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View Article  Jody Victor : OSU Baseball News

Jody Victor: Sophomore second baseman Cory Kovanda was selected to the 2008 Big Ten Conference all-tournament team. The Columbus, Ohio native and Worthington Kilbourne H.S. grad hit .429 and scored three runs during the tournament.

Kovanda had one hit and scored a run in the Buckeyes' opening game, 3-2, loss to Illinois. He followed that with two hits, two runs scored and an RBI in the extra-inning, 10-8 loss to Indiana. His sacrifice fly in the eighth inning of the Indiana game scored Justin Miller and tied the game at 8-all. The Hoosiers won it with two runs in the 10th. The Buckeyes were eliminated from the tournament after the Indiana loss and concluded their season with a 30-26 record.

Kovanda was one of eight every day players for the Buckeyes to hit at least .300 this season. His .324 batting average was third-best on the team. His 45 runs scored ranked second and he led the team with 37 bases on balls.

Go Bucks!!!

Jody Victor

View Article  Jody Victor : OSU And OWU Celebrate Football

Jody Victor: The New York Times published a story about Ohio State's first football game played vs. Ohio Wesleyan May 3, 1890 in Delaware, Ohio. Ohio State defeated Ohio Wesleyan, 20-14.

Saturday, May 3rd, the two schools held a celebration to unveil an historical marker on the Ohio Wesleyan campus commemorating the game. Below is the story that ran in the Times.

On May 3, 1890, a group of Ohio State students rose early, boarded their horse-drawn wagons and made the 20-mile trip along the Olentangy River from Columbus to Delaware, the home of Ohio Wesleyan University, to play what that day's Delaware Gazette described as "the first game of Rugby foot ball."

Ohio State and Ohio Wesleyan now occupy opposite ends of the college football spectrum. The Buckeyes, whose Columbus campus has an enrollment in excess of 52,000, play in a stadium that seats more than 100,000 and field a team of players with NFL aspirations. The Battling Bishops who draw from a student body of 1,850, play in a stadium less than a tenth the size and offer no football scholarships. But the universities' football programs began together on that spring morning 118 years ago.

The site of that first game was a mystery until last year, when Dick Gordin, a former Ohio Wesleyan athletic director who has studied the history of the university's sports teams, uncovered a letter written by one player in that 1890 game, describing the playing field near a creek called Delaware Run. This weekend, Ohio Wesleyan has scheduled a ceremony to install an historical marker at the site, with dignitaries from both universities attending.

"Ohio Wesleyan, as the first team Ohio State played, is extremely important to our football history," said Archie Griffin, the Buckeyes' two-time Heisman Trophy winner, who was scheduled to attend the dedication. "They really got it started for Ohio State."

The teams played for the final time in 1932, when Ohio State won, 34-7, ending the series with 26-2-1 advantage. By then, the Buckeyes were playing Michigan and Wisconsin, and the Battling Bishops were playing Wittenberg and DePauw.

Ohio Wesleyan was an important part of the early days of college football. In 1897, it gave Fielding Yost, a founding father of the sport, his first coaching job. In 1906, it was a charter member of the Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (later named the National Collegiate Athletic Association). Ohio Wesleyan has played Ohio State more than any other Ohio team.

"The two schools both started out as Midwest football powers in the late 19th century, early 20th century," Roger Ingles, the athletic director at Ohio Wesleyan, said. "The first game that Ohio State ever played was at Ohio Wesleyan, and we were the first visiting team to play at Ohio Stadium in 1922. A lot of our past has been intertwined."

At that first game in 1890, the ball was round, forward passes were outlawed, touchdowns were worth 4 points and "goals after touchdown" worth 2. Wedges - plays in which players locked elbows and ran into each other en masse, often causing serious injuries - were commonplace. Players wore no pads.

Gordin said: "In those days, it looked more like a rugby game, where they have the scrums with the players down close to each other and push each other around, and all at once the ball comes out of there. The biggest problem was the number of injuries."

Those injuries - and professors' concerns that students should focus on their classwork - nearly prevented Ohio State's players from making that trip to Ohio Wesleyan.

"Faculty didn't want players leaving the campus," Gordin said. "For Ohio State to come up here and play was a big thing."

It was big enough that an estimated 700 people attended, watching from a hill overlooking the field. Ohio State won, 20-14, with four touchdowns and two goals after for the men of Columbus against three touchdowns and one goal after for the home team.

The Delaware Gazette reported aferward, "The game was a spirited one, and, from the interest aroused, it is safe to say that foot ball has taken a firm hold upon both students and citizens."

Go Bucks!!!

Jody Victor

View Article  Jody Victor : Buckeyes Got Talent

Jody Victor: Buckeyes Got Talent is back! After its successful first run in 2007, the Ohio State student-athlete talent show is back for its second edition. Buckeyes Got Talent, which is organized by the Ohio State Student-Athlete Advisory Board (SAAB), takes place at 7 p.m. May 14 in St. John Arena. Doors open at 6 p.m. for an autograph session with the Buckeye student-athletes that will last until 6:45 p.m., allowing the contestants time to prepare for the main event.

Chairing the event this year is women's volleyball standout Danielle Meyer, a three-time All-Big Ten selection and ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America first-team selection.

Last year, the bar was set with a collection of dances from the wrestling and men's lacrosse team and a barber shop quartet performance by the men's cross country team, the competition's top 3 acts. This year, the 10 Buckeye varsity teams competing May 14 have their work cut out as they vie for the 2008 title.

The 10 teams performing at Buckeyes Got Talent include: men's cross country, football, men's and women's lacrosse, rowing, men's and women's soccer, women's swimming and diving, synchronized swimming, men's track and field and wrestling.

General admission tickets for the event can be purchased at the door for $5 with Ohio State student tickets discounted to $3 and no charge for children ages 6 and under. All proceeds from the Ohio State student-athlete talent show will be donated to the Boys & Girls Club of Columbus. SAAB looks to better its $1,300 donation collected for the organization at the event in 2007.

Go Bucks!!!

Jody Victor

View Article  Jody Victor : Buckeyes Visit Ohio Statehouse

Jody Victor: Football coach Jim Tressel and seven members of the Buckeyes football team were visitors of the Ohio House of Representatives last Wednesday in downtown Columbus.

Among the players in attendance were Kirk Barton, Dionte Johnson, Brett Daly, Andrew Good, Tyler Whaley, Dimitrios Makridis and Devin Jordan.

The players went on a tour of the house, including the cabinet room before heading in to meet former United States Senator John Glenn and Ohio Governor Ted Strickland. Ohio State President Gordon Gee also joined as the group sat and shared stories and spoke about their plans after graduation while enjoying a few laughs from Senator Glenn's jokes.

Governor Strickland added, "It is an honor to have all of you here today. Coach Tressel and his players always represent Ohio with class and character on and off the field and we're very proud of you and all your accomplishments."

After meeting in the Governor's office, the Buckeyes went to meet Jon Husted, the Speaker fo House of Representatives. Husted was an All-American defensive back at the University of Dayton and a member of the 1989 Division III National Championship football team.

From there the Buckeyes moved into the House Chambers as Tressel addressed the House of Representatives, introducing his seniors one-by-one and thanking all the guests, employees and representatives for all their support over the years.

Go Bucks!!

Jody Victor