From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Author: drobik.5@osu.edu (page 62 of 62)

Fall Sports (Part 1)

We thought it would be fun to briefly highlight the histories of OSU’s other fall sports.  Here’s part one:

Men’s Soccer

Veterinary Medicine soccer champs, team photo, 1914

Men’s Soccer began at Ohio State around 1912 as an informal league. The first record of the sport was in 1914, when Professor Thomas French mentioned “soccer football” in an article about fall sports. At that time there were ten local teams, from fraternities and boarding houses, playing matches in Columbus. It was not until 1953 that Ohio State’s team played its first intercollegiate season. To date, the team has won three Big Ten Championships (2000, 2007, 2009). They have won 16 of the 22 matches played against Michigan, including the last two years.

Men's Soccer Team (from the 1914 yearbook)

 

Men's Soccer at Ohio Field, 1913

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women’s Soccer

Women's Soccer, action shot vs. Notre Dame, 1993

Though women’s soccer has existed at OSU since 1977, it didn’t become a Varsity sport until more than 15 years later. When the Women’s Soccer Club first applied for Varsity status, it was denied; the University cited lack of funds for all sports, as well as a lack of competition, since the Club was playing Division III schools. Players argued that Division I teams did not want to play against OSU for fear of losing to a Club team, while at the same time many Division I schools had enacted rules preventing their Varsity teams from playing clubs.  The sport finally received Varsity status in 1993, giving the women the same class and facility scheduling opportunities as the men, as well as funding for scholarships, travel and tournament fees. In 2002 the team won the Big Ten Championship.

Women's Soccer Team, inaugural season, 1993

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Men’s Cross Country

Men's Cross Country Team (from the 1913 yearbook)

Men’s Cross Country is one of the oldest sports at OSU, as foot races were held on campus before Ohio Field was in use. The earliest reference to an official team was in 1912, the year of the first Big Ten Championship (the Buckeyes placed 6th); by 1914 the team had thirty members and was growing in popularity.

Men's Cross Country, finish line at Western Conference Run, 1917

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women’s Cross Country

Women's Cross Country, beginning of a race, 1975

The first season of intercollegiate Women’s Cross Country was in 1975, with a dozen members.  The sport was officially sanctioned by the Big Ten Conference in 1981. The women had a track team, both indoor and outdoor, even before the establishment of a Cross Country Team.

1981 Women's Cross Country Team

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Buckeye Stroll

Want to take a walk through OSU history?   Now it’s easy, with the Libraries’ new mobile app and web site, Buckeye Stroll.

The site  features current and historical landmarks of the Columbus campus.  Included is a map view of more than 70 sites of interest on The Ohio State University campus, and a browse view for locating a known site by name. Each stop on the tour includes several historical photographs from the OSU Photo Archives, as well as historical summaries of the location.  This campus tour can be taken by either using your mobile device or your computer.

Click the map to go to the Buckeye Stroll web page

This summer, Buckeye Stroll was also released on the University’s new mobile application, OSU Mobile.

OSU Mobile allows you to access all the great features of Buckeye Stroll that are available on the web site.  The mobile application also includes other tools, including access to OSU news, real-time bus schedules, maps, grades and class schedules.

The Archives is continuing to add locations and photographs to Buckeye Stroll,  so please check back as the site is always changing.

Have you tried using Buckeye Stroll yet?  Please let us know what you think about it.

 

OSU Football: Who was the youngest coach?

New Buckeyes Football Head Coach Luke Fickell, who turns 38 on Aug. 18, starts his tenure at a significantly younger age than his more recent predecessors, which started us wondering, who were the youngest Buckeye football coaches? Here are the top three, although there’s a tie for third:

#1: The youngest OSU Head Coach appears to have been Jack Ryder, who we believe was 21 years old when he began coaching. Born in 1871, he came to OSU in 1892 and coached until 1895, returning in 1898. He is also notable as OSU’s first paid head coach. He made $10 per week, which he was allegedly quite pleased with, bringing him to a total of $150 for the season. After his coaching career ended he became a sports editor for The Cincinnati Enquirer, a post that he held for more than 30 years until his death in 1936.

Jack Ryder, football coach, 1893

Jack Ryder, football coach, 1893

1893 football team

1893 Football Team (Ryder is in the center of the third row)

#2: The next-youngest coach was David Edwards (1875-1948) who coached the 1897 season at the ripe old age of 22. Edwards was a half back at Princeton, and the next fall came to OSU to coach. It seems he was a better player than a coach, because the Buckeyes had an epically bad season, and Edwards was let go.

David F. Edwards, 1897

David F. Edwards, 1897

#3: The last is a tie for age 23: Both Alexander S. Lilley, the Buckeyes’ first coach, and Perry Hale, the sixth OSU coach, were 23 years old when they started coaching here.

We previously posted on Lilley, but just as a reminder: He was unpaid, which was probably a good thing. It can be debated as to whether it was the newness of the game, the inexperience of the players, or Lilley’s coaching ability that resulted in so many losses in the beginning of the Buckeyes football history. Lilley, however, did help start the madness here on campus, riding an indian pony to practices from his home on Main Street. A plaque honoring him hangs over the team’s dressing room door at the Stadium.

Alexander Lilley, 1890

Alexander Lilley, 1890

Alexander Lilley plaque, 1930s

Alexander Lilley plaque, 1930s

Lilley Alexander plaque above Stadium locker room, 1980

Lilley Alexander plaque above Stadium locker room, 1980

Perry Hale was a graduate of Yale, where he was All-American Fullback in 1900. He coached for two years at Phillips Exeter Academy prior to coming to OSU in 1902. From several accounts, Hale was well-regarded by the team and the community, and as a plus, the Buckeyes won the first four games of the season. He left OSU in 1903 and opened his own civil engineering office.

Perry Hale, 1903

Perry Hale, 1903

1903 Football Team

1903 Football Team, (Perry Hale is in the third row to the far left)

filed by C.N.

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