down there at State. Then I lost Woody. He was like a grandfather figure to me and to a lot of the other guys. When Mom died, he was up in my room every night talking to me. We became real close. Then he was gone. Things just didn't come together for me after that. I was a hell-raiser. It was just part of a night out to get into a fight."

Sullivan's bar fights were legendary. He never started any; he never backed away from any; he never lost any. "People thought I was too small to be a football player," he says. "Or they didn't know I was a football player and just thought I was too small. I guess I just felt I had something to prove."

And there was the alligator that he bought from a teammate for $35. "That gator was mean. I liked to throw it on people to see if it would bite," says Sullivan, who speaks with some embarrassment of his unholy past. He took the alligator home after he got it drunk on vodka in his dorm room and it threw up on a roommate's rug. Sullivan's father, Edward, let him keep the gator in a 200-gallon tank in the backyard. "It was fine," says Sullivan, "until one morning I woke up to find it frozen solid in ice."

Then, following the Buckeyes' game against Michigan his junior year, Sullivan simply walked away. "I felt I needed to change my life," he says. "I was going out too much and not showing up at classes." He tried to find work first in the Canadian Football League and then in the USFL. Neither had any interest in a 5'9" aspiring linebacker. He played one season without pay for the semipro Canton Bulldogs. He worked as an unpaid assistant coach at his former high school, where he helped train his brothers, twins Mike, a starter at middle guard for Ohio State, and John, a sometime starter at linebacker for the Buckeyes, and seven of his current teammates at John Carroll. And he took construction jobs with his father, a general contractor.

In 1983, Sullivan enrolled at John Carroll and stayed just long enough to become the runner-up in the heavyweight class at the Division III national wrestling championships. "I still wasn't ready for the books," he says. Sullivan then spent four months training with Iowa and U.S. Olympic coach Dan Gable in a bid to make the team for the Los Angeles Games. He finished fifth at the trials; only the first three finishers made the trip to L.A.

cont...

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1066617/index.htm

Time & Change: Mark Sullivan
Undersized wild man has mellowed into a father and coach at prep football power
Updated: September 10, 2012
By Brad Bournival | BuckeyeNation

Mark Sullivan was a walk-on at Ohio State and played under Woody Hayes and Earle Bruce from 1978-80.

A Woody Hayes Memorial Trophy winner in 1980 for his play at middle guard against Michigan, Sullivan was a true character. Stories of his pet alligator and bar fights are legendary, but so was his play on the field. With a partial scholarship as a wrestler, Sullivan made Ohio State's football team and finished a three-year stint with the Buckeyes before earning a degree at John Carroll University, where he became a two-time Division III national runner-up in wrestling.

He trained for the 1984 Olympic Games under Dan Gable and finished fifth at the trials.

Sullivan, 52, now lives in Mentor, Ohio, where he is the prevailing wage officer for the Northeast Ohio Sewer District.

The head wrestling and defensive line coach at the all-boys St. Ignatius High School in Cleveland, Sullivan helped the Wildcats to their 11th Division I state title on the gridiron and coached the school's first national champion on the mat last year.

BuckeyeNation caught up with Sullivan and talked to him about his relationships with Woody Hayes and Earle Bruce, wrestling and becoming a coach.

BN: What was it like to play for Woody Hayes?

Sullivan: It was the greatest experience of my life. Every day was eye-opening, just the way he commanded respect. I'll never forget the first time I met him in a setting with the whole team. I went down to report. He didn't care for walk-ons -- that was a known thing -- but I was a walk-on and he let me report with the scholarship guys. I'm in this room.

At first I thought I made a mistake because I was shorter than the kicker. I was tiny and these guys were huge. They're all joking around, pushing each other like a bunch of little kids on recess. Then, all of a sudden you could hear a pin drop and I'm like, 'What happened?' You see Woody Hayes walk in the room. The first thing he does is talk about those bastards up north and talk about Patton and these military quotes. Everybody's jacked up and I've got goosebumps to go on the field then and there.

As the season progressed, it was tough. He started Art Schlichter as a freshman against Penn State and he had five interceptions. It was kind of a frustrating season for Woody, but he kept his demeanor in practice. Everything he said, you just wanted to run through a wall for the guy.

The other side was I found out my mother was dying. He came into my room and I'm a homesick freshman and there's Woody Hayes in my room because he knew I couldn't sleep and he's talking to me for an hour, half hour at a time. Here's the guy that's running the biggest college program in the country and he's taking time out to talk to me about it and to work me through that situation.

BN: You had the reputation of being a little crazy. How have you mellowed in the years

cont...

http://espn.go.com/colleges/osu/story/_/id/8362896/former-middle-guard-mark-sullivan
 
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