Sorry, Paul Brown. These guys were better.
Sure, Brown was a legend at Massillon. He started the Cleveland
Browns, launched several coaching careers and belongs in the NFL
Hall of Fame.
He also coached three years at Ohio State and brought the school
its first national championship in 1942.
But Browns three-year record of 18-8-1 (.685) isnt
good enough to make our list of Ohio States top five coaches.
Heres a closer look at those men:
Woody Hayes (1951-1978)
During
his day, Woody Hayes had only one peer, Alabamas Bear Bryant.
Hayes rolled up a 205-61-10 (.761) record at Ohio State and claimed
wire service national titles in 1954, 1957 and 1968. He also added
a Football Writers national crown in 1961 and brought home
the National Football Foundation championship in 1970.
Woody was a top-flight recruiter who snagged Jim Parker, Jack Tatum,
Archie Griffin, John Hicks, Randy Gradishar, Rex Kern, Art Schlichter
and many, many more from various backgrounds and economic conditions.
His best team was the 1969 squad that lost in Ann Arbor, a defeat
he never really got over. His biggest disappointment might have
been having the 1961 Big Ten champions denied a trip to the Rose
Bowl on a Faculty Council vote.
Hayes claimed this vote hurt Ohio State recruiting for the next
several years. Although the Buckeyes were a respectable 35-18-1
over the ensuing six-year stretch, OSU didnt win a Big Ten
title in that period the longest such stint in Woodys
career.
Ohio State was 16-11-1 vs. Michigan and went 4-4 in eight Rose
Bowls under Hayes. His career, which included 13 Big Ten titles,
ended with a frustrated punch of an opposing player. But his legacy
of success still lives in Columbus where Woody Hayes Drive runs
past Ohio Stadium.
Dr. John Wilce (1913-1928)
A
Wisconsin graduate, Dr. John Wilce ran the program when Buckeye
football first burst on the national scene. Ohio State joined the
Western Conference (later Big Ten) during his tenure, and the Buckeyes
won three league titles for this College Football Hall of Famer.
When Columbus native Chic Harley collected three-time All-America
honors on Wilces watch, it led to a three-year run of wild
support from central Ohio football fans that continues to this day.
Ohio State was 21-1-1 in 1916, 1917 and 1919 (Harley missed 1918
while serving in World War I), and it was decided that Ohio Stadium
must be built to house this new mania.
Wilce finished with a 78-33-9 record (.683) before resigning to
concentrate on his career as a physician with an emphasis on heart
disease research.
Francis Schmidt (1934-1940)
Schmidt
was called a mad genius for his wide-open offensive philosophy and
zany antics. Historian Jerome Brondfield, in his classic book Woody
Hayes and the 100-yard War, reveals an intriguing, insightful
story about Schmidt.
According to Brondfield, the Ohio State boss was so zonked out
on football that he ignored virtually everything else. One day,
Schmidts car needed service, but the coach decided to stay
in his vehicle and concentrate on Xs and Os while the
auto was hoisted in the air. For some reason, Schmidt decided to
get out and, forgetting where he was, fell into the garage pit.
He refused to reveal the source of his injury at practice but carried
a limp for days.
The Texas native also coined the famous They put their pants
on one leg at a time approach to playing Michigan, launching
the golden pants tradition whenever the Buckeyes beat the Wolverines.
There were a lot of those trinkets given out as Schmidt shut out
Michigan in his first four encounters with the hated rival.
The Bucks won two Big Ten titles under Schmidt, and finished second
in three other years during a 39-16-1 tenure (.705). But when Tom
Harmon led Michigan to three straight victories over the Buckeyes,
Schmidt resigned.
Earle Bruce (1979-1987)
Someone
had to follow Woody Hayes, and for better or worse that was Earle
Bruces assignment. A former Hayes assistant, and an OSU alumnus,
Bruce was masterful early, leading an unranked OSU team to the threshold
of a national championship in his first season.
But after that, the Buckeyes lost at least three games every season.
Still, Bruce went 81-26-1 (.755) and had a 5-4 mark against Michigan.
His teams won four Big Ten titles and captured the Cotton and Fiesta
bowls.
Bruce was well aware of the schools history and carried on
many of his predecessors traditions.
A feud between Bruce and the power brokers at the university eventually
led to a messy firing late in a nightmarish 1987 season. Still,
the Buckeyes rallied around their lame duck coach, donning Earle
headbands during a shocking 23-20 upset of Michigan. This was the
schools last win in Ann Arbor until 2001.
Bruce was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2003.
John Cooper (1988-2000)
At times, John Coopers teams looked spectacular 1993,
1995, 1996 and 1998. He won the Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl. He had
monster wins over Notre Dame and Penn State in consecutive seasons.
Yet his teams earned only three Big Ten titles, all shared, and
he beat Michigan just twice in 13 tries.
Cooper finished with a 111-43-4 record at OSU (.715). But fans
never fully accepted the OSU coach for his Tennessee background,
his CEO personality or his seemingly hands-off approach on the sidelines.
Coopers strong recruiting efforts brought great talent to
Columbus, with athletes winning the Heisman, Butkus, Thorpe, Outland
and Lombardi awards.
Yet the big prize consistently eluded the program. Cooper was fired
after OSUs lackluster 2001 Outback Bowl loss to South Carolina.