sonofabeach wrote:z-man wrote:weirdo0521 wrote:Anyone go to the Texas Ohio State game? All kinds of reports of OSU fans being not very gracious hosts...Tsk Tsk
I find that kind of hard to believe. I have been to Columbus wearing the other schools colors, and have been to many Big 10 games where OSU was the visitor. In most cases OSU fans were among the better behaved I have been around. I was in Bloomington at the IU vs Ohio St game last year for dads day, and there were more OSU fans than IU fans. We were in a sports bar after the game and several OSU fans bought us a round since we were cheering for Purdue against Michigan.
Didn't a bunch Buckeye fans burn and loot a few years back after a big game?
And I think they won that game. Of course they were not being mean to other fans.
Buckeye fans...a real class act:
Ohio State TE receives hate e-mail
Associated Press
Posted: 20 hours ago
Ohio State tight end Ryan Hamby has received a couple of hate letters since dropping a sure touchdown pass during the Buckeyes' loss to Texas last week.
Ohio State tight end Ryan Hamby has received hate e-mails after dropping this touchdown pass against Texas. (Terry Gilliam / Associated Press)
Cutting over the middle into the end zone, Hamby was open when Justin Zwick's pass bounced off his chest and into the air. He had a second chance to grab it but was slammed by a defender just as the ball touched his hands.
A touchdown would have given Ohio State a 10-point lead in the third quarter. The Buckeyes ended up settling for a field goal and eventually lost 25-22 to Texas.
"I can't think about it too much because we still have a lot of football to play," he said as the ninth-ranked Buckeyes prepared for Saturday's game with San Diego State. "I'm not going to lie. I think about it some times. But you've just got to move on."
A senior from Cincinnati, Hamby said he had a sleepless night after dropping the pass.
"I just came open and, I don't know, it all happened so fast," he said. "I knew I caught the ball and it got knocked out of my hands. I was kind of laying there thinking, 'Man, I wish that didn't happen.' But it's part of life and you've got to deal with it."
Asked about the content of the letters, Hamby said, "I'm not going to talk about them, but they're just dumb things. You almost want to say, 'You know, in the scheme of life there are things going on around the world. It's just a game."'
Several of Hamby's teammates supported him Tuesday, saying that there were plenty of opportunities to win the game regardless of what happened on that one play.
"It kind of makes me upset that people would do that to him," linebacker Anthony Schlegel said. "I don't see them out there."
Hamby said he was doing his best to forget the play - and the ugliness of the fans.
"I've thought about it and stuff and it's hard, but you've got to deal with it," Hamby said. "I've got my teammates, coach (Jim) Tressel - everybody's behind me. So I'm not going to worry about it. We've got San Diego State and we've got to focus on that."