2009 Football Schedule

            Game              W-L

Navy
Navy1
September 5, 2009
Columbus, OH
31-27
Recap: 11W, The Birddog
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
USC
USC
September 12, 2009
Columbus, OH
15-18
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Toledo
Toledo
September 19, 2009
Cleveland, OH
38-0
Recap: 11W
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Illinois
Illinois2
September 26, 2009
Columbus, OH
30-0
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Indiana
Indiana
October 3, 2009
Bloomington, IN
33-14
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
October 10, 2009
Columbus, OH
31-13
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Purdue
Purdue
October 17, 2009
West Lafayette, IN
18-26
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Minnesota
Minnesota3
October 24, 2009 – 12:00PM ET
Columbus, OH
38-7
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
New Mexico State
New Mexico State
October 31, 2009
Columbus, OH
45-0
Recap: 11W
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Penn State
Penn State
November 7, 2009
State College, PA
24-7
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Iowa
Iowa
November 14, 2009
Columbus, OH
27-24
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP
Michigan
Michigan
November 21, 2009
Ann Arbor, MI
21-10
Also: Dispatch, ESPN/AP

 

 

 

 Other OSU News    

 

Former OSU running back Lydell Ross becomes a firefighter.

Follow the link below for details....Go Bucks!!!

http://www.wtsp.com/sports/article.aspx?storyid=55905

 

 

Students set national speed record

Buckeye Bullet


Ohio State's Buckeye Bullet electric car broke the record for the fastest speed by an electric vehicle, with a speed of 257 mph at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah last month. The former national record was 251.3 mph. The vehicle, which was designed, built and managed by a team of engineering students at the university's Center for Automotive Research-Intelligent Transportation (CAR-IT) traveled to Bonneville to attempt to break the record for the fastest speed achieved by an electric car. The team includes 12 graduate and undergraduate students with majors in a variety of engineering disciplines

OSU vehicle gets national speed record

By Beth Knieriemen
Published: Tuesday, August 24, 2004
Article Tools:Email This ArticlePrint This Article Page 1 of 1

Media Credit: Courtesy of Southern California Timing Association

The Buckeye Bullet is on its way home from the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah after attempting to break its own national speed record. Last week's annual Speed Week saw Ohio State students try to surpass their old mark of 257 mph.

Driven by Roger Schroer, the machine reached speeds of 308.317 mph in a qualifying timed mile on August 16, which is the fastest timed mile ever recorded.

After its 300 mph first run, the Bullet encountered a mechanical problem. The differential was in need of a replacement and the part had to be shipped in from the United Kingdom, said adviser Giorgio Rizzoni. The malfunction forced the crew to end the run.

Rizzoni said the Bullet is one of only 54 other teams to break the 300mph barrier and the first-ever electric vehicle to do so.

"For the first time ever in history, someone in an electric automobile went over 300 miles per hour," Rizzoni said. "That someone was from Ohio State University."

The car is built and maintained by a team of graduate and undergraduate students in engineering. The all-electric vehicle is 31 feet long, two feet tall and 30 inches wide.

October will bring another challenge for the Bullet when the team will travel back to Bonneville and attempt to break the world speed record at the World Finals. The Federation Internationale de l'Automobile world land speed record stands at 245 mph and dates back to 1999, according to the FIA Web site.

The Buckeye Bullet holds the U.S. land speed record for electronic vehicles at 256.894 mph, which was set October 2003.

"Ohio State is the only university that has an electric car like the Bullet," said Gina Langen, spokeswoman for Engineering Communication. "There have been different racecars throughout the years. The Bullet gets a lot of attention at Bonneville."

Several student teams work on a variety of projects in the College of Engineering, including the Buckeye Bullet. All the students who went to Bonneville were undergraduate students.

"The team is all undergraduate students," Rizzoni said. "It is a neat accomplishment. There are teams of professionals that do this same thing and our undergrads are doing it."


Buckeye Bullet
Buckeye Bullet breaks world land speed record

Ohio State's Buckeye Bullet, a vehicle designed, built and maintained by OSU students, set the new international land speed in the top category of electric vehicles at 272 mph at Bonneville International Speedway at the Salt Flats in Utah this month. The team also set a new American land speed record of 315 mph, surpassing its previous mark.

 

 

           OSU researchers help guide Mars rovers

Mapping Mars

 

"We have landed safely on Mars and are working intensively to map the landing site. It was a great and smooth landing," according to Ron Li, professor of geodetic science in civil and environmental engineering and geodetic science. Li leads a team of Ohio State engineering students working with NASA on the Mars Exploration Rover mission. The team is responsible for precise localization (providing exact ground location) of the Spirit rover that made planet-fall last week. Mission data transmitted from Spirit is being sent directly to Li's Mapping and GIS Lab for processing. Team members are research associate Kaichang Di, along with CEEGS students Fenglaing Xu, Jue Wang and Charles Serafy. 

 

Compound could give some cancer one-two punch!

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Ohio State researchers are working on developing a multi-purpose cancer drug that might one day scale back the number of medications some cancer patients need to take. In laboratory tests, a dual-action compound called OSU 111 has shown promise in killing prostate cancer cells, said Tom Li, the study’s lead investigator and associate professor of pharmacy. Li presented the results this month at the summer meeting of the American Chemical Society. READ MORE >

 

 

Some Graphics.....

 

(To download images, right click and save as!)

 

           

 

 

                                                                                        

                     

 

                                             

 

  

 

 

 

2002.......A Season to Remember

     

 

     Fiesta Bowl       

 

The right call.....................http://531ghostown.com/id148.htm#buckeyes

To the Cryami fans............http://home.earthlink.net/~ohiobort/Cryami.html

                                                                 (copy link and paste into browser)

 

Some Favorite Pics.....


                                              

   

It is a privilege to carry the ball for the Ohio State University!.........Woody Hayes

Now we think you're a 100-percenter, son. You come with us, dig in your heels, and prove you're the best. You just have to ask yourself whether you're man enough to be a Buckeye.---------Woody Hayes during a recruiting visit

 

      

                 14-0h! Celebration, Columbus, Ohio                                   A boys first game.......Priceless!!!!!

       

                  Grant drills Dorsey for another loss!!!                                                  Carmen O-HI-O

        

                              A true fan!                                                         The Mighty Canes go down to defeat!

Miami holds on to Gamble...Priceless!!!!!

(This one is for Tod!)

     

                                     Rest easy Woody......The new man has arrived!..........Keith Jackson

 

Video Clips

 

Cie Grant sings Carmen Ohio 14 & Oh! Celebration.

 

MP3's 

Fight The Team                                          Buckeye Battle Cry                                        Hang On Sloopy

Carmen Ohio                                                Hey! Cheer                                                   Le Regiment

I Wanna Go Back

 

     Buckeye Lore....    

 

Origins of the Buckeye Name

The use of the term Buckeyes to refer to Ohio State University sports teams derives from the even wider use of the term to refer to all residents of the state of Ohio.

Table of Contents   Origins of the Buckeye Name        Ohio State Fight Songs
      Across the Field
      Buckeye Battle Cry
      Carmen Ohio

The universityís Athletic Council officially adopted the term in 1950, but it had been in common use for many years before ñ certainly it was firmly established by 1920, and most records indicate that it had probably been used with some frequency to refer to Ohio State and its athletic teams since before the turn of the century.


    As with many such terms that seem to have evolved rather than been decreed, the history of "buckeye" is a bit fuzzy. The buckeye (Aesuclus glabra) is a tree, native to Ohio and particularly prevalent in the Ohio River Valley, whose shiny dark brown nuts with lighter tan patches resemble the eye of a deer. Settlers who crossed the Alleghenies found it to be the only unfamiliar tree in the forest. Perhaps its uniqueness contributed to its popularity because it had few other attractions. Pioneers carved the soft buckeye wood into troughs, platters, and even cradles. Before the days of plastic, buckeye wood was often used to fashion artificial limbs. The nuts, although inedible, are attractive and folk wisdom had it that carrying one in a pocket brings good luck and wards off rheumatism. However, in general, the trees and their nuts are of little practical use: the wood does not burn well, the bark has an unpleasant odor, and the bitter nut meat is mildly toxic. Still, the tree has grit. It grows where others cannot, is difficult to kill, and adapts to its circumstances. Daniel Drake, who gave a witty speech on behalf of the buckeye at a well attended dinner in Cincinnati in 1833, said, "In all our woods there is not a tree so hard to kill as the buckeye. The deepest girdling does not deaden it, and even after it is cut down and worked up into the side of a cabin it will send out young branches, denoting to all the world that Buckeyes are not easily conquered, and could with difficulty be destroyed."


      The first recorded use of the term to refer to a resident of the area is in 1788, some 15 years before Ohio became a state. Col. Ebenezer Sproat, a 6í4" man of large girth and swashbuckling mannerisms, led the legal delegation at the first court session of the Northwest Territory, held in Marietta. The Indians in attendance greeted him with shouts of "Hetuck, Hetuck" (the Indian word for buckeye), it is said because they were impressed by his statue and manner. He proudly carried the Buckeye nickname for the rest of his life, and it gradually spread to his companions and to other local white settlers. By the 1830s, writers were commonly referring to locals as "Buckeyes."
      It was the presidential election of 1840, though, that put the term permanently in the vocabulary. William Henry Harrison, who had traded his Virginia-born aristocratic background for a more populist image as a war hero and frontiersman living on the banks of the Ohio River just west of Cincinnati, adopted the buckeye tree and buckeye nuts as campaign symbols. At the Whig convention, Harrison delegates carried buckeye canes, decorated with strings of buckeye beads. The buckeye nut was a precursor to today's campaign buttons. The buckeye became indelibly linked with Ohio.


      The Ohio buckeye is one of 13 recognized members of the genus Aesculus, seven native to North America, one to Europe (the horse chestnut) and five to Asia. The Ohio buckeye's five-fingered leaflet, along with the nut, are sometimes used as symbols for The Ohio State University and are incorporated in its Alumni Association logo. Buckeye leaf decals are awarded to Ohio State football players for outstanding efforts on the field; players with many buckeye leaves on their helmets are indeed honored.
      It is rare for an athletic team to be named after a tree; but the Buckeye name is so ingrained in the history and lore of the state and the university that few stop to consider how unusual it is. It is native, tenacious, attractive and unique -- traits that Ohioans and Ohio State alumni are proud to be associated with.

Sources:
"Of Buckeyes and buckeyes" by John Fleischman, Audubon magazine, Sept. 1989

Various memos and articles from the files of the Office of University Communications
Top

OHIO STATE FIGHT SONGS

Across the Field                                                           
Fight the team across the field,
Show them Ohio's here
Set the earth reverberating with a mighty cheer
Rah! Rah! Rah!
Hit them hard and see how they fall;
Never let that team get the ball,
Hail! Hail! The gang's all here,
So let's win that old conference now.

Buckeye Battle Cry
In old Ohio there's a team
That's known thru-out the land;
Eleven warriors, brave and bold,
Whose fame will ever stand.
And when the ball goes over,
Our cheers will reach the sky,
Ohio field will hear again
The Buckeye Battle Cry-

Drive! Drive on down the field,
Men of the scarlet and gray;
Don't let them thru that line,
We have to win this game today,
Come on, Ohio!
Smash through to victory.
We cheer you as you go:
Our honor defend
So we'll fight to the end for O-hi-o.

Carmen Ohio
Oh! Come let's sing Ohio's praise,         
And songs to Alma Mater raise;
While our hearts rebounding thrill,
With joy which death alone can still.
Summer's heat or Winter's cold,
The seasons pass, the years will roll;
Time and change will surely show
How firm thy friendship O-hi-o.

These jolly days of priceless worth,
By far the gladest days of earth,
Soon will pass and we not know,
How dearly we love O-hi-o.
We should strive to keep the name,
Of fair repute and spotless fame,
So, in college halls we'll grow,
To love the better, O-hi-o.

Tho' age may dim our mem'ry's store,
We'll think of happy days of yore,
True to friend and frank to foe,
As sturdy sons of O-hi-o.
If on seas of care we roll,
'Neath blackened sky, o'er barren shoal,
Tho'ts of thee bid darkness go,
Dear Alma Mater O-hi-o.