WE ARE FAMILY
Football coach Jim Tressel learned early in life that Buckeye passion can
be a beautiful thing.
(From the January/February
2006 Ohio State Alumni Magazine)
My dad was a Buckeye through and through.
Like me, he was a football coach, and that kept him busy in the fall.
But his season ended before Ohio State and Michigan played, so when I was a
kid he always made sure we watched that game together.
Dad had grown up as a fan of Ohio State, and he played for the Buckeyes
before enlisting in the U.S. Navy. Later, even as he was guiding his teams
at Baldwin-Wallace, he always had one eye on what Woody Hayes was doing down
in Columbus.
The passion Dad showed for Ohio State resonated with me. I can’t say I
understood at first, but I realized early on that the Buckeyes were
something special, something more than a team. They were a rallying point
for the entire state and a unifying factor for fans of every generation.
I became a full-fledged Buckeye fan when I was in junior high school. The
teams during those years were among the best in Ohio State history. In 1968
they earned the national championship. I recall picking up the Cleveland
Plain Dealer the morning after the Buckeyes won the title by beating
Southern California in the Rose Bowl. A photo of quarterback Rex Kern was on
the front page. He was holding the Rose Bowl MVP football in one hand and a
Bible in the other. That really struck me.
Rex was one of my first sports heroes. I liked what he was about. He was the
consummate leader, and it was clear he had the respect of his teammates.
In many ways, I think Rex personifies what a Buckeye should be. He played
hard and fair on the field and lived a good life off the field.
That’s something I teach my players, and something I hope our fans have
learned. If they’re going to be good Buckeyes, they need to be good sports.
Like our players, we want our fans to make things tough on the other team,
but in a sportsmanlike way that reflects class and dignity.
As a coach, I have a special responsibility for upholding Ohio State’s great
traditions, both on and off the field. Believe me, I think about that every
day. I know there’s a huge Buckeye family out there watching, and I don’t
want to let that family down.
Generation after generation of people root for the Buckeyes with a passion
that has been passed down like a valuable family heirloom.
But unlike an heirloom, this passion is a living thing. It lives in the
enthusiasm of the tens of thousands of fans who crowd into Ohio Stadium
every football Saturday. It lives in the people throughout the world who are
dedicated to this great university. It lived in my father as he cheered his
team, his Buckeyes, to victory over Michigan.
One of the best parts of my job is that I get to meet Ohio State fans from
all walks of life. I’m always amazed at the stories they tell of how their
family and friends have been drawn together by their love of the Buckeyes.
Truly, it’s all about family—a family I’m privileged to call my own.
Jim Tressel
the rest of the thoughts 1.19.06