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Ohio State Buckeye national championship seasons
1968
Unanimous
10-0
Led by an amazing class of sophomores
that included quarterback Rex Kern, defensive back Jack
Tatum and defensive lineman Jim Stillwagon, the Ohio State
Buckeyes rolled to a 10-0 record and the last wire service
National Championship for a Big Ten school when it defeated
Southern California in the Rose Bowl, 27-16.
The team compiled numbers that boggle the mind and beat
teams that it wasn't supposed to beat. The Woody Hayes-led
squad averaged 32 points and 440 yards per game, impressive
numbers for that time, and the defense was stingy, allowing
15 points and 292 yards.
Eleven players from the team earned All-America honors
during their careers and six players from the team were
drafted in the first round of the NFL draft in either 1969
or 1971.
Jim Otis led the Buckeyes' rushing attack with 985 yards and
17 touchdowns, while Kern was the passing leader with 972
yards and seven touchdowns. Sensibaugh led the defense with
five interceptions and Mark Stier recorded 87 tackles.
The unknown and young Buckeyes opened the season at home
with a 35-14 victory over Southern Methodist. Despite an
NCAA record performance from SMU quarterback Chuck Hixson,
the Buckeye defense forced six turnovers and allowed only 50
yards on the ground. On the offensive side of things, the
Buckeyes rolled along with 227 yards on the ground and
another 145 in the air to tally five touchdowns.
OSU then rolled past Oregon 21-6 before playing perhaps the
most important game of the season. With a 2-0 record, but
still a questionable reputation, the wet behind the ears
Buckeyes hosted the No. 1 ranked Purdue Boilermakers. It was
this game that probably made the biggest difference in the
Scarlet and Gray's season.
The Ohio State defense throttled a Purdue offense led by
All-America candidates Mike Phipps and Leroy Keyes, allowing
only 186 yards and no points. The defense also scored the
Buckeyes' first touchdown as Ted Provost picked off a Phipps
pass and cruised 35 yards into the end zone for all the
points OSU would need. Quarterback Bill Long added a 14-yard
run in the third quarter giving the Buckeyes a 13-0 victory
and a piece of the national limelight.
From that point on, the momentum just snowballed through the
rest of the season. The next week Hayes' squad drilled
Northwestern 45-21 in Columbus on the strength of 565 yards
of total offense. On Oct. 26 it was the Fighting Illini that
took it on the chin when Kern and Otis combined for 129
yards and four touchdowns on the ground as OSU jumped out to
a 24-0 halftime lead.
The Buckeyes defeated Michigan State, Wisconsin and Iowa
before hosting the Michigan Wolverines in Ohio Stadium on
Nov. 23. In a game that clinched the Big Ten Championship
and a Rose Bowl berth, the Buckeyes scored 29 second-half
points for a 50-14 win. Otis had 143 yards on the ground and
four touchdowns and Kern added 96 yards and two scores as
OSU tallied 421 yards and seven TDs on the ground.
The win over Michigan set up a showdown between No. 1 OSU
and No. 2 Southern California in the Rose Bowl.
In one of the great games of all time in Pasadena, OSU
overcame a 10-0 deficit and rolled to a 27-16 win. Though he
scored on an 80-yard run, Heisman Trophy winner O.J. Simpspn
was held to 91 yards on 27 carries the rest of the way.
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