73 days until Ohio State plays Oregon State to start the 2014 season. Throughout the years, 27 players have worn the No. 73 for the Buckeyes. Today will feature Bob Vogel and Rufus Mayes.
PLAYER | WORN | B1G MVP | TEAM MVP | AA | CAPT. | 1R NFL | ALL B1G | AC AA | NFL DRAFT | AC B1G | LETTER |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thornton Dixon* | 1942 | 1942 | |||||||||
Charles Diamond | 1944 | ||||||||||
Richard O'Hanlon* | 1946 | ||||||||||
Richard Prchlik | 1947 | ||||||||||
Robert Momsen | 1950 | 1950 | 1951 | 1950 | |||||||
George Jacoby | 1951-53 | 1953 | 1952, 1953 | 1954 | 1951-53 | ||||||
William Cummings | 1956 | 1957 | 1956 | ||||||||
David Wagner | 1957-58 | ||||||||||
Walter DeBruin | 1959 | ||||||||||
Robert Vogel* | 1961-62 | 1962 | 1963 | 1961-62 | |||||||
Jim Davidson | 1963-64 | 1965 | 1963-64 | ||||||||
Paul Fender | 1967 | 1967 | |||||||||
Rufus Mayes* | 1968 | 1968 | 1969 | 1968 | 1968 | ||||||
Richard Simon | 1969-71 | 1971 | 1971 | 1971 | 1971 | ||||||
Scott Dannelley | 1972-75 | 1975 | 1972-75 | ||||||||
Douglas Mackie | 1976-77 | 1976-77 | |||||||||
Reginald Echols | 1979-80 | 1979-80 | |||||||||
Mark Krerowicz | 1982-84 | 1984 | 1984 | 1985 | 1982-84 | ||||||
Tom Foster | 1984 | ||||||||||
Jeff Kuczek | 1986-87 | ||||||||||
Paul Sherrick | 1988-91 | ||||||||||
Jeff Meade | 1993-94 | ||||||||||
Joe Brown | 1996-2000 | 1996-2000 | |||||||||
Steve Winner | 2002-05 | 2002, 2004 | 2005 | ||||||||
Josh Kerr | 2006-10 | 2010 | |||||||||
Antonio Underwood | 2011-14 | 2011-12, 2014 | |||||||||
Michael Jordan | 2016-18 | 2016 |
*Wore another number at Ohio State
Did not earn a varsity letter while wearing No. 73
Bob Vogel, OT (1960-62)
Born: 1941 (Columbus)
High School: Massillon Washington
Ohio State
The Buckeyes were 21-5-1 with Vogel on the team.
1961 National Champions.
1961 Big Ten Champions.
3-0 against That Team. Outscored That Team 85-20 in the three games including two shutouts.
Honors
1962 Captain.
5 Pro Bowls: 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968 and 1971.
3 All Pro selections: 1964, 1965 and 1967.
September 26th, 2014 Vogel was inducted into the Ohio State Athletics Hall of Fame.
Miscellaneous
Won Super Bowl V as a member of the Colts.
Vogel's bio from the Ohio State Team Guide:
6-5, 232...From Massillon...one of top offensive tackles in collegiate football...logged a total of 302 minutes of playing time last year, second highest on the squad...was a regular as a sophomore...is a fine defensive player, but concentrates on offense in Ohio State's two platoon system.
Has not missed a game at Ohio State because of injury...has unusual quickness and agility for his size...will start at left tackle.
Was an All-America end in high school, but shifted to tackle at Ohio State...won 13 letters in four sports while attending Massillon High...captained his high school basketball and track teams.
Vogel's Ohio State career per cantonrep.com:
Vogel played football for Ohio State from 1959-1962, serving as team captain in 1962. He was a three-year letterwinner (1960-62).
Born in Columbus, his family later moved to Massillon where he was named all-state as a Massillon Tiger tackle before starring for the Buckeyes.
Vogel, considered one of college football’s best offensive tackles, was an outstanding player for Woody Hayes’ teams that went 7-2 in 1960, 8-0-1 in 1961 and 6-3 in 1962. The 1961 team won the national championship, as voted on by the Football Writers’ Association of America, as well as the Big Ten title with a 6-0 mark. After a 7-7 tie with Texas Christian to open the season, the Buckeyes won eight consecutive games and capped the national championship season with a 50-20 victory over Michigan. The team finished second that year, behind Alabama, in both the AP and UPI polls.
Following his Buckeye football career, Vogel was the fifth player chosen in the NFL Draft. He went to the Baltimore Colts, where he played through 1972 as a tackle, protecting Johnny Unitas’ blind side. In his 10 years playing with the Colts, he missed only a single game. He was named to the Pro Bowl five times and played in Super Bowls III and V, beating the Dallas Cowboys in the latter game.
Vogel's Colts career per the Balitimore Sun 2009:
Pound for pound, he was the smallest offensive tackle of his day, and maybe the smartest. It wasn’t size but savvy that made Bob Vogel one of football’s top lineman and a pillar of the Baltimore Colts’ storied front wall.
Vogel, the team’s top draft choice in 1963, spent the next decade taming sack packs and clearing paths for Colts’ runners despite a 240-pound frame that even then was underwhelming.
"I wasn’t one of those guys who could lift the stadium," said Vogel, from Ohio State. "I was purely a technician. That’s how I survived." ...
A five-time Pro Bowler, Vogel helped the Colts to two Super Bowls (III and V) and then retired from the game at the age of 30, his dignity intact...
Vogel's life today:
Vogel traded the mayhem for a more selfless life. Witness the 48 foster children that he and his wife, Andrea, have cared for through the years. Or the prisons that Vogel visits, Good Book in hand, in a bid to turn inmates’ lives around. Or the mission trips he makes regularly to places like Honduras and Cuba, to bring health care to the poor.
"Football was a good experience, but this is the Lord’s will for my life," said Vogel, of Sunbury, Ohio.
Retired from a career in marketing and sales, he travels regularly to area prisons to share the word of God. A born-again Christian, Vogel taught himself Spanish so he could converse with Latinos who don’t speak English.
At one youth facility, he said, "the kids are so violent that I’m not allowed to go into their cells. I have to sit outside their room, on a plastic bucket, and talk to them through the slot in the door where they’re fed. It’s a unique way to spread the gospel."
Only in prison does Vogel ever wear his Super Bowl ring from the Colts’ 16-13 victory over Dallas in 1971.
"Masculinity is the trump card in there," he said. "The ring is a symbol of machismo. If the men respect my manhood, they’ll sometimes allow me to share my feelings about Jesus, whether they are believers or not."
Vogel also travels regularly to Third World countries with a philanthropic group that provides free dental care to townsfolk there. His job? Translator and Bible thumper.
"We’ve been to places in Honduras that are 12-hour drives through the jungle," he said. "Dentists spend a week there pulling hundreds of teeth, and sometimes my job is as his assistant. Imagine, with these big, heavy digits of mine."
Married 46 years, Vogel has four children, four grandkids and his health. The man who missed one Colts game in 10 years works out daily and weighs 210 pounds, well below his playing weight.
Rufus Mayes, TE and OT (1966-68)
Born: 1947 (Memphis, TN)
High School: Macomber (Toledo)
Died: 1990 (Redmond, WA)
Ohio State
The Buckeyes went 20-8 with Mayes on the team.
1968 National Champions (10-0).
1968 Big Ten Champions.
Defeated USC 27-16 in the 1969 Rose Bowl.
Went 2-1 against That Team.
Selected in the first round by the Bears in the 1969 NFL Draft.
Honors
1968 All-American.
1968 All-Big Ten.
1994 Inducted into the Varsity O Hall of Fame.
Miscellaneous
After football he worked at Hewlett-Packard.
Bacterial Meningitis took his life in 1990.
Rufus Mayes' bio per The Ohio State Team Guide:
6-5, 250...From Toledo...starting his third season as a regular...played tight end on offense in 1966 and 1967 but has been moved to offensive left tackle...made the switch easily last spring...is an outstanding blocker and may be one of the top tackles in the Big Ten this fall.
Has good quickness...has a fine attitude and is easy to coach...was an all-Ohio tackle at Macomber High in Toledo.
Hobby is music...the only boy in a family of four...wants to teach after graduation.
NAME | YEAR | ROUND | PICK | POSITION | TEAM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOB MOMSEN | 1951 | 7 | 80 | T | LIONS |
GEORGE JACOBY | 1954 | 6 | 65 | T | GIANTS |
BILL CUMMINGS | 1957 | 11 | 125 | DT | BROWNS |
BOB VOGEL* | 1963 | 1 | 5 | OT | COLTS |
JIM DAVIDSON | 1965 | 1 | 8 | T | BILLS |
RUFUS MAYES | 1969 | 1 | 14 | OT | BEARS |
MARK KREROWICZ | 1985 | 6 | 147T | OG | BROWNS |
*1963 selected by the Bills in the 8th round of the AFL Draft.
99 | 98 | 97 | 96 | 95 | 94 | 93 | 92 | 91 | 90 |
89 | 88 | 87 | 86 | 85 | 84 | 83 | 82 | 81 | 80 |
79 | 78 | 77 | 76 | 75 | 74 | 73 |
156 days until The Game.