It’s not quite a bronzed statue, but Ohio high school coaches are looking to honor former Ohio State coach Jim Tressel in the best way that they know how.
Wearing white shirts and ties for their season openers.
No sweater vests, though; it will be August.
The idea originated last week, when Tressel was inducted into the Ohio High School Football Coaches Association’s Hall of Fame, by Solon HS coach Jim McQuaide. The OHSFCA spread the idea to its over 750 coaching members.
Word of the tribute is still making its rounds and coaches are currently trying to get others on board.
Now, given Tressel’s unceremonious departure from the Buckeyes in the wake of one of the biggest… nope, the biggest… scandal of 2011 thus far, this might seem like an odd idea.
McQuaide, along with several other state coaches, doesn’t feel that way at all. Below are some quotes from the story, courtesy of the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
“Whether he was he right or wrong, that’s not our place,” McQuaide said. “This is not to say he was fired wrongly. This is purely an appreciation for what he did.”
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“I don’t do ties, but I would do it for him,” Shaw coach Rodney Brown said. “I would jump at the opportunity to honor Coach Tressel. He’s a great man who fell on the sword for his players. He’s an honorable man. I have T.Y. Williams there, and I have no regrets.”
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“I guess you could say that, but I look at what he did for the kids and Ohio State in a lot of ways,” Mentor coach Steve Trivisonno said. “I don’t think he did anything majorly wrong. He’s still a great man and people shouldn’t forget that.”
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“I don’t want to see a fragmented effort,” Longtime Kent Roosevelt coach John Nemec said. “I would do anything I could to honor Coach Tressel. He’s one of the finest men I’ve met in this game.
“I don’t think anyone is happy with the events that took place, including Coach Tressel,” Nemec said. “We all make mistakes. He has done such a remarkable job, I haven’t got a problem forgiving him for his mistakes.”
Honestly, and despite my disagreement with some of the above comments, this is 100 percent appropriate. Tressel may have chosen winning over ethics, and lied to the NCAA in the process, but that doesn’t make him a bad guy who didn’t mean a lot to his players and the high school coaches in the state.
Those coaches are honoring Tressel for what he meant to, and did for, them.


