Buckeye Snapshots (Issue #5)

A recent scene from a Buckeyes’ game at the “Shoe.”

Listed on the National Registry of Historic Places, Ohio Stadium is hallowed ground for The Ohio State University football team.  The Buckeyes have played here since 1922.

Nicknamed the “Horseshoe,” the venerable stadium graces the west side of campus near the Olentangy River.  The journey to build this magnificent home goes back to the World War I era.

The Buckeyes playing field back in the 1910s is Ohio Field.  The unassuming name cannot hide the fact that this football home is less than adequate.  Seating is limited to 14,000, but some games find more fans viewing from the perimeter of the field as a standing-room only (sometimes in excess of 20,000).

The catalyst behind the need for a much larger stadium for the Buckeyes is traced to the success of the team in 1916, 1917, and 1919.  Ohio State’s first three-time All-American, Charles “Chic” Harley leads the team to numerous victories and conference championships.  Playing in the period before college football’s Heisman Trophy, Harley would have been a cinch to win this prestigious award as college football’s most outstanding player.  One might say that Ohio Stadium is the field Chic built.

Needing a much bigger stadium, Ohio Stadium is constructed with its unique horseshoe design.  Ohio Wesleyen becomes the first opponent to play here on October 7, 1922.  The original stadium’s seating capacity is 66,000, but it is far exceeded later in the 1922 season when the Buckeyes host the Michigan Wolverines before 71,138 spectators.

Field-level view during a youth flag football event. My grandson was participating.

Here are some quick facts about the “Horseshoe.”

  • Current seating capacity:  102,780
  • Fourth largest on-campus facility in the United States
  • Largest crowd:  110,045 for the 2016 Michigan game
  • Over 36 million fans have entered the stadium since 1922
Ohio State has captured many national football championships as evidenced by these banners. An additional one has been added for 2014.

Curious Trivial Facts (9/11)

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This informative post will be posted on Saturday along with my usual writing.  We can all appreciate some of the lesser known facts from around the world.

Musician Gordon Sumner got the nickname “Sting” because he once performed wearing a black-and-yellow rugby shirt that bandmates said made him look a bumblebee.

“Dumbledore,” an old English word for “bumblebee,” was picked by author J. K. Rowling as the name of Harry Potter’s headmaster because she imagined him wandering around the castle, humming to himself.

These facts have been discovered in I NEVER KNEW THAT by David Hoffman (2009).

Jack Nicklaus Quotes

Achievement is largely the product of steadily raising one’s level of aspiration and expectation.

Confidence is believing in your own ability, knowing what you have to do to win.  My confidence was developed through preparation.

Ohio native Jack Nicklaus (born 1940) is considered by many to be the greatest American professional golfer.  Born in Columbus and later attending The Ohio State University, his accomplishments are too numerous to count.

God Calling (Elfchen Series #75)

Never Lost 

Navigating

Uncharted waters

Embrace change ahead

Steadfast in trusting God

Faithfulness

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Never Misses

Sin

Life’s misdeeds

Missing God’s target

Grace finds its mark

Forgiveness

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Never Closed 

Come

Gather today

Community of believers

House of the Lord

Worship

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This series of poems (written in the German-inspired style of Elfchen or Elevenie) shares a total of eleven words in each poem, with a sequence by line of one, two, three, four, and one words.

Eugene Peterson Quote

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Discipleship is a decision to live by what I know about God, not by what I feel about Him or myself or my neighbors.

From Micah 6:8:  “He has told you, O mortal, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?”

Blogging Megastars

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Under the infinite Big Sky, many bloggers have found their way into my midst.  As writers, artists, people of faith, lovers of life, and a nearly unlimited collection, these amazing people share themselves, their craft, and their positive outlook.

Today, I feel grateful in sharing three WordPress bloggers whom I regularly visit.  Each is worthy of a large box of Buckeyes (peanut butter balls covered in chocolate) for adding delicious sweetness to others’ lives.

Life Is Full of Sweet Spots

Mary shares a regularly published blog, and she uses a simple and effective formula as she shares quotations, poetry, artwork, and photography. 

Heart Tokens

Renee shares her Christian faith with frequent testaments, filled with personal reflections and timely Scripture verses.  She unflinchingly shares her faith, hope, and love.  Be on the lookout for “hearts.”

A Time To Share

Kathy shares a variety of posts.  Through her posts, she eloquently and honestly expresses her love of God and country, with a bit of humor thrown in.  She also features the inspiring artwork of her husband, Paul.

Life’s Paradox

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Life consumes ups and downs

Warm smiles give way to frowns

 

One moment pours with joy

Another will annoy

 

Mountaintop songs swell hearts

Dark valleys tear apart

 

Tonight’s thunderstorms boom

Tomorrow catches gloom

 

Miles bridge life’s paradox

Some shine, others break glass

 

Life’s cycle never halts

Dancing to steady waltz

 

Time takes different road

Living by rhythmic code

 

Expectations grin back

Days no longer look black

 

Morning rain shares rainbow

Outlook blossoms and glows

 

Love filling empty hearts

Today brings fresh restart

 

Hourglass never drains out

Happiness transforms drought

 

Life consumes ups and downs

Now sowing fertile grounds

  

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Words Count

From James 3:5-6:  “How great a forest is set ablaze by a small fire!   And the tongue is a fire.  The tongue is placed among our members as a world of iniquity; it stains the whole body, sets on fire the cycle of nature, and is itself set on fire by hell.”

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Children sometimes hearing these words

Sticks and stones may break someone’s bones

But, cruel words shall not hurt thee

Sadly, words can harm like thrown stones

 

Taming his rough tongue, mankind fails

Harsh words lash out, crushing others

Steers life toward ominous clouds

Disrespecting earthly brothers

 

Mothers teaching, “Now bite your tongue”

How often must we all forget?

Allowing words to run amuck

Their cold misdeeds, sin’s rising debt

 

Practice daily, Christ’s “Golden Rule”

Taming tongue, words chosen rightly

No longer curse, but life’s blessing

Words count, so use them politely

 

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From James 3:10-12:  “From the same mouth come blessing and cursing.  My brothers and sisters, this ought not to be so.  Does a spring pour forth from the same opening both fresh and brackish water?  Can a fig tree, my brothers and sisters, yield olives, or a grapevine figs?  No more can salt water yield fresh.”

Charles Swindoll Quote

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What is God looking for?  He is looking for men and women whose hearts are completely His–completely.

From 2 Chronicles 16:9:  “ For the eyes of the Lord range throughout the entire earth, to strengthen those whose heart is true to Him.”