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{{short description|Football team of Ohio State University}}
{| class="infobox bordered" style="width: 25em; text-align: left; font-size: 100%;"
{{Infobox college football team
|+ style="font-size: larger;" |
| TeamName = Ohio State Buckeyes football
| CurrentSeason = 2024 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
| Image = Ohio State Buckeyes logo.svg
| ImageSize = 175
| FirstYear = [[1890 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1890]]; {{Years or months ago|1890}}
| AthleticDirector = [[Ross Bjork]]
| HeadCoach = [[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]]
| HeadCoachYear = 6th
| HCWins = 61
| HCLosses = 9

| Stadium = [[Ohio Stadium]]
| StadCapacity = 102,780
| FieldName = [[Safelite]] Field
| StadiumBuilt = 1922
| StadSurface = [[FieldTurf]]
| Location = [[Columbus, Ohio]]
| NCAAdivision = I FBS
| Conference = [[Big Ten Conference]]
| ConfDivision =
| PastAffiliations = [[NCAA Division I FBS independent schools|Independent]]<br />[[Ohio Athletic Conference]]
| ATWins = 969

| ATLosses = 334
| ATTies = 53

| BowlWins = 28<!--through January 1, 2023, do not include vacated 2011 Sugar Bowl Bowl win-->
| BowlLosses = 29
| BowlTies =
| PlayoffApps = 5 ('''[[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]]''', [[2016 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2016]], [[2019 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2019]], [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]], [[2022 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2022]])
| Playoffs = 3–4 ({{Winning percentage|3|4}})
| NatlTitles = 8([[1942 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1942]], [[1954 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1954]], [[1957 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1957]], [[1961 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1961]], [[1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1968]], [[1970 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1970]], [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]], [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]])
| UnNatlTitles = 7 ([[1933 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1933]], [[1944 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1944]],<!--1945 is an error in the NCAA records book; see [[Billingsley Report]]--> [[1969 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1969]], [[1973 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1973]], [[1974 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1974]], [[1975 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1975]], [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2006]])
| NatlFinalist = 5 ([[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]], [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2006]], [[2007 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2007]], [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]], [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]])
| ConfTitles = 41 (2 [[Ohio Athletic Conference|OAC]], 39 [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]])
| DivTitles = 10 (2 Leaders, 8 East)
| Rivalries = See {{section link||Rivalries}}:<br />[[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois]] ([[Illinois–Ohio State football rivalry|rivalry]])<br />[[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]] ([[Michigan–Ohio State football rivalry|rivalry]])
| Heismans = [[Les Horvath]] – 1944<br />[[Vic Janowicz]] – 1950<br />[[Howard Cassady]] – 1955<br />[[Archie Griffin]] – 1974<br />[[Archie Griffin]] – 1975<br />[[Eddie George]] – 1995<br />[[Troy Smith]] – 2006
| AllAmericans = 93
| uniform = [[File:Ohio state football unif.png|250px]]
| FightSong = [[Across the Field]] and [[Buckeye Battle Cry]]
| Mascot = [[Brutus Buckeye]]
| MarchingBand = [[Ohio State University Marching Band]]
| PagFreeLabel = Outfitter
| PagFreeValue = [[Nike, Inc.|Nike]]
| PagFreeLabel2 =
| PagFreeValue2 =
| WebsiteName = ohiostatebuckeyes.com
| WebsiteURL = https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/
}}{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}

The '''Ohio State Buckeyes football''' team competes as part of the [[NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision]], representing The [[Ohio State University]] in the [[Big Ten Conference]]. Ohio State has played its home games at [[Ohio Stadium]] in [[Columbus, Ohio]], since 1922.<ref>{{cite web | title = Ohio Stadium | publisher = Ohio State Buckeyes | url = http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/facilities/ohio-stadium.html | access-date = June 10, 2012 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140701124946/http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/facilities/ohio-stadium.html | archive-date = July 1, 2014 | url-status = dead | df = mdy-all }}</ref>

The Buckeyes are recognized by the university and NCAA as having won eight national championships,<ref name="Yearly Results">{{cite web|title=Ohio State Buckeyes Football Results by Year|publisher=Ohio State Buckeyes.com|url=http://grfx.cstv.com/schools/osu/graphics/pdf/m-footbl/10_p102to131.pdf|access-date=June 10, 2012|archive-date=March 7, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130307134321/http://grfx.cstv.com/schools/osu/graphics/pdf/m-footbl/10_p102to131.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> including six from the major wire-service selectors: [[AP Trophy|AP Poll]] and/or [[Coaches' Trophy|Coaches' Poll]]. The program has also captured 41 conference championships (2 [[Ohio Athletic Conference|OAC]] and 39 [[List of Big Ten Conference football champions#Championships by team|Big Ten]]), 10 division championships, and has compiled 10 undefeated seasons, including six perfect seasons (no losses or ties). Seven players have received the [[Heisman Trophy]] (second all-time), with the program holding the distinction of having the only two-time winner ([[Archie Griffin]]) of the award.

As of 2017, the football program is valued at $1.5–2 billion,<ref name="NCAA football programs worth">{{cite news |author=Wall Street Journal |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-much-is-your-college-football-team-worth-1506000030 |title=How Much Is Your College Football Team Worth? |newspaper=Wall Street Journal |date=September 21, 2017 |publisher=wsj.com |access-date=September 21, 2017 |archive-date=September 21, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170921134034/https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-much-is-your-college-football-team-worth-1506000030 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="NCAA football programs worth2">{{cite news |author=Wall Street Journal |url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-much-is-your-college-football-team-worth-11546875092|title=How Much Is Your College Football Team Worth? |newspaper=Wall Street Journal |date=January 7, 2019 |publisher=wsj.com |access-date=December 6, 2021}}</ref> the highest valuation of any such program in the country. NCAA's first millioniare student-athlete ([[Quinn Ewers]]) became such using [[student athlete compensation|NIL]] while in the program.

{{TOClimit|limit=3}}

==History==
===Early history (1890–1950)===
{{main|History of Ohio State Buckeyes football}}
{{see also|List of Ohio State Buckeyes football seasons}}
[[File:Ohio state football team photo 1890.jpg|thumb|left|The first Ohio State football team of 1890]]
After early attempts at forming a team in 1886 (led by future Nebraska governor [[Chester Hardy Aldrich]]) and 1887, football was ultimately established at the university in 1890.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://library.osu.edu/site/ohiostadium/before-the-stadium/ | title=Before the Stadium &#124; A Walk in Our 'Shoe : The history of Ohio Stadium }}</ref> On the site of the first OSU game, on the campus of [[Ohio Wesleyan University]] in [[Delaware, Ohio]], on May 3, 1890, the Delaware County Historical Society has set an historical marker.<ref name="auto">{{cite book |last=Roman |first=Robert J. |date=2017 |title=Ohio State Football: The Forgotten Dawn |publisher=University of Akron Press |isbn=978-1629220666 }}</ref> Some histories of Ohio State football credit George Cole, an undergraduate, and [[Alexander S. Lilley]] with introducing the sport to the campus. More recent research has challenged that claim, stating that George Cole did not persuade Lilley to coach the football team until after its first full season began that fall.<ref name="auto"/> OSU's first home game took place at 2:30&nbsp;p.m. on November 1, 1890. They played the [[The College of Wooster|University of Wooster]] on the site that was then called Recreation Park. Just east of historic German Village, the park occupied the north side of Schiller (now Whittier), between Ebner and Jaeger, in what is now Schumacher Place. OSU lost the game, 64–0. Over the next eight years, under a number of coaches, the team played to a cumulative record of 31 wins, 39 losses, and 2 ties. The first game against the [[University of Michigan]], in [[Ann Arbor, Michigan|Ann Arbor]], was a 34–0 loss in 1897, a year that saw the low point in Buckeye football history with a 1–7–1 record. Jack Ryder was Ohio State's first paid coach, earning $150 per season, and lost his first game, against [[Oberlin College]] and [[John Heisman]], on October 15, 1892.<ref>Walsh, Christopher (2009). ''Ohio State Football Football Huddleup'', Triumph Books (Random House, Inc.), {{ISBN|978-1-60078-186-5}}, p. 69.</ref> In 1899 the university hired John Eckstorm to bring professional coaching skills to the program and immediately went undefeated.<ref name="Spring08">[http://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/fls/17300/pdf/fb/guide/08_Spring_p100to129.pdf?SPSID=87751&SPID=10408&DB_OEM_ID=17300 Ohio State Spring Football 2008 – Part 2] {{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=Red Director |fix-attempted=yes }}, OSU Athletics, Spring 2008.</ref> In 1901, however, [[Center (American football)|center]] John Sigrist was fatally injured in a game against [[Case Western Reserve Spartans football|Western Reserve University]] and the continuation of football at Ohio State was in serious question. Although the school's athletic board let the team decide its future, Eckstorm resigned.<ref>Park, p.28</ref> In 1912, football underwent a number of developments that included joining the [[Big Ten Conference|Western Conference]], making football as part of a new Department of Athletics, and hiring [[Lynn St. John|Lynn W. St. John]] to be [[athletic director]].

[[Chic Harley]] attended East High in Columbus and was regarded as one of the greatest players to attend an Ohio high school. A well-rounded player, Harley came to Ohio State in 1916 and instantly became a fan favorite. Harley and the Buckeyes won the first Big Ten championship in school history in 1916, finishing 7–0. The team would repeat in 1917 finishing 8–0–1. In 1918, Harley left to be a pilot in the U.S. Army Air Service during World War I. With Harley's return in 1919, the Buckeyes would only lose one game, to Illinois. Harley left OSU with a career record of 22–1–1. At the time, OSU played at the small [[Ohio Field]] and Harley brought such record crowds it became necessary to open [[Ohio Stadium]] in 1922. The stadium was built entirely on fan donations and several stadium drives around the city where Harley would often appear. In 1951, when the [[College Football Hall of Fame]] opened, Harley was inducted as an inaugural member. Ohio State's first rival was [[Kenyon College]], a small liberal arts college in [[Gambier, Ohio|Gambier]], roughly 50 miles to the northeast. The Buckeyes first played them in their first season in 1890 on Nov 27, Kenyon won the first two meetings; however, Ohio State won 15 in a row and the rivalry diminished. Kenyon made it their season goal to defeat OSU. After the Bucks joined the Big Ten they stopped playing Kenyon. The all-time record stands at 17–6, OSU.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://athletics.kenyon.edu/sports/2012/12/17/FBALL_Series.aspx?id=724 |title=Football Series Records |access-date=June 28, 2021 |archive-date=June 28, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210628173909/https://athletics.kenyon.edu/sports/2012/12/17/FBALL_Series.aspx?id=724 |url-status=live }}</ref> In hiring [[Francis Schmidt]] in March 1934 to coach its football team, Ohio State moved its program to a "big-time" level of competition. Schmidt was a well-established coach and an acknowledged offensive innovator. His offensive schemes were a "wide-open" style called "razzle-dazzle" and led him to be the first Buckeye football coach granted a multi-year contract. Schmidt's first four seasons saw victories over archrival Michigan, all by shut-out. The 1935 squad went 7–1, its sole loss was to [[University of Notre Dame|Notre Dame]], 18–13, in the first contest between the programs. However Schmidt's remaining seasons were less successful, except in 1939 when the Buckeyes won the Big Ten championship, and his popularity faded for a number of reasons.<ref>Park, p.166.</ref> On December 17, 1940, he resigned.

===Paul Brown era (1941–1943)===

[[File:Paul Brown, American football head coach.png|right|thumb|175px|[[Paul Brown]] (shown here as head coach of the [[Cleveland Browns]]) led the Buckeyes to their first national championship in 1942.]]
Ohio State hired the coach of [[Massillon Washington High School]] football team, [[Paul Brown]], to succeed Schmidt.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://ohiohistorycentral.org/w/Paul_Brown | title=Paul Brown - Ohio History Central }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://spec.lib.miamioh.edu/cradleofcoaches/brown | title=Paul Brown · Cradle of Coaches }}</ref> Brown's Tigers had just won their sixth straight state championship. Brown immediately changed Ohio State's style of offense, planned and organized his program in great detail, and delegated to his assistant coaches using highly structured practices.

In 1942, Ohio State lost 22 veteran players to military service as the United States joined World War II, and with a team of mostly sophomores went on to lose only once in winning its first national championship. Brown accepted a commission in the [[United States Navy]] in 1944, ending his coaching run prior to the season.

===Team in flux (1944–1950)===
[[file:Les horvarth bowman card 1948.jpg|right|thumb|175px|Former Buckeyes QB/HB, 1942 National Champion, and 1944 [[Heisman Trophy]] winner [[Les Horvath]]]]
When Brown went into the Navy, he directed his assistant Carroll Widdoes to head the team in his absence. The 1944 team fielded 31&nbsp;[[First year|freshmen]] but went undefeated and untied, including a victory over Paul Brown's Great Lakes Navy team. Ohio State finished second in the national rankings behind [[United States Military Academy#Other sports|Army]] and [[Les Horvath]] became the first Buckeye to be awarded the [[Heisman Trophy]]. Also prominent on the 1942–44 teams was the first Buckeye [[African American]] star, [[Bill Willis]]. Brown chose not to return to Ohio State after the war, going into professional football instead.

Widdoes, despite having the highest two-year winning percentage of any Buckeye coach, asked to return to an assistant's position. Offensive coordinator [[Paul Bixler]] and Widdoes switched positions, and Bixler endured a mediocre 4–3–2 season. Bixler resigned and talk of Ohio State being a "graveyard of coaches" became commonplace, a reputation that lingered for decades.<ref name="SIbix">{{cite news| url = http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/ncaa/specials/preview/2006/teams/ten/ohiost.html| title = 2006 Team previews- Ohio State| publisher = SI.com| access-date = August 20, 2006| archive-date = July 20, 2006| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060720111550/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/ncaa/specials/preview/2006/teams/ten/ohiost.html| url-status = live}}</ref>

[[Wes Fesler]] became head coach in 1947 but finished last in the Big Ten for the only time in team history. Ohio State improved greatly in 1948, winning 6 and losing 3, then in 1949 enjoyed a successful season due to the play of sophomore [[Vic Janowicz]]. Ohio State received the [[Rose Bowl (game)|Rose Bowl]] invitation, where they came from behind to defeat [[California Golden Bears|California]].

In 1950, Fesler, rumored to be resigning because of pressures associated with the position and abuse of his family by anonymous critics, returned to coach the Buckeyes, who won six games in a row to move into the top ranking in the AP poll. However, the season fell apart as the Buckeyes lost to Michigan during a [[blizzard]], a game that came to be known as the "[[Snow Bowl (1950)|Snow Bowl]]". Two weeks later, citing concerns about his health and family, Fesler resigned.

===Woody Hayes era (1951–1978)===
[[File:President Gerald R. Ford and Ohio State University Football Coach Woody Hayes at the Port Columbus Airport in Columbus, Ohio - NARA - 30805881 (cropped).jpg|right|thumb|175px|[[Woody Hayes]], who won 205 games, five National Championships, and 13 Big Ten Championships - all team records - in 28 seasons (1951-1978) as head coach of the Buckeyes.]]

====Early days====
[[Woody Hayes|Wayne Woodrow "Woody" Hayes]] beat out Paul Brown,<ref>Park, p. 275</ref> among others, to be named head coach on February 18, 1951. He instituted a demanding practice regimen and was both aggressive and vocal in enforcing it, alienating many players accustomed to Fesler's laid-back style. The 1951 Buckeyes won 4, lost 3, and tied 2, leaving many to question the ability of the new coach. In 1952, the team improved to 6–3 and recorded their first victory over Michigan in eight years, but after a 1953 loss to Michigan, critics called for the replacement of Hayes. In 1954, the Buckeyes were picked to finish no higher than 10th in the Big Ten. Hayes, however, had the talents of [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]], and a historic goal-line stand against Michigan propelled Ohio State to a perfect season. Hayes led the powerhouse Buckeyes to a shared national championship (his first and the team's second). In 1955 the team again won the Big Ten, set an attendance record, and won in Ann Arbor for the first time in 18&nbsp; years, while Hopalong Cassady was securing the Heisman Trophy. Ohio State passed only three times against Michigan (the sole reception was the only completion in the final three games of the year), leading to the characterization of Hayes' style of offensive play as "three yards and a cloud of dust". In a 1955 article in ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'', Hayes admitted to making small personal loans to financially needy players.<ref name="misshapen">{{cite web| url = http://www.buckeye50.com/Drive_Drive_Down_the_field_15_to_11.html| title = #11—Iowa at Ohio State—November 11, 1957| publisher = The Buckeye 50 Yard Line| access-date = October 2, 2006| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20061127011223/http://www.buckeye50.com/Drive_Drive_Down_the_field_15_to_11.html| archive-date = November 27, 2006| url-status = dead| df = mdy-all}}</ref> The article resulted in a furor over possible violations of [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] rules, and the faculty council, followed by the Big Ten and NCAA, conducted lengthy investigations. Big Ten Commissioner Kenneth "Tug" Wilson found Hayes and the program guilty of violations and placed it on a year's probation in 1956.

====Championship glory====
In 1957, Ohio State won all of its remaining games after an opening loss to claim the Big Ten championship, then won the Rose Bowl over [[University of Oregon|Oregon]], and shared a national title with [[Auburn University|Auburn]], for which Hayes was named [[Paul "Bear" Bryant Award|Coach of the Year]].
[[file:Howard Cassady (1953 Makio).jpg|left|thumb|175px|Former Buckeyes running back/receiver, 1954 National Champion, and 1955 Heisman Trophy winner [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]]]]
In 1961, the team went undefeated to be named national champions by the [[Football Writers Association of America|FWAA]] but a growing conflict between academics and athletics over Ohio State's reputation as a "football school" resulted in a faculty council vote to decline an invitation to the Rose Bowl, resulting in much public protest and debate.<ref>Park, pp. 340, 342.</ref> Over the next 6 seasons, Ohio State finished no higher than 2nd and had a losing season in 1966, and public speculation that Hayes would be replaced as a coach grew to its highest point since 1953. In 1968, Ohio State defeated the number one-ranked [[Purdue Boilermakers]] and continued to an undefeated season including a 50–14 rout of Michigan and a Rose Bowl victory over the [[USC Trojans]] that resulted in the national championship. The Class of 1970 became known as the "super sophomores" in 1968 and might have gone on to three consecutive national championships except for what may have been the most bitter loss in Buckeye history. The winning streak reached 22 games as Ohio State traveled to Michigan. The Buckeyes were 17-point favorites but directed by first-year coach [[Bo Schembechler]], Michigan shocked the Buckeyes in a 24–12 upset. The 1969 loss to Michigan initiated what came to be known as "The Ten Year War", in which the rivalry, which pitted some of OSU's and UM's strongest teams ever, rose to the uppermost level of all sports and the competition between Schembechler and Hayes became legendary.<ref name="Maisel">{{cite web| url = https://proxy.espn.com/college-football/columns/story?columnist=maisel_ivan&id=1667333| title = UM-OSU more than just a game| date = November 21, 2003| publisher = ESPN| access-date = October 13, 2006| archive-date = June 5, 2011| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20110605103302/http://proxy.espn.go.com/ncf/columns/story?columnist=maisel_ivan&id=1667333| url-status = live}}</ref> Four times between 1970 and 1975, Ohio State and Michigan were both ranked in the top five of the AP Poll before their matchup. The Wolverines entered every game during those years undefeated and won only once, a 10–7 victory in Ann Arbor on November 20, 1971. Both teams used the annual game as motivation for entire seasons and after the initial win by Michigan, played dead even at four wins and a tie apiece. Hayes had the upper hand during the first part of the war, in which Ohio State won the conference championship and went to the Rose Bowl four straight years, while Michigan won the final three. It was also an era in which through television Ohio State football again came to the forefront of national attention.

Hayes set the tone in spring practice in 1970, placing a rug at the entrance to the Buckeye dressing room emblazoned with the words: "1969 MICH 24 OSU 12 — 1970 MICH:__ OSU:__" as a constant reminder of their objective.<ref>Park, p. 391 (park has a picture of the rug).</ref> The "super sophomores", now seniors, used a strong fullback-oriented offense to smash their way through the season undefeated, struggling only with Purdue the week before the Michigan game. The return match in Columbus found both teams undefeated and untied, a "first" in the history of the rivalry, with Michigan, ranked fourth and Ohio State fifth. Ohio State combined a powerful defense that held Michigan to only 37&nbsp; yards rushing, a rushing offense employing two tight ends as blockers, and a 26-yard touchdown pass from Kern to [[Bruce Jankowski]] to win 20–9. The Buckeyes returned to the Rose Bowl to be upset by [[Stanford Cardinal|Stanford]] 27–17. The "super sophomores" had garnered a record of 27–2, the best winning percentage of any three-year period in team history, and won or shared the Big Ten title all three years. The [[National Football Foundation]] named Ohio State as a national co-champion, along with [[1970 Texas Longhorns football team|Texas]], for 1970 and awarded the teams joint possession of the [[MacArthur Bowl]]. 1971 was less successful than the preceding seasons, but the middle four years of the 10-year war saw the greatest success for Hayes against Michigan, although the teams fell short of repeating their 1968 national championship. [[Archie Griffin]] began his college football career in 1972, taking advantage of new NCAA eligibility rules that allowed freshmen to compete at the varsity level. In his second game, sent in against [[North Carolina Tarheels|North Carolina]] late in the first quarter, Griffin set a new Buckeye rushing record with 239&nbsp;yards and led the team in rushing for the season with 867.

[[File:Archie Griffin 2015.jpg|right|175px|thumb|Former Buckeyes RB [[Archie Griffin]], the only two-time [[Heisman Trophy]] winner in college football history (1974–75)]]
The following season, Hayes installed an [[I-formation]] attack with Griffin at tailback and fellow sophomore [[Cornelius Greene]] at quarterback. The Buckeyes went undefeated with a powerful offense and impenetrable defense, achieving an average margin of victory of 31 points a game. The only blemish on their record was a 10–10 tie with Michigan after both teams had entered the game unbeaten. (The tie was more galling for the Wolverines, however, as the Big Ten selected Ohio State to represent the conference in the Rose Bowl.) Despite soundly defeating defending national champion [[University of Southern California|USC]], however, the tie with Michigan resulted in the Buckeyes finishing second to [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish|Notre Dame]] in the final [[Associated Press|AP]] rankings. Griffin, [[Randy Gradishar]], [[Van DeCree]], and [[John Hicks (American football)|John Hicks]] were named All-Americans; Hicks, an offensive tackle, not only won both the [[Outland Trophy|Outland]] and [[Lombardi Award|Lombardi Trophies]] but placed second in the [[Heisman Trophy]] competition. 1974 and 1975 were seasons of both elation and frustration. The Buckeyes twice more defeated Michigan, and went to two Rose Bowls, but lost both. The 1974 team seemed bound for another national championship when it was derailed by a loss to unranked [[Michigan State Spartans|Michigan State]] (Ohio State lost only twice in the regular season during Griffin's four-year career, both to the Spartans), and the next year, the No. 1-ranked Bucks lost 23–10 to 11th-ranked [[UCLA]] in the [[1976 Rose Bowl]]. In all, the Buckeyes were 40–5–1 from 1972 to 1975, winning the Big Ten all four years and never losing to Michigan, but it was the losses and ties that proved important to Ohio State missing out on achieving a national championship. At any rate, [[Archie Griffin]] rushed for 5,589 yards combined in his four seasons at Ohio State while winning the [[Heisman Trophy]] in 1974 (1,695 yards rushed) and 1975 (1,450 yards).<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/players/archie-griffin-1.html|title=Archie Griffin College Stats}}</ref>

====Downfall====
The falloff in the success of Hayes' last three years was not great. His teams forged records of 9–2–1, 9–3, and 7–4–1, and made bowl appearances in all three years (the rules had changed to allow appearances in other than the Rose Bowl). However, frustrations in losing three straight years to Michigan, and other factors, resulted in growing criticism of Hayes and his methods, particularly his on-the-field fits of temper. Even so, his downfall was sudden and shocking when near the end of the nationally televised [[Gator Bowl]], Hayes punched [[Clemson Tigers|Clemson]] [[middle guard]] Charlie Bauman after Bauman intercepted a pass to kill Ohio State's last chance to win.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/bowls13/story/_/id/10215217/the-punch-ended-woody-hayes-career | title=Bennett: The punch that ended Woody Hayes' career | date=December 30, 2013 }}</ref> Hayes was fired after the game by Ohio State president Harold Enarson and athletic director Hugh Hindman.<ref name="Sports Illustrated, 2016">{{cite web |title=Woody Hayes's last stand: Ohio State, Clemson and the punch that ruined Hayes |url=https://www.si.com/college-football/2016/12/23/woody-hayes-punch-clemson-ohio-state |publisher=Sports Illustrated |date=December 23, 2016|access-date=December 20, 2019}}</ref>

===Earle Bruce era (1979–1987)===
Hayes was replaced by a former protégé, [[Iowa State Cyclones football|Iowa State]] head coach [[Earle Bruce]].<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/1979/01/12/archives/ohio-state-is-set-to-name-bruce.html | title=Ohio State is Set to Name Bruce | newspaper=The New York Times | date=January 12, 1979 }}</ref> Bruce inherited a strong team led by sophomore quarterback [[Art Schlichter]] but that had also lost 11 starters, and the 1979 squad exceeded pre-season expectations, ending the 3-year loss drought against Michigan and going to the [[Rose Bowl Game|Rose Bowl]] with an opportunity once again to be national champions. The Buckeyes lost both by a single point, 17–16, but Bruce was named [[Paul "Bear" Bryant Award|Coach of the Year]]. His success was hailed by those in the media who saw it as a rebuke of Hayes and the start of a "new era".<ref name="earle">{{cite news | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,946372-1,00.html| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070930110007/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,946372-1,00.html| url-status = dead| archive-date = September 30, 2007| title = Making 'Em Forget Woody| publisher = Time Magazine| access-date = December 11, 2006 | date=November 12, 1979}}</ref> 1980, however, saw the start of a trend that eventually brought criticism to Bruce, when Ohio State finished with a 9–3 record, the first of six consecutive years at 9–3. Though each of these seasons, and the 10–3 season that followed them, culminated in a bowl game, Ohio State did not appear to be any closer to a national championship than during the end of the Hayes era. Bruce's teams were not without impact players, however. All-Americans and future [[National Football League]] stars included [[Keith Byars]], [[Cris Carter]], [[Chris Spielman]], [[John E. Frank|John Frank]], [[Jim Lachey]], [[Tom Tupa]], [[Marcus Marek]], and [[Pepper Johnson]]. His program was also known for the number of notable assistant coaches on staff, including [[Jim Tressel]], [[Glen Mason]], [[Pete Carroll]], [[Nick Saban]], [[Urban Meyer]] and [[Dom Capers]]. For the first time since 1922, the Buckeyes lost three in a row in Ohio Stadium in 1982, including rematches with Stanford and Florida State, and for the second year in a row to Wisconsin, but then won seven straight, the last over [[Brigham Young University#Football|BYU]] in the [[Holiday Bowl]]. Sophomore running back Keith Byars had a stand-out season in 1983, rushing for 1,199 yards, and Ohio State defeated the [[Oklahoma Sooners]] in [[Norman, Oklahoma|Norman]], but three losses in conference meant a 4th-place finish. 1984 witnessed what Bruce called "the greatest comeback after the worst start" when Ohio State fell behind Illinois 24–0 at home but roared back on 274 yards rushing and five touchdowns by Byars to win 45–38. Ohio State also defeated Michigan to win an outright Big Ten championship. Byars led the nation in rushing and scoring but finished second in Heisman balloting.

====Downfall====
In 1986, Bruce received a 3-year contract, the first for the modern program but the team opened with two losses, which had not occurred in over 90 years. The Buckeyes then won 9 in a row before Michigan took a close game when kicker Matt Frantz missed a field goal with a minute to play. After the season Bruce was offered the position of head coach at the University of Arizona with a 5-year contract but was persuaded to stay at his [[alma mater]] by Athletic Director Rick Bay. Hopes for a standout season in 1987 suffered a serious setback when All-American wide receiver [[Cris Carter]] was dropped from the team for signing with an agent. Indiana defeated Ohio State for the first time since 1951, 31–10, in a game that came to be known as the "darkest day",<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-10-11-sp-13424-story.html | title=Indiana Turns Back Ohio State for First Time in 31 Meetings | website=[[Los Angeles Times]] | date=October 11, 1987 }}</ref> and Ohio State lost three conference games in a row going into the Michigan game. On the Monday of Michigan week, after a weekend of rumors and speculation, Ohio State President [[Edward H. Jennings|Edward Jennings]] fired Bruce but tried to keep the dismissal secret until after the end of the season. Bay, who had been instrumental in keeping Bruce at Ohio State, disregarded Jennings' orders and announced the firing and his own resignation in protest. Jennings made his own situation worse by refusing to give a reason for the firing and the circumstances have been the subject of controversy since.<ref>Park, pp. 537–538</ref> The Buckeyes enjoyed an emotional come-from-behind victory over Michigan in Ann Arbor after the entire team wore [[headband]]s bearing the word "EARLE", then declined an invitation to play in the [[Sun Bowl]].

===John Cooper era (1988–2000)===
====Early days====
[[John Cooper (coach)|John Cooper]] was hired as the 21st football head coach at Ohio State before the end of 1987 and before he had coached his last game at [[Arizona State University]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.upi.com/Archives/1987/12/31/John-Cooper-12-hours-after-leading-Arizona-State-to/3544567925200/ | title=John Cooper, 12 hours after leading Arizona State to }}</ref> Cooper's coaching record at ASU and at [[University of Tulsa|Tulsa]] prior to that stood out among his credentials, as did a victory over Michigan in the 1987 Rose Bowl.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-12-30-sp-21587-story.html | title=Ohio State Reportedly to Hire ASU's Cooper; Kansas Job to Mason | website=[[Los Angeles Times]] | date=December 30, 1987 }}</ref>

Cooper's 13 years as the Buckeye head coach are largely remembered in the litany of negative statistics associated with him: a notorious 2–10–1 record against Michigan, a 3–8 record in bowl games, a 5-year losing streak to Illinois to start his term and a 6–7 record overall, and blowing a 15-point 3rd quarter lead in a 28–24 loss to unranked Michigan State when the Buckeyes were the top-ranked team in the nation and en route to a national championship. However, his record also has many positives: back-to-back victories over Notre Dame, two finishes second-ranked in the polls, and three Big Ten championships (albeit shared). Cooper also recruited 15 players who were first-round draft picks in the [[National Football League]].<ref name="coopbio">{{cite web| url = http://ohiostatebuckeyes.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/mtt/cooper_john01.html| title = John Cooper Profile| publisher = TOSU Football Official Site| access-date = December 19, 2006}} {{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=Red Director |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>

Both 1988 and 1989 began identically: a season-opening win followed by an embarrassing loss to a highly regarded team ([[Pitt Panthers|Pitt]] and [[USC Trojans|USC]]); a rebound win against two other highly regarded programs ([[LSU Tigers|LSU]] and [[Boston College Eagles|Boston College]]) followed by a loss to Illinois in the conference opener. However, 1988 saw Ohio State lose its first three conference games and a close game at home against Michigan for a 4–6–1 record, its first losing season in 22 years. In 1989 the Buckeyes won 6 consecutive Big Ten games before losing its last two to go 8–4. The most noteworthy victory occurred in [[Minneapolis]] when Ohio State overcame a 31–0 deficit to Minnesota to win 41–37. 1990 continued the pattern with a 2-win 2-loss start and an overall 7–4–1 record that included an embarrassing loss to [[Air Force Falcons football|Air Force]] in the [[Liberty Bowl]]. 1991 was 8–4, notable primarily as the season that sophomore running back [[Robert Smith (running back)|Robert Smith]] quit the team. 1992, with senior [[Kirk Herbstreit]] at quarterback, and Smith back on the team was 8–3–1, but the losing string to Michigan was broken with a 13–13 tie. Persistent rumors that Cooper would resign or be fired were laid to rest when University President [[Gordon Gee]] announced he would be back in 1993.<ref name="coop">{{cite news| url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE1DE133CF935A35751C1A964958260&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fOrganizations%2fO%2fOhio%20State%20University| title = Cooper Will Be Back| work = [[The New York Times]]| access-date = December 19, 2006| date = December 6, 1992| archive-date = September 11, 2021| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210911194104/https://www.nytimes.com/1992/12/06/sports/sports-people-football-cooper-will-be-back.html| url-status = live}}</ref>

[[File:Eddie George.jpg|175px|right|thumb|Former Buckeyes RB [[Eddie George]], who won the 1995 [[Heisman Trophy]].]]

====Failures against Michigan====
The next six seasons were very successful, winning 10 or more games in five out of six, and sharing the conference championship in three. [[Eddie George]] won the [[Heisman Trophy]] in 1995 after a tremendous senior season, Ohio State defeated Notre Dame in 1995 and 1996, and won half its bowl games. But in three seasons (1993, 1995, and 1996) the Buckeyes entered the Michigan game undefeated, with the possibility of a national championship in at least one, and lost all three to underdog Wolverine teams. Ohio State had won 62 games and lost only 12, but a third of those were to Michigan. After renewing his contract and becoming a member of the "million dollar coaching club",<ref name="cop$$$">{{cite news| url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C01EFD9133CF932A35750C0A96F958260&n=Top%2fReference%2fTimes%20Topics%2fOrganizations%2fO%2fOhio%20State%20University| title = Coach Joining $1 Million Club| work = [[The New York Times]]| access-date = December 19, 2006| date = March 1, 1999| archive-date = September 11, 2021| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210911194058/https://www.nytimes.com/1999/03/01/sports/plus-college-football-ohio-state-coach-joining-1-million-club.html| url-status = live}}</ref> Cooper started sophomore Austin Moherman against the [[Miami Hurricanes]] in the nationally televised [[Kickoff Classic]] and was soundly beaten. That presaged a mediocre season in which the Buckeyes finished 6–6, ending their successful 90's run. The 2000 team was more successful, going 8–4, but criticism of Cooper among fans had risen to a clamor again and touched on many areas of the program beyond specific game records. The negative publicity rose to a peak in the days leading up to Ohio State's matchup with [[South Carolina Gamecocks|South Carolina]] in the [[Outback Bowl]], when wide receiver Reggie Germany was suspended for having a 0.0 [[GPA]], team captain [[Matt Wilhelm]] publicly criticized fellow player [[Ken-Yon Rambo]], and one Buckeye lineman sued another.<ref name="reggie&co">{{cite news| url = http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/college/2000/bowls/outback/| title = Getting a Little Payback| publisher = CNN-Sports Illustrated| access-date = December 19, 2006| archive-date = May 10, 2006| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060510124802/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/football/college/2000/bowls/outback/| url-status = live}}</ref>

====Downfall====
On January 3, 2001, Cooper was fired.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2001/01/03/sports/college-football-cooper-fired-at-ohio-state.html | title=COLLEGE FOOTBALL; Cooper Fired at Ohio State | newspaper=The New York Times | date=January 3, 2001 }}</ref> His loss in the Outback Bowl to a team that had not even won a single game the year before was a factor in his subsequent firing, as was negative publicity regarding player behavior before and during the game. Other contributing factors included the record against Michigan (which was actually considered by most people to be the biggest reason for his firing), a reputation of inability to win "big games", the lack of a national championship, the perception of him as an outsider by many alumni, the poor bowl game record, and finally a perceived lack of discipline on the team.

===Jim Tressel era (2001–2010)===
[[File:Coach Tressel.png|175px|thumb|right|Former head coach [[Jim Tressel]], who led the Buckeyes to the 2002 National Championship, and six Big Ten titles.]]
====Early days====
Ohio State quickly sought a replacement for Cooper and after a nationwide search hired Jim Tressel.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2001-01-18-0101180209-story.html | title=Tressel Picked to Coach Ohio St | website=[[Chicago Tribune]] | date=January 18, 2001 }}</ref> With four NCAA [[Division I-AA]] National Championships at [[Youngstown State University]], Tressel, formerly an assistant coach for Earle Bruce, was an Ohioan who was considered to be appreciative of Buckeye football traditions. Although there were some doubts as to whether or not Tressel could repeat his earlier success at the Division 1A level, most fans and alumni met the coaching change with enthusiasm. On the day of his hiring, Jim Tressel, speaking to fans and students at a Buckeye basketball game, made a prophetic implication that he would lead the Buckeyes to beat Michigan in Ann Arbor the following November.<ref name="310days">{{cite web|url=http://www.michigandaily.com/news/2001/07/23/Sports/Tressel.Eyes.Finally.Bucking.The.Wolverines-1408404.shtml |title=Tressel Eyes Finally Bucking the Wolverines |publisher=The Michigan Daily |access-date=December 11, 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071221173235/http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/storage/paper851/news/2001/07/23/Sports/Tressel.Eyes.Finally.Bucking.The.Wolverines-1408404.shtml |archive-date=December 21, 2007 }}</ref> Tressel's first season was difficult as the Buckeyes finished 7–5 (all but one loss was by a touchdown or less), but he made good on his promise, beating Michigan in Ann Arbor.

====National Championship====
While its fans were optimistic about the chance for success of the 2002 team, most observers were surprised by Ohio State's [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|National Championship]].<ref name="surprised">{{cite web| url = http://www.covers.com/articles/articles.aspx?theArt=99132&tid=30| title = BCS National Title Game Bowl preview| publisher = Covers.com| access-date = January 13, 2007| archive-date = December 5, 2013| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131205033253/http://www.covers.com/articles/articles.aspx?theArt=99132&tid=30| url-status = dead}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book|author=Paul Keels|chapter=Chapter 1 Expectations|title=Paul Keels Tales from the Buckeyes' Championship Season|publisher=Sports Publishing LLC|isbn=1-58261-539-X|year=2003|page=[https://archive.org/details/paulkeelsstalesf0000keel/page/6 6]|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/paulkeelsstalesf0000keel/page/6}}</ref> Ohio State used strong defense, ball-control play-calling, and field position tactics to win numerous close games, a style of play characterized as "Tresselball",<ref name="tresselball">{{cite web| url = https://proxy.espn.com/college-football/columns/story?columnist=maisel_ivan&id=1662661| title = Tresselball just keeps winning| date = November 15, 2003| publisher = ESPN| access-date = December 19, 2006| archive-date = December 2, 2008| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081202174406/http://proxy.espn.go.com/ncf/columns/story?columnist=maisel_ivan&id=1662661| url-status = live}}</ref> and disparaged by detractors as "the Luckeyes".<ref name="luckeyes">{{cite news|last=Ridenour|first=Marla|url=http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-8169824_ITM|title=Ohio State must shake Luckeyes image|publisher=Akron Beacon-Journal|access-date=December 19, 2006|date=August 27, 2003|archive-date=September 30, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930182438/http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-8169824_ITM|url-status=live}}</ref>

====Later years====
The 2006 and 2007 regular seasons ended with just one combined loss and consecutive appearances in the national championship game. The Buckeyes lost both by wide margins. On January 1, 2010, the Buckeyes defeated the Oregon Ducks in The Rose Bowl Game by a score of 26–17. This ended a 3-game BCS losing streak for Ohio State, having lost 2 national championships and one Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. [[Terrelle Pryor]] was named MVP of the contest with 2 touchdown passes for a career-high 266 passing yards. In addition, he had more total yards than the entire Oregon Ducks team.

===="Tattoogate"====
{{Main article|Ohio State University football scandal}}
[[File:Troy Smith Ravens.jpg|thumb|right|175px|Former Buckeyes QB [[Troy Smith]] (shown as a member of the NFL's [[Baltimore Ravens]]), the 2006 [[Heisman Trophy]] winner]]
In December 2010, it was announced that five student-athletes on the football team would be suspended for the first five games of the 2011 season for NCAA violations. The punishments stemmed from an incident when some of the Buckeye players received tattoos for their autographs, according to news reports. Other violations committed by the players included the selling of several items given to them by the university, such as Big Ten championship rings.<ref name=history>{{cite news | url=http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/12/23/5-ohio-state-football-players-suspended/?hpt=T1 | work=CNN | title=Terrelle Pryor, 5 other Ohio State football players suspended – This Just In | date=December 23, 2010 | access-date=December 23, 2010 | archive-date=December 26, 2010 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101226020443/http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/12/23/5-ohio-state-football-players-suspended/?hpt=T1 | url-status=dead }}</ref>

On December 22, 2010, the NCAA announced that five players would be suspended for the first five games of the 2011 season due to receiving improper benefits. Mike Adams, [[Dan Herron]], [[DeVier Posey]], Solomon Thomas, and quarterback [[Terrelle Pryor]] were found to have signed autographs in return for tattoos, as well as selling memorabilia given to them by the university.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/sports/ncaafootball/24buckeyes.html | title=Ohio State Players, Including Pryor, Suspended for Five Games in 2011 | newspaper=The New York Times | date=December 24, 2010 | last1=Thamel | first1=Pete |author-link=Pete Thamel }}</ref> In addition, Jordan Whiting was suspended for the season opener for his involvement. The scandal originated at Fine Line Tattoos and Piercings in Columbus, whose owner, Edward Rife, was being investigated for felony drug trafficking. On January 4, 2011, with all the players allowed to participate by the NCAA, the Buckeyes defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks in the Sugar Bowl by a margin of 31–26.<ref name=SEC>{{cite news | url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/andy_staples/01/05/sugar.bowl.ohiostate.arkansas/index.html | work=CNN | title=Buckeyes, Big Ten show they can rival both SEC's teams and ethics | date=January 5, 2011 | access-date=January 21, 2011 | archive-date=January 8, 2011 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110108103324/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/andy_staples/01/05/sugar.bowl.ohiostate.arkansas/index.html | url-status=live }}</ref> The win, along with every other one from the 2010 season, would later be vacated due to the scandal. The Buckeyes finished the season 12–1, with their only official game being a loss to Wisconsin.

====Downfall====
On March 8, 2011, OSU suspended head coach Jim Tressel for the first 2 games of the 2011 season and fined him $250,000 for not informing the university and the NCAA that he had knowledge of his players receiving improper benefits. Coach Tressel's suspension would later be increased to 5 games by the university. On May 30, 2011, Jim Tressel resigned as head coach of the Buckeyes.<ref name="Greenberg, Martin J">[https://web.archive.org/web/20131211041047/http://law.marquette.edu/national-sports-law-institute/tattoogate-january-10-2012 "Tattoogate (January 10, 2012)"], ''Marquette University Law School'', January 10, 2011.</ref> On June 6, 2011, a story in ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' reported that at least 28 players, including [[Rob Rose (American football)|Rob Rose]], T. J. Downing, Louis Irizarry, Chris Vance, C. J. Barnett, Dorien Bell, Jamaal Berry, Bo DeLande, Zach Domicone, Storm Klein, [[Etienne Sabino]], John Simon, Nathan Williams, [[Jermale Hines]], Devon Torrence, [[Donald Washington (American football)|Donald Washington]], [[Thaddeus Gibson]], Jermil Martin, Lamaar Thomas, and [[Doug Worthington]] traded team memorabilia or used equipment for tattoos or other merchandise or services between 2002 and 2010. The report alleged that Tressel had violated NCAA bylaw 10.1, unethical conduct, three times by not acting when told of the tattoo improprieties, by signing a statement saying he knew of no violations, and for withholding information on what was going on from university officials.<ref name="Dohrmann, George 2011, pp. 40-48">[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1186822/index.htm Dohrmann, George, "The Fall of Jim Tressel"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120101024105/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1186822/index.htm |date=January 1, 2012 }}, ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'', June 6, 2011, pp. 40–48.</ref>

===Luke Fickell (2011)===
On July 8, 2011, Ohio State University decided to vacate all victories from the 2010 football season as self-imposed punishment for major NCAA violations.<ref>{{cite web |author=The Columbus Dispatch |url=http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/sports/stories/2011/07/08/0708-ohio-state-pleads-case-to-ncaa.html |title=Ohio State vacates wins from 2010 football season, places program on probation &#124; The Columbus Dispatch |publisher=Dispatch.com |date=July 8, 2011 |access-date=June 2, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711152038/http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/sports/stories/2011/07/08/0708-ohio-state-pleads-case-to-ncaa.html |archive-date=July 11, 2011 }}</ref> Former coach Jim Tressel received more than $52,000 from the university and didn't have to pay a $250,000 fine for his involvement in the scandal. His status was also changed from "Resigned" to "Retired" in keeping with his wishes to "remain a Buckeye for life".<ref>{{cite web |author=The Columbus Dispatch |url=http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/sports/stories/2011/07/08/0708-ohio-state-tressel.html |title=Ohio State waives fine, instead will pay Tressel $52,250 &#124; The Columbus Dispatch |publisher=Dispatch.com |date=July 8, 2011 |access-date=June 2, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711152219/http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/sports/stories/2011/07/08/0708-ohio-state-tressel.html |archive-date=July 11, 2011 }}</ref> Ohio State named [[Luke Fickell]] interim head coach for the 2011 season following Tressel's resignation, and Fickell coached the 2011 Buckeyes to a 6–7 record; going 6–6 in the regular season and losing in the [[2012 Gator Bowl|Gator Bowl]] to Florida.

===Urban Meyer era (2012–2018)===
[[File:Urban Meyer in 2017 (cropped).jpg|right|175px|thumb|Former head coach [[Urban Meyer]], who led the Buckeyes to seven division titles, three Big Ten Championships, the 2014 national championship, and the team's all-time record winning streak (24).]]

====Early years====
On November 28, 2011, former [[Florida Gators football|University of Florida]] head coach and [[ESPN]] college football analyst [[Urban Meyer]] accepted the position of Buckeyes head coach.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/7289592/urban-meyer-joins-ohio-state-buckeyes-coach-1-year-hiatus-sources-say |title=Urban Meyer joins Ohio State Buckeyes as coach after 1-year hiatus, sources say |work=ESPN |date=November 28, 2011 |access-date=June 2, 2013 |archive-date=June 6, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130606044652/http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/7289592/urban-meyer-joins-ohio-state-buckeyes-coach-1-year-hiatus-sources-say |url-status=live }}</ref> Meyer assumed head coaching responsibilities following the Buckeyes' January 2012 Gator Bowl appearance. Meyer's first season at Ohio State did not include a postseason contest, as the Buckeyes were sanctioned with a one-year bowl ban on December 20, 2011. The NCAA sanctions also included the loss of three scholarships each year for the following three years and three years' probation to end on December 19, 2014. Ohio State was required to vacate all wins from the 2010 season, the 2010 Big Ten Conference championship and their win in the [[2011 Sugar Bowl]]. The school's share of the Sugar Bowl proceeds was forfeited as well.<ref name="2011 Sanctions">{{cite web |author=The Columbus Dispatch |url=http://www.buckeyextra.com/content/stories/2011/12/20/ncaa-report.html |title=NCAA: Ohio State banned from postseason play next season Ohio|publisher=Buckeyextra.com|access-date=June 2, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120622004210/http://www.buckeyextra.com/content/stories/2011/12/20/ncaa-report.html |archive-date=June 22, 2012 }}</ref> In Meyer's first year, the Buckeyes went a perfect 12–0, winning the 2012 [[Big Ten Football Championship Game|Big Ten Leaders Division]], though the previously mentioned sanctions kept them from playing in the 2012 Big Ten Football Championship Game and a postseason bowl game.<ref name="2011 Sanctions"/> On November 23, 2013, the Buckeyes clinched their second straight Leaders Division Championship, after defeating Indiana 42–14. With the victory over Indiana, Ohio State set a team record for all-time consecutive wins, with 23. The following week, Ohio State defeated Michigan 42–41 in Ann Arbor, to increase the streak to 24. The streak ended with Ohio State's 34–24 loss to Michigan State in the 2013 Big Ten Conference Championship game on December 7, marking Meyer's first loss as the Buckeyes' head coach. On January 3, 2014, the Buckeyes were defeated by [[Clemson University|Clemson]] in the [[Orange Bowl]] 40–35.

====National Championship====
[[File:OSU 125th anniversary.png|right|175px|thumb|The logo for the 2014 National Champion Buckeyes, which celebrated the football program's 125th anniversary]]
On November 22, 2014, the Buckeyes clinched the first-ever Big Ten East Division Championship when they defeated Indiana 42–27, earning a berth in the 2014 [[Big Ten Football Championship Game|Big Ten Championship Game]], where they defeated West Division champion Wisconsin 59–0 to win the Big Ten Conference Championship and qualified for the four-team playoff to decide the National Champion. OSU defeated [[University of Alabama|Alabama]] in the [[2015 Sugar Bowl|Sugar Bowl]] 42–35, on January 1, 2015, to qualify for the National Championship Game against Rose Bowl winner [[University of Oregon|Oregon]] on January 12 (the Rose and Sugar Bowls were the designated semifinal games in 2014). OSU claimed the first-ever [[College Football Playoff National Championship]] by defeating Oregon 42–20.<ref name = "OSU B10East">{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/recap?gameId=400547926|title=Indiana vs. Ohio State – Game Recap – November 22, 2014 |website=ESPN|access-date=November 22, 2014|archive-date=November 23, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141123092544/http://espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=400547926|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://espncleveland.com/common/more.php?m=49&post_id=40621|title=Buckeyes make playoff Cleveland.com|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141209160341/http://espncleveland.com/common/more.php?m=49&post_id=40621|archive-date=December 9, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/recap?gameId=400610178|title=Alabama vs. Ohio State – Game Recap – January 1, 2015 |website=ESPN|access-date=January 12, 2015|archive-date=January 15, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150115104928/http://espn.go.com/ncf/recap?gameId=400610178|url-status=live}}</ref>

====Later years====
The 2015 season for the Buckeyes began with a 10–0 start before losing on a last-second field goal to Michigan State on November 21, ending the Buckeyes' quest to repeat as National Champions. However, the Buckeyes recovered their 2 next games with dominating wins over Michigan and then over Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl to finish the season at 12–1. The 2016 season started off great with 6 straight victories, including a win over the Oklahoma Sooners, but the streak came to an end as the team lost a heart-breaker to the Penn State Nittany Lions. The Buckeyes went on to win the rest of their regular-season games, finishing 11–1. They did not play in the Big Ten Championship as Penn State took the division. In a controversial call, the College Football Playoff committee gave Ohio State a spot in the Playoff. Ohio State lost in the Fiesta Bowl to the Clemson Tigers in an embarrassing 31–0 loss, ending the season 11–2. The 2017 season started out on a high note with a victory over the Indiana Hoosiers, but the next week the Buckeyes fell to the Oklahoma Sooners. The Buckeyes won the next 6 games, including a win over No. 2 Penn State in a revenge game of sorts. The Buckeyes suffered an embarrassing defeat against the Iowa Hawkeyes. The Buckeyes ended the season 12–2 overall, winning the rest of their games including a Big Ten Championship victory over Wisconsin and a Cotton Bowl victory over USC.

====Downfall====
Urban Meyer was suspended for the first three games of the 2018 season for mishandling domestic violence allegations against then-wide receivers coach Zach Smith. Co-Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Ryan Day served as interim coach and led the Buckeyes to a 3–0 start. Meyer returned to the sidelines and coached the team to four more victories before the team suffered a loss on October 20 to Purdue, 49–20. The Buckeyes won their last four games of the regular season, including a 62–39 win over archrival Michigan, in Columbus. The win gave the Buckeyes a share of the Big Ten East Division title, and the right to face Northwestern in the Big Ten Championship Game, which Ohio State won for its second consecutive Big Ten Championship. Ohio State would go on to win the Rose Bowl over Pac-12 Champion Washington 28–23, giving Ohio State their 8th Rose Bowl win.

===Ryan Day era (2019–present)===
[[File:Ryan Day 2019.png|right|thumb|175px|Current head coach [[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]], who has led the Buckeyes to two Big Ten Championships]]
On December 4, 2018, the university announced that Meyer would retire after the [[2019 Rose Bowl]] and be replaced by co-offensive coordinator [[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Sallee |first1=Barrett |title=Ohio State coach Urban Meyer set to announce retirement, Ryan Day to replace him with Buckeyes |url=https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/ohio-state-coach-urban-meyer-set-to-announce-retirement-ryan-day-to-replace-him-with-buckeyes/ |work=CBS Sports |access-date=December 4, 2018 |date=December 4, 2018 |archive-date=December 4, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181204195149/https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/ohio-state-coach-urban-meyer-set-to-announce-retirement-ryan-day-to-replace-him-with-buckeyes/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Ohio State's Urban Meyer retiring; Ryan Day promoted to head coach |url=https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/sports/article_6af710d6-f7c5-11e8-9e7f-17cc754a697e.html |access-date=December 4, 2018 |agency=Associated Press |publisher=The Advocate |date=December 4, 2018 |archive-date=December 5, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181205003313/https://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/sports/article_6af710d6-f7c5-11e8-9e7f-17cc754a697e.html |url-status=live }}</ref>

In Day's first year, the Buckeyes went a perfect 13–0, including a win over archrival Michigan by a score of 56–27 and defeating Wisconsin for the Big Ten Championship. They would earn a spot in the College Football Playoff but would lose to Clemson 29–23 in the [[2019 Fiesta Bowl (December)|2019 Fiesta Bowl]]. In Day's second year, the Big Ten season didn't start until late October due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], and the Buckeyes would only play five out of a scheduled eight games due to several virus-related cancellations - including the Michigan game. Nevertheless, the Buckeyes would go 5–0 in the regular season, win the East Division title, and go on to beat Northwestern 22–10 in the Big Ten Championship Game, giving Day his second straight conference title. On January 1, 2021, the Buckeyes defeated Clemson 49–28 to win the [[2021 Sugar Bowl|Sugar Bowl]] in a rematch of the 2019 Fiesta Bowl to advance to the [[CFP National Championship Game]] against Alabama on January 11, which they lost 52–24. On September 11, 2021, he suffered his first regular season loss as head coach when the [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon Ducks]] defeated the Buckeyes 35–28 in the 2nd game of the season. Ohio State's streak of defeating Michigan also came to an end on November 27, 2021, in Ann Arbor, when Ohio State lost 42–27.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/recap?gameId=401282781 | title=Ohio State vs. Michigan - Game Recap - November 27, 2021 - ESPN }}</ref> They then won the [[2022 Rose Bowl]] against [[Utah Utes football|Utah]] 48–45 on January 1, 2022.

In 2022, Day led the team to an 11–0 record and was ranked #2 going into the Michigan game, which #3 Michigan would win 45–23 on November 26, 2022 (outscoring the Buckeyes 28–3 in the second half), in Ohio State's first loss to Michigan in Columbus since 2000, and first back–to–back losses to Michigan since 1999–2000. The Buckeyes would go on to play the defending national champion [[2022 Georgia Bulldogs football team|Georgia Bulldogs]] in the 2022 national semifinal game on New Year's Eve, taking a 14-point lead into the fourth quarter, but ultimately seeing their season come to an end with a 42–41 loss.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Adelson |first1=Adrian |title=Georgia storms back, edges Ohio State to make CFP title game |url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/35357049/georgia-storms-back-edges-ohio-state-make-cfp-title-game |website=ESPN.com |date=January 2023 |access-date=1 January 2023}}</ref> Kicker Noah Ruggles' would-be game-winning field goal attempt sailed wide left just as the clock struck midnight on New Year's Day, 2023.

In 2023, Day led the team to an 11–0 record and was ranked #2 going into the Michigan game for the second consecutive year. This time, Michigan won by six points 30–24 on November 25, 2023. This marked the first three game losing streak to Michigan since 1995–97. The Buckeyes were then invited to the [[2023 Cotton Bowl Classic (December)|2023 Cotton Bowl]], where they lost to the [[2023 Missouri Tigers football team|Missouri Tigers]] 14–3 on December 29, 2023.

==Championships==

===National===
Ohio State recognizes eight [[College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS|national championships]] from NCAA-designated "consensus" selectors,<ref name="OhioStateClaimSign">{{Cite sign |title=Ohio State Buckeyes football National Champions 1942, 1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 1970, 2002, 2014 |year=2015 |type=Stadium Sign |publisher=[[Ohio State University]] |location=[[Ohio Stadium]] |url=https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/the-university-of-ohio-state-unveiled-their-2014-national-news-photo/580047818 |access-date=March 12, 2022}}</ref><ref name="NCAA2022"/> including six ([[1942 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1942]], [[1954 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1954]], [[1957 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1957]], [[1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1968]], [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]], [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]]) from the major wire-service: [[AP Trophy|AP Poll]] and/or [[Coaches' Trophy|Coaches' Poll]].<ref name="NCAA2022"/><ref>{{cite tweet|number=555027791918284801|user=ESPNCFB|title=Ohio State now has six national championships since 1936.|date=January 13, 2015}}</ref>

The following is a list of Ohio State's claimed national championships:

{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Head coach|Selector(s)|Overall<br />Record|Big Ten<br />Record|Bowl Game(s)|AP<br />Poll|Coaches<br />Poll}}
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background-color: #ffffff" | [[Image:Logo_OhioStateBuckeyes1.jpg|150 px]]
|-
|-
| [[1942 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1942]] || [[Paul Brown]] || [[AP Poll|AP]] || 9–1 || 6–1 || – || '''No. 1''' || −
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Program description*
|-
|-
| [[1954 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1954]] || rowspan="5"|[[Woody Hayes]] || AP || 10–0 || 7–0 || '''Won''' [[1955 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || '''No. 1''' || No. 2
! Participants:
| 104 (85 [[scholarship]]s)
|-
|-
| [[1957 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1957]] || [[Coaches Poll|Coaches]], [[Football Writers Association of America|FWAA]]<ref name="GrantlandRiceAward1957">{{cite news |agency=[[International News Service]] |date=January 4, 1958 |title=Ohio State Is Winner Of Grantland Rice Award |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-buffalo-news-1957-grantland-rice-awa/149053724/ |work=[[The Buffalo News]] |place=[[New York City]] |publication-place=[[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo]] |access-date=June 10, 2024 |quote=The Buckeyes received two of the five first-place votes in the balloting conducted by [[Look (American magazine)|Look Magazine]]. In the voting by a five-man panel, Ohio State got eight points to five apiece for Auburn, Navy, and Michigan State.}}</ref> || 9–1 || 7–0 || '''Won''' [[1958 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || No. 2 || '''No. 1'''
! Coaches:
| 10 full-time, 2 part-time
|-
|-
| [[1961 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1961]] || FWAA || 8–0–1 || 6–0 || – || No. 2 || No. 2
! Revenues (US$):
| $51,810,607 (2004)
|-
|-
| [[1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1968]] || AP, Coaches, FWAA, [[National Football Foundation|NFF]] || 10–0 || 7–0 || '''Won''' [[1969 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || '''No. 1''' || '''No. 1'''
! Total Expenses:
| $25,711,478
|-
|-
| [[1970 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1970]] || NFF (co-champion)<ref name="1970NFF">{{cite news |date=December 9, 1970 |title=MacArthur Winners |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/112382828/1970-nff-macarthur-bowl-co-champions/ |work=The News–Messenger |publication-place=Fremont, Ohio |access-date=November 1, 2022 |quote=Ohio State football Coach Woody Hayes and Texas coach Darrell Royal accept the MacArthur Bowl which was awarded jointly to their teams as the best of 1970 at the award dinner of the National Football Foundation}}</ref> || 9–1 || 7–0 || Lost [[1971 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || No. 5 || No. 2
! Game-day expenses:
|-
| $3,914,431
| [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]] || [[Jim Tressel]] || [[Bowl Championship Series|BCS]], AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF || 14–0 || 8–0 || '''Won''' [[2003 Fiesta Bowl|Fiesta Bowl]] ([[BCS National Championship Game]])|| '''No. 1''' || '''No. 1'''
|-
|-
| [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]] || [[Urban Meyer]] || [[College Football Playoff|CFP]], AP, Coaches, NFF || 14–1 || 8–0 || '''Won''' [[2015 Sugar Bowl|Sugar Bowl]] (CFP semifinal)<br />'''Won''' [[2015 College Football Playoff National Championship|CFP National Championship]] || '''No. 1''' || '''No. 1'''
! Recruiting expenses:
|}
| $418,975

Ohio State has also been selected an additional seven times by various NCAA-designated [[College football national championships in NCAA Division I FBS#Yearly national championship selections from major selectors|"major selectors"]], in 1933, 1944, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1975, and 2006.<ref name="NCAA2022">{{cite book |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2022/FBS.pdf |title=2022 NCAA Football Bowl Subdivision Records |publisher=[[National Collegiate Athletic Association]] |date=2022 |access-date=May 12, 2023}}</ref><ref name=DeVold2006>{{cite web|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070203031126/http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/rate/devold.txt |url-status=dead|archive-date=3 February 2007|url= http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/rate/devold.txt| title= Harry DeVold's final 100 Best College Football Teams For 2006 |website= University of Wisconsin-Madison Computer-Aided Engineering |access-date=2021-12-10}}</ref><ref name=RFACT2006>{{cite web|url=http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/history/rothman.txt| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190916071202/http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/rsfc/history/rothman.txt|url-status=dead|archive-date=16 September 2019|title=FOUR DECADES OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS|website=University of Wisconsin-Madison Computer-Aided Engineering|access-date=2021-12-10}}</ref> However, the Buckeyes do not recognize any of those championships.

===Conference===
Ohio State joined the Big Ten in 1912; before that they were a member of the [[Ohio Athletic Conference]] (OAC) and won two OAC titles. Ohio State has won a championship in the Big Ten 39 times, [[List of Big Ten Conference football champions|second-most in the conference]].<ref>[http://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/7_Award-Winners-History.pdf Award Winners & History] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181119091900/http://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/7_Award-Winners-History.pdf |date=November 19, 2018 }}, Ohio State University, 2018</ref>

{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Conference|Coach|Record|Conference Record}}
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Pageantry
|-
|-
| 1906 || [[Ohio Athletic Conference|OAC]] || [[Albert E. Herrnstein]] || 8–1 || 4–0
! Nickname:
| [[Ohio Buckeye|Buckeye]]s
|-
|-
| 1912 || OAC || [[John R. Richards|John Richards]] || 6–3 || 4–0
! Colors:
| [[Scarlet (color)|Scarlet]] and [[Grey|Gray]]
|-
|-
| 1916 || [[Big Ten Conference|Big Ten]] || [[John Wilce]] || 7–0 || 4–0
! Fight songs:
| ''[[Across the Field]]'' and ''[[Buckeye Battle Cry]]''
|-
|-
| [[1917 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1917]] || Big Ten || John Wilce || 8–0–1 || 4–0
! Mascot:
| [[Brutus Buckeye]]
|-
|-
| [[1920 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1920]] || Big Ten ||John Wilce || 7–1 || 5–0
! Marching Band:
| [[The Ohio State University Marching Band]]
|-
|-
| [[1935 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1935]]† || Big Ten || [[Francis Schmidt]] || 7–1 || 5–0
! Stadium:
| [[Ohio Stadium]]
|-
|-
| [[1939 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1939]] || Big Ten || Francis Schmidt || 6–2 || 5–1
! Rivals:
| [[Michigan-Ohio State rivalry|Michigan Wolverines]]
|-
|-
| [[1942 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1942]] || Big Ten || [[Paul Brown]] || 9–1 || 5–1
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Records
|-
|-
| [[1944 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1944]] || Big Ten || [[Carroll Widdoes]] ||9–0 || 6–0
! All-time Record:
| align=center|775-300-53
|-
|-
| [[1949 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1949]]† || Big Ten || [[Wes Fesler]] || 7–1–2 || 4–1–1
! [[Bowl game|Bowl]] Record:
| align=center|17-19
|-
|-
| [[1954 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1954]] || Big Ten || [[Woody Hayes]] || 10–0 || 7–0
! [[Bowl Championship Series|BCS]] Record:
| align=center|3-0
|-
|-
| [[1955 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1955]] || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 7–2 || 6–0
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Awards
|-
|-
| [[1957 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1957]] || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 9–1 || 7–0
! [[NCAA Division I-A national football championship|National Titles]]:
| align=center|7
|-
|-
| [[1961 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1961]] || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 8–0–1 || 6–0
! Conference Titles:
| align=center|30
|-
|-
| [[1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1968]] || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 10–0 || 7–0
! [[Heisman Trophy|Heisman]] Winners:
| align=center|6
|-
|-
| [[1969 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1969]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 8–1 || 6–1
! 1st Team [[All-America]]ns:
| align=center|125
|-
|-
| [[1970 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1970]] || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 9–1 || 7–0
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | <small>*Source: 2005 Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act filing</small>
|-
|-
| [[1972 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1972]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 9–2 || 7–1
|-
| [[1973 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1973]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 10–0–1 || 7–0–1
|-
| [[1974 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1974]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 10–2 || 7–1
|-
| [[1975 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1975]] || Big Ten ||Woody Hayes || 11–1 || 8–0
|-
| [[1976 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1976]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 9–2–1 || 7–1
|-
| [[1977 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1977]]† || Big Ten || Woody Hayes || 9–3 || 6–2
|-
| [[1979 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1979]] || Big Ten || [[Earle Bruce]] || 11–1 || 8–0
|-
| [[1981 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1981]]† || Big Ten || Earle Bruce || 9–3 || 6–2
|-
| [[1984 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1984]] || Big Ten || Earle Bruce || 9–3 || 7–2
|-
| [[1986 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1986]]† || Big Ten || Earle Bruce || 10–3 || 7–1
|-
| [[1993 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1993]]† || Big Ten || [[John Cooper (American football)|John Cooper]] || 10–1–1 || 6–1–1
|-
| [[1996 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1996]]† || Big Ten || John Cooper || 11–1 || 7–1
|-
| [[1998 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1998]]† || Big Ten ||John Cooper || 11–1 || 7–1
|-
| [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]]† || Big Ten || [[Jim Tressel]] || 14–0 || 8–0
|-
| [[2005 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2005]]† || Big Ten || Jim Tressel || 10–2 || 7–1
|-
| [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2006]] || Big Ten || Jim Tressel || 12–1 || 8–0
|-
| [[2007 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2007]] || Big Ten || Jim Tressel || 11–2 || 7–1
|-
| [[2008 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2008]]† || Big Ten || Jim Tressel || 10–3 || 7–1
|-
| [[2009 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2009]] || Big Ten || Jim Tressel || 11–2 || 7–1
|-
| [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]] || Big Ten || [[Urban Meyer]] || 14–1 || 8–0
|-
| [[2017 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2017]] || Big Ten || Urban Meyer || 12–2 || 8–1
|-
| [[2018 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2018]] || Big Ten || Urban Meyer || 13–1 || 8–1
|-
| [[2019 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2019]] || Big Ten || [[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]] || 13–1 || 9–0
|-
| [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]] || Big Ten || Ryan Day || 7–1 || 6–0
|}
|}
† Co-champions
:''For information specifically about the 2006 team, see [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team]]''


===Division===
'''Ohio State Buckeyes football''' is the intercollegiate [[American football]] [[varsity sports]] program of [[The Ohio State University]]. The program represents the university as a member of the [[Big Ten Conference]] of the [[National Collegiate Athletics Association]], playing at the [[Division I-A]] level. The team nickname is derived from the [[state tree]] of [[Ohio]]. The Buckeyes have played their home games in [[Ohio Stadium]] since [[1922]].
From 2011 to 2023, Big Ten had divisions to decide who would play for the conference championship. The divisions were known as Legends and Leaders from 2011 to 2013. In 2014, the divisions were realigned geographically into East and West. The divisional format ended for the 2024 season.


{| class="wikitable"
In its 116-year-history, the Buckeyes have been consensus [[NCAA Division I-A national football championship|Division IA National Champions]] four times ([[1942]], [[1954]], [[1968]], and [[2002]]), and officially recognize titles in three other years ([[1957]], [[1961]], and [[1970]]).<ref name="osumnc"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.cstv.com/auto_pdf/p_hotos/s_chools/osu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/champions| title = National Championships| format = | work = | publisher = The Ohio State University Department of Athletics| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref>
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Division|Coach|Opponent|CG Result}}
|-
| [[2012 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2012]] || Big Ten Leaders || [[Urban Meyer]] || colspan="2" | ''N/A – Ineligible (postseason ban)''
|-
| [[2013 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2013]] || Big Ten Leaders || Urban Meyer || [[2013 Michigan State Spartans football team|Michigan State]] || L 24–34
|-
| [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]] || Big Ten East || Urban Meyer || [[2014 Wisconsin Badgers football team|Wisconsin]] || '''W''' 59–0
|-
| [[2015 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2015]]† || Big Ten East || Urban Meyer || colspan="2" | ''N/A lost tiebreaker to [[2015 Michigan State Spartans football team|Michigan State]]''
|-
| [[2016 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2016]]† || Big Ten East || Urban Meyer || colspan="2" | ''N/A lost tiebreaker to [[2016 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]]''
|-
| [[2017 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2017]] || Big Ten East || Urban Meyer || [[2017 Wisconsin Badgers football team|Wisconsin]] || '''W''' 27–21
|-
| [[2018 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2018]]† || Big Ten East || Urban Meyer || [[2018 Northwestern Wildcats football team|Northwestern]] || '''W''' 45–24
|-
| [[2019 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2019]] || Big Ten East || [[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]] || [[2019 Wisconsin Badgers football team|Wisconsin]] || '''W''' 34–21
|-
| [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]] || Big Ten East || Ryan Day || [[2020 Northwestern Wildcats football team|Northwestern]] || '''W''' 22–10
|-
| [[2021 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2021]]† || Big Ten East || Ryan Day || colspan="2" | ''N/A lost tiebreaker to [[2021 Michigan Wolverines football team|Michigan]]''
|}
† Co-champions


==Undefeated seasons==
Since [[January 18]], [[2001]], the head coach of the Ohio State Buckeyes has been '''[[Jim Tressel]]'''. He heads a staff of approximately eighty-five persons: ten assistant coaches, a [[Weight training|strength and conditioning]] staff of three, a program operations and support staff of eleven (including two part-time coaches), a [[sports medicine]] staff of eleven team [[physician]]s and seven consultants, twenty-five [[athletic trainer]]s, six equipment managers, and approximately fifteen student managers.


{| class="wikitable"
==History of Ohio State football==
|-
===1890-1912: Beginnings===
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Year|Overall Record|Big Ten Record|Head Coach}}
In the spring of 1890 the growing fever of the [[History of American football#The influence of Walter Camp, 1880s|Walter Camp]]-style of football, formulated between 1880 and 1883 among colleges of the future [[Ivy League]], reached Columbus, Ohio. George Cole, an undergraduate, is generally given credit for organizing the first intercollegiate team at Ohio State.<ref>
|-
{{cite book
| [[1899 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1899]] || 9–0–1 || – || [[John B. Eckstorm]]
| author=Jack Park
|-
| chapter=
| [[1916 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1916]] || 7–0 || 4–0 || [[John Wilce]]
| title=The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia
|-
| editor=
| [[1917 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1917]] || 8–0–1 || 4–0 || John Wilce
| publisher=Sports Publishing LLC
|-
| id= ISBN 1582610061
| [[1944 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1944]] || 9–0 || 6–0 || [[Carroll Widdoes]]
| year=2002| pages=p.10}}</ref> He persuaded Alexander S. Lilley to coach the squad and brought in a reknowned [[Princeton University|Princeton]] [[fullback]] and soon-to-be coach of the [[Purdue Boilermakers]], Knowlton Lyman "Snake" Ames,<ref name="ames"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.princeton.edu/football/hallfam.htm| title = Tiger Hall of Famers| format = | work = | publisher = Princeton Tiger Football| accessdate =3 Aug | accessyear = 2006}} Ames also app. coached Northwestern in the same years</ref> to familiarize the team with fundamentals. The Buckeyes first game, played on [[May 3]], [[1890]], at [[Delaware, Ohio]], against [[Ohio Wesleyan University]], was a victory, but two other projected spring games could not be arranged.<ref>Park, p.11</ref>
|-
| [[1954 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1954]] || 10–0 || 7–0 || [[Woody Hayes]]
|-
| [[1961 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1961]] || 8–0–1 || 6–0 || Woody Hayes
|-
| [[1968 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1968]] || 10–0 || 7–0 || Woody Hayes
|-
| [[1973 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1973]] || 10–0–1 || 7–0–1 || Woody Hayes
|-
| [[2002 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2002]] || 14–0 || 8–0 || [[Jim Tressel]]
|-
| [[2012 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2012]] || 12–0 || 8–0 || [[Urban Meyer]]
|-
|}


==Bowl games==
Play resumed in November, with home games played at Recreation Park (near the current Schiller Park in south Columbus), but Ohio State lost all three. The next year representatives met with counterparts from [[Western Reserve University|Adelbert]], [[Denison University|Denison]], [[University of Akron|Buchtel]], and [[Kenyon College]]s to agree to various terms and laid the groundwork for the informal "Big Six" conference of Ohio colleges.<ref>Park, p.13. This scheduling arrangement was not formalized. </ref> Throughout its first decade nearly all of Ohio State's opponents were in-state teams.
{{main|List of Ohio State Buckeyes bowl games}}
Ohio State has played in 55 bowl games in which they are 27–29–0.<ref name="SR">{{Cite sports-reference |title=Ohio State Buckeyes Bowls |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ohio-state/bowls.html |access-date=October 31, 2023}}</ref> The Buckeyes have been to the Rose Bowl 16 times. Below are the team's most recent bowl games.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Coach|Bowl|Opponent|Result}}
|-
| [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]] || Urban Meyer || [[2015 Sugar Bowl|CFP Semifinal at Sugar Bowl]] || [[2014 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama]] || '''W''' 42–35
|-
| [[2014 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2014]] || Urban Meyer || [[2015 College Football Playoff National Championship|CFP National Championship]] || [[2014 Oregon Ducks football team|Oregon]] || '''W''' 42–20
|-
| [[2015 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2015]] || Urban Meyer || [[2016 Fiesta Bowl (January)|Fiesta Bowl]] || [[2015 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team|Notre Dame]] || '''W''' 44–28
|-
| [[2016 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2016]] || Urban Meyer || [[2016 Fiesta Bowl (December)|CFP Semifinal at Fiesta Bowl]] || [[Clemson Tigers football|Clemson]] || L 0–31
|-
| [[2017 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2017]] || Urban Meyer || [[2017 Cotton Bowl Classic (December)|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[2017 USC Trojans football team|USC]] || '''W''' 24–7
|-
| [[2018 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2018]] || Urban Meyer || [[2019 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || [[2018 Washington Huskies football team|Washington]] || '''W''' 28–23
|-
| [[2019 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2019]] ||[[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]]||[[2019 Fiesta Bowl (December)|CFP Semifinal at Fiesta Bowl]] || [[2019 Clemson Tigers football team|Clemson]] || L 23–29
|-
| [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]] ||Ryan Day||[[2021 Sugar Bowl|CFP Semifinal at Sugar Bowl]] || [[2020 Clemson Tigers football team|Clemson]] || '''W''' 49–28
|-
| [[2020 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2020]] ||Ryan Day||[[2021 College Football Playoff National Championship|CFP National Championship]] || [[2020 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama]] || L 24–52
|-
| [[2021 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2021]] || Ryan Day || [[2022 Rose Bowl|Rose Bowl]] || [[2021 Utah Utes football team|Utah]] || '''W''' 48–45
|-
|[[2022 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2022]]
|Ryan Day || [[2022 Peach Bowl|CFP Semifinal at Peach Bowl]]
|[[Georgia Bulldogs football|Georgia]] || L 41–42
|-
|[[2023 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2023]]
|Ryan Day
|[[2023 Cotton Bowl Classic (December)|Cotton Bowl Classic]]
|[[2023 Missouri Tigers football team|Missouri]]
|L 3–14
|}
{| class="wikitable"
|+ '''Bowl records:'''
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2| team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Overall|[[New Year's Six]]|[[College Football Playoff]]}}


|-
Over the next eight years, under a number of coaches, the team played to a cumulative record of 31 wins, 39 losses, and 2 ties. Home games were moved to a field on campus at Neil and 11th Avenues, then in 1898 to University Field at High Street and Woodruff Avenue. Play was brutal and dangerous but continued to grow in popularity. The first game against Michigan, in [[Ann Arbor]], was a 34-0 loss in 1897, a year that saw the low point in Buckeye football history with a 1-7-1 record.
| 27–29<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ohio-state/|title=Ohio State Buckeyes Bowls|website=College Football at Sports-Reference.com|access-date=August 11, 2019|archive-date=November 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191124013645/https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ohio-state/|url-status=live}}</ref>
| 21–15
| 3–4
|}


<sup>†</sup> Vacated
In 1899 the university hired John Eckstorm away from Kenyon College. He brought professional coaching skills to the program and immediately won the Big Six for the first time by going undefeated, as well as beating [[Oberlin College]] after previous teams had gone 0-6. His second season was almost as successful, as the 8-1-1 record included a scoreless tie against Michigan. In 1901, however, [[Center (American football)|center]] John Sigrist, a 27-year-old senior, was fatally injured in a game against [[Western Reserve]] and the continuation of intercollegiate football at Ohio State was in serious question. Although the school's athletic board backed away from a confrontation and let the team decide its future, a faculty resolution to cancel the season was not easily defeated and Eckstorm resigned. <ref>Park, p.28</ref>


==Home venues==
In 1902 the team won its first four games by a combined score of 86-0, then traveled to Ann Arbor and lost to the Wolverines—86-0. From that humiliation Fred Cornell, a freshman football player, wrote ''[[Carmen Ohio]]'', which became the school's [[alma mater]].<ref name="carmen100"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.alumni-osu.org/sarasota/carmen.html| title = Carmen Ohio Centenniel| format = | work = | publisher = OSU Alumni Sarasota| accessdate = 4 Aug| accessyear = 2006}}</ref> In 1906, yet another coaching change saw the hiring of Albert A. Herrnstein, the coach of Purdue, who had been a running back for Michigan and had scored six touchdowns against Ohio State in 1902. Herrnstein's four years were successful (although not against his former team) and also saw the first use of the [[forward pass]] by the Buckeyes.<ref>Park, p. 37</ref>
* [[Recreation Park (Columbus)|Recreation Park]] (1890–1897)
* [[Ohio Field]] (1898–1921)
* [[Ohio Stadium]] (1922–present)


===Marching band===
In 1908 the name of University Field was changed to Ohio Field, and although the team continued to prosper, continuing losses to Michigan, Case, and Oberlin saw the cycle of coaching changes continue. By the end of the 1912 season, Ohio State's 23rd, the team had had eleven coaches, sixteen coaching changes, and stood 126-72-17, having never beaten Michigan.
[[File:Script Ohio.jpg|thumb|300px|Script Ohio]]
{{main|Ohio State University Marching Band}}
Ohio State University Marching Band<ref>[http://www.tbdbitl.com/ TBDBITL Alumni Club] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080509072822/http://www.tbdbitl.com/ |date=May 9, 2008 }}, accessed January 22, 2008.</ref> is the most visible and possibly best-known tradition of Ohio State football.<ref>{{cite book| editor=Leeann Parker| title=Ohio State Football Gameday| publisher=Ohio State Athletics Communications Office| year=2001|page=45}}</ref> Home games are preceded by four marching band traditions:<ref name="gameday">{{cite book| editor=Todd Lamb| title=Ohio State Football Gameday| publisher=Ohio State Athletics Communications Office| year=2002|pages=42–43}}</ref>
*[[Ohio State University Marching Band#Skull Session|Skull Session]]
*[[Ohio State University Marching Band#Ramp entrance|Ramp entrance]]
*[[Ohio State University Marching Band#Back bend|The Back Bend]]
*[[Script Ohio]]


==Rivalries==
====1912: A significant year====
===Illinois===
Football underwent a number of developments in [[1912]] that mark the year as a watershed point in Buckeye history. In the game itself, [[touchdown]]s were re-valued to the six points they are now. On [[April 6]], the [[Big Ten Conference|Western Conference]] approved Ohio State's application to join. The Bucks would play their first conference schedule in 1913 and be limited by its rules to just seven games a season. The price at the time was steep: Michigan had left the conference in 1906 and conference policy forbade playing the Wolverines.<ref>Park, p.48</ref>
{{main|Illibuck Trophy}}
The series versus [[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois]] began in 1902 and became the longest continuous series in 2002 when the schools played in their 89th consecutive year. In 2007, Ohio State was given their only defeat of the regular season by the Illini. Through the 2019 season, Ohio State leads the series 68–30–4.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/illinois/vs/ohio-state|title=Winsipedia - Illinois Fighting Illini vs. Ohio State Buckeyes football series history|website=Winsipedia|access-date=October 13, 2020|archive-date=October 14, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201014211910/http://winsipedia.com/illinois/vs/ohio-state|url-status=live}}</ref>


===Michigan===
The program itself was removed from the Department of Physical Education and made a part of the new Department of Athletics, an organization under faculty control, but a move which saw the hiring of full-time coaches with faculty status. The new football coach, John Richards, was also named the first [[Athletic director|Director of Athletics]] but resigned from both positions at the end of the football season. [[Lynn W. St. John]], a medical student who had just been hired as business manager for OSU athletics, was named the second AD and served in that capacity for 35 years.<ref>Park, p.52</ref>
{{main|Michigan–Ohio State football rivalry}}
Ohio State's first game with [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]] dates to 1897. Michigan leads the series
61–51–6 through the 2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/ohio-state/vs/michigan|title=Winsipedia - Ohio State Buckeyes vs. Michigan Wolverines football series history|website=Winsipedia|access-date=December 9, 2021|archive-date=December 6, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211206052351/http://www.winsipedia.com/ohio-state/vs/michigan|url-status=live}}</ref>


===Penn State===
===1913-1933: Conference, stadium, and the "downtown coaches"===
{{main|Ohio State–Penn State football rivalry}}
Ohio State's entry into the Western Conference initally saw a reduction in the number of games played each season but otherwise continued success for the program, with their first three seasons' record 14-5-2 and finishes in conference standings of 6th, 4th, and 3rd place. Coach [[John Wilce]] brought a stability to the program not previously experienced, and in 1916 he also brought [[Chic Harley|Charles W. "Chic" Harley]], the first "triple threat" (runner, passer, and kicker), to the varsity team. The Buckeyes had their first undefeated-untied season in [[1916]], and repeated as conference champions in [[1917]], going 8-0-1. Harley served in the [[U.S. Army Air Service]] in [[1918]], and the Buckeyes saw their undefeated streak broken at 22 games. Harley returned after [[World War I]], making [[All-American]] for the third time, but Ohio State finished second in the conference when in the final game of [[1919]] Illinois scored the only touchdown of the season against the Buckeyes and kicked a field goal with 8 seconds left to win 9-7.<ref>Park, p.74</ref> However the season also saw the first victory over Michigan (which had re-joined the Western Conference in 1917), 13-3 in Ann Arbor, the first of three straight wins against its rival.
When [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]] was added to the Big Ten conference football play in 1993, every member was given two designated rivals, teams to be played every year, with the other conference teams rotated out of the schedule at regular intervals. For geographic convenience, the Big Ten named Penn State as Ohio State's new designated rival in addition to Michigan. Ohio State leads the series 24–14 through the 2023 season.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ohio State Buckeyes vs. Penn State Nittany Lions football series history|url=https://www.winsipedia.com/ohio-state/vs/penn-state#google_vignette|access-date=January 24, 2024 |website=Winsipedia}}</ref>


== Famous Coaches==
Harley's exploits prompted both a new surge of popularity in Ohio State football and higher attendance figures, with the demand far outreaching the capacity of Ohio Field. Discussion of a new, larger facility at a location away from High Street had begun as early as 1913 but plans took shape when a [[horseshoe]] design was presented by alumnus [[Howard Dwight Smith]] ('07) in 1918 and a professionally-managed public [[Fundraising|fundraising drive]] begun in October 1920 that quickly pledged more than $1 million of the $1.34 million cost stipulated in the April 1921 construction contract. Ground was broken on [[August 3]], [[1921]], and [[Ohio Stadium]] opened [[October 7]], [[1922]].<ref name="ohstad"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://football.ballparks.com/NCAA/Big10/OhioState/index.htm| title = The Ohio Stadium Story| format = | work = | publisher = Football Ballparks| accessdate = 9 Aug| accessyear = 2006}}</ref>
{{See also|List of Ohio State Buckeyes head football coaches}}
The Buckeyes have had 24 head coaches in their 121-year history.


Of the team's eight national championships to date, [[Woody Hayes]] won five, with [[Paul Brown]], [[Jim Tressel]], and [[Urban Meyer]] each having one.
With the opening of the new stadium, however, Buckeye fortunes on the [[Gridiron football|gridiron]] also turned sour. Ohio State had won its third Big Ten championship in [[1920]], losing its only game to [[California Golden Bears|California]] in the [[Rose Bowl]], and a superb [[1921]] season had been marred by two inexplicable losses to Oberlin (the last Buckeye loss to an Ohio team) and to winless Illinois. The dedication game for Ohio Stadium was against Michigan, which became the first of six straight losses to the Wolverines, and the 1922 season the first of three losing seasons. The Buckeyes rebounded in [[1926]], losing only to Michigan as a result of a missed [[extra point]] with two minutes to play. The game was also notable in that more than 90,000 attended the game, overflowing stadium [[seating capacity]] by nearly forty per cent.


==Personnel==
However Ohio State had otherwise unspectacular seasons and never finished higher than third place in the conference, going 28-21-6 in Wilce's final seven years as head coach. Criticism of Wilce was widespread, particularly from the "downtown coaches" (a term that came into usage in the 1920's to describe vocal businessmen and other influential supporters of the program), for both failing to win the conference and for the extended losing streak to Michigan. Wilce forestalled further criticism and possible removal by resigning on [[June 3]], [[1928]], effective at the end of the upcoming season, to practice [[medicine]]. His sixteen years as coach had brought Ohio State to the forefront of intercollegiate football and his .695 [[winning percentage]] remains impressive.<ref>Park, p.112-115</ref>
===Roster===
{{American football roster/Header|year=2024|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|teamcolors=f
|offensive_players=
{{American football roster/Player|num=1|first=Quinshon|last=Judkins|pos=RB|link=y|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=2|first=Emeka|last=Egbuka|pos=WR|link=y|class=Jr|note=C}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=3|first=Lincoln|last=Kienholz|pos=QB|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=4|first=Jeremiah|last=Smith|pos=WR|link=y|class=Fr|dab=Jeremiah Smith (American football)}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=5|first=Mylan|last=Graham|pos=WR|link=|class=Fr|}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=9|first=Jayden|last=Ballard|pos=WR|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=10|first=Julian|last=Sayin|pos=QB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=11|first=Brandon|last=Inniss|pos=WR|link=y|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=12|first=Air|last=Noland|pos=QB|link=y|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=13|first=Bryson|last=Rodgers|pos=WR|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=14|first=Kojo|last=Antwi|pos=WR|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=15|first=Jelani|last=Thurman|pos=TE|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=16|first=Mason|last=Maggs|pos=QB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=17|first=Carnell|last=Tate|pos=WR|link=y|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=18|first=Will|last=Howard|pos=QB|link=y|class=Gr|dab=Will Howard (American football)}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=19|first=Chad|last=Ray|pos=QB|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=20|first=James|last=Peoples|pos=RB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=23|first=Nolan|last=Baudo|pos=WR|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=24|first=Sam|last=Williams-Dixon|pos=RB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=26|first=Chase|last=Brecht|pos=RB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=28|first=TC|last=Caffey|pos=RB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=30|first=Rashid|last=SeSay|pos=RB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=32|first=TreVeyon|last=Henderson|pos=RB|link=y|class=Sr|note=C}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=33|first=Devin|last=Brown|pos=QB|link=y|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=34|first=Brennen|last=Schramm|pos=WR|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=46|first=Jace|last=Middleton|pos=TE|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=49|first=Patrick|last=Gurd|pos=TE|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=51|first=Luke|last=Montgomery|pos=OL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=54|first=Toby|last=Wilson|pos=OL|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=55|first=Matthew|last=Jones|pos=OL|link=|class=Gr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=56|first=Seth|last=McLaughlin.|pos=OL|link=|class=GS}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=58|first=Gabe|last=VanSickle.|pos=OL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=62|first=Joshua|last=Padilla|pos=OL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=63|first=Julian|last=Goines-Jackson|pos=OL|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=64|first=Simon|last=Lorentz|pos=OL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=65|first=Zen|last=Michalski|pos=OL|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=67|first=Austin|last=Siereveld|pos=OL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=68|first=George|last=Fitzpatrick|pos=OL|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=69|first=Ian|last=Moore|pos=OL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=70|first=Josh|last=Fryar|pos=OL|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=71|first=Josh|last=Simmons|pos=OL|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=72|first=Deontae|last=Armstrong|pos=OL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=73|first=Devontae|last=Armstrong|pos=OL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=74|first=Donovan|last=Jackson|pos=OL|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=75|first=Carson|last=Hinzman|pos=OL|link=y|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=76|first=Miles|last=Walker|pos=OL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=77|first=Tegra|last=Tshabola|pos=OL|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=80|first=Shawn|last=Lodge|pos=WR|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=81|first=Damarion|last=Witten|pos=TE|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=82|first=David|last=Adolph|pos=WR|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=83|first=Joop|last=Mitchell|pos=WR|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=84|first=Dorian|last=Williams|pos=WR|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=85|first=Bennett|last=Christian|pos=TE|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=86|first=Maxence|last=LeBlanc|pos=TE|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=87|first=Reis|last=Stocksdale|pos=WR|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=88|first=Gee|last=Scott Jr.|pos=TE|link=y|class=Gr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=89|first=Zak|last=Herbstreit|pos=TE|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=89|first=Will|last=Kacmarek|pos=TE|link=|class=Sr}}


|defensive_players=
Wilce's assistant and former Buckeye letterman, Sam Willaman, was expected to inherit the head coaching position at the December meeting of the Athletic Board, but Athletic Director St. John refused to publicly commit the program to his succession. During 1928 there had been public speculation that [[Knute Rockne]], famed coach of [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish football|Notre Dame]] but enduring a mediocre season and stung by persistent criticisms of overemphasis of football at Notre Dame, might leave the Irish to take the position at Ohio State.<ref>
{{American football roster/Player|num=0|first=Cody|last=Simon|pos=LB|class=Gr|link=y|note=C}}
{{cite book
{{American football roster/Player|num=1|first=Davison|last=Igbinosun|pos=CB|link=y|class=Jr}}
| author=Ray Robinson
{{American football roster/Player|num=2|first=Caleb|last=Downs|pos=S|link=|class=So}}
| chapter=
{{American football roster/Player|num=2|first=Kourt|last=Williams II|pos=LB|link=|class=Gr}}
| title=Rockne of Notre Dame: The Making of a Football Legend
{{American football roster/Player|num=4|first=Lorenzo|last=Styles Jr.|pos=CB|link=|class=Sr}}
| editor=
{{American football roster/Player|num=6|first=Sonny|last=Styles|pos=LB|link=y|class=Jr}}
| publisher=Oxford University Press
{{American football roster/Player|num=5|first=Aaron|last=Scott Jr.|pos=CB|link=|class=Fr}}
| id= ISBN 0-19-510549-4
{{American football roster/Player|num=7|first=Jordan|last=Hancock|pos=CB|link=y|class=Sr}}
| year=1999| pages=p. 215}}</ref> At least two sources<ref name="macwood"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.golfclubatlas.com/mhca.html/trads/osu-m-footbl-trad.html| title = My Home Course, by Tom MacWood| format = | work = | publisher = Golf Club Atlas.com| accessdate = 10 Aug| accessyear = 2006}}</ref><ref>Park, p.118</ref> indicate that St. John and Rockne met in early January in [[New Orleans]] and that Rockne accepted the position at OSU contingent on his release by Notre Dame. Whether Rockne was merely trying to gain leverage for a new, larger stadium in [[South Bend]] and fewer road games, or whether he seriously contemplated coaching the Buckeyes will never be known, for history records that he was "unusually silent on the matter."<ref>Robinson, p. 216</ref>
{{American football roster/Player|num=8|first=Lathan|last=Ransom|pos=S|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=10|first=Denzel|last=Burke|pos=CB|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=11|first=C.J.|last=Hicks|pos=LB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=12|first=Bryce|last=West|pos=CB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=13|first=Myles|last=Lockhart|pos=CB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=16|first=Keenan|last=Nelson Jr.|pos=DB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=17|first=Mitchell|last=Melton|pos=LB|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=18|first=Jaylen|last=McClain|pos=S|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=20|first=Arvell|last=Reese|pos=LB|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=21|first=Jayden|last=Bonsu|pos=S|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=22|first=Calvin|last=Simpson-Hunt|pos=CB|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=23|first=Garrett|last=Stover|pos=LB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=24|first=Jermaine|last=Mathews Jr.|pos=CB|link=y|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=25|first=Malik|last=Hartford|pos=S|link=y|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=28|first=Leroy|last=Roker III|pos=S|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=29|first=Glorien|last=Gough|pos=DB|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=32|first=Brenton "Inky"|last=Jones|pos=S|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=33|first=Jack|last=Sawyer|pos=DE|link=y|class=Sr|note=C}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=34|first=Bukari|last=Miles Jr.|pos=CB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=35|first=Payton|last=Pierce|pos=LB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=36|first=Gabe|last=Powers|pos=LB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=37|first=Zach|last=Hayes|pos=LB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=38|first=Eli|last=Riggs|pos=LB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=39|first=Joey|last=Velazquez|pos=LB|link=|class=Gr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=43|first=Dianté|last=Griffin|pos=CB|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=44|first=JT|last=Tuimoloau|pos=DE|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=46|first=Ryan|last=Rudzinski|pos=S|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=50|first=Alec|last=DelSignore|pos=LB|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=52|first=Joshua|last=Mickens|pos=DE|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=53|first=Will|last=Smith Jr.|pos=DL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=55|first=Dominic|last=Kirks|pos=DE|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=57|first=Jalen|last=Pace|pos=LB|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=58|first=Ty|last=Hamilton|pos=DT|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=59|first=Ahmed|last=Tounkara|pos=DL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=60|first=Cade|last=Casto|pos=DL|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=61|first=Caden|last=Davis|pos=DE|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=62|first=Bryce|last=Prater|pos=DL|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=66|first=Nate|last=Riegle|pos=LB|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=90|first=Eric|last=Mensah|pos=DL|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=91|first=Tyleik|last=Williams|pos=DT|link=y|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=92|first=Caden|last=Curry|pos=DE|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=93|first=Hero|last=Kanu|pos=DT|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=94|first=Jason|last=Moore|pos=DL|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=95|first=Tywone|last=Malone Jr.|pos=DT|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=96|first=Eddrick|last=Houston|pos=DE|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=97|first=Kenyatta|last=Jackson Jr.|pos=DE|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=98|first=Kayden|last=McDonald|pos=DL|link=|class=So}}


|special_teams_players=
===1934-1943: Francis Schmidt and Paul Brown===
{{American football roster/Player|num=19|first=Nick|last=McLarty|pos=P|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=35|first=Anthony|last=Venneri|pos=P|link=|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=38|first=Jayden|last=Fielding|pos=K|link=y|class=Jr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=39|first=Hadi|last=Jawad|pos=P|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=41|first=Morrow|last=Evans|pos=LS|link=|class=Fr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=42|first=Joe|last=McGuire|pos=P|link=|class=So}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=43|first=John|last=Ferlmann|pos=LS|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=48|first=Max|last=Lomonico|pos=LS|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=95|first=Casey|last=Magyar|pos=K|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=96|first=Collin|last=Johnson|pos=LS|link=|class=Sr}}
{{American football roster/Player|num=98|first=Austin|last=Snyder|pos=K|link=|class=Sr}}
}}
{{American football roster/Footer|roster_url=https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/football/roster|accessdate=August 22, 2024
|head_coach=
*[[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]]
|asst_coach=
*[[Chip Kelly]] – Offensive Coordinator/quarterbacks
*[[Jim Knowles (American football)|Jim Knowles]] – Defensive coordinator
*Keenan Bailey – Tight ends
*[[Justin Frye]] – Run game coordinator/offensive line
*[[Matt Guerrieri]] – Safeties
*[[Brian Hartline]] – Co-offensive coordinator/wide receivers
*[[Larry Johnson (American football coach)|Larry Johnson]] – Associate HC/defensive line
*[[James Laurinaitis]] – Linebackers coach
*Carlos Locklyn – Running backs coach
*[[Tim Walton (American football)|Tim Walton]] – Assistant HC/secondary/cornerbacks
*[[Mickey Marotti]] – Associate AD/director of football sport performance
*Brent Zdebski – Quality Control - Defense
*[[Rob Keys]] – Quality Control - Kicking
*Sam McGrath - Quality Control - Defense
*Joe Lyberger – Quality Control - Defense
*Tim Drevno - Quality Control - Offense
*LaAllan Clark - Graduate Assistant - Defense
*Mike Sollene - Graduate Assistant - Offense
*Sean Binckes - Graduate Assistant - Offense
*Michael Hunter Jr. - Graduate Assistant- Defense
*Riley Larkin - Program Assistant - Offense
*Gunnar Daniel - Program Assistant - Special Teams
*Devin Jordan - Program Assistant - Offense
*Gerren DuHart - Program Assistant - Defense
*Joshua Chorba - Program Assistant - Defense
*Tony Johnson - Senior Advisor - Analyst


}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/football/roster | title=2024-25 Football Roster }}</ref>
===1944-1951: The Graveyard of Coaches===
Two weeks after the Snow Bowl, citing concerns about his health and family, Fesler resigned to go into [[real estate]]. Less than two months later, however, he was named head coach at Minnesota. Detractors of Ohio State in general and Woody Hayes in particular have cited Fesler as a victim of unremitting abuse by "big football" at Ohio State<ref>
{{cite book
| author=Robert Vare
| chapter=
| title=Buckeye: A Study of Coach Woody Hayes and the Ohio State Football Machine
| editor=
| publisher=Harper's Magazine Press
| id= ISBN 0061291501
| year=1974| pages=p.72}}</ref>but throughout the 1950 season speculation that Minnesota's [[Bernie Bierman]] would retire had repeatedly suggested that Fesler was a prime candidate for his replacement.<ref>Park, p.265, 269, 273</ref>


===1951-1978: Woody Hayes===
=== Staff ===
{| class="wikitable"
The search for a coach to replace Wes Fesler was in some ways a replay of the talent search to replace Francis Schmidt: Paul Brown, even though he had become a successful coach on the professional level, was the immediate "favorite" and had a well-organized corps of supporters boosting his cause. As in 1940, the Ohio High School Football Coaches Association voiced their support for Brown early on.<ref>Vare, p. 73</ref> However Brown had also alienated many Buckeye alumni by failing to return to the coaching position reserved for him at the end of World War II, and the athletics department by signing Buckeye players, [[Lou Groza]] chief among them, to professional contracts before their college eligibility had ended.
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Coach|Title|Years at Ohio State}}
|-
|[[Ryan Day (American football)|Ryan Day]]
|Head coach
|8th
|-
|[[Ross Bjork]]
|Senior vice president / athletic director
|1st
|-
|[[Mickey Marotti]]
|Associate athletic director of football sports performance
|15th
|-
|[[Chip Kelly]]
|Offensive coordinator / quarterbacks
|1st
|-
|[[Jim Knowles (American football)|Jim Knowles]]
|Defensive coordinator
|3rd
|-
|Keenan Bailey
|Tight ends coach
|9th
|-
|[[Justin Frye]]
|Run game coordinator / offensive line
|3rd
|-
|[[Matt Guerrieri]]
|Safeties coach
|1st
|-
|[[Brian Hartline]]
|Co-offensive coordinator / wide receivers
|7th
|-
|[[Larry Johnson (American football coach)|Larry Johnson]]
|Associate head coach / defensive line
|11th
|-
|[[James Laurinaitis]]
|Linebackers coach
|2nd
|-
|[[Carlos Locklyn]]
|Running backs coach
|1st
|-
|[[Tim Walton (American football)|Tim Walton]]
|Assistant head coach / secondary / cornerbacks
|3rd
|-
|Brent Zdebski
|Quality control – defense
|1st
|-
|[[Rob Keys]]
|Quality control – kicking
|1st
|-
|Sam McGrath
|Quality control – defense
|1st
|-
|Joe Lyberger
|Quality control – defense
|1st
|-
|[[Tim Drevno]]
|Quality control – offense
|1st
|-
|LaAllan Clark
|Graduate assistant – defense
|1st
|-
|Mike Sollenne
|Graduate assistant – offense
|1st
|-
|Sean Binckes
|Graduate assistant – offense
|1st
|-
|[[Michael Hunter (American football)|Michael Hunter, Jr.]]
|Graduate assistant – defense
|1st
|-
|Riley Larkin
|Program assistant – offense
|1st
|-
|Gunner Daniel
|Program assistant – special teams
|2nd
|-
|Devin Jordan
|Program assistant – offense
|1st
|-
|Gerren DuHart
|Program assistant – defense
|2nd
|-
|Joshua Chorba
|Program assistant – defense
|2nd
|-
|[[Tony Johnson (wide receiver)|Tony Johnson]]
|Senior advisor/analyst
|1st
|}


==All-time records==
A unanimous vote of the [[board of trustees]] endorsed the choice of the selection committee and on [[February 18]], [[1951]], named as head coach [[Woody Hayes|Wayne Woodrow Hayes]], who had achieved success as head coach of both his alma mater [[Denison University]] and [[Miami University#Athletics|Miami of Ohio]].<ref>ibid.p. 76. Dick Larkins, the Athletic Director, and Jack Fullen, executive secretary of the alumni association, were Brown's main opponents</ref> Hayes, ironically, had not been the committee's first choice. The head coach of [[Missouri Tigers|Missouri]], [[Don Faurot]], had been offered and accepted the position a week earlier, but changed his mind two days later.<ref>Park, p.276</ref> Going into his first season, Hayes thus did not enjoy widespread support among Ohio State's following.


===All-time Big Ten records===
Hayes had Janowicz returning for his senior year but he converted the Buckeye offense from [[single-wing]] to [[T-formation]], limiting the tailback's effectiveness. He also instituted a demanding practice regimen and was both aggressive and vocal in enforcing it, alienating many players accustomed to Fesler's laid-back style.
{{disputed section|date=August 2019}}
This table reflects the results of Big Ten match-ups when both OSU and its opponent were members of the conference through November 9, 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/ohio-state/head-to-head.html|title=Ohio State head-to-head records|publisher=[[Sports-Reference]]}}</ref> Ohio State began Big Ten play in 1913. Examples of excluded results are Chicago after 1939, Michigan between 1907 and 1916, Michigan State before 1953, Penn State before 1993, and Nebraska before 2011 (see [[Big Ten Conference#History|Big Ten History]] for further information). Ohio State's vacated wins from 2010 are not included (see [[2010 Ohio State Buckeyes football team]] for further information).


{| class="wikitable"
===1979-1987: Earle Bruce===
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Team|Big Ten wins|Big Ten losses|Big Ten ties|Winning percentage|Streak|First Big Ten meeting|Last meeting}}
|-
| [[Chicago Maroons football|Chicago Maroons]] || 10 || 2 || 2 || {{Winning percentage|10|2|2}} || Won 8 || 1920 || 1939
|-
| [[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois Fighting Illini]] || 69 || 30 || 3 || {{Winning percentage|69|30|3}} || Won 8 || 1914 || 2017
|-
| [[Indiana Hoosiers football|Indiana Hoosiers]] || 80 || 12 || 5 || {{Winning percentage|80|12|5}}|| Won 28 || 1913 || 2023
|-
| [[Iowa Hawkeyes football|Iowa Hawkeyes]] || 49 || 15 || 3 || {{Winning percentage|49|15|3}}|| Won 1 || 1922 || 2022
|-
| [[Maryland Terrapins football|Maryland Terrapins]] ||9|| 0 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|7|0|0}} || Won 9 || 2014 ||2023
|-
| [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan Wolverines]] ||52||60||4||{{Winning percentage|52|60|6}}
| Lost 3 || 1918 || 2023
|-
| [[Michigan State Spartans football|Michigan State Spartans]] || 38 || 15 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|38|15|0}}|| Won 8 || 1953 || 2023
|-
| [[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota Golden Gophers]] || 48 || 7 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|48|7|0}} || Won 12 || 1921 || 2023
|-
| [[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska Cornhuskers]] ||9|| 1 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|9|1|0}}|| Won 7 || 2011 ||2021
|-
| [[Northwestern Wildcats football|Northwestern Wildcats]] ||66|| 14 || 1 || {{Winning percentage|66|14|1}}|| Won 10 || 1913 ||2022
|-
| [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State Nittany Lions]] || 22 || 8 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|22|8|0}}|| Won 7 || 1993 ||2023
|-
| [[Purdue Boilermakers football|Purdue Boilermakers]] || 42 || 15 || 2 || {{Winning percentage|42|15|2}} || Won 2 || 1919 || 2023
|-
| [[Rutgers Scarlet Knights football|Rutgers Scarlet Knights]] ||10|| 0 || 0 || {{Winning percentage|9|0|0}} || Won 10 || 2014 ||2023
|-
| [[Wisconsin Badgers football|Wisconsin Badgers]] || 64 || 18 || 5 || {{Winning percentage|64|18|5}}|| Won 10 || 1913 || 2023
|}


==Individual awards and achievements==
===1988-2000: John Cooper===
Through the 2006 season, Ohio State players have by a significant margin won more trophies than any other NCAA Division 1A program. Ohio State players have won 34 of the listed major awards, with the next closest being 26 (Oklahoma). Ohio State is the only university to have received each of the awards at least once. Of the five awards created prior to 1980 (Heisman, Lombardi, Maxwell, Outland, and Walter Camp), Ohio State has received the most with 25 (Notre Dame follows with 23).


===From 2001: Jim Tressel===
===Retired numbers===
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
|-
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=40px| No.
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=150px| Player
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=px| Pos.
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=100px| Tenure
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width= px| No. ret.
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width= px| Ref
|-
| '''22''' || [[Les Horvath]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1940–42, 1944 || 2000 || <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''27''' || [[Eddie George]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1992–95 || 2001 || <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''31''' || [[Vic Janowicz]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1949–51 || 2000 || <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''40''' || [[Howard Cassady]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]] || 1952–55 || 2000|| <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''45''' || [[Archie Griffin]] || [[Running back|RB]] || 1972–75 || 1999 || <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''47''' || [[Chic Harley]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]], [[Quarterback|QB]], [[End (American football)|E]], [[Placekicker|K]] || 1916–17, 1919 || 2004 || <ref name=ohiosf/>
|-
| '''99''' || [[Bill Willis]] || [[Lineman (American football)|DL]] || 1942–44 || 2007|| <ref name=ohiosf/>
|}


==2006 Buckeye team==
=== Honored numbers ===
<!-- NOTE: the numbers cited below are currently in use according to Ohio Buckeye 2022-23 roster (source: https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/roster/) -->
In the initial [[USA Today]] Coaches' Poll, which is part of the [[Bowl Championship Series]] formula for determining which two teams play for the National Championship, Ohio State is ranked number one.<ref name="coach-poll1">{{cite news | url=http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/2006-08-03-top-25-capsules_x.htm | title=Breaking down the top 25 teams | publisher=USA Today | date=[[5 August]] [[2006]] | accessdate=2006-08-07}}</ref> The same poll has the defending national champions, the [[2006 Texas Longhorn football team |Texas Longhorns]] ranked 2nd,<ref name="pre-season-OSU">{{cite news | url=http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/2006-08-04-ohio-state-poll-cover_x.htm | title=Buckeyes are preseason favorites in USA TODAY Top 25 Coaches' poll | publisher=USA Today | date=[[4 August]] [[2006]] | accessdate=2006-08-07}}</ref> meaning the [[9 September]] [[2006]] game between the two teams could be a rare early-season meeting of the two most highly ranked teams in the sport.<ref name="1v2">{{cite news | author=Mandel, Stewart | url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/si_blogs/football/ncaa/2006/08/get-ready-for-no-1-vs-no-2.html | title=Get Ready for No. 1 vs No. 2 | publisher=Sports Illustrated | date=[[4 August]] [[2006]] | accessdate=2006-08-07}}</ref>
Although these numbers are cited as "retired" on Ohio State website,<ref name=ohiosf/> they are considered enshrined rather than retired, and are available to be worn. All previously retired jersey numbers remain retired.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/112214aaa.html|title=No. 10, Troy Smith to be honored in Ohio Stadium|date=November 22, 2014|access-date=December 8, 2014|archive-date=December 4, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141204213653/http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/112214aaa.html|url-status=live}}</ref>


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
===Coaching staff===
|-
Name/Position/(First season in position)(former position held and seasons)//Alma mater/(Year graduated)
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=40px| No.
* [[Jim Tressel]], Head Coach (2001)
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=150px| Player
::[[Baldwin-Wallace College]] 1975
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=px| Pos.
* [[Jim Bollman]], Offensive Coordinator /Offensive Line Coach (2001)
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width=100px| Tenure
::[[Ohio University]] 1977
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width= px| Honored
* [[Joe Daniels (football)|Joe Daniels]], Passing Game Coordinator (2004)/Quarterbacks Coach (2002) ''(formerly Wide Receivers Coach 2002-2003)''
! style={{CollegePrimaryStyle|Ohio State Buckeyes|color=white}} ; width= px| Ref.
::[[Slippery Rock University]] 1964
|-
* [[Darrell Hazell]], Assistant Head Coach/Wide Receivers Coach (2004)
| '''10''' || [[Troy Smith]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 2003–06 || 2014 || <ref name=ohiosf>[https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/football-archive/ Retired numbers] at Ohio State Buckeyes</ref>
::[[Muskingum College]] 1986
|}
* [[John Peterson (football)|John Peterson]], Recruiting Coordinator/Tight Ends Coach (2004)
::[[The Ohio State University]] 1991
* [[Dick Tressel]], Running Backs Coach (2004) ''(formerly Associate Director of Football Operations 2001-2003)''
::[[Baldwin-Wallace College]] 1970
* [[Jim Heacock]], Defensive Coordinator (2005)/Defensive Line Coach (2000) ''(formerly Defensive Tackles Coach 1996-1999)''
::[[Muskingum College]] 1970
* [[Luke Fickell]], Co-Defensive Coordinator (2005)/Linebackers Coach (2004) ''(formerly Special Teams Coach 2002-2003)''
::[[The Ohio State University]] 1997
* [[Tim Beckman]], Defensive Backs Coach (2005)
::[[University of Findlay]] 1988
* [[Paul Haynes]], Defensive Backs Coach (2005)
::[[Kent State University]] 1993
* [[Eric Lichter]], Director of Football Performance (2006)
::[[Weber State University]] 1997
* [[Joe Rudolph]], Strength Coordinator (2006)
::[[University of Wisconsin]] 1995
* [[Butch Reynolds]], Speed Coordinator (2005)
::[[The Ohio State University]] 1991
* [[Bob Tucker (football)|Bob Tucker]], Director of Football Operations (2001)
::[[College of Wooster]] 1965
* [[Stan Jefferson]], Associate Director of Football Operations (2004)
::[[The Ohio State University]] 1974


===Player roster, depth chart, and schedule===
=== Block O Jersey ===
In 2020, the NCAA approved the use of the No. 0.<ref>{{Cite web|last1=Baird|first1=Nathan|date=2020-04-21|title=NCAA abolishes targeting 'walk of shame' like the one Ohio State football's Shaun Wade took at Fiesta Bowl|url=https://www.cleveland.com/osu/2020/04/ncaa-abolishes-targeting-walk-of-shame-like-the-one-ohio-state-footballs-shaun-wade-took-at-fiesta-bowl.html|access-date=2020-10-22|website=cleveland|language=en|archive-date=October 31, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031035013/https://www.cleveland.com/osu/2020/04/ncaa-abolishes-targeting-walk-of-shame-like-the-one-ohio-state-footballs-shaun-wade-took-at-fiesta-bowl.html|url-status=live}}</ref> In order to further pay tribute to Bill Willis, Coach Day decided to start a new tradition and choose the player who will wear the number each season.<ref>{{Cite web|last1=Baird|first1=Nathan|date=2020-10-10|title=Ohio State football's "Block O" No. 0 tradition a fitting tribute to both Bill Willis and Jonathon Cooper|url=https://www.cleveland.com/osu/2020/10/ohio-state-footballs-block-o-no-0-tradition-a-fitting-tribute-to-both-bill-willis-and-jonathon-cooper.html|access-date=2020-10-22|website=cleveland|language=en|archive-date=October 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201027195953/https://www.cleveland.com/osu/2020/10/ohio-state-footballs-block-o-no-0-tradition-a-fitting-tribute-to-both-bill-willis-and-jonathon-cooper.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
:''Main article: [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team]]''


{| class="wikitable"
==Buckeye football traditions==
|-
Ohio State football is rich in traditions, and Coach Tressel has since his hiring made upholding tradition a cornerstone of his program.<ref>Park, p.1</ref> The following are football traditions in chronogical order of longevity:
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Name|Pos.|Class|Previous No.}}
* '''Senior tackle'''
|-
Begun in 1913 by head coach [[John Wilce]], seniors on the team are recognized at the last practice of the season, either before the Michigan game or before departing Columbus to play in a [[bowl game]], and hit the [[Glossary of American football#B|blocking sled]] a final time.<ref>{{cite book| author=Todd Lamb, editor| title=Ohio State Football Gameday| publisher=The Ohio State Athletics Communications Office| year=2002|pages=42-43}}</ref>
| 2020 || [[Jonathon Cooper]] || [[Defensive end|DE]]|| Senior (RS) || 18
* '''Illibuck'''
|-
The winner of the Ohio State-[[Illinois Fighting Illini|Illinois]] game has been awarded the [[Illibuck]] trophy since 1925.<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref>
|2021
* '''Gold pants'''
|[[Thayer Munford]]
A [[gold]] miniature [[Charm bracelet|charm]] depicting a pair of football pants is given to all players and coaches following a victory over the Michigan Wolverines. The tradition began as the result of a comment to reporters by newly-hired head coach [[Francis Schmidt]] on [[March 2]], [[1934]]: "How about Michigan? They put their pants on one leg at a time, the same as we do!" The first gold pants, which were a creation of Simon Lazarus (president of the [[Lazarus (department store)|Lazarus]] chain of department stores) and Herbert Levy,<ref>
|[[Offensive tackle|OT]]
{{cite book
|Senior (RS)
| author=Jim Tressel
|75*
| chapter= Charlie Ream 1934-1937
|-
| title=What It Means To Be A Buckeye
|2022
| editor=Jeff Snook
|Kamryn Babb
| publisher=Triumph Books
|[[Wide receiver|WR]]
| id= ISBN 1572436026
|Senior (RS)
| year=2003| pages=3}}</ref> were awarded that year for a 34-0 drubbing of the Wolverines.<ref>Park, p.141</ref>
|1
* '''Captain's Breakfast'''
|-
1934 also saw the first gathering of former [[team captain]]s for breakfast on the Sunday following the [[Homecoming]] game. The event began when local businessman Walter Jeffrey invited twenty former captains to the [[Scioto Country Club]] to honor them, and continues to welcome new captains and award them [[mug]]s bearing their names and season.<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref><ref>Park, p.145</ref>
|2023
* '''Buckeye Grove'''
|[[Xavier Johnson (American football)|Xavier Johnson]]
Begun in 1934, each player who wins "first-team [[All-American]]" honors is recognized by the planting of a buckeye tree and installation of a plaque in Buckeye Grove, now located near the southwestern corner of Ohio Stadium next to Morrill Tower. Trees are planted in ceremonies held prior to the Spring Game. All 125 Buckeye All-Americans dating back to 1914 have been so honored.<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref>
|[[Wide receiver|WR]]
* '''Michigan Week'''
|Senior (RS)
Since 1935 the annual game against Michigan has been the final meeting of the regular season for both teams. The week prior to "The Game", known as Michigan Week, is characterized by scheduled school spirit and public service events, such as rallies, [[touch football]] games, and [[blood drive]]s;<ref name="offlscumwk"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://ohiounion.osu.edu/bmw/| title = Beat Michigan Week| format = | work = | publisher = The Ohio State University Union| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref> and by massive displays of school colors and banners in much of Ohio. (In an unofficial culmination to Michigan Week, since 1990 on the Thursday night before "The Game" students have participated in the "Mirror Lake jump", an unofficial gathering at Mirror Lake, a pond between Pomerene Hall and [[Ohio State University#Campus|The Oval]], in which masses of students jump into the water.)<ref name="mirlakjmp"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.bright.net/~beeryde/ref/osuhistory/mirrorlake2.htm| title = How the Mirror Lake Jump Came to Be| format = | work = | publisher = The Lantern 17 Nov 2005| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref>
|10
|-
|2024
|[[Cody Simon]]
|[[Linebacker|LB]]
|Senior (RS)
|30
|}


Note: Due to number restrictions, Thayer Munford could not wear number 0. Instead, he wore his regular number and honored the award with a patch.
* '''Block O'''
Since 1938 the registered student organization Block O has been the "Official Cheering Section" of the Buckeyes. ''"Known for spreading spirit, starting cheers and performing card stunts, Block 'O' was founded...by Clancy Isaac"''.<ref name="osufbtrad"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://ohiostatebuckeyes.cstv.com/trads/osu-m-footbl-trad.html| title = Football Traditions| format = | work = | publisher = TOSU Football Official Site| accessdate = 27 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref> They occupy Section 39A in the South [[grandstand]] of [[Ohio Stadium]], next to the band.<ref name="blocko"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://blocko.org.ohio-state.edu/| title = Block "O"| format = | work = | publisher = The Ohio State University| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref><ref name="tressblocko"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.coachtressel.com/tradition/block_O.asp| title = Tradition-Block O| format = | work = | publisher = Coach Tressel.com| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref>


===Honored coaches===
* '''Victory Bell'''
Two head coaches have also been honored by the Buckeyes, with banners at Ohio Stadium:
The Victory Bell is rung after every Ohio State victory by members of [[Alpha Phi Omega]], a tradition that began after the Bucks beat [[California Golden Bears|California]] [[October 2]], [[1954]]. Reputedly the ringing can be heard five miles away "on a calm day." Located 150 feet high in the southeast tower of Ohio Stadium, the bell was a gift of the classes of 1943, 1944 and 1945, and weighs 2,420 pounds. <ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref>
* [[Paul Brown]] (1941–43) - led OSU to their first National Championship in 1942
* '''''Hang on Sloopy'''''
* [[Woody Hayes]] (1951–78) - led OSU to school records of 205 wins, five National Championships (1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 1970), and 13 Big Ten Championships
First played at the [[Minnesota Golden Gophers|Minnesota]] game of [[October 9]], [[1965]], the [[Rock music|rock]] song ''[[Hang On Sloopy]]'' is now played by the marching band before the start of the fourth quarter, with fans performing an O-H-I-O chant in the intervals between the [[refrain]]s. The song is also played to encourage the team's defensive players when opponents are moving the ball on offense late in a game.<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref>
* '''Buckeye leaves'''
Since 1968 the helmets of Ohio State players have been adorned with white decals approximately the size of a [[Quarter (U.S. coin)|quarter]] depicting a [[ohio buckeye|buckeye leaf]], awarded for making significant plays and for consistency of performance.<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref>
* '''Tunnel of Pride'''
The Tunnel of Pride began with the 1994 Michigan game when all former players who were in attendance formed a tunnel through which the team ran to take the field, and Ohio State beat its rival that day, 22-6. [[Rex Kern]], quarterback of the [[Rose Bowl game|1968 National Championship]] team, and then Director of Athletics [[Andy Geiger]] together used the concept as a means of connecting current Buckeyes with those who played before them. The Tunnel of Pride was next formed for the [[1995]] [[Notre Dame Fighting Irish football|Notre Dame]] game, which the Buckeyes also won. In each home game against Michigan since, the tradition has been repeated. <ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.42</ref><ref name="tunpride"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.coachtressel.com/tradition/tunnel_of_pride.asp| title = Tunnel of Pride| format = | work = | publisher = Coach Tressel.com| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref>


===Award winners===
* '''''Carmen Ohio'''''
Instituted by Coach Tressel in 2001, at the conclusion of all home games the coaches, players and cheerleaders gather in the south [[end zone]] next to the marching band to sing the university's alma mater, ''[[Carmen Ohio]]''.<ref name="carmenotrad"> {{cite web | last = | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = | url = http://www.coachtressel.com/tradition/carmen_ohio.asp| title = Tradition-Carmen Ohio| format = | work = | publisher = Coach Tressel.com| accessdate = 26 Jul | accessyear = 2006}}</ref>
*'''TBDBITL'''
:''Main article: [[The Ohio State University Marching Band]]''
The Marching Band, known by its acronym as "'''T'''he '''B'''est '''D'''amned '''B'''and '''I'''n '''T'''he '''L'''and," is the most visible and possibly best-known tradition of Ohio State football.<ref>{{cite book| author=Leeann Parker, editor| title=Ohio State Football Gameday| publisher=The Ohio State Athletics Communications Office| year=2001|pages=45}}</ref> Home games are preceded by three much-anticipated traditions, and a fourth, "dotting the 'i'" of [[The Ohio State University Marching Band#Script Ohio|Script Ohio]], enjoys a reputation all its own:<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.43</ref>
**[[The Ohio State University Marching Band#Skull Session|Skull Session]]
**[[The Ohio State University Marching Band#Ramp entrance|Ramp entrance]]
**[[The Ohio State University Marching Band#The Back Bend|The Back Bend]]
**[[The Ohio State University Marching Band#Script Ohio|Script Ohio]]


====Heisman Trophy winners====
==Rivalries==
Ohio State players have won the [[Heisman Trophy]] seven times, which ties Notre Dame and Oklahoma for the second most awards for any school, behind only USC with eight. [[Archie Griffin]] is the only two-time recipient in the history of the award.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-12-02|title=45 Years Later, Griffin's Still the Only Two-Time Heisman Winner|url=https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/45-years-later-griffins-still-the-only-two-time-heisman-winner-2/|access-date=2021-03-17|website=Ohio State Buckeyes|language=en-US|archive-date=December 7, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201207100447/https://ohiostatebuckeyes.com/45-years-later-griffins-still-the-only-two-time-heisman-winner-2/|url-status=live}}</ref>
:''Main article: [[Michigan-Ohio State rivalry]]''


{| class="wikitable"
While its rivalry with the University of Michigan is its most reknowned and intense, Ohio State has two other series marked by their longevity, both [[Big Ten Conference]] rivals, those of [[Indiana Hoosiers|Indiana]] and [[Illinois Fighting Illini|Illinois]]. The series versus Indiana began as a non-conference matchup, with Indiana going undefeated at 0-4-1. In conference, however, the Buckeyes (despite losing the opening conference game) are 64-8-4 through the 2005 season, the most wins against any opponent. Illinois also began with non-conference games (0-1-1) but became the longest continuous series in 2002 when the schools played in their 89th consecutive year. (Michigan and Ohio State will play their 90th consecutive year in 2007.) Through 2005 Ohio State's record against the Illini is 59-29-4.

==Awards and achievements==
{| class="toccolours" style="float: right; margin-left: 1em;" width="250px"
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center; background:red" | <font color=lightgrey>'''Retired football jerseys'''<ref> ''OSF Gameday 2002'' p.61</ref></font>
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Season|Name|Pos.|Class|Points}}
| '''Number'''|| '''Player'''
|-
|-
| [[1944 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1944]] || [[Les Horvath]] || [[Running back|RB]] || Senior || 412
| colspan="2" |<hr>
|-
|-
| [[1950 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1950]] || [[Vic Janowicz]] || [[Running back|RB]] || Junior || 633
| align=center|'''45''' || [[Archie Griffin]]
|-
|-
| [[1955 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1955]] || [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]] || [[Running back|RB]] || Senior || 2219
| align=center|'''31''' || [[Vic Janowicz]]
|-
|-
| [[1974 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1974]] || [[Archie Griffin]] || [[Running back|RB]] || Junior || 1920
| align=center|'''40''' || [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]]
|-
|-
| [[1975 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1975]] || Archie Griffin (2) || [[Running back|RB]] || Senior || 1800
| align=center|'''22''' || [[Les Horvath]]
|-
|-
| align=center|'''27''' || [[Eddie George]]
| [[1995 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|1995]] || [[Eddie George]] || [[Running back|RB]] || Senior || 1460
|-
|-
| [[2006 Ohio State Buckeyes football team|2006]] || [[Troy Smith]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || Senior || 2540
| align=center|'''47''' || [[Chic Harley|Charles "Chic" Harley]]
|}
|}


====Lombardi Award====
Through the 2005 season Ohio State players have by a significant margin won more major trophies than any other school in the Big Ten Conference, and since 1990 have won more than any other NCAA Division 1A program. Ohio State players have won 27 major awards, with the next closest in the conference being 15.
Ohio State players have won the [[Lombardi Award]] six times:
* 1970: [[Jim Stillwagon]]
* 1973: [[John Hicks (American football)|John Hicks]]
* 1987: [[Chris Spielman]]
* 1995: [[Orlando Pace]]
* 1996: [[Orlando Pace]]
* 2005: [[A. J. Hawk]]


===Heisman Trophy===
====Maxwell Award====
Ohio State players have won the [[Heisman Trophy]] six times. '''Archie Griffin''' is the only two-time recipient in the history of the award.
* [[Les Horvath]] 1944
* [[Vic Janowicz]] 1950
* [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]] 1955
* [[Archie Griffin]] 1974
* [[Archie Griffin]] 1975
* [[Eddie George]] 1995
===Lombardi Award===
Ohio State players have won the [[Lombardi Award]] six times. '''Orlando Pace''' is the only two-time recipient in the history of the award.
* [[Jim Stillwagon]] 1970
* [[John Hicks]] 1973
* [[Chris Spielman]] 1987
* [[Orlando Pace]] 1995
* [[Orlando Pace]] 1996
* [[A.J. Hawk]] 2006
===Maxwell Award===
Four Ohio State players have won the [[Maxwell Award]]:
Four Ohio State players have won the [[Maxwell Award]]:
* [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady|Howard Cassady]] 1955
* 1955: [[Howard Cassady]]
* [[Bob Ferguson]] 1961
* 1961: [[Bob Ferguson (American football player)|Bob Ferguson]]
* [[Archie Griffin]] 1975
* 1975: [[Archie Griffin]]
* [[Eddie George]] 1995
* 1995: [[Eddie George]]


===Outland Trophy===
====Outland Trophy====
Four Ohio State players have won the [[Outland Trophy]]:
Four Ohio State players have won the [[Outland Trophy]]:
* [[Jim Parker]] 1956
* 1956: [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]]
* [[Jim Stillwagon]] 1970
* 1970: [[Jim Stillwagon]]
* [[John Hicks]] 1973
* 1973: [[John Hicks (American football)|John Hicks]]
* [[Orlando Pace]] 1996
* 1996: [[Orlando Pace]]


===Other Awards===
====Walter Camp Award====
Ohio State players have won the [[Walter Camp Award]] four times:
* 1974: [[Archie Griffin]]
* 1975: [[Archie Griffin]]
* 1995: [[Eddie George]]
* 2006: [[Troy Smith]]

====Fred Biletnikoff Award====

Ohio State Players have won the [[Fred Biletnikoff Award]] twice:

* 1995: [[Terry Glenn]]
* 2023: [[Marvin Harrison Jr.]]

====Bronko Nagurski Trophy====

Ohio State Players have won the [[Bronko Nagurski Trophy]] award twice:

* 2006: [[James Laurinaitis]]
* 2019: [[Chase Young]]

====Dick Butkus Award====

Ohio State players have won the [[Dick Butkus Award]] twice:
* 1997: [[Andy Katzenmoyer]]
* 2007: [[James Laurinaitis]]

====Jim Thorpe Award====
Ohio State players have won the [[Jim Thorpe Award]] twice:
* 1998: [[Antoine Winfield Sr.|Antoine Winfield]]
* 2008: [[Malcolm Jenkins]]

====Rimington Trophy====
Ohio State players have won the [[Rimington Trophy|Dave Rimington Trophy]] three times:

* 2001: [[LeCharles Bentley]]
* 2016: [[Pat Elflein]]
* 2017: [[Billy Price (American football)|Billy Price]]

====Chicago Tribune Silver Football====
Ohio State players have won the [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football]] award 23 times:

* 1930: [[Wes Fesler]]
* 1941: [[Jack Graf]]
* 1944: [[Les Horvath]]
* 1945: [[Ollie Cline]]
* 1950: [[Vic Janowicz]]
* 1955: [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]]
* 1973: [[Archie Griffin]]
* 1974: [[Archie Griffin]]
* 1975: [[Cornelius Greene]]
* 1981: [[Art Schlichter]]
* 1984: [[Keith Byars]]
* 1995: [[Eddie George]]
* 1996: [[Orlando Pace]]
* 1998: [[Joe Germaine]]
* 2006: [[Troy Smith]]
* 2012: [[Braxton Miller]]
* 2013: [[Braxton Miller]]
* 2015: [[Ezekiel Elliott]]
* 2016: [[J. T. Barrett]]
* 2018: [[Dwayne Haskins]]
* 2019: [[Chase Young]]
* 2020: [[Justin Fields]]
* 2023: [[Marvin Harrison Jr.]]

====Graham–George Offensive Player of the Year====
Ohio State players have won the [[Graham–George Offensive Player of the Year]] 13 times:

* 1995: [[Eddie George]]
* 1996: [[Orlando Pace]]
* 1998: [[Joe Germaine]]
* 2006: [[Troy Smith]]
* 2012: [[Braxton Miller]]
* 2013: [[Braxton Miller]] (2)
* 2015: [[Ezekiel Elliott]]
* 2018: [[Dwayne Haskins]]
* 2019: [[Justin Fields]]
* 2020: [[Justin Fields]] (2)
* 2021: [[C. J. Stroud]]
* 2022: [[C. J. Stroud]] (2)
* 2023: [[Marvin Harrison Jr.]]

====Nagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year====

Ohio State players have won the [[Nagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year]] 11 times:

* 1992: [[Steve Tovar]]
* 1993: [[Dan Wilkinson]]
* 1996: [[Shawn Springs]]
* 2002: [[Mike Doss]]
* 2003: [[Will Smith (defensive end)|Will Smith]]
* 2005: [[A. J. Hawk]]
* 2007: [[James Laurinaitis]]
* 2008: [[James Laurinaitis]] (2)
* 2012: [[John Simon (defensive end)|John Simon]]
* 2014: [[Joey Bosa]]
* 2019: [[Chase Young]]

====Other====
* [[Eddie George]] received the '''[[Doak Walker Award]]''' in 1995
* [[Eddie George]] received the '''[[Doak Walker Award]]''' in 1995
* [[Terry Glenn]] received the '''[[Biletnikoff Award]]''' in 1995
* [[B. J. Sander]] received the '''[[Ray Guy Award]]''' in 2003
* [[Andy Katzenmoyer]] received the '''[[Butkus Award]]''' in 1997
* [[Antoine Winfield]] received the '''[[Jim Thorpe Award]]''' in 1998
* [[LeCharles Bentley]] received the '''[[Dave Rimington Trophy]]''' in 2000
* [[B.J. Sander]] received the '''[[Ray Guy Award]]''' in 2003
* [[Mike Nugent]] received the '''[[Lou Groza Award]]''' in 2004
* [[Mike Nugent]] received the '''[[Lou Groza Award]]''' in 2004
* [[Troy Smith]] received the '''[[Davey O'Brien Award]]''' in 2006
* [[James Laurinaitis]] received the '''[[Lott Trophy]] ''' in 2008
* [[Ezekiel Elliott]] received the '''[[James E. Sullivan Award]]''' in 2014
* [[Chase Young]] received the '''[[Chuck Bednarik Award]]''' and '''[[Ted Hendricks Award]]''' in 2019.


===All-American and All-Conference honors===
===Season MVP===
Through 2017, 199 Buckeyes have been named first team All-Americans since 1914. Of those 85 have been consensus picks. 388 have been named to the All-Big Ten team, and 16 have won the [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football]], the Big Ten's [[Most Valuable Player]] award, including Troy Smith for 2006. The [[Athletic director|Athletic Directors]] of the Big Ten Conference voted Eddie George '''Big Ten-[[Jesse Owens]]''' '''Athlete of the Year''' for 1996.


On November 22, 2006, ten Buckeyes were named to either the Coaches or Conference media All-Big Ten First Team selections for the 2006 season, and seven were named to both. [[Troy Smith]] was named Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year. Four other Buckeyes received Second Team honors.
Voted by players at the end of the season.


===List of All-Americans===
* 2005 [[A. J. Hawk]] - [[linebacker]]
All records per OSU Athletics.<ref>http://grfx.cstv.com/schools/osu/graphics/pdf/m-footbl/16guide/8_Award_Winners_History.pdfs {{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, OSU Athletics, Summer 2016.</ref>{{when|date=August 2019}}
* 2004 [[Mike Nugent]] - [[place kicker]]
* 2003 [[Michael Jenkins]] - [[wide receiver]]
* 2002 [[Craig Krenzel]] - [[quarterback]] / [[Chris Gamble]] - [[wide receiver]]/[[defensive back]]
* 2001 [[Jonathan Wells]] - [[tailback]]
* 2000 [[Derek Combs]] - [[tailback]]
* 1999 [[Ahmed Plummer]] - [[defensive back]]
* 1998 [[Joe Germaine]] - [[quarterback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1997 [[Antoine Winfield]] - [[defensive back]]
* 1996 [[Orlando Pace]] - [[offensive tackle]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1995 [[Eddie George]] - [[tailback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1994 [[Korey Stringer]] - [[offensive tackle]]
* 1993 [[Raymont Harris]] - [[tailback]]
* 1992 [[Kirk Herbstreit]] - [[quarterback]]
* 1991 [[Carlos Snow]] - [[tailback]]
* 1990 [[Jeff Graham]] - [[wide receiver]]
* 1989 [[Derek Isaman]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1988 [[Jeff Uhlenhake]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1987 [[Chris Spielman]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1986 [[Cris Carter]] - [[wide receiver]]
* 1985 [[Jim Karsatos]] - [[quarterback]]
* 1984 [[Keith Byars]] - [[running back]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1983 [[John Frank]] - [[tight end]]
* 1982 [[Tim Spencer]] - [[running back]]
* 1981 [[Art Schlichter]] - [[quarterback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1980 [[Calvin Murray]] - [[tailback]]
* 1979 [[Jim Laughlin]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1978 [[Tom Cousineau]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1977 [[Dave Adkins]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1976 [[Bob Brudzinski]] - [[defensive end]]
* 1975 [[Cornelius Greene]] - [[quarterback]]
* 1974 [[Archie Griffin]] - [[tailback]]
* 1973 [[Archie Griffin]] - [[tailback]]
* 1972 [[George Hasenohrl]] - [[defensive lineman]]
* 1971 [[Tom DeLeone]]- [[center (football)|center]]
* 1970 [[Jim Stillwagon]] - [[defensive lineman]]
* 1969 [[Jim Otis]] - [[fullback]]
* 1968 [[Mark Stier]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1967 [[Dirk Worden]] - [[linebacker]]
* 1966 [[Ray Pryor]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1965 [[Doug Van Horn]] - [[offensive guard]]
* 1964 [[Ed Orazen]] - [[defensive lineman]]
* 1963 [[Matt Snell]] - [[fullback]]
* 1962 [[Billy Armstrong]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1961 [[Bob Ferguson]] - [[fullback]]
* 1960 [[Tom Matte]] - [[quarterback]]
* 1959 [[Jim Houston]] - [[end (football)|end]]
* 1958 [[Jim Houston]] - [[end (football)|end]]
* 1957 [[Bill Jobko]] - [[guard (football)|guard]]
* 1956 [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]] - [[guard (football)|guard]]
* 1955 [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]] - [[halfback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1954 [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady]] - [[halfback]]
* 1953 [[George Jacoby]] - [[tackle (American football)|tackle]]
* 1952 [[Fred Bruney]] - [[halfback]]
* 1951 [[Vic Janowicz]] - [[halfback]]
* 1950 [[Vic Janowicz]] - [[halfback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1949 [[Jack Lininger]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1948 [[Joe Whistler]] - [[fullback]]
* 1947 [[Dave Templeton]] - [[guard (football)|guard]]
* 1946 [[Cecil Souders]] - [[end (football)|end]]
* 1945 [[Ollie Cline]] - [[halfback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1944 [[Les Horvath]] - [[quarterback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1943 [[Gordon Appleby]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1942 [[Charles Csuri|Chuck Csuri]] - [[tackle (American football)|tackle]]
* 1941 [[Jack Graf]] - [[fullback]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]
* 1940 [[Claude White]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1939 [[Steve Andrako]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1938 [[Jim Langhurst]] - [[fullback]]
* 1937 [[Ralph Wolf]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1936 [[Ralph Wolf]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1935 [[Gomer Jones]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1934 [[Gomer Jones]] - [[center (football)|center]]
* 1933 [[Mickey Vuchinich]] - [[fullback]]
* 1932 [[Lew Hinchman]] - [[halfback]]
* 1931 [[Robert Haubrich]] - [[tackle (American football)|tackle]]
* 1930 [[Wes Fesler]] - [[end (football)|end]] - also [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]


;1910s
===NCAA Coach of the Year===
*1914: Boyd Cherry (E)
Three Ohio State head coaches have received the '''[[Paul "Bear" Bryant Award]]''' as NCAA Coach of the Year a total of five times:
* [[Woody Hayes]] 1957, 1968, 1975
*1916: [[Chic Harley]] (B), Robert Karch (T)
*1917: Charles Bolen (E), Harold Courtney (E), Chic Harley (B), Kelley VanDyne (C)
* [[Earle Bruce]] 1979
*1918: Clarence MacDonald (E)
* [[Jim Tressel]] 2002
*1919: Chic Harley (B), [[Gaylord Stinchcomb]] (B)
In addition, two coaches were voted "National Coach of the Year" before the inception of the Bryant Award. [[Carroll Widdoes]], acting head coach after [[Paul Brown]] had entered the [[U.S. Navy]], was voted the honor in 1944. Brown himself was voted the honor in 1942 for winning the [[NCAA Division I-A national football championship|National Championship]] but declined in favor of [[Georgia Tech]]'s [[William Alexander (football coach)|Bill Alexander]].


;1920s
===All-American and All-Conference honors===
*1920: Iolas Huffman (G), Gaylord Stinchcomb (B)
Through 2005 125 Buckeyes have been named First team All-Americans since 1914. 234 have been named to the All-Big Ten team, and 14 have won the [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football]], the Big Ten's [[Most Valuable Player]] award. The [[Athletic director|Athletic Directors]] of the Big Ten Conference voted Eddie George '''Big Ten-[[Jesse Owens]]''' '''Athlete of the Year''' for 1996.
*1921: Iolas Huffman (G), Cyril Myers (E)
*1923: Harry Workman (QB)
*1924: [[Cookie Cunningham|Harold Cunningham]] (E)
*1925: Edwin Hess (G)
*1926: Edwin Hess (G), [[Marty Karow]] (HB), [[Leo Raskowski]] (T)
*1927: Leo Raskowski (T)
*1928: [[Wes Fesler]] (E)
*1929: Wes Fesler (E)

;1930s
*1930: Wes Fesler (E), Lew Hinchman (HB)
*1931: Carl Cramer (QB), Lew Hinchman (HB)
*1932: Joseph Gailus (G), [[Sid Gillman]] (E), Lew Hinchman (HB), Ted Rosequist (T)
*1933: Joseph Gailus (G)
*1934: Regis Monahan (G), Merle Wendt (E)
*1935: [[Gomer Jones]] (C), Merle Wendt (E)
*1936: Charles Hamrick (T), Inwood Smith (G), Merle Wendt (E)
*1937: Carl Kaplanoff (T), Jim McDonald (QB), Ralph Wolf (C), [[Gust Zarnas]] (G)
*1939: Vic Marino (G), Esco Sarkkinen (E), [[Don Scott (American football)|Don Scott]] (HB)

;1940s
*1940:Don Scott (C)
*1942: [[Bob Shaw (end)|Robert Shaw]] (E), [[Charles Csuri]] (T), [[Lin Houston]] (G), Paul Sarringhaus (HB), Gene Fekete (E)
*1943: [[Bill Willis]] (T)
*1944: [[Jack Dugger]] (E), Bill Willis (T), [[Bill Hackett|William Hackett]] (G), [[Les Horvath]] (QB/HB)
*1945: [[Warren Amling]] (G), [[Ollie Cline]] (FB), Russell Thomas (T)
*1946: Warren Amling (G), Cecil Souders (E)

;1950s
*1950: Robert Momsen (T), Robert McMullogh (C), [[Vic Janowicz]] (HB)
*1952: Mike Takacs (G)
*1954: Dean Dugger (E), [[Howard "Hopalong" Cassady|Howard Cassady]] (HB), Jim Reichenbach (G)
*1955: [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]] (G), Howard Cassady (HB)
*1956: Jim Parker (G)
*1957: [[Aurealius Thomas]] (G)
*1958: [[Jim Houston]] (E), [[Jim Marshall (defensive end)|Jim Marshall]] (T), [[Bob White (fullback)|Bob White]] (E)
*1959: Jim Houston (E)

;1960s
*1960: [[Bob Ferguson (American football player)|Bob Ferguson]] (FB)
*1961: Bob Ferguson (FB)
*1964: Jim Davidson (T), [[Ike Kelley]] (LB), Arnie Chonko (DB)
*1965: [[Doug Van Horn]] (G), Ike Kelley (LB)
*1966: Ray Pryor (C)
*1968: [[Dave Foley (American football)|Dave Foley]] (OT), [[Rufus Mayes]] (OT)
*1969: [[Jim Stillwagon]] (G), [[Rex Kern]] (QB), [[Jim Otis]] (FB), [[Ted Provost]] (CB), [[Jack Tatum]] (CB)

;1970s
*1970: [[Jan White]] (TE), Jim Stillwagon (MG), [[John Brockington]] (FB), Jack Tatum (CB), [[Mike Sensibaugh]] (S), Tim Anderson (CB)
*1971: [[Tom DeLeone]] (C)
*1972: [[John Hicks (American football)|John Hicks]] (OT), [[Randy Gradishar]] (LB)
*1973: John Hicks (OT), Randy Gradishar (LB), Van DeCree (DE), [[Archie Griffin]] (TB)
*1974: Van Ness DeCree (DE), Kurt Schumacher (OT), Steve Myers (C), Pete Cusick (DT), Archie Griffin (TB), [[Neal Colzie]] (CB), [[Tom Skladany]] (P)
*1975: [[Ted Smith (American football)|Ted Smith]] (OG), Archie Griffin (TB), [[Tim Fox (American football)|Tim Fox]] (S), Tom Skladany (P)
*1976: [[Bob Brudzinski]] (DE), [[Chris Ward (American football)|Chris Ward]] (OT), Tom Skladany (P)
*1977: Chris Ward (OT), Aaron Brown (NG), [[Tom Cousineau]] (LB), Ray Griffin (S)
*1978: Tom Cousineau (LB)
*1979: Ken Fritz (OG), [[Art Schlichter]] (QB)

;1980s
*1982: [[Marcus Marek]] (LB)
*1984: [[Jim Lachey]] (OG), [[Keith Byars]] (TB)
*1985: [[Pepper Johnson]] (LB)
*1986: [[Cris Carter]] (SE), [[Chris Spielman]] (LB)
*1987: Chris Spielman (LB), [[Tom Tupa]] (P)
*1988: [[Jeff Uhlenhake]] (C)

;1990s
*1991: [[Steve Tovar]] (LB)
*1992: Steve Tovar (LB)
*1993: [[Korey Stringer]] (OT), [[Dan Wilkinson]] (DT)
*1994: Korey Stringer (OT)
*1995: [[Eddie George]] (TB), [[Terry Glenn]] (FL), [[Orlando Pace]] (OT), [[Mike Vrabel]] (DE)
*1996: Orlando Pace (OT), [[Shawn Springs]] (CB), Mike Vrabel (DE)
*1997: [[Andy Katzenmoyer]] (LB), [[Rob Murphy (gridiron football)|Rob Murphy]] (OG), [[Antoine Winfield Sr.|Antoine Winfield]] (CB)
*1998: [[David Boston]] (SE), [[Damon Moore]] (SS), Rob Murphy (OG), Antoine Winfield (CB)
*1999: [[Na'il Diggs]] (LB)

;2000s
*2000: [[Mike Doss]] (SS)
*2001: [[LeCharles Bentley]] (C), Mike Doss (SS)
*2002: Mike Doss (SS), [[Andy Groom]] (P), [[Mike Nugent]] (PK), [[Matt Wilhelm]] (LB)
*2003: [[Will Allen (safety)|Will Allen]] (DB), [[Will Smith (defensive end)|Will Smith]] (DE)
*2004: Mike Nugent (PK), [[A. J. Hawk]] (LB)
*2005: A. J. Hawk (LB), [[Donte Whitner]] (SS), [[Nick Mangold]] (C)
*2006: [[Troy Smith]] (QB), [[James Laurinaitis]] (LB), [[Quinn Pitcock]] (DL), [[Ted Ginn Jr.]] (PR)
*2007: James Laurinaitis (LB), [[Kirk Barton]] (OT), [[Vernon Gholston]] (DE), [[Malcolm Jenkins]] (DB)
*2008: James Laurinaitis (LB), Malcolm Jenkins (CB)
*2009: [[Kurt Coleman]] (DB)

;2010s
*2010: [[Mike Brewster]] (C), [[Chimdi Chekwa]] (DB)
*2012: [[Johnathan Hankins]] (DT), [[Bradley Roby]] (CB)
*2013: [[Ryan Shazier]] (LB), [[Jack Mewhort]] (T)
*2014: [[Joey Bosa]] (DE). [[Michael Bennett (defensive tackle, born 1993)|Michael Bennett]] (DL)
*2015: [[Vonn Bell]] (SAF), [[Joey Bosa]] (DE), [[Taylor Decker]] (OT), [[Adolphus Washington]] (DT)
*2016: [[Pat Elflein]] (C), [[Malik Hooker]] (SAF), [[Billy Price (American football)|Billy Price]] (G), [[Curtis Samuel]] (HB)
*2017: [[Billy Price (American football)|Billy Price]] (C), [[Denzel Ward]] (CB) [[Nick Bosa]] (DE)
*2019: [[Chase Young]] (DE), [[Jeff Okudah]] (CB), [[J. K. Dobbins]] (AP), [[Wyatt Davis]] (G)

;2020s
*2020: [[Wyatt Davis]] (G), [[Shaun Wade (American football)|Shaun Wade]] (CB)
*2021: [[Thayer Munford]] (OT), [[Chris Olave]] (WR), [[Nicholas Petit-Frere]] (OT), [[Garrett Wilson]] (WR)
*2022: [[Marvin Harrison Jr.]] (WR), [[Paris Johnson Jr.]] (OT),

===Team MVP===
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
1930: [[Wes Fesler]] – (E) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1931: Robert Haubrich – (OT)<br />
1932: Lew Hinchman – (HB)<br />
1933: Mickey Vuchinich – (FB)<br />
1934: [[Gomer Jones]] – (C)<br />
1935: Gomer Jones – (C)<br />
1936: Ralph Wolf – (C)<br />
1937: Ralph Wolf – (C)<br />
1938: Jim Langhurst – (FB)<br />
1939: [[Steve Andrako]] – (C)<br />
1940: [[Don Scott (American football)|Don Scott]] – (QB)<br />
1941: [[Jack Graf]] – (FB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1942: [[Charles Csuri|Chuck Csuri]] – (OT)<br />
1943: [[Gordon Appleby]] – (C)<br />
1944: [[Les Horvath]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1945: [[Ollie Cline]] – (FB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1946: [[Cecil Souders]] – (E)<br />
1947: Dave Templeton – (G)<br />
1948: Joe Whisler – (FB)<br />
1949: Jack Lininger – (C)<br />
1950: [[Vic Janowicz]] – (HB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1951: Vic Janowicz – (HB)<br />
1952: [[Fred Bruney]] – (HB)<br />
1953: George Jacoby – (T)<br />
1954: [[Howard Cassady]] – (HB)<br />
1955: Howard Cassady – (HB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1956: [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]] – (G)<br />
1957: [[Bill Jobko]] – (G)<br />
1958: [[Jim Houston]] – (E)<br />
1959: Jim Houston – (E)<br />
1960: [[Tom Matte]] – (QB)<br />
1961: [[Bob Ferguson (American football player)|Bob Ferguson]] – (FB)<br />
1962: Billy Armstrong – (C)<br />
1963: [[Matt Snell]] – (FB)<br />
1964: Ed Orazen – (DL)<br />
1965: [[Doug Van Horn]] – (OG)<br />
1966: Ray Pryor – (C)<br />
1967: Dirk Worden – (LB)<br />
1968: Mark Stier – (LB)<br />
1969: [[Jim Otis]] – (FB)<br />
1970: [[Jim Stillwagon]] – (DL)<br />
1971: [[Tom DeLeone]] – (C)<br />
1972: [[George Hasenohrl]] – (DL)<br />
1973: [[Archie Griffin]] – (RB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1974: Archie Griffin – (RB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1975: [[Cornelius Greene]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1976: [[Bob Brudzinski]] – (DE)<br />
1977: Dave Adkins – (LB)<br />
1978: [[Tom Cousineau]] – (LB)<br />
1979: [[Jim Laughlin]] – (LB)<br />
1980: [[Calvin Murray (American football)|Calvin Murray]] – (TB)<br />
1981: [[Art Schlichter]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1982: [[Tim Spencer (American football)|Tim Spencer]] – (RB)<br />
1983: [[John E. Frank|John Frank]] – (TE)<br />
1984: [[Keith Byars]] – (RB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1985: [[Jim Karsatos]] – (QB)<br />
1986: [[Cris Carter]] – (WR)<br />
1987: [[Chris Spielman]] – (LB)<br />
1988: [[Jeff Uhlenhake]] – (C)<br />
1989: [[Derek Isaman]] – (LB)<br />
1990: [[Jeff Graham]] – (WR)<br />
1991: [[Carlos Snow]] – (TB)<br />
1992: [[Kirk Herbstreit]] – (QB)<br />
1993: [[Raymont Harris]] – (TB)<br />
1994: [[Korey Stringer]] – (OT)<br />
1995: [[Eddie George]] – (TB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1996: [[Orlando Pace]] – (OT) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1997: [[Antoine Winfield Sr.|Antoine Winfield]] – (DB)<br />
1998: [[Joe Germaine]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
1999: [[Ahmed Plummer]] – (DB)<br />
2000: [[Derek Combs]] – (TB)<br />
2001: [[Jonathan Wells (American football)|Jonathan Wells]] – (TB)<br />
2002: [[Craig Krenzel]] – (QB) / [[Chris Gamble]] – (WR/DB)<br />
2003: [[Michael Jenkins (wide receiver)|Michael Jenkins]] – (WR)<br />
2004: [[Mike Nugent]] – (PK)<br />
2005: [[A. J. Hawk]] – (LB)<br />
2006: [[Troy Smith]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2007: [[Chris Wells (American football)|Chris Wells]] – (TB)<br />
2008: [[Chris Wells (American football)|Chris Wells]] – (TB)<br />
2009: [[Kurt Coleman]] – (SS)<br />
2010: [[Dane Sanzenbacher]] – (WR)<br />
2011: [[Daniel Herron]] – (TB)<br />
2012: [[Braxton Miller]] – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2013: Braxton Miller – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2014: [[Evan Spencer]] – (WR)<br />
2015: [[Ezekiel Elliott]] – (RB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2016: [[Malik Hooker]] – (SAF) / [[Pat Elflein]] – (C) <br />
2017: [[Sam Hubbard]] – (DE) <br />
2018: [[Dwayne Haskins]] – (QB) <br />
2019: [[Justin Fields]] – (QB) / [[Chase Young]] – (DE) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2020: Justin Fields – (QB) – [[Chicago Tribune Silver Football|Big Ten MVP]]<br />
2021: [[C. J. Stroud]] – (QB)<br />
2022: C. J. Stroud – (QB)
{{div col end}}

===All-Century Team===
{{see also|Ohio State Football All-Century Team}}

===Paul "Bear" Bryant Award===
* 2002: [[Jim Tressel]]

===AFCA Coach of the Year===
* 1944: [[Carroll Widdoes]]
* 1957: [[Woody Hayes]]
* 1979: [[Earle Bruce]]
* 2002: [[Jim Tressel]]

==Academic awards and achievements==
{{unreferenced section|date=August 2019}}

===College Sports Information Directors of America Academic All-America===

====Academic All-American Hall of Fame====
* 1992: [[Randy Gradishar]]

====Academic All-American Player of the Year====
* 2003: [[Craig Krenzel]] ([[Quarterback|QB]])

====Academic All-Americans====
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
1952: John Borton ([[Quarterback|QB]])<br />
1954: Dick Hilnski ([[Tackle (gridiron football position)|T]])<br />
1958: [[Bob White (fullback)|Bob White]] ([[Fullback (gridiron football)|FB]])<br />
1961: Tom Perdue (End)<br />
1965: Bill Ridder ([[Middle guard|MG]])<br />
1966: [[Dave Foley (American football)|Dave Foley]] ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1967: Dave Foley ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1968: Dave Foley ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1969: Bill Urbanik ([[Defensive tackle|DT]])<br />
1971: Rick Simon ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1973: [[Randy Gradishar]] ([[Linebacker|LB]])<br />
1974: [[Brian Baschnagel]] ([[Running back|RB]])<br />
1975: Brian Baschnagel ([[Running back|RB]])<br />
1976: [[Pete Johnson (American football)|Pete Johnson]] ([[Fullback (gridiron football)|FB]])<br />
1977: [[Jeff Logan]] ([[Running back|RB]])<br />
1980: Marcus Marek ([[Linebacker|LB]])<br />
1982: Joe Smith ([[Offensive tackle|OT]]) and [[John E. Frank|John Frank]] ([[Tight end|TE]])<br />
1983: John Frank ([[Tight end|TE]]) and Dave Crecelius ([[Defensive tackle|DT]])<br />
1984: Dave Crecelius ([[Defensive tackle|DT]]), Mike Lanese ([[Wide receiver|WR]]), and Anthony Tiuliani ([[Defensive tackle|DT]])<br />
1985: Mike Lanese ([[Wide receiver|WR]])<br />
{{col-2}}
1987: [[Joe Staysniak]] ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1989: Joe Staysniak ([[Offensive tackle|OT]])<br />
1990: Greg Smith ([[Defensive line|DL]])<br />
1992: Len Hartman ([[Offensive guard|OG]]) and Greg Smith ([[Defensive line|DL]])<br />
1995: Greg Bellisari ([[Linebacker|LB]])<br />
1996: Greg Bellisari ([[Linebacker|LB]])<br />
1998: Jerry Rudzinski ([[Linebacker|LB]])<br />
1999: [[Ahmed Plummer]] ([[Cornerback|CB]])<br />
2002: [[Craig Krenzel]] ([[Quarterback|QB]])<br />
2003: Craig Krenzel ([[Quarterback|QB]])<br />
2006: [[Anthony Gonzalez (politician)|Anthony Gonzalez]] ([[Wide receiver|WR]]) and Stan White, Jr. ([[Fullback (gridiron football)|FB]])<br />
2007: [[Brian Robiskie]] ([[Wide receiver|WR]])<br />
2008: Brian Robiskie ([[Wide receiver|WR]])<br />
2014: Jacoby Boren ([[Center (gridiron football)|C]])<br />
2015: Jacoby Boren ([[Center (gridiron football)|C]]) and Jack Willoughby ([[Placekicker|K]])<br />
2016: [[Sam Hubbard]] ([[Defensive line|DL]])<br />
2017: [[Jordan Fuller]] ([[Safety (gridiron football position)|SAF]])<br />
2018: Jordan Fuller (SAF)<br />
2019: Jordan Fuller (SAF)
{{col-end}}

===National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame===

====William V. Campbell Trophy====
*1995 [[Bobby Hoying]]
*2003 [[Craig Krenzel]]

====National Scholar-Athlete Awards====
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
*1965 Willard Sander
*1968 David Foley
*1970 [[Rex Kern]]
*1973 [[Randy Gradishar]]
*1975 [[Brian Baschnagel]]
*1979 [[Jim Laughlin]]
*1982 Joe Smith
*1983 [[John E. Frank|John Frank]]
*1984 Dave Crecelius
*1985 Mike Lanese
*1989 [[Joe Staysniak]]
*1990 [[Greg Frey]]
*1992 Greg Smith
*1994 [[Joey Galloway]]
*1995 [[Bobby Hoying]]
*1996 Greg Bellisari
*1999 [[Ahmed Plummer]]
*2003 [[Craig Krenzel]]
*2008 [[Brian Robiskie]]
*2015 [[Jacoby Boren]]
*2019 [[Jordan Fuller]]
{{div col end}}

==Hall of Fame inductees==
===College Football Hall of Fame===
{{Main|College Football Hall of Fame}}


==All-time records==
'''All-time coaching records'''
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Name|Position|Year Inducted}}
! Head Coach !! Period !! W-L-T Record !! Win % !! [[List of Big Ten Conference football champions|Big10]] !! [[NCAA Division I-A national football championship|N/C]] !![[Michigan-Ohio State Rivalry#Results|vs Michigan]]

|-
|-
| [[Howard Jones (American football coach)|Howard Jones]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||1951
| [[Alexander S. Lilley]] || align=center|1890-1891 || align=center|3-5 || align=center|37.5 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|n/a
|-
|-
| [[Chic Harley]] || [[Halfback (american football)|HB]]/[[Quarterback|QB]] ||1951
| [[Frederick Bushnell "Jack" Ryder|Frederick B. "Jack" Ryder]]|| 1892-95/1898 || align=center|22-22-2 || align=center|50.0 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|n/a
|-
|-
| [[Wes Fesler]] || [[End (gridiron football)|End]] ||1954
| [[Charles A. Hickey ]]|| align=center|1896 || align=center|5-5-1¹ || align=center|50.0 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|n/a
|-
|-
| [[John Wilce]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||1954
| [[David F. Edwards (coach)|David Edwards ]]|| align=center|1897 || align=center|1-7-1 || align=center|16.7 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-1
|-
| [[Les Horvath]] ||[[Halfback (american football)|HB]]/[[Quarterback|QB]]||1969
|-
|-
| [[Bill Willis]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|DT]] ||1971
| [[John B. Eckstorm ]]|| align=center|1899-1901 || align=center|22-4-3 || align=center|81.0 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-1-1
|-
|-
| [[Francis Schmidt]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||1971
| [[Perry Hale ]]|| align=center|1902-1903 || align=center|14-5-2 || align=center|71.4 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-2
|-
|-
|[[Ernie Godfrey]]
| [[Edwin R. Sweetland]]|| align=center|1904-1905 || align=center|14-7-2 || align=center|65.2 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-2
|[[Coach (American football)|Asst. Coach]]
|-
|1972
| [[Albert E. Herrnstein ]]|| align=center|1906-1909 || align=center|28-10-1 || align=center|73.1 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-4
|-
| [[Howard Jones (football coach)|Howard Jones]]|| align=center|1910 || align=center|6-1-3 || align=center|75.0 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-0-1
|-
|-
| [[Gaylord Stinchcomb]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]]/[[Quarterback|QB]] ||1973
| [[Harry Vaughn ]]|| align=center|1911 || align=center|5-3-2 || align=center|60.0 || align=center|n/a || || align=center|0-1
|-
| [[John Richards (coach)|John R. Richards]]|| align=center|1912 || align=center|6-3 || align=center|66.7 || || || align=center|0-1
|-
| [[John Wilce|John W. Wilce]]|| align=center|1913-1928 || align=center|78-33-9 || align=center|68.8 || align=center|3 || || align=center|4-7
|-
| [[Sam S. Willaman ]]|| align=center|1929-1933 || align=center|26-10-5 || align=center|69.5 || || || align=center|2-3
|-
|-
| [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||1974
| [[Francis Schmidt|Francis A. Schmidt]]|| align=center|1934-1940 || align=center|39-16-1 || align=center|70.5 || align=center|2 || || align=center|4-3
|-
|-
| [[Gust Zarnas]] || [[Guard (gridiron football)|OG]] ||1975
| [[Paul Brown|Paul E. Brown]] ||align=center|1941-1943 || align=center|18-8-1 || align=center|68.5 || align=center|1 || align=center| 1 || align=center|1-1-1
|-
|-
| [[Vic Janowicz]] || [[Halfback (american football)|HB]] ||1976
| [[Carroll A. Widdoes]] || align=center|1944-1945 || align=center|16-2 || align=center|88.9 || align=center|1 || || align=center|1-1
|-
|-
| [[Jim Daniell]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||1977
| [[Paul O. Bixler]] || align=center| 1946 || align=center|4-3-2 || align=center|55.6 || || || align=center|0-1
|-
|-
| [[Gomer Jones]] || [[Center (gridiron football)|C]] ||1978
| [[Wes Fesler|Wesley E. Fesler]] || align=center|1947-1950 || align=center|21-13-3 || align=center|60.8 ||align=center|1 || || align=center|0-3-1
|-
| [[Woody Hayes|W.W. "Woody" Hayes]] || align=center|1951-1978 || align=center|205–61-10 || align=center|76.1 || align=center|13 || align=center| 5² || align=center|16-11-1
|-
|-
| [[Howard Cassady]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]] ||1979
| [[Earle Bruce]] || align=center|1979-1987 || align=center|81-26-1 || align=center|75.5 || align=center|4 || || align=center|5-4
|-
|-
| [[Woody Hayes]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||1983
| [[John Cooper]] || align=center|1988-2000 || align=center|111-43-4 || align=center|71.5 || align=center|3 || || align=center|2-10-1
|-
|-
| [[Warren Amling]] || [[Guard (gridiron football)|OG]] ||1984
| [[Jim Tressel]] || align=center|2001-2005 || align=center|50-13 || align=center|79.4 || align=center|2 || align=center|1 || align=center|4-1
|-
|-
| [[Archie Griffin]] || [[Running back|RB]] ||1986
| '''TOTALS''' || align=center|'''1890-2005''' || align=center|'''775-300-53''' || align=center|'''71.1''' || align=center|'''30''' || align=center|'''7''' ||align=center|39-57-6
|-
|[[Doyt Perry]]
|[[Coach (American football)|Asst. Coach]]
|1988
|-
|[[Sid Gillman]]
|[[Coach (American football)|Asst. Coach]]
|1989
|-
| [[Aurealius Thomas]] || [[Guard (gridiron football)|OG]] ||1989
|-
| [[Jim Stillwagon]] || [[Defensive tackle|DT]] ||1991
|-
|[[Bo Schembechler]]
|[[Coach (American football)|Asst. Coach]]
|1993
|-
| [[Bob Ferguson (American football player)|Bob Fergueson]] || [[Fullback (gridiron football)|FB]] ||1996
|-
| [[Randy Gradishar]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] ||1998
|-
| [[John Hicks (American football)|John Hicks]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||2001
|-
| [[Earle Bruce]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||2002
|-
| [[Jack Tatum]] || [[Safety (gridiron football position)|S]] ||2004
|-
| [[Jim Houston]] || [[Defensive end|DE]] ||2005
|-
| [[Rex Kern]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] ||2007
|-
| [[John Cooper (American football)|John Cooper]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||2008
|-
| [[Chris Spielman]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] ||2009
|-
| [[Eddie George]] || [[Running back|RB]] ||2011
|-
| [[Orlando Pace]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||2013
|-
| [[Jim Tressel]] || [[Coach (American football)|Head Coach]] ||2015
|-
| [[Tom Cousineau]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] ||2016
|-
| [[Keith Byars]] || [[Halfback (American football)|HB]] ||2020
|-
|[[Rudy Hubbard]]
|[[Coach (American football)|Asst. Coach]]
|2021
|-
| [[Mike Doss]] || [[Safety (gridiron football position)|S]]||2022
|-
|[[Chris Ward (American football)|Chris Ward]]
|[[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]]
|2024
|}
|}
<small>'''All totals per OSU Athletics'''</small>


===Pro Football Hall of Fame===
:¹ Hickey was hired part-way into the season and a student coached the team several games.
{{Main|Pro Football Hall of Fame}}
:² 1970 national title recognized by OSU Athletics
{| class="wikitable"

|-
===All-time season records===
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|Name|Position|Year Inducted}}

|-
==Buckeyes in the NFL==
| [[Paul Brown]] || [[Coach (American football)|Coach]] ||1967
{| class="infobox bordered" style="width: 25em; text-align: left; font-size: 100%;"
|+ style="font-size: larger;" |
|-
|-
| [[Jim Parker (American football)|Jim Parker]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||1973
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" |Buckeyes in the NFL
|-
|-
| [[Lou Groza]] || [[Placekicker|K]] ||1974
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" |[[NFL Draft]] selections
|-
|-
| [[Dante Lavelli]] || [[Wide receiver|End]] ||1975
! Total selected:
| align=center|317
|-
|-
| [[Bill Willis]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|DT]] ||1977
! First picks in draft:
| align=center|3
|-
|-
| [[Sid Gillman]] || [[Coach (American football)|Coach]] ||1983
! 1st Round:
| align=center|64
|-
|-
| [[Paul Warfield]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] ||1983
! colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[National Football League|NFL]] achievements
|-
|-
| [[Dick LeBeau]] || [[Cornerback|CB]] ||2010
! Total Players:
| align=center|308
|-
|-
| [[Cris Carter]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] ||2013
! In the [[Super Bowl]]:
| align=center|54
|-
|-
| [[Orlando Pace]] || [[Tackle (gridiron football position)|OT]] ||2016
! [[Pro Football Hall of Fame|Hall of Fame]]rs:
| align=center|5
|-
|-
| [[Randy Gradishar]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] || 2024
|}
|}
53 former Ohio State players are currently active on rosters of [[National Football League]] teams: [[Will Allen]], [[Tim Anderson]], [[Kyle Andrews]], [[Rodney Bailey]], [[LeCharles Bentley]], [[David Boston]], [[Bobby Carpenter]], [[Drew Carter]], [[Bam Childress]], [[Adrien Clarke]], [[Nate Clements]], [[Na'il Diggs]], [[Mike Doss]], [[Tyler Everett]], [[Dustin Fox]], [[Simon Fraser]], [[Joey Galloway]], [[Chris Gamble]], [[Terry Glenn]], [[Marcus Green]], [[Andy Groom]], [[Ben Hartsock]], [[A.J. Hawk]], [[Santonio Holmes]], [[Kevin Houser]], [[Josh Huston]], [[Michael Jenkins]], [[Branden Joe]], [[Mike Kudla]], [[Nick Mangold]], [[Donnie Nickey]], [[Mike Nugent]], [[Shane Olivea]], [[Orlando Pace]], [[Kenny Peterson]], [[Ryan Pickett]], [[Robert Reynolds (football)]], [[Nate Salley]], [[B.J. Sander]], [[Darnell Sanders]], [[Anthony Schlegel]], [[Darrion Scott]], [[Rob Sims]], [[Will Smith]], [[Shawn Springs]], [[Alex Stepanovich]], [[E.J. Underwood]], [[Mike Vrabel]], [[Tyson Walter]], [[Donte Whitner]], [[Matt Wilhelm]], [[Antoine Winfield]], and [[Ashton Youboty]].


==Media==
Former notable NFL players who played at Ohio State include: [[Lou Groza]], [[Dante Lavelli]], [[Jim Parker]], [[Jim Marshall]], [[Bill Willis]], [[Jim Houston]], [[Paul Warfield]], [[Jack Tatum]], [[Jim Lachey]], [[Cris Carter]], [[Tom Tupa]], [[Chris Spielman]], [[Raymont Harris]], [[Eddie George]], and [[Dan Wilkinson]]. Groza, Lavelli, Parker, Warfield, and Willis have been inducted into the [[Pro Football Hall of Fame]].
{{Further|Ohio State Sports Network}}
The Buckeyes are covered on the radio by Ohio State Sports Network, operated by [[Learfield IMG College]]. [[WBNS (AM)|WBNS]]/Columbus (1460&nbsp;AM) and sister station [[WBNS-FM]]/Columbus (97.1&nbsp;FM) serve as flagship stations, with more than 60 affiliates in Ohio, and two additional affiliates in [[West Virginia]]. [[Paul Keels]] is the play-by-play announcer, while former Buckeye [[left guard]] [[Jim Lachey]] serves as color analyst. They are joined by sideline reporter Matt Andrews and Skip Mosic, host of the network pregame and halftime shows.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/radio-network.html|title=Buckeyes Radio Network|publisher=Ohio State Buckeyes|access-date=April 30, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130127064844/http://www.ohiostatebuckeyes.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/radio-network.html|archive-date=January 27, 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>


[[WBNS-TV]] (channel 10) in Columbus is the long-standing "official TV home" of the Buckeyes, airing the official coach's show ''Game Time with Ryan Day'' (simulcast statewide on [[Bally Sports Ohio]]).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wbns.titantv.com|title=TitanTV Programming Guide – What's on TV, Movies, Reality Shows, and Local News|website=wbns.titantv.com|publisher=Decisionmark Corp. 818 Dows Road SE, Cedar Rapids, Iowa|access-date=September 11, 2021|archive-date=March 7, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210307205934/http://wbns.titantv.com/|url-status=live}}</ref>
'''Ohio State Players Selected In 2006 NFL Draft'''


In addition, Ohio State football games are broadcast by their student radio organization, Scarlet and Gray Sports Radio on OhioStateSports.net

== Future conference opponents ==
Schedule announced October 5, 2023<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-10-02 |title=Big Ten Conference Announces Future Football Schedule Formats for 2024-28 |url=https://bigten.org/fb/article/blt39fc5a9dd81251cf/ |access-date=2023-10-05 |website=[[Big Ten Conference]] |language=en}}</ref>
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!2024
!2025
!2026
!2027
!2028
|-
|-
|at [[Michigan State Spartans football|Michigan State]]
! Round !! Pick # !! Team !! Player !! Position
|at [[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois]]
|at [[Indiana Hoosiers football|Indiana]]
|at [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]]*
|at [[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois]]
|-
|-
|[[Iowa Hawkeyes football|Iowa]]
| 1 || align=center|5 || [[Green Bay Packers]] ||[[A.J. Hawk]] || Outside Linebacker
|at [[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]]*
|at [[Iowa Hawkeyes football|Iowa]]
|at [[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota]]
|at [[Maryland Terrapins football|Maryland]]
|-
|-
|at [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]]
| 1 || align=center|8 || [[Buffalo Bills]] ||[[Donte Whitner]] || Safety
|at [[Purdue Boilermakers football|Purdue]]
|at [[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska]]
|at [[Northwestern Wildcats football|Northwestern]]
|at [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]]
|-
|-
|[[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska]]
| 1 || align=center|18 || [[Dallas Cowboys]] ||[[Bobby Carpenter]] || Outside Linebacker
|at [[Washington Huskies football|Washington]]
|at [[USC Trojans football|USC]]
|at [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]]
|at [[UCLA Bruins football|UCLA]]
|-
|-
|at [[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]]
| 1 || align=center|25 || [[Pittsburgh Steelers]] ||[[Santonio Holmes]] || Wide Receiver
|at [[Wisconsin Badgers football|Wisconsin]]
|[[Illinois Fighting Illini football|Illinois]]
|at [[Rutgers Scarlet Knights football|Rutgers]]
|[[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]]*
|-
|-
|[[Purdue Boilermakers football|Purdue]]
| 1 || align=center|29 || [[New York Jets]] || [[Nick Mangold]] || Center
|[[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota]]
|[[Maryland Terrapins football|Maryland]]
|[[Michigan State Spartans football|Michigan State]]
|[[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota]]
|-
|-
|at [[Northwestern Wildcats football|Northwestern]]
| 3 || align=center|70 || [[Buffalo Bills]] || [[Ashton Youboty]] || Cornerback
|[[Penn State Nittany Lions football|Penn State]]
|[[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]]*
|[[Nebraska Cornhuskers football|Nebraska]]
|[[Rutgers Scarlet Knights football|Rutgers]]
|-
|-
|[[Indiana Hoosiers football|Indiana]]
| 3 || align=center|76 || [[New York Jets]] || [[Anthony Schlegel]] || Inside Linebacker
|[[Rutgers Scarlet Knights football|Rutgers]]
|[[Northwestern Wildcats football|Northwestern]]
|[[Purdue Boilermakers football|Purdue]]
|[[Washington Huskies football|Washington]]
|-
|-
|[[Michigan Wolverines football|Michigan]]*
| 4 || align=center|121 || [[Carolina Panthers]] || [[Nate Salley]] || Safety
|[[UCLA Bruins football|UCLA]]
|[[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]]
|[[USC Trojans football|USC]]
|[[Wisconsin Badgers football|Wisconsin]]
|}
(*) denotes protected matchup

==Future non-conference opponents==
Announced schedules as of September 28, 2023.<ref>{{cite web |title=Future Ohio State Football Schedules |url=https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/ohio-state/ |website=FBSchedules.com |access-date=May 10, 2023 |archive-date=June 17, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200617065602/https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/ohio-state/ |url-status=live }}</ref>

{| class="wikitable"
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|border=2|team=Ohio State Buckeyes|2024|2025|2026|2027|2028|2029|2030|2031|2032|2033|2034|2035|2036}}
|-
| vs [[Akron Zips football|Akron]] (8/31)
| vs [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] (8/30)
| vs [[Ball State Cardinals football|Ball State]] (9/5)
| vs [[Bowling Green Falcons football|Bowling Green]] (9/4)
| vs [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] (9/2)
| vs [[Nevada Wolf Pack football|Nevada]] (9/1)
| at [[Georgia Bulldogs football|Georgia]] (9/14)
| vs [[Georgia Bulldogs football|Georgia]] (8/30)
|
|
|
| [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]] (9/15)
| at [[Boston College Eagles football|Boston College]] (9/13)
|-
| vs [[Western Michigan Broncos football|Western Michigan]] (9/7)
| vs [[Grambling State Tigers football|
Grambling State]] (9/6)
| at [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] (9/12)
| vs [[New Hampshire Wildcats football|New Hampshire]]
| at [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] (9/9)
| vs [[Charlotte 49ers football|Charlotte]] (9/8)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
| vs [[Marshall Thundering Herd football|Marshall]] (9/21)
| 4 || align=center|128 || [[Seattle Seahawks]] || [[Rob Sims]] || Guard
| vs [[Ohio Bobcats football|Ohio]] (9/13)
| [[Kent State Golden Flashes football|Kent State]] (9/19)
| vs [[Alabama Crimson Tide football|Alabama]] (9/18)
| vs [[Northern Illinois Huskies football|Northern Illinois]] (9/16)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|}
|}
*Ohio State has no opponents scheduled for 2034 yet.


==Footnotes==
== Fan base ==
In 2011, a study conducted by [[Nate Silver]] of the ''[[New York Times]]'', which he described as "not quite scientific," determined that Ohio State had the most fans of any college football team.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cleveland.com/ohio-sports-blog/index.ssf/2011/09/ohio_state_football_take_heart.html|title=Ohio State Buckeyes estimated to have the most fans of any college football team in the country, study finds|date=September 21, 2011|access-date=October 24, 2014|archive-date=October 30, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141030072452/http://www.cleveland.com/ohio-sports-blog/index.ssf/2011/09/ohio_state_football_take_heart.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
<div class="references-small">
<references />
</div>


==Sources==
==Notes==
{{notelist-la|refs=
*Park, Jack; ''The Official OHIO STATE Football Encyclopedia'' (2002), Sports Publishing L.L.C., ISBN 1-58261-006-1
}}
* [http://ohiostatebuckeyes.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/osu-m-footbl-body.html Official OSU Football Homepage]

* [http://www.coachtressel.com/tradition/index.asp Traditions Page at Tressel.com]
==References==
{{Reflist|30em}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite book
| author=Jack Park
| title=The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia
| publisher=Sports Publishing LLC
| isbn= 1-58261-006-1
| year=2002}}
*{{cite book
| author=Jim Tressel
| title=What It Means To Be A Buckeye
| editor=Jeff Snook
| publisher=Triumph Books
| isbn=1-57243-602-6
| year=2003
| url-access=registration
| url=https://archive.org/details/whatitmeanstobeb0000unse
}}
*{{cite book |author1=Greenberg, S. |author2=Ratermann, D. |title=I Remember Woody |publisher=Triumph Books |isbn=1-57243-674-3 |year=2004 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/irememberwoodyre0000gree }}
*{{cite book
| author=Robert Vare
| title=Buckeye: A Study of Coach Woody Hayes and Ohio State Football Machine
| publisher=Harper's Magazine Press
| isbn=0-06-129150-1
| year=1974
| url-access=registration
| url=https://archive.org/details/buckeyestudyofco00vare
}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category}}
* [http://www.the-ozone.net The O-Zone]
* {{Official website}}
* [http://ohiostate.scout.com/ Bucknuts.com]

* [http://buckeyeplanet.com/ Buckeyeplanet]
{{Ohio State Buckeyes football navbox}}
* [http://buckeyebanter.com/ Buckeye Banter]
{{Ohio State University|athletics}}
{{Big Ten Conference football navbox}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ohio State Buckeyes Football}}
{{collegefootball-stub}}
[[Category:Big Ten Conference]]
[[Category:Ohio State Buckeyes football| ]]
[[Category:Big Ten Football]]
[[Category:American football teams established in 1890]]
[[Category:College football teams]]
[[Category:1890 establishments in Ohio|Buckeyes]]
[[Category:Ohio State Buckeyes football]]

Latest revision as of 20:36, 19 October 2024

Ohio State Buckeyes football
2024 Ohio State Buckeyes football team
First season1890; 134 years ago
Athletic directorRoss Bjork
Head coachRyan Day
6th season, 61–9 (.871)
StadiumOhio Stadium
(capacity: 102,780)
FieldSafelite Field
Year built1922
Field surfaceFieldTurf
LocationColumbus, Ohio
NCAA divisionDivision I FBS
ConferenceBig Ten Conference
Past conferencesIndependent
Ohio Athletic Conference
All-time record969–334–53 (.734)
Bowl record28–29 (.491)
Playoff appearances5 (2014, 2016, 2019, 2020, 2022)
Playoff record3–4 (.429)
Claimed national titles8(1942, 1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 1970, 2002, 2014)
Unclaimed national titles7 (1933, 1944, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1975, 2006)
National finalist5 (2002, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2020)
Conference titles41 (2 OAC, 39 Big Ten)
Division titles10 (2 Leaders, 8 East)
RivalriesSee § Rivalries:
Illinois (rivalry)
Michigan (rivalry)
Heisman winnersLes Horvath – 1944
Vic Janowicz – 1950
Howard Cassady – 1955
Archie Griffin – 1974
Archie Griffin – 1975
Eddie George – 1995
Troy Smith – 2006
Consensus All-Americans93
Current uniform
ColorsScarlet and gray[1]
   
Fight songAcross the Field and Buckeye Battle Cry
MascotBrutus Buckeye
Marching bandOhio State University Marching Band
OutfitterNike
Websiteohiostatebuckeyes.com

The Ohio State Buckeyes football team competes as part of the NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, representing The Ohio State University in the Big Ten Conference. Ohio State has played its home games at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio, since 1922.[2]

The Buckeyes are recognized by the university and NCAA as having won eight national championships,[3] including six from the major wire-service selectors: AP Poll and/or Coaches' Poll. The program has also captured 41 conference championships (2 OAC and 39 Big Ten), 10 division championships, and has compiled 10 undefeated seasons, including six perfect seasons (no losses or ties). Seven players have received the Heisman Trophy (second all-time), with the program holding the distinction of having the only two-time winner (Archie Griffin) of the award.

As of 2017, the football program is valued at $1.5–2 billion,[4][5] the highest valuation of any such program in the country. NCAA's first millioniare student-athlete (Quinn Ewers) became such using NIL while in the program.

History

[edit]

Early history (1890–1950)

[edit]
The first Ohio State football team of 1890

After early attempts at forming a team in 1886 (led by future Nebraska governor Chester Hardy Aldrich) and 1887, football was ultimately established at the university in 1890.[6] On the site of the first OSU game, on the campus of Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware, Ohio, on May 3, 1890, the Delaware County Historical Society has set an historical marker.[7] Some histories of Ohio State football credit George Cole, an undergraduate, and Alexander S. Lilley with introducing the sport to the campus. More recent research has challenged that claim, stating that George Cole did not persuade Lilley to coach the football team until after its first full season began that fall.[7] OSU's first home game took place at 2:30 p.m. on November 1, 1890. They played the University of Wooster on the site that was then called Recreation Park. Just east of historic German Village, the park occupied the north side of Schiller (now Whittier), between Ebner and Jaeger, in what is now Schumacher Place. OSU lost the game, 64–0. Over the next eight years, under a number of coaches, the team played to a cumulative record of 31 wins, 39 losses, and 2 ties. The first game against the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, was a 34–0 loss in 1897, a year that saw the low point in Buckeye football history with a 1–7–1 record. Jack Ryder was Ohio State's first paid coach, earning $150 per season, and lost his first game, against Oberlin College and John Heisman, on October 15, 1892.[8] In 1899 the university hired John Eckstorm to bring professional coaching skills to the program and immediately went undefeated.[9] In 1901, however, center John Sigrist was fatally injured in a game against Western Reserve University and the continuation of football at Ohio State was in serious question. Although the school's athletic board let the team decide its future, Eckstorm resigned.[10] In 1912, football underwent a number of developments that included joining the Western Conference, making football as part of a new Department of Athletics, and hiring Lynn W. St. John to be athletic director.

Chic Harley attended East High in Columbus and was regarded as one of the greatest players to attend an Ohio high school. A well-rounded player, Harley came to Ohio State in 1916 and instantly became a fan favorite. Harley and the Buckeyes won the first Big Ten championship in school history in 1916, finishing 7–0. The team would repeat in 1917 finishing 8–0–1. In 1918, Harley left to be a pilot in the U.S. Army Air Service during World War I. With Harley's return in 1919, the Buckeyes would only lose one game, to Illinois. Harley left OSU with a career record of 22–1–1. At the time, OSU played at the small Ohio Field and Harley brought such record crowds it became necessary to open Ohio Stadium in 1922. The stadium was built entirely on fan donations and several stadium drives around the city where Harley would often appear. In 1951, when the College Football Hall of Fame opened, Harley was inducted as an inaugural member. Ohio State's first rival was Kenyon College, a small liberal arts college in Gambier, roughly 50 miles to the northeast. The Buckeyes first played them in their first season in 1890 on Nov 27, Kenyon won the first two meetings; however, Ohio State won 15 in a row and the rivalry diminished. Kenyon made it their season goal to defeat OSU. After the Bucks joined the Big Ten they stopped playing Kenyon. The all-time record stands at 17–6, OSU.[11] In hiring Francis Schmidt in March 1934 to coach its football team, Ohio State moved its program to a "big-time" level of competition. Schmidt was a well-established coach and an acknowledged offensive innovator. His offensive schemes were a "wide-open" style called "razzle-dazzle" and led him to be the first Buckeye football coach granted a multi-year contract. Schmidt's first four seasons saw victories over archrival Michigan, all by shut-out. The 1935 squad went 7–1, its sole loss was to Notre Dame, 18–13, in the first contest between the programs. However Schmidt's remaining seasons were less successful, except in 1939 when the Buckeyes won the Big Ten championship, and his popularity faded for a number of reasons.[12] On December 17, 1940, he resigned.

Paul Brown era (1941–1943)

[edit]
Paul Brown (shown here as head coach of the Cleveland Browns) led the Buckeyes to their first national championship in 1942.

Ohio State hired the coach of Massillon Washington High School football team, Paul Brown, to succeed Schmidt.[13][14] Brown's Tigers had just won their sixth straight state championship. Brown immediately changed Ohio State's style of offense, planned and organized his program in great detail, and delegated to his assistant coaches using highly structured practices.

In 1942, Ohio State lost 22 veteran players to military service as the United States joined World War II, and with a team of mostly sophomores went on to lose only once in winning its first national championship. Brown accepted a commission in the United States Navy in 1944, ending his coaching run prior to the season.

Team in flux (1944–1950)

[edit]
Former Buckeyes QB/HB, 1942 National Champion, and 1944 Heisman Trophy winner Les Horvath

When Brown went into the Navy, he directed his assistant Carroll Widdoes to head the team in his absence. The 1944 team fielded 31 freshmen but went undefeated and untied, including a victory over Paul Brown's Great Lakes Navy team. Ohio State finished second in the national rankings behind Army and Les Horvath became the first Buckeye to be awarded the Heisman Trophy. Also prominent on the 1942–44 teams was the first Buckeye African American star, Bill Willis. Brown chose not to return to Ohio State after the war, going into professional football instead.

Widdoes, despite having the highest two-year winning percentage of any Buckeye coach, asked to return to an assistant's position. Offensive coordinator Paul Bixler and Widdoes switched positions, and Bixler endured a mediocre 4–3–2 season. Bixler resigned and talk of Ohio State being a "graveyard of coaches" became commonplace, a reputation that lingered for decades.[15]

Wes Fesler became head coach in 1947 but finished last in the Big Ten for the only time in team history. Ohio State improved greatly in 1948, winning 6 and losing 3, then in 1949 enjoyed a successful season due to the play of sophomore Vic Janowicz. Ohio State received the Rose Bowl invitation, where they came from behind to defeat California.

In 1950, Fesler, rumored to be resigning because of pressures associated with the position and abuse of his family by anonymous critics, returned to coach the Buckeyes, who won six games in a row to move into the top ranking in the AP poll. However, the season fell apart as the Buckeyes lost to Michigan during a blizzard, a game that came to be known as the "Snow Bowl". Two weeks later, citing concerns about his health and family, Fesler resigned.

Woody Hayes era (1951–1978)

[edit]
Woody Hayes, who won 205 games, five National Championships, and 13 Big Ten Championships - all team records - in 28 seasons (1951-1978) as head coach of the Buckeyes.

Early days

[edit]

Wayne Woodrow "Woody" Hayes beat out Paul Brown,[16] among others, to be named head coach on February 18, 1951. He instituted a demanding practice regimen and was both aggressive and vocal in enforcing it, alienating many players accustomed to Fesler's laid-back style. The 1951 Buckeyes won 4, lost 3, and tied 2, leaving many to question the ability of the new coach. In 1952, the team improved to 6–3 and recorded their first victory over Michigan in eight years, but after a 1953 loss to Michigan, critics called for the replacement of Hayes. In 1954, the Buckeyes were picked to finish no higher than 10th in the Big Ten. Hayes, however, had the talents of Howard "Hopalong" Cassady, and a historic goal-line stand against Michigan propelled Ohio State to a perfect season. Hayes led the powerhouse Buckeyes to a shared national championship (his first and the team's second). In 1955 the team again won the Big Ten, set an attendance record, and won in Ann Arbor for the first time in 18  years, while Hopalong Cassady was securing the Heisman Trophy. Ohio State passed only three times against Michigan (the sole reception was the only completion in the final three games of the year), leading to the characterization of Hayes' style of offensive play as "three yards and a cloud of dust". In a 1955 article in Sports Illustrated, Hayes admitted to making small personal loans to financially needy players.[17] The article resulted in a furor over possible violations of NCAA rules, and the faculty council, followed by the Big Ten and NCAA, conducted lengthy investigations. Big Ten Commissioner Kenneth "Tug" Wilson found Hayes and the program guilty of violations and placed it on a year's probation in 1956.

Championship glory

[edit]

In 1957, Ohio State won all of its remaining games after an opening loss to claim the Big Ten championship, then won the Rose Bowl over Oregon, and shared a national title with Auburn, for which Hayes was named Coach of the Year.

Former Buckeyes running back/receiver, 1954 National Champion, and 1955 Heisman Trophy winner Howard "Hopalong" Cassady

In 1961, the team went undefeated to be named national champions by the FWAA but a growing conflict between academics and athletics over Ohio State's reputation as a "football school" resulted in a faculty council vote to decline an invitation to the Rose Bowl, resulting in much public protest and debate.[18] Over the next 6 seasons, Ohio State finished no higher than 2nd and had a losing season in 1966, and public speculation that Hayes would be replaced as a coach grew to its highest point since 1953. In 1968, Ohio State defeated the number one-ranked Purdue Boilermakers and continued to an undefeated season including a 50–14 rout of Michigan and a Rose Bowl victory over the USC Trojans that resulted in the national championship. The Class of 1970 became known as the "super sophomores" in 1968 and might have gone on to three consecutive national championships except for what may have been the most bitter loss in Buckeye history. The winning streak reached 22 games as Ohio State traveled to Michigan. The Buckeyes were 17-point favorites but directed by first-year coach Bo Schembechler, Michigan shocked the Buckeyes in a 24–12 upset. The 1969 loss to Michigan initiated what came to be known as "The Ten Year War", in which the rivalry, which pitted some of OSU's and UM's strongest teams ever, rose to the uppermost level of all sports and the competition between Schembechler and Hayes became legendary.[19] Four times between 1970 and 1975, Ohio State and Michigan were both ranked in the top five of the AP Poll before their matchup. The Wolverines entered every game during those years undefeated and won only once, a 10–7 victory in Ann Arbor on November 20, 1971. Both teams used the annual game as motivation for entire seasons and after the initial win by Michigan, played dead even at four wins and a tie apiece. Hayes had the upper hand during the first part of the war, in which Ohio State won the conference championship and went to the Rose Bowl four straight years, while Michigan won the final three. It was also an era in which through television Ohio State football again came to the forefront of national attention.

Hayes set the tone in spring practice in 1970, placing a rug at the entrance to the Buckeye dressing room emblazoned with the words: "1969 MICH 24 OSU 12 — 1970 MICH:__ OSU:__" as a constant reminder of their objective.[20] The "super sophomores", now seniors, used a strong fullback-oriented offense to smash their way through the season undefeated, struggling only with Purdue the week before the Michigan game. The return match in Columbus found both teams undefeated and untied, a "first" in the history of the rivalry, with Michigan, ranked fourth and Ohio State fifth. Ohio State combined a powerful defense that held Michigan to only 37  yards rushing, a rushing offense employing two tight ends as blockers, and a 26-yard touchdown pass from Kern to Bruce Jankowski to win 20–9. The Buckeyes returned to the Rose Bowl to be upset by Stanford 27–17. The "super sophomores" had garnered a record of 27–2, the best winning percentage of any three-year period in team history, and won or shared the Big Ten title all three years. The National Football Foundation named Ohio State as a national co-champion, along with Texas, for 1970 and awarded the teams joint possession of the MacArthur Bowl. 1971 was less successful than the preceding seasons, but the middle four years of the 10-year war saw the greatest success for Hayes against Michigan, although the teams fell short of repeating their 1968 national championship. Archie Griffin began his college football career in 1972, taking advantage of new NCAA eligibility rules that allowed freshmen to compete at the varsity level. In his second game, sent in against North Carolina late in the first quarter, Griffin set a new Buckeye rushing record with 239 yards and led the team in rushing for the season with 867.

Former Buckeyes RB Archie Griffin, the only two-time Heisman Trophy winner in college football history (1974–75)

The following season, Hayes installed an I-formation attack with Griffin at tailback and fellow sophomore Cornelius Greene at quarterback. The Buckeyes went undefeated with a powerful offense and impenetrable defense, achieving an average margin of victory of 31 points a game. The only blemish on their record was a 10–10 tie with Michigan after both teams had entered the game unbeaten. (The tie was more galling for the Wolverines, however, as the Big Ten selected Ohio State to represent the conference in the Rose Bowl.) Despite soundly defeating defending national champion USC, however, the tie with Michigan resulted in the Buckeyes finishing second to Notre Dame in the final AP rankings. Griffin, Randy Gradishar, Van DeCree, and John Hicks were named All-Americans; Hicks, an offensive tackle, not only won both the Outland and Lombardi Trophies but placed second in the Heisman Trophy competition. 1974 and 1975 were seasons of both elation and frustration. The Buckeyes twice more defeated Michigan, and went to two Rose Bowls, but lost both. The 1974 team seemed bound for another national championship when it was derailed by a loss to unranked Michigan State (Ohio State lost only twice in the regular season during Griffin's four-year career, both to the Spartans), and the next year, the No. 1-ranked Bucks lost 23–10 to 11th-ranked UCLA in the 1976 Rose Bowl. In all, the Buckeyes were 40–5–1 from 1972 to 1975, winning the Big Ten all four years and never losing to Michigan, but it was the losses and ties that proved important to Ohio State missing out on achieving a national championship. At any rate, Archie Griffin rushed for 5,589 yards combined in his four seasons at Ohio State while winning the Heisman Trophy in 1974 (1,695 yards rushed) and 1975 (1,450 yards).[21]

Downfall

[edit]

The falloff in the success of Hayes' last three years was not great. His teams forged records of 9–2–1, 9–3, and 7–4–1, and made bowl appearances in all three years (the rules had changed to allow appearances in other than the Rose Bowl). However, frustrations in losing three straight years to Michigan, and other factors, resulted in growing criticism of Hayes and his methods, particularly his on-the-field fits of temper. Even so, his downfall was sudden and shocking when near the end of the nationally televised Gator Bowl, Hayes punched Clemson middle guard Charlie Bauman after Bauman intercepted a pass to kill Ohio State's last chance to win.[22] Hayes was fired after the game by Ohio State president Harold Enarson and athletic director Hugh Hindman.[23]

Earle Bruce era (1979–1987)

[edit]

Hayes was replaced by a former protégé, Iowa State head coach Earle Bruce.[24] Bruce inherited a strong team led by sophomore quarterback Art Schlichter but that had also lost 11 starters, and the 1979 squad exceeded pre-season expectations, ending the 3-year loss drought against Michigan and going to the Rose Bowl with an opportunity once again to be national champions. The Buckeyes lost both by a single point, 17–16, but Bruce was named Coach of the Year. His success was hailed by those in the media who saw it as a rebuke of Hayes and the start of a "new era".[25] 1980, however, saw the start of a trend that eventually brought criticism to Bruce, when Ohio State finished with a 9–3 record, the first of six consecutive years at 9–3. Though each of these seasons, and the 10–3 season that followed them, culminated in a bowl game, Ohio State did not appear to be any closer to a national championship than during the end of the Hayes era. Bruce's teams were not without impact players, however. All-Americans and future National Football League stars included Keith Byars, Cris Carter, Chris Spielman, John Frank, Jim Lachey, Tom Tupa, Marcus Marek, and Pepper Johnson. His program was also known for the number of notable assistant coaches on staff, including Jim Tressel, Glen Mason, Pete Carroll, Nick Saban, Urban Meyer and Dom Capers. For the first time since 1922, the Buckeyes lost three in a row in Ohio Stadium in 1982, including rematches with Stanford and Florida State, and for the second year in a row to Wisconsin, but then won seven straight, the last over BYU in the Holiday Bowl. Sophomore running back Keith Byars had a stand-out season in 1983, rushing for 1,199 yards, and Ohio State defeated the Oklahoma Sooners in Norman, but three losses in conference meant a 4th-place finish. 1984 witnessed what Bruce called "the greatest comeback after the worst start" when Ohio State fell behind Illinois 24–0 at home but roared back on 274 yards rushing and five touchdowns by Byars to win 45–38. Ohio State also defeated Michigan to win an outright Big Ten championship. Byars led the nation in rushing and scoring but finished second in Heisman balloting.

Downfall

[edit]

In 1986, Bruce received a 3-year contract, the first for the modern program but the team opened with two losses, which had not occurred in over 90 years. The Buckeyes then won 9 in a row before Michigan took a close game when kicker Matt Frantz missed a field goal with a minute to play. After the season Bruce was offered the position of head coach at the University of Arizona with a 5-year contract but was persuaded to stay at his alma mater by Athletic Director Rick Bay. Hopes for a standout season in 1987 suffered a serious setback when All-American wide receiver Cris Carter was dropped from the team for signing with an agent. Indiana defeated Ohio State for the first time since 1951, 31–10, in a game that came to be known as the "darkest day",[26] and Ohio State lost three conference games in a row going into the Michigan game. On the Monday of Michigan week, after a weekend of rumors and speculation, Ohio State President Edward Jennings fired Bruce but tried to keep the dismissal secret until after the end of the season. Bay, who had been instrumental in keeping Bruce at Ohio State, disregarded Jennings' orders and announced the firing and his own resignation in protest. Jennings made his own situation worse by refusing to give a reason for the firing and the circumstances have been the subject of controversy since.[27] The Buckeyes enjoyed an emotional come-from-behind victory over Michigan in Ann Arbor after the entire team wore headbands bearing the word "EARLE", then declined an invitation to play in the Sun Bowl.

John Cooper era (1988–2000)

[edit]

Early days

[edit]

John Cooper was hired as the 21st football head coach at Ohio State before the end of 1987 and before he had coached his last game at Arizona State University.[28] Cooper's coaching record at ASU and at Tulsa prior to that stood out among his credentials, as did a victory over Michigan in the 1987 Rose Bowl.[29]

Cooper's 13 years as the Buckeye head coach are largely remembered in the litany of negative statistics associated with him: a notorious 2–10–1 record against Michigan, a 3–8 record in bowl games, a 5-year losing streak to Illinois to start his term and a 6–7 record overall, and blowing a 15-point 3rd quarter lead in a 28–24 loss to unranked Michigan State when the Buckeyes were the top-ranked team in the nation and en route to a national championship. However, his record also has many positives: back-to-back victories over Notre Dame, two finishes second-ranked in the polls, and three Big Ten championships (albeit shared). Cooper also recruited 15 players who were first-round draft picks in the National Football League.[30]

Both 1988 and 1989 began identically: a season-opening win followed by an embarrassing loss to a highly regarded team (Pitt and USC); a rebound win against two other highly regarded programs (LSU and Boston College) followed by a loss to Illinois in the conference opener. However, 1988 saw Ohio State lose its first three conference games and a close game at home against Michigan for a 4–6–1 record, its first losing season in 22 years. In 1989 the Buckeyes won 6 consecutive Big Ten games before losing its last two to go 8–4. The most noteworthy victory occurred in Minneapolis when Ohio State overcame a 31–0 deficit to Minnesota to win 41–37. 1990 continued the pattern with a 2-win 2-loss start and an overall 7–4–1 record that included an embarrassing loss to Air Force in the Liberty Bowl. 1991 was 8–4, notable primarily as the season that sophomore running back Robert Smith quit the team. 1992, with senior Kirk Herbstreit at quarterback, and Smith back on the team was 8–3–1, but the losing string to Michigan was broken with a 13–13 tie. Persistent rumors that Cooper would resign or be fired were laid to rest when University President Gordon Gee announced he would be back in 1993.[31]

Former Buckeyes RB Eddie George, who won the 1995 Heisman Trophy.

Failures against Michigan

[edit]

The next six seasons were very successful, winning 10 or more games in five out of six, and sharing the conference championship in three. Eddie George won the Heisman Trophy in 1995 after a tremendous senior season, Ohio State defeated Notre Dame in 1995 and 1996, and won half its bowl games. But in three seasons (1993, 1995, and 1996) the Buckeyes entered the Michigan game undefeated, with the possibility of a national championship in at least one, and lost all three to underdog Wolverine teams. Ohio State had won 62 games and lost only 12, but a third of those were to Michigan. After renewing his contract and becoming a member of the "million dollar coaching club",[32] Cooper started sophomore Austin Moherman against the Miami Hurricanes in the nationally televised Kickoff Classic and was soundly beaten. That presaged a mediocre season in which the Buckeyes finished 6–6, ending their successful 90's run. The 2000 team was more successful, going 8–4, but criticism of Cooper among fans had risen to a clamor again and touched on many areas of the program beyond specific game records. The negative publicity rose to a peak in the days leading up to Ohio State's matchup with South Carolina in the Outback Bowl, when wide receiver Reggie Germany was suspended for having a 0.0 GPA, team captain Matt Wilhelm publicly criticized fellow player Ken-Yon Rambo, and one Buckeye lineman sued another.[33]

Downfall

[edit]

On January 3, 2001, Cooper was fired.[34] His loss in the Outback Bowl to a team that had not even won a single game the year before was a factor in his subsequent firing, as was negative publicity regarding player behavior before and during the game. Other contributing factors included the record against Michigan (which was actually considered by most people to be the biggest reason for his firing), a reputation of inability to win "big games", the lack of a national championship, the perception of him as an outsider by many alumni, the poor bowl game record, and finally a perceived lack of discipline on the team.

Jim Tressel era (2001–2010)

[edit]
Former head coach Jim Tressel, who led the Buckeyes to the 2002 National Championship, and six Big Ten titles.

Early days

[edit]

Ohio State quickly sought a replacement for Cooper and after a nationwide search hired Jim Tressel.[35] With four NCAA Division I-AA National Championships at Youngstown State University, Tressel, formerly an assistant coach for Earle Bruce, was an Ohioan who was considered to be appreciative of Buckeye football traditions. Although there were some doubts as to whether or not Tressel could repeat his earlier success at the Division 1A level, most fans and alumni met the coaching change with enthusiasm. On the day of his hiring, Jim Tressel, speaking to fans and students at a Buckeye basketball game, made a prophetic implication that he would lead the Buckeyes to beat Michigan in Ann Arbor the following November.[36] Tressel's first season was difficult as the Buckeyes finished 7–5 (all but one loss was by a touchdown or less), but he made good on his promise, beating Michigan in Ann Arbor.

National Championship

[edit]

While its fans were optimistic about the chance for success of the 2002 team, most observers were surprised by Ohio State's National Championship.[37][38] Ohio State used strong defense, ball-control play-calling, and field position tactics to win numerous close games, a style of play characterized as "Tresselball",[39] and disparaged by detractors as "the Luckeyes".[40]

Later years

[edit]

The 2006 and 2007 regular seasons ended with just one combined loss and consecutive appearances in the national championship game. The Buckeyes lost both by wide margins. On January 1, 2010, the Buckeyes defeated the Oregon Ducks in The Rose Bowl Game by a score of 26–17. This ended a 3-game BCS losing streak for Ohio State, having lost 2 national championships and one Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. Terrelle Pryor was named MVP of the contest with 2 touchdown passes for a career-high 266 passing yards. In addition, he had more total yards than the entire Oregon Ducks team.

"Tattoogate"

[edit]
Former Buckeyes QB Troy Smith (shown as a member of the NFL's Baltimore Ravens), the 2006 Heisman Trophy winner

In December 2010, it was announced that five student-athletes on the football team would be suspended for the first five games of the 2011 season for NCAA violations. The punishments stemmed from an incident when some of the Buckeye players received tattoos for their autographs, according to news reports. Other violations committed by the players included the selling of several items given to them by the university, such as Big Ten championship rings.[41]

On December 22, 2010, the NCAA announced that five players would be suspended for the first five games of the 2011 season due to receiving improper benefits. Mike Adams, Dan Herron, DeVier Posey, Solomon Thomas, and quarterback Terrelle Pryor were found to have signed autographs in return for tattoos, as well as selling memorabilia given to them by the university.[42] In addition, Jordan Whiting was suspended for the season opener for his involvement. The scandal originated at Fine Line Tattoos and Piercings in Columbus, whose owner, Edward Rife, was being investigated for felony drug trafficking. On January 4, 2011, with all the players allowed to participate by the NCAA, the Buckeyes defeated the Arkansas Razorbacks in the Sugar Bowl by a margin of 31–26.[43] The win, along with every other one from the 2010 season, would later be vacated due to the scandal. The Buckeyes finished the season 12–1, with their only official game being a loss to Wisconsin.

Downfall

[edit]

On March 8, 2011, OSU suspended head coach Jim Tressel for the first 2 games of the 2011 season and fined him $250,000 for not informing the university and the NCAA that he had knowledge of his players receiving improper benefits. Coach Tressel's suspension would later be increased to 5 games by the university. On May 30, 2011, Jim Tressel resigned as head coach of the Buckeyes.[44] On June 6, 2011, a story in Sports Illustrated reported that at least 28 players, including Rob Rose, T. J. Downing, Louis Irizarry, Chris Vance, C. J. Barnett, Dorien Bell, Jamaal Berry, Bo DeLande, Zach Domicone, Storm Klein, Etienne Sabino, John Simon, Nathan Williams, Jermale Hines, Devon Torrence, Donald Washington, Thaddeus Gibson, Jermil Martin, Lamaar Thomas, and Doug Worthington traded team memorabilia or used equipment for tattoos or other merchandise or services between 2002 and 2010. The report alleged that Tressel had violated NCAA bylaw 10.1, unethical conduct, three times by not acting when told of the tattoo improprieties, by signing a statement saying he knew of no violations, and for withholding information on what was going on from university officials.[45]

Luke Fickell (2011)

[edit]

On July 8, 2011, Ohio State University decided to vacate all victories from the 2010 football season as self-imposed punishment for major NCAA violations.[46] Former coach Jim Tressel received more than $52,000 from the university and didn't have to pay a $250,000 fine for his involvement in the scandal. His status was also changed from "Resigned" to "Retired" in keeping with his wishes to "remain a Buckeye for life".[47] Ohio State named Luke Fickell interim head coach for the 2011 season following Tressel's resignation, and Fickell coached the 2011 Buckeyes to a 6–7 record; going 6–6 in the regular season and losing in the Gator Bowl to Florida.

Urban Meyer era (2012–2018)

[edit]
Former head coach Urban Meyer, who led the Buckeyes to seven division titles, three Big Ten Championships, the 2014 national championship, and the team's all-time record winning streak (24).

Early years

[edit]

On November 28, 2011, former University of Florida head coach and ESPN college football analyst Urban Meyer accepted the position of Buckeyes head coach.[48] Meyer assumed head coaching responsibilities following the Buckeyes' January 2012 Gator Bowl appearance. Meyer's first season at Ohio State did not include a postseason contest, as the Buckeyes were sanctioned with a one-year bowl ban on December 20, 2011. The NCAA sanctions also included the loss of three scholarships each year for the following three years and three years' probation to end on December 19, 2014. Ohio State was required to vacate all wins from the 2010 season, the 2010 Big Ten Conference championship and their win in the 2011 Sugar Bowl. The school's share of the Sugar Bowl proceeds was forfeited as well.[49] In Meyer's first year, the Buckeyes went a perfect 12–0, winning the 2012 Big Ten Leaders Division, though the previously mentioned sanctions kept them from playing in the 2012 Big Ten Football Championship Game and a postseason bowl game.[49] On November 23, 2013, the Buckeyes clinched their second straight Leaders Division Championship, after defeating Indiana 42–14. With the victory over Indiana, Ohio State set a team record for all-time consecutive wins, with 23. The following week, Ohio State defeated Michigan 42–41 in Ann Arbor, to increase the streak to 24. The streak ended with Ohio State's 34–24 loss to Michigan State in the 2013 Big Ten Conference Championship game on December 7, marking Meyer's first loss as the Buckeyes' head coach. On January 3, 2014, the Buckeyes were defeated by Clemson in the Orange Bowl 40–35.

National Championship

[edit]
The logo for the 2014 National Champion Buckeyes, which celebrated the football program's 125th anniversary

On November 22, 2014, the Buckeyes clinched the first-ever Big Ten East Division Championship when they defeated Indiana 42–27, earning a berth in the 2014 Big Ten Championship Game, where they defeated West Division champion Wisconsin 59–0 to win the Big Ten Conference Championship and qualified for the four-team playoff to decide the National Champion. OSU defeated Alabama in the Sugar Bowl 42–35, on January 1, 2015, to qualify for the National Championship Game against Rose Bowl winner Oregon on January 12 (the Rose and Sugar Bowls were the designated semifinal games in 2014). OSU claimed the first-ever College Football Playoff National Championship by defeating Oregon 42–20.[50][51][52]

Later years

[edit]

The 2015 season for the Buckeyes began with a 10–0 start before losing on a last-second field goal to Michigan State on November 21, ending the Buckeyes' quest to repeat as National Champions. However, the Buckeyes recovered their 2 next games with dominating wins over Michigan and then over Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl to finish the season at 12–1. The 2016 season started off great with 6 straight victories, including a win over the Oklahoma Sooners, but the streak came to an end as the team lost a heart-breaker to the Penn State Nittany Lions. The Buckeyes went on to win the rest of their regular-season games, finishing 11–1. They did not play in the Big Ten Championship as Penn State took the division. In a controversial call, the College Football Playoff committee gave Ohio State a spot in the Playoff. Ohio State lost in the Fiesta Bowl to the Clemson Tigers in an embarrassing 31–0 loss, ending the season 11–2. The 2017 season started out on a high note with a victory over the Indiana Hoosiers, but the next week the Buckeyes fell to the Oklahoma Sooners. The Buckeyes won the next 6 games, including a win over No. 2 Penn State in a revenge game of sorts. The Buckeyes suffered an embarrassing defeat against the Iowa Hawkeyes. The Buckeyes ended the season 12–2 overall, winning the rest of their games including a Big Ten Championship victory over Wisconsin and a Cotton Bowl victory over USC.

Downfall

[edit]

Urban Meyer was suspended for the first three games of the 2018 season for mishandling domestic violence allegations against then-wide receivers coach Zach Smith. Co-Offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Ryan Day served as interim coach and led the Buckeyes to a 3–0 start. Meyer returned to the sidelines and coached the team to four more victories before the team suffered a loss on October 20 to Purdue, 49–20. The Buckeyes won their last four games of the regular season, including a 62–39 win over archrival Michigan, in Columbus. The win gave the Buckeyes a share of the Big Ten East Division title, and the right to face Northwestern in the Big Ten Championship Game, which Ohio State won for its second consecutive Big Ten Championship. Ohio State would go on to win the Rose Bowl over Pac-12 Champion Washington 28–23, giving Ohio State their 8th Rose Bowl win.

Ryan Day era (2019–present)

[edit]
Current head coach Ryan Day, who has led the Buckeyes to two Big Ten Championships

On December 4, 2018, the university announced that Meyer would retire after the 2019 Rose Bowl and be replaced by co-offensive coordinator Ryan Day.[53][54]

In Day's first year, the Buckeyes went a perfect 13–0, including a win over archrival Michigan by a score of 56–27 and defeating Wisconsin for the Big Ten Championship. They would earn a spot in the College Football Playoff but would lose to Clemson 29–23 in the 2019 Fiesta Bowl. In Day's second year, the Big Ten season didn't start until late October due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Buckeyes would only play five out of a scheduled eight games due to several virus-related cancellations - including the Michigan game. Nevertheless, the Buckeyes would go 5–0 in the regular season, win the East Division title, and go on to beat Northwestern 22–10 in the Big Ten Championship Game, giving Day his second straight conference title. On January 1, 2021, the Buckeyes defeated Clemson 49–28 to win the Sugar Bowl in a rematch of the 2019 Fiesta Bowl to advance to the CFP National Championship Game against Alabama on January 11, which they lost 52–24. On September 11, 2021, he suffered his first regular season loss as head coach when the Oregon Ducks defeated the Buckeyes 35–28 in the 2nd game of the season. Ohio State's streak of defeating Michigan also came to an end on November 27, 2021, in Ann Arbor, when Ohio State lost 42–27.[55] They then won the 2022 Rose Bowl against Utah 48–45 on January 1, 2022.

In 2022, Day led the team to an 11–0 record and was ranked #2 going into the Michigan game, which #3 Michigan would win 45–23 on November 26, 2022 (outscoring the Buckeyes 28–3 in the second half), in Ohio State's first loss to Michigan in Columbus since 2000, and first back–to–back losses to Michigan since 1999–2000. The Buckeyes would go on to play the defending national champion Georgia Bulldogs in the 2022 national semifinal game on New Year's Eve, taking a 14-point lead into the fourth quarter, but ultimately seeing their season come to an end with a 42–41 loss.[56] Kicker Noah Ruggles' would-be game-winning field goal attempt sailed wide left just as the clock struck midnight on New Year's Day, 2023.

In 2023, Day led the team to an 11–0 record and was ranked #2 going into the Michigan game for the second consecutive year. This time, Michigan won by six points 30–24 on November 25, 2023. This marked the first three game losing streak to Michigan since 1995–97. The Buckeyes were then invited to the 2023 Cotton Bowl, where they lost to the Missouri Tigers 14–3 on December 29, 2023.

Championships

[edit]

National

[edit]

Ohio State recognizes eight national championships from NCAA-designated "consensus" selectors,[57][58] including six (1942, 1954, 1957, 1968, 2002, 2014) from the major wire-service: AP Poll and/or Coaches' Poll.[58][59]

The following is a list of Ohio State's claimed national championships:

Year Head coach Selector(s) Overall
Record
Big Ten
Record
Bowl Game(s) AP
Poll
Coaches
Poll
1942 Paul Brown AP 9–1 6–1 No. 1
1954 Woody Hayes AP 10–0 7–0 Won Rose Bowl No. 1 No. 2
1957 Coaches, FWAA[60] 9–1 7–0 Won Rose Bowl No. 2 No. 1
1961 FWAA 8–0–1 6–0 No. 2 No. 2
1968 AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF 10–0 7–0 Won Rose Bowl No. 1 No. 1
1970 NFF (co-champion)[61] 9–1 7–0 Lost Rose Bowl No. 5 No. 2
2002 Jim Tressel BCS, AP, Coaches, FWAA, NFF 14–0 8–0 Won Fiesta Bowl (BCS National Championship Game) No. 1 No. 1
2014 Urban Meyer CFP, AP, Coaches, NFF 14–1 8–0 Won Sugar Bowl (CFP semifinal)
Won CFP National Championship
No. 1 No. 1

Ohio State has also been selected an additional seven times by various NCAA-designated "major selectors", in 1933, 1944, 1969, 1973, 1974, 1975, and 2006.[58][62][63] However, the Buckeyes do not recognize any of those championships.

Conference

[edit]

Ohio State joined the Big Ten in 1912; before that they were a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) and won two OAC titles. Ohio State has won a championship in the Big Ten 39 times, second-most in the conference.[64]

Year Conference Coach Record Conference Record
1906 OAC Albert E. Herrnstein 8–1 4–0
1912 OAC John Richards 6–3 4–0
1916 Big Ten John Wilce 7–0 4–0
1917 Big Ten John Wilce 8–0–1 4–0
1920 Big Ten John Wilce 7–1 5–0
1935 Big Ten Francis Schmidt 7–1 5–0
1939 Big Ten Francis Schmidt 6–2 5–1
1942 Big Ten Paul Brown 9–1 5–1
1944 Big Ten Carroll Widdoes 9–0 6–0
1949 Big Ten Wes Fesler 7–1–2 4–1–1
1954 Big Ten Woody Hayes 10–0 7–0
1955 Big Ten Woody Hayes 7–2 6–0
1957 Big Ten Woody Hayes 9–1 7–0
1961 Big Ten Woody Hayes 8–0–1 6–0
1968 Big Ten Woody Hayes 10–0 7–0
1969 Big Ten Woody Hayes 8–1 6–1
1970 Big Ten Woody Hayes 9–1 7–0
1972 Big Ten Woody Hayes 9–2 7–1
1973 Big Ten Woody Hayes 10–0–1 7–0–1
1974 Big Ten Woody Hayes 10–2 7–1
1975 Big Ten Woody Hayes 11–1 8–0
1976 Big Ten Woody Hayes 9–2–1 7–1
1977 Big Ten Woody Hayes 9–3 6–2
1979 Big Ten Earle Bruce 11–1 8–0
1981 Big Ten Earle Bruce 9–3 6–2
1984 Big Ten Earle Bruce 9–3 7–2
1986 Big Ten Earle Bruce 10–3 7–1
1993 Big Ten John Cooper 10–1–1 6–1–1
1996 Big Ten John Cooper 11–1 7–1
1998 Big Ten John Cooper 11–1 7–1
2002 Big Ten Jim Tressel 14–0 8–0
2005 Big Ten Jim Tressel 10–2 7–1
2006 Big Ten Jim Tressel 12–1 8–0
2007 Big Ten Jim Tressel 11–2 7–1
2008 Big Ten Jim Tressel 10–3 7–1
2009 Big Ten Jim Tressel 11–2 7–1
2014 Big Ten Urban Meyer 14–1 8–0
2017 Big Ten Urban Meyer 12–2 8–1
2018 Big Ten Urban Meyer 13–1 8–1
2019 Big Ten Ryan Day 13–1 9–0
2020 Big Ten Ryan Day 7–1 6–0

† Co-champions

Division

[edit]

From 2011 to 2023, Big Ten had divisions to decide who would play for the conference championship. The divisions were known as Legends and Leaders from 2011 to 2013. In 2014, the divisions were realigned geographically into East and West. The divisional format ended for the 2024 season.

Year Division Coach Opponent CG Result
2012 Big Ten Leaders Urban Meyer N/A – Ineligible (postseason ban)
2013 Big Ten Leaders Urban Meyer Michigan State L 24–34
2014 Big Ten East Urban Meyer Wisconsin W 59–0
2015 Big Ten East Urban Meyer N/A lost tiebreaker to Michigan State
2016 Big Ten East Urban Meyer N/A lost tiebreaker to Penn State
2017 Big Ten East Urban Meyer Wisconsin W 27–21
2018 Big Ten East Urban Meyer Northwestern W 45–24
2019 Big Ten East Ryan Day Wisconsin W 34–21
2020 Big Ten East Ryan Day Northwestern W 22–10
2021 Big Ten East Ryan Day N/A lost tiebreaker to Michigan

† Co-champions

Undefeated seasons

[edit]
Year Overall Record Big Ten Record Head Coach
1899 9–0–1 John B. Eckstorm
1916 7–0 4–0 John Wilce
1917 8–0–1 4–0 John Wilce
1944 9–0 6–0 Carroll Widdoes
1954 10–0 7–0 Woody Hayes
1961 8–0–1 6–0 Woody Hayes
1968 10–0 7–0 Woody Hayes
1973 10–0–1 7–0–1 Woody Hayes
2002 14–0 8–0 Jim Tressel
2012 12–0 8–0 Urban Meyer

Bowl games

[edit]

Ohio State has played in 55 bowl games in which they are 27–29–0.[65] The Buckeyes have been to the Rose Bowl 16 times. Below are the team's most recent bowl games.

Season Coach Bowl Opponent Result
2014 Urban Meyer CFP Semifinal at Sugar Bowl Alabama W 42–35
2014 Urban Meyer CFP National Championship Oregon W 42–20
2015 Urban Meyer Fiesta Bowl Notre Dame W 44–28
2016 Urban Meyer CFP Semifinal at Fiesta Bowl Clemson L 0–31
2017 Urban Meyer Cotton Bowl Classic USC W 24–7
2018 Urban Meyer Rose Bowl Washington W 28–23
2019 Ryan Day CFP Semifinal at Fiesta Bowl Clemson L 23–29
2020 Ryan Day CFP Semifinal at Sugar Bowl Clemson W 49–28
2020 Ryan Day CFP National Championship Alabama L 24–52
2021 Ryan Day Rose Bowl Utah W 48–45
2022 Ryan Day CFP Semifinal at Peach Bowl Georgia L 41–42
2023 Ryan Day Cotton Bowl Classic Missouri L 3–14
Bowl records:
Overall New Year's Six College Football Playoff
27–29[66] 21–15 3–4

Vacated

Home venues

[edit]

Marching band

[edit]
Script Ohio

Ohio State University Marching Band[67] is the most visible and possibly best-known tradition of Ohio State football.[68] Home games are preceded by four marching band traditions:[69]

Rivalries

[edit]

Illinois

[edit]

The series versus Illinois began in 1902 and became the longest continuous series in 2002 when the schools played in their 89th consecutive year. In 2007, Ohio State was given their only defeat of the regular season by the Illini. Through the 2019 season, Ohio State leads the series 68–30–4.[70]

Michigan

[edit]

Ohio State's first game with Michigan dates to 1897. Michigan leads the series 61–51–6 through the 2023 season.[71]

Penn State

[edit]

When Penn State was added to the Big Ten conference football play in 1993, every member was given two designated rivals, teams to be played every year, with the other conference teams rotated out of the schedule at regular intervals. For geographic convenience, the Big Ten named Penn State as Ohio State's new designated rival in addition to Michigan. Ohio State leads the series 24–14 through the 2023 season.[72]

Famous Coaches

[edit]

The Buckeyes have had 24 head coaches in their 121-year history.

Of the team's eight national championships to date, Woody Hayes won five, with Paul Brown, Jim Tressel, and Urban Meyer each having one.

Personnel

[edit]

Roster

[edit]
2024 Ohio State Buckeyes football team roster
Players Coaches
Offense
Pos. # Name Class
RB 1 Quinshon Judkins Jr
WR 2 Emeka Egbuka (C) Jr
QB 3 Lincoln Kienholz So
WR 4 Jeremiah Smith Fr
WR 5 Mylan Graham Fr
WR 9 Jayden Ballard Sr
QB 10 Julian Sayin Fr
WR 11 Brandon Inniss So
QB 12 Air Noland Fr
WR 13 Bryson Rodgers So
WR 14 Kojo Antwi Jr
TE 15 Jelani Thurman So
QB 16 Mason Maggs Jr
WR 17 Carnell Tate So
QB 18 Will Howard GS
QB 19 Chad Ray Sr
RB 20 James Peoples Fr
WR 23 Nolan Baudo So
RB 24 Sam Williams-Dixon Fr
RB 26 Chase Brecht Jr
RB 28 TC Caffey Jr
RB 30 Rashid SeSay Fr
RB 32 TreVeyon Henderson (C) Sr
QB 33 Devin Brown Jr
WR 34 Brennen Schramm So
TE 46 Jace Middleton Sr
TE 49 Patrick Gurd Sr
OL 51 Luke Montgomery So
OL 54 Toby Wilson Sr
OL 55 Matthew Jones GS
OL 56 Seth McLaughlin. GS
OL 58 Gabe VanSickle. Fr
OL 62 Joshua Padilla So
OL 63 Julian Goines-Jackson Jr
OL 64 Simon Lorentz Fr
OL 65 Zen Michalski Sr
OL 67 Austin Siereveld So
OL 68 George Fitzpatrick Jr
OL 69 Ian Moore Fr
OL 70 Josh Fryar Sr
OL 71 Josh Simmons Sr
OL 72 Deontae Armstrong Fr
OL 73 Devontae Armstrong Fr
OL 74 Donovan Jackson Sr
OL 75 Carson Hinzman Jr
OL 76 Miles Walker So
OL 77 Tegra Tshabola Jr
WR 80 Shawn Lodge Jr
TE 81 Damarion Witten Fr
WR 82 David Adolph Jr
WR 83 Joop Mitchell Sr
WR 84 Dorian Williams Fr
TE 85 Bennett Christian Jr
TE 86 Maxence LeBlanc Fr
WR 87 Reis Stocksdale Sr
TE 88 Gee Scott Jr. GS
TE 89 Zak Herbstreit Sr
TE 89 Will Kacmarek Sr
Defense
Pos. # Name Class
LB 0 Cody Simon (C) GS
CB 1 Davison Igbinosun Jr
S 2 Caleb Downs So
LB 2 Kourt Williams II GS
CB 4 Lorenzo Styles Jr. Sr
LB 6 Sonny Styles Jr
CB 5 Aaron Scott Jr. Fr
CB 7 Jordan Hancock Sr
S 8 Lathan Ransom Sr
CB 10 Denzel Burke Sr
LB 11 C.J. Hicks Jr
CB 12 Bryce West Fr
CB 13 Myles Lockhart Fr
DB 16 Keenan Nelson Jr. Jr
LB 17 Mitchell Melton Sr
S 18 Jaylen McClain Fr
LB 20 Arvell Reese So
S 21 Jayden Bonsu So
CB 22 Calvin Simpson-Hunt So
LB 23 Garrett Stover Fr
CB 24 Jermaine Mathews Jr. So
S 25 Malik Hartford So
S 28 Leroy Roker III Fr
DB 29 Glorien Gough So
S 32 Brenton "Inky" Jones Jr
DE 33 Jack Sawyer (C) Sr
CB 34 Bukari Miles Jr. Fr
LB 35 Payton Pierce Fr
LB 36 Gabe Powers Jr
LB 37 Zach Hayes Fr
LB 38 Eli Riggs Fr
LB 39 Joey Velazquez GS
CB 43 Dianté Griffin Jr
DE 44 JT Tuimoloau Sr
S 46 Ryan Rudzinski So
LB 50 Alec DelSignore So
DE 52 Joshua Mickens So
DL 53 Will Smith Jr. So
DE 55 Dominic Kirks Fr
LB 57 Jalen Pace Sr
DT 58 Ty Hamilton Sr
DL 59 Ahmed Tounkara Fr
DL 60 Cade Casto Sr
DE 61 Caden Davis So
DL 62 Bryce Prater Sr
LB 66 Nate Riegle Fr
DL 90 Eric Mensah Fr
DT 91 Tyleik Williams Sr
DE 92 Caden Curry Jr
DT 93 Hero Kanu Jr
DL 94 Jason Moore So
DT 95 Tywone Malone Jr. Sr
DE 96 Eddrick Houston Fr
DE 97 Kenyatta Jackson Jr. Jr
DL 98 Kayden McDonald So
Special teams
Pos. # Name Class
P 19 Nick McLarty Fr
P 35 Anthony Venneri Jr
K 38 Jayden Fielding Jr
P 39 Hadi Jawad Sr
LS 41 Morrow Evans Fr
P 42 Joe McGuire So
LS 43 John Ferlmann Sr
LS 48 Max Lomonico Sr
K 95 Casey Magyar Sr
LS 96 Collin Johnson Sr
K 98 Austin Snyder Sr
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches
  • Chip Kelly – Offensive Coordinator/quarterbacks
  • Jim Knowles – Defensive coordinator
  • Keenan Bailey – Tight ends
  • Justin Frye – Run game coordinator/offensive line
  • Matt Guerrieri – Safeties
  • Brian Hartline – Co-offensive coordinator/wide receivers
  • Larry Johnson – Associate HC/defensive line
  • James Laurinaitis – Linebackers coach
  • Carlos Locklyn – Running backs coach
  • Tim Walton – Assistant HC/secondary/cornerbacks
  • Mickey Marotti – Associate AD/director of football sport performance
  • Brent Zdebski – Quality Control - Defense
  • Rob Keys – Quality Control - Kicking
  • Sam McGrath - Quality Control - Defense
  • Joe Lyberger – Quality Control - Defense
  • Tim Drevno - Quality Control - Offense
  • LaAllan Clark - Graduate Assistant - Defense
  • Mike Sollene - Graduate Assistant - Offense
  • Sean Binckes - Graduate Assistant - Offense
  • Michael Hunter Jr. - Graduate Assistant- Defense
  • Riley Larkin - Program Assistant - Offense
  • Gunnar Daniel - Program Assistant - Special Teams
  • Devin Jordan - Program Assistant - Offense
  • Gerren DuHart - Program Assistant - Defense
  • Joshua Chorba - Program Assistant - Defense
  • Tony Johnson - Senior Advisor - Analyst

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (S) Suspended
  • (I) Ineligible
  • Injured Injured
  • Redshirt Redshirt

Roster
Last update: August 22, 2024

[73]

Staff

[edit]
Coach Title Years at Ohio State
Ryan Day Head coach 8th
Ross Bjork Senior vice president / athletic director 1st
Mickey Marotti Associate athletic director of football sports performance 15th
Chip Kelly Offensive coordinator / quarterbacks 1st
Jim Knowles Defensive coordinator 3rd
Keenan Bailey Tight ends coach 9th
Justin Frye Run game coordinator / offensive line 3rd
Matt Guerrieri Safeties coach 1st
Brian Hartline Co-offensive coordinator / wide receivers 7th
Larry Johnson Associate head coach / defensive line 11th
James Laurinaitis Linebackers coach 2nd
Carlos Locklyn Running backs coach 1st
Tim Walton Assistant head coach / secondary / cornerbacks 3rd
Brent Zdebski Quality control – defense 1st
Rob Keys Quality control – kicking 1st
Sam McGrath Quality control – defense 1st
Joe Lyberger Quality control – defense 1st
Tim Drevno Quality control – offense 1st
LaAllan Clark Graduate assistant – defense 1st
Mike Sollenne Graduate assistant – offense 1st
Sean Binckes Graduate assistant – offense 1st
Michael Hunter, Jr. Graduate assistant – defense 1st
Riley Larkin Program assistant – offense 1st
Gunner Daniel Program assistant – special teams 2nd
Devin Jordan Program assistant – offense 1st
Gerren DuHart Program assistant – defense 2nd
Joshua Chorba Program assistant – defense 2nd
Tony Johnson Senior advisor/analyst 1st

All-time records

[edit]

All-time Big Ten records

[edit]

This table reflects the results of Big Ten match-ups when both OSU and its opponent were members of the conference through November 9, 2019.[74] Ohio State began Big Ten play in 1913. Examples of excluded results are Chicago after 1939, Michigan between 1907 and 1916, Michigan State before 1953, Penn State before 1993, and Nebraska before 2011 (see Big Ten History for further information). Ohio State's vacated wins from 2010 are not included (see 2010 Ohio State Buckeyes football team for further information).

Team Big Ten wins Big Ten losses Big Ten ties Winning percentage Streak First Big Ten meeting Last meeting
Chicago Maroons 10 2 2 .786 Won 8 1920 1939
Illinois Fighting Illini 69 30 3 .691 Won 8 1914 2017
Indiana Hoosiers 80 12 5 .851 Won 28 1913 2023
Iowa Hawkeyes 49 15 3 .754 Won 1 1922 2022
Maryland Terrapins 9 0 0 1.000 Won 9 2014 2023
Michigan Wolverines 52 60 4 .466 Lost 3 1918 2023
Michigan State Spartans 38 15 0 .717 Won 8 1953 2023
Minnesota Golden Gophers 48 7 0 .873 Won 12 1921 2023
Nebraska Cornhuskers 9 1 0 .900 Won 7 2011 2021
Northwestern Wildcats 66 14 1 .821 Won 10 1913 2022
Penn State Nittany Lions 22 8 0 .733 Won 7 1993 2023
Purdue Boilermakers 42 15 2 .729 Won 2 1919 2023
Rutgers Scarlet Knights 10 0 0 1.000 Won 10 2014 2023
Wisconsin Badgers 64 18 5 .764 Won 10 1913 2023

Individual awards and achievements

[edit]

Through the 2006 season, Ohio State players have by a significant margin won more trophies than any other NCAA Division 1A program. Ohio State players have won 34 of the listed major awards, with the next closest being 26 (Oklahoma). Ohio State is the only university to have received each of the awards at least once. Of the five awards created prior to 1980 (Heisman, Lombardi, Maxwell, Outland, and Walter Camp), Ohio State has received the most with 25 (Notre Dame follows with 23).

Retired numbers

[edit]
No. Player Pos. Tenure No. ret. Ref
22 Les Horvath RB 1940–42, 1944 2000 [75]
27 Eddie George RB 1992–95 2001 [75]
31 Vic Janowicz HB 1949–51 2000 [75]
40 Howard Cassady HB 1952–55 2000 [75]
45 Archie Griffin RB 1972–75 1999 [75]
47 Chic Harley HB, QB, E, K 1916–17, 1919 2004 [75]
99 Bill Willis DL 1942–44 2007 [75]

Honored numbers

[edit]

Although these numbers are cited as "retired" on Ohio State website,[75] they are considered enshrined rather than retired, and are available to be worn. All previously retired jersey numbers remain retired.[76]

No. Player Pos. Tenure Honored Ref.
10 Troy Smith QB 2003–06 2014 [75]

Block O Jersey

[edit]

In 2020, the NCAA approved the use of the No. 0.[77] In order to further pay tribute to Bill Willis, Coach Day decided to start a new tradition and choose the player who will wear the number each season.[78]

Season Name Pos. Class Previous No.
2020 Jonathon Cooper DE Senior (RS) 18
2021 Thayer Munford OT Senior (RS) 75*
2022 Kamryn Babb WR Senior (RS) 1
2023 Xavier Johnson WR Senior (RS) 10
2024 Cody Simon LB Senior (RS) 30

Note: Due to number restrictions, Thayer Munford could not wear number 0. Instead, he wore his regular number and honored the award with a patch.

Honored coaches

[edit]

Two head coaches have also been honored by the Buckeyes, with banners at Ohio Stadium:

  • Paul Brown (1941–43) - led OSU to their first National Championship in 1942
  • Woody Hayes (1951–78) - led OSU to school records of 205 wins, five National Championships (1954, 1957, 1961, 1968, 1970), and 13 Big Ten Championships

Award winners

[edit]

Heisman Trophy winners

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Heisman Trophy seven times, which ties Notre Dame and Oklahoma for the second most awards for any school, behind only USC with eight. Archie Griffin is the only two-time recipient in the history of the award.[79]

Season Name Pos. Class Points
1944 Les Horvath RB Senior 412
1950 Vic Janowicz RB Junior 633
1955 Howard "Hopalong" Cassady RB Senior 2219
1974 Archie Griffin RB Junior 1920
1975 Archie Griffin (2) RB Senior 1800
1995 Eddie George RB Senior 1460
2006 Troy Smith QB Senior 2540

Lombardi Award

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Lombardi Award six times:

Maxwell Award

[edit]

Four Ohio State players have won the Maxwell Award:

Outland Trophy

[edit]

Four Ohio State players have won the Outland Trophy:

Walter Camp Award

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Walter Camp Award four times:

Fred Biletnikoff Award

[edit]

Ohio State Players have won the Fred Biletnikoff Award twice:

Bronko Nagurski Trophy

[edit]

Ohio State Players have won the Bronko Nagurski Trophy award twice:

Dick Butkus Award

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Dick Butkus Award twice:

Jim Thorpe Award

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Jim Thorpe Award twice:

Rimington Trophy

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Dave Rimington Trophy three times:

Chicago Tribune Silver Football

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award 23 times:

Graham–George Offensive Player of the Year

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Graham–George Offensive Player of the Year 13 times:

Nagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year

[edit]

Ohio State players have won the Nagurski–Woodson Defensive Player of the Year 11 times:

Other

[edit]

All-American and All-Conference honors

[edit]

Through 2017, 199 Buckeyes have been named first team All-Americans since 1914. Of those 85 have been consensus picks. 388 have been named to the All-Big Ten team, and 16 have won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football, the Big Ten's Most Valuable Player award, including Troy Smith for 2006. The Athletic Directors of the Big Ten Conference voted Eddie George Big Ten-Jesse Owens Athlete of the Year for 1996.

On November 22, 2006, ten Buckeyes were named to either the Coaches or Conference media All-Big Ten First Team selections for the 2006 season, and seven were named to both. Troy Smith was named Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year. Four other Buckeyes received Second Team honors.

List of All-Americans

[edit]

All records per OSU Athletics.[80][when?]

1910s
  • 1914: Boyd Cherry (E)
  • 1916: Chic Harley (B), Robert Karch (T)
  • 1917: Charles Bolen (E), Harold Courtney (E), Chic Harley (B), Kelley VanDyne (C)
  • 1918: Clarence MacDonald (E)
  • 1919: Chic Harley (B), Gaylord Stinchcomb (B)
1920s
  • 1920: Iolas Huffman (G), Gaylord Stinchcomb (B)
  • 1921: Iolas Huffman (G), Cyril Myers (E)
  • 1923: Harry Workman (QB)
  • 1924: Harold Cunningham (E)
  • 1925: Edwin Hess (G)
  • 1926: Edwin Hess (G), Marty Karow (HB), Leo Raskowski (T)
  • 1927: Leo Raskowski (T)
  • 1928: Wes Fesler (E)
  • 1929: Wes Fesler (E)
1930s
  • 1930: Wes Fesler (E), Lew Hinchman (HB)
  • 1931: Carl Cramer (QB), Lew Hinchman (HB)
  • 1932: Joseph Gailus (G), Sid Gillman (E), Lew Hinchman (HB), Ted Rosequist (T)
  • 1933: Joseph Gailus (G)
  • 1934: Regis Monahan (G), Merle Wendt (E)
  • 1935: Gomer Jones (C), Merle Wendt (E)
  • 1936: Charles Hamrick (T), Inwood Smith (G), Merle Wendt (E)
  • 1937: Carl Kaplanoff (T), Jim McDonald (QB), Ralph Wolf (C), Gust Zarnas (G)
  • 1939: Vic Marino (G), Esco Sarkkinen (E), Don Scott (HB)
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s

Team MVP

[edit]

1930: Wes Fesler – (E) – Big Ten MVP
1931: Robert Haubrich – (OT)
1932: Lew Hinchman – (HB)
1933: Mickey Vuchinich – (FB)
1934: Gomer Jones – (C)
1935: Gomer Jones – (C)
1936: Ralph Wolf – (C)
1937: Ralph Wolf – (C)
1938: Jim Langhurst – (FB)
1939: Steve Andrako – (C)
1940: Don Scott – (QB)
1941: Jack Graf – (FB) – Big Ten MVP
1942: Chuck Csuri – (OT)
1943: Gordon Appleby – (C)
1944: Les Horvath – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
1945: Ollie Cline – (FB) – Big Ten MVP
1946: Cecil Souders – (E)
1947: Dave Templeton – (G)
1948: Joe Whisler – (FB)
1949: Jack Lininger – (C)
1950: Vic Janowicz – (HB) – Big Ten MVP
1951: Vic Janowicz – (HB)
1952: Fred Bruney – (HB)
1953: George Jacoby – (T)
1954: Howard Cassady – (HB)
1955: Howard Cassady – (HB) – Big Ten MVP
1956: Jim Parker – (G)
1957: Bill Jobko – (G)
1958: Jim Houston – (E)
1959: Jim Houston – (E)
1960: Tom Matte – (QB)
1961: Bob Ferguson – (FB)
1962: Billy Armstrong – (C)
1963: Matt Snell – (FB)
1964: Ed Orazen – (DL)
1965: Doug Van Horn – (OG)
1966: Ray Pryor – (C)
1967: Dirk Worden – (LB)
1968: Mark Stier – (LB)
1969: Jim Otis – (FB)
1970: Jim Stillwagon – (DL)
1971: Tom DeLeone – (C)
1972: George Hasenohrl – (DL)
1973: Archie Griffin – (RB) – Big Ten MVP
1974: Archie Griffin – (RB) – Big Ten MVP
1975: Cornelius Greene – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
1976: Bob Brudzinski – (DE)
1977: Dave Adkins – (LB)
1978: Tom Cousineau – (LB)
1979: Jim Laughlin – (LB)
1980: Calvin Murray – (TB)
1981: Art Schlichter – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
1982: Tim Spencer – (RB)
1983: John Frank – (TE)
1984: Keith Byars – (RB) – Big Ten MVP
1985: Jim Karsatos – (QB)
1986: Cris Carter – (WR)
1987: Chris Spielman – (LB)
1988: Jeff Uhlenhake – (C)
1989: Derek Isaman – (LB)
1990: Jeff Graham – (WR)
1991: Carlos Snow – (TB)
1992: Kirk Herbstreit – (QB)
1993: Raymont Harris – (TB)
1994: Korey Stringer – (OT)
1995: Eddie George – (TB) – Big Ten MVP
1996: Orlando Pace – (OT) – Big Ten MVP
1997: Antoine Winfield – (DB)
1998: Joe Germaine – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
1999: Ahmed Plummer – (DB)
2000: Derek Combs – (TB)
2001: Jonathan Wells – (TB)
2002: Craig Krenzel – (QB) / Chris Gamble – (WR/DB)
2003: Michael Jenkins – (WR)
2004: Mike Nugent – (PK)
2005: A. J. Hawk – (LB)
2006: Troy Smith – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
2007: Chris Wells – (TB)
2008: Chris Wells – (TB)
2009: Kurt Coleman – (SS)
2010: Dane Sanzenbacher – (WR)
2011: Daniel Herron – (TB)
2012: Braxton Miller – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
2013: Braxton Miller – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
2014: Evan Spencer – (WR)
2015: Ezekiel Elliott – (RB) – Big Ten MVP
2016: Malik Hooker – (SAF) / Pat Elflein – (C)
2017: Sam Hubbard – (DE)
2018: Dwayne Haskins – (QB)
2019: Justin Fields – (QB) / Chase Young – (DE) – Big Ten MVP
2020: Justin Fields – (QB) – Big Ten MVP
2021: C. J. Stroud – (QB)
2022: C. J. Stroud – (QB)

All-Century Team

[edit]

Paul "Bear" Bryant Award

[edit]

AFCA Coach of the Year

[edit]

Academic awards and achievements

[edit]

College Sports Information Directors of America Academic All-America

[edit]

Academic All-American Hall of Fame

[edit]

Academic All-American Player of the Year

[edit]

Academic All-Americans

[edit]

National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame

[edit]

William V. Campbell Trophy

[edit]

National Scholar-Athlete Awards

[edit]

Hall of Fame inductees

[edit]

College Football Hall of Fame

[edit]
Name Position Year Inducted
Howard Jones Head Coach 1951
Chic Harley HB/QB 1951
Wes Fesler End 1954
John Wilce Head Coach 1954
Les Horvath HB/QB 1969
Bill Willis DT 1971
Francis Schmidt Head Coach 1971
Ernie Godfrey Asst. Coach 1972
Gaylord Stinchcomb HB/QB 1973
Jim Parker OT 1974
Gust Zarnas OG 1975
Vic Janowicz HB 1976
Jim Daniell OT 1977
Gomer Jones C 1978
Howard Cassady HB 1979
Woody Hayes Head Coach 1983
Warren Amling OG 1984
Archie Griffin RB 1986
Doyt Perry Asst. Coach 1988
Sid Gillman Asst. Coach 1989
Aurealius Thomas OG 1989
Jim Stillwagon DT 1991
Bo Schembechler Asst. Coach 1993
Bob Fergueson FB 1996
Randy Gradishar LB 1998
John Hicks OT 2001
Earle Bruce Head Coach 2002
Jack Tatum S 2004
Jim Houston DE 2005
Rex Kern QB 2007
John Cooper Head Coach 2008
Chris Spielman LB 2009
Eddie George RB 2011
Orlando Pace OT 2013
Jim Tressel Head Coach 2015
Tom Cousineau LB 2016
Keith Byars HB 2020
Rudy Hubbard Asst. Coach 2021
Mike Doss S 2022
Chris Ward OT 2024

Pro Football Hall of Fame

[edit]
Name Position Year Inducted
Paul Brown Coach 1967
Jim Parker OT 1973
Lou Groza K 1974
Dante Lavelli End 1975
Bill Willis DT 1977
Sid Gillman Coach 1983
Paul Warfield WR 1983
Dick LeBeau CB 2010
Cris Carter WR 2013
Orlando Pace OT 2016
Randy Gradishar LB 2024

Media

[edit]

The Buckeyes are covered on the radio by Ohio State Sports Network, operated by Learfield IMG College. WBNS/Columbus (1460 AM) and sister station WBNS-FM/Columbus (97.1 FM) serve as flagship stations, with more than 60 affiliates in Ohio, and two additional affiliates in West Virginia. Paul Keels is the play-by-play announcer, while former Buckeye left guard Jim Lachey serves as color analyst. They are joined by sideline reporter Matt Andrews and Skip Mosic, host of the network pregame and halftime shows.[81]

WBNS-TV (channel 10) in Columbus is the long-standing "official TV home" of the Buckeyes, airing the official coach's show Game Time with Ryan Day (simulcast statewide on Bally Sports Ohio).[82]

In addition, Ohio State football games are broadcast by their student radio organization, Scarlet and Gray Sports Radio on OhioStateSports.net

Future conference opponents

[edit]

Schedule announced October 5, 2023[83]

2024 2025 2026 2027 2028
at Michigan State at Illinois at Indiana at Michigan* at Illinois
Iowa at Michigan* at Iowa at Minnesota at Maryland
at Oregon at Purdue at Nebraska at Northwestern at Penn State
Nebraska at Washington at USC at Oregon at UCLA
at Penn State at Wisconsin Illinois at Rutgers Michigan*
Purdue Minnesota Maryland Michigan State Minnesota
at Northwestern Penn State Michigan* Nebraska Rutgers
Indiana Rutgers Northwestern Purdue Washington
Michigan* UCLA Oregon USC Wisconsin

(*) denotes protected matchup

Future non-conference opponents

[edit]

Announced schedules as of September 28, 2023.[84]

2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036
vs Akron (8/31) vs Texas (8/30) vs Ball State (9/5) vs Bowling Green (9/4) vs Buffalo (9/2) vs Nevada (9/1) at Georgia (9/14) vs Georgia (8/30) Boston College (9/15) at Boston College (9/13)
vs Western Michigan (9/7) vs Grambling State (9/6) at Texas (9/12) vs New Hampshire at Alabama (9/9) vs Charlotte (9/8)
vs Marshall (9/21) vs Ohio (9/13) Kent State (9/19) vs Alabama (9/18) vs Northern Illinois (9/16)
  • Ohio State has no opponents scheduled for 2034 yet.

Fan base

[edit]

In 2011, a study conducted by Nate Silver of the New York Times, which he described as "not quite scientific," determined that Ohio State had the most fans of any college football team.[85]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
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Further reading

[edit]
[edit]