Advertisement
PAST REPORTS
OSR 11/30/2009
Cole Ignites Hawkeyes
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Igniting the University of Iowa offense in the Hawkeye’s 73-63 win over North Carolina Central on Saturday a....
 
OSR 11/30/2009
Ferentz Recalls Regular-Season Highlights
IOWA CITY, Iowa — There is still one very big football game left to be played, but when University of Iowa head coach Kirk....
 
OSR 11/29/2009
Dialing Long Distance
IOWA CITY, Iowa – The Iowa Hawkeyes won their second game of the 2009-10 season Saturday with an offensive attack that took ad....
 
OSR 11/28/2009
This and That
IOWA CITY, Iowa – A little bit about a lot of things the day after Thanksgiving…Pretty incredible that a guy making his first ....
 
OSR 11/27/2009
Random Thoughts on Random Topics
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — My mind is running in all directions following this past week in college football:-- What a Civil War game ....
 
OSR 11/27/2009
Demanding Start for Young Hawkeyes
IOWA CITY, Iowa — The University of Iowa men’s basketball team recently concluded a challenging stretch of five games in six d....
 
OSR 11/27/2009
Thanksgiving Chatter
IOWA CITY, Iowa – So, what do you suppose (much of) the talk was among the family that gathered at our house on Thanksgivi....
 
OSR 11/26/2009
Working toward the NFL
IOWA CITY, Iowa — Matt Kroul used a redshirt season at the University of Iowa in 2004 before starting an unprecedented 50 cons....
 
OSR 11/26/2009
Playoff or Play-In?
CORVALLIS, Ore. – These final weeks of the college football schedule, along with March Madness and the College World Serie....
 
OSR 11/25/2009
Thumbs Up from the NCAA
Editor's Note:  Some news items are worth repeating.  The UI Athletics Department shared the following with local, regional an....
 
 
1 2 3 4 5 »   Next

 
 
 
 
OSR ARCHIVES
   Print

Iowa retained ownership of the


A History Lesson

Floyd of Rosedale is a product of racism


by A special to OSR by George Wine
IOWA CITY, Iowa -- It’s a little-known fact that Floyd of Rosedale, the long-time traveling trophy that goes to the winner of Iowa’s football game with Minnesota at Kinnick Stadium on Saturday, is a product of racism.

The target of that racism was Ozzie Simmons, a star running back for the Hawkeyes in the mid-1930s when Hitler was spreading bigotry in Europe and the Ku Klux Klan was active in America. Not many African Americans were competing in college sports.

One of the few blacks playing major college football was Simmons, As Iowa's best player, he was often the target of racial slurs and verbal abuse. Almost all opponents were guilty to some degree, but the worst was Minnesota.

As the Gophers were preparing to visit Iowa in 1934, the Minneapolis Tribune ran an article that said, “Simmons is a Negro halfback who runs like a deer and has a knack of fading away from tacklers in a ghostlike manner.”

That was 75 years ago, and the Gophers were on their way to a national championship, They would no doubt have beaten Iowa without cruel and inhuman treatment to its black star, but wanting to ensure victory they knocked Simmons out of the game not once, not twice, but three times with late hits and cheap shots.

He never played in the second half of a 48-12 Minnesota romp. One person who witnessed that game was Ed Benedict, who was in school with Simmons. In an interview several years ago he told me, “It was shameful the way Minnesota beat up on Ozzie. It was brutal and I felt sorry for him.”

Another witness was former President Ronald Reagan, then the play-by-play voice for WHO radio. “I remember some really hard and often late hits aimed at Ozzie,” he told Jim Zabel, who later called Iowa games for WHO.

Simmons himself recalled Minnesota as a great football team. “But they were blatant with their piling on and kneeing me. It was obvious, but the refs didn’t call it. Some of our fans were so upset they wanted to come out on the field.”

The 1935 schedule brought Minnesota back to Iowa City, where Hawkeye fans were still fuming. Simmons was on his way to all-America honors and both teams were unbeaten. This season, Iowa was no pushover.

The week before the game Iowa Governor Clyde Herring issued a statement that predicted a Hawkeye victory and contained an inflammatory warning: “If officials stand for any rough tactics like Minnesota used on Ozzie Simmons last year, I’m sure the crowd will not.”

In essence, he promised a public mugging if the Gophers didn’t behave. Simmons was both surprised and embarrassed by the governor’s threat. “He was clearly telling the Gophers, ‘We’re coming out of the stands to get you.’ I wasn’t proud of that. I just wanted to play football.”

When Minnesota Coach Bernie Bierman asked for a police guard, Governor Herring threatened to end relations between the two universities. Newspapers in both states ran big, bold headlines usually reserved for declaration of war.

Fortunately, a cooler head resided in the Minnesota governor’s office. Governor Floyd Olson tried to calm things down with this telegram to Governor Herring in Des Moines:
“Minnesota fans are excited over your statement about the Iowa crowd lynching the Minnesota football team. I have assured them that you are a law-abiding gentleman only trying to get our goat. The Minnesota team will tackle hard but clean. Clyde, if you seriously think Iowa has a chance to win, I will bet you a Minnesota prize hog against an Iowa prize hog. You are getting odds because Minnesota produces better hogs than Iowa.”

Fortunately, Herring was smart enough to accept the friendly wager and quit making threats. “It was an unusual way to calm things down,” said Simmons. “We had one of the best games I ever played in. Everyone played clean and hard and honest.”

After Minnesota won 13-6, the Minneapolis Tribune reported, “Never have we heard so much praise for an opposing player as the Gophers had for Ozzie Simmons.”
Paying off his debt, Governor Herring delivered a prize pig named Floyd of Rosedale to Governor Olson, who gave it to the University of Minnesota and commissioned sculptor Charles Brioscho to capture Floyd’s image.

The bronze statue of Floyd has resided in the Iowa football complex the last two years, following two Hawkeye victories. Saturday it will be sitting on the Iowa sideline at Kinnick Stadium for the winner to claim.

If you are at the game and get a glimpse of the trophy, or see it while watching the game on TV, pause to remember Ozzie Simmons, who died nine years ago at age 87. He is a member of Iowa’s all-time team and a charter member of the UI Varsity Club Hall of Fame.

Wearing a black and gold uniform 75 years ago, he played an important role in integrating college football. He is the reason Iowa and Minnesota compete annually for a bonze pig named Floyd of Rosedale.

Editor's Note:  Former UI staffer George Wine authors "Wine Online" each week for hawkeyesports.com, the official world wide web site of the Iowa Hawkeyes.


 
 

Advertisement
 

Advertisement
 

Advertisement

email:
password:
forgot email? remember me


  





Partners  |  Careers  |  Advertiser Info  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Use