The Columbus Dispatch

Last resort

Broncos’ QB shortage a flashback to how Matte helped Buckeyes, Colts

- Rob Oller Columnist Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

Last week’s Denver Broncos quarterbac­k quandary took Tom Matte back six decades to when Ohio State assistant coach Bo Schembechl­er pulled the Buckeyes’ fill-in QB out of the High Street bars.

“I wasn’t big into drinking, but that’s where the good-looking girls were,” Matte told me on Tuesday. “Bo was the coach I had to report to and he would come check out what I was doing at the North and South Heidelberg­s.”

The two Heidelberg bars sat at opposite ends of campus (the north location later was renamed Northberg Tavern). Matte, not wanting to show geographic favoritism, felt obligated to visit both establishm­ents.

“That was when at age 18 you could drink 3.2 beer,” he said. “Remember?”

Oh, I remember.

Matte continued: “Bo would come in and say, ‘OK, that’s enough. You gotta get ready for the game. Baby, you’re the quarterbac­k now.’ ”

Not wanting to upset Bo, who blew his fuse only slightly less often than his boss, Woody Hayes, Matte would exit the bar with his Phi Gamma Delta fraternity brothers — he pleaded the Fifth when I asked if frat friend Jack Nicklaus left with him — and immediatel­y begin arguing with his belligeren­t belly.

“I was under a lot of pressure,” Matte said. “I had ulcers. Bleeding ulcers. They finally had to cut my stomach out.”

And we think we have it tough cooped up indoors for nine months. Matte had to deal with Bo and Woody while playing a position he had no business playing.

Just like Kendall Hinton, Denver’s little-used wide receiver who was pressed into emergency service on Sunday after the Broncos’ first three QBS were disqualified for breaching mask-wearing protocols related to COVID-19.

Hinton’s challengin­g assignment — the former Wake Forest quarterbac­k who converted to receiver for his senior year was 1 of 9 for 13 yards and a sack, two intercepti­ons and a passer rating of 0.0 — reminded Matte of his own struggles as a running back-turned-quarterbac­k, first at Ohio State and then with the Baltimore Colts.

Matte, 81, who lives with his wife Judy in Baltimore — the couple has been married 58 years — did not volunteer for the assignment thrust upon him in Ohio State’s 1959 season opener against Duke.

Recruited as a defensive back who played some quarterbac­k at Shaw High School in East Cleveland, Matte entered 1959 playing DB and running back before things changed quickly. Ohio State starting quarterbac­k Jerry Fields injured a shoulder in the first half against Duke, and Matte, who later became known as the “Garbage Man” because he played so many positions, was pulled aside at halftime.

“Woody and I went out to the practice field next to the stadium,” Matte recalled. “There were 80,000 in the stadium and here we are taking snaps at halftime. Woody says to me, ‘I may have to put you in at quarterbac­k.’ I didn’t want to play quarterbac­k, actually used to fumble the ball on purpose in practice because I didn’t want to play it. Plus I had really small hands, so it was tough to hold the ball.”

Matte chuckled when sharing that “I almost castrated poor center (Jene Watkins) at halftime” because he had to practice so many snaps. “I told him, ‘Don’t worry, I’ll eventually get it.’ ”

Matte nearly escaped going under center during the game, but after opening the second half with sophomore quarterbac­k Jack Wallace, Hayes eventually switched to Matte. It worked. Matte led Ohio State on a 63-yard scoring drive, culminatin­g in a fourthand-22 touchdown pass to Chuck Bryant in the closing minutes of a 14-13 win.

From then on, Hayes made sure Matte knew every jot and tittle of the playbook, even making his fill-in quarterbac­k come to his house for dinner and film study.

“It was, ‘Here’s what you do if this happens.’ All the hypothetic­al stuff,” Matte said. “Woody told me if somebody is open, throw it. If not, run it. I definitely didn’t know what the hell I was doing.”

Matte became Ohio State’s starting quarterbac­k in 1960, then returned to running back with Baltimore when the Colts selected him seventh overall in the 1961 NFL draft.

But there was no escaping the past. In 1965, after Johnny Unitas and Gary Cuozzo suffered season-ending injuries, Baltimore coach Don Shula pulled a Woody by turning to Matte to run the offense.

The Colts won their regular-season finale, but lost their first playoff game. The famous wristband Matte wore that held a list of plays can be found in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

“They designed the offense around my running ability,” Matte said, admitting that his passing ability was suspect. “Our receiver, Jimmy Orr, said I threw an ‘option ball,’ because you could catch it at either end.”

Despite the stress associated with being “the last man standing,” as he put it, Matte takes pride in the way he was able to step in and win games.

“You have to have a little bit of ability to reach that challenge as an athlete,” he said. “I had to fill John Unitas’ shoes.” He played pretty well in them, too. roller@dispatch.com @rollercd

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS FILE PHOTOS, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Running back Tom Matte, here following Baltimore Colts linemen Alex Sandusky (68) and Palmer Pyle, was used by coach Don Shula as an emergency QB late in the 1965 season after injuries to Johnny Unitas and Gary Cuozzo. Matte had played some quarterbac­k for Woody Hayes at Ohio State in 1959 and '60. Main: Matte as a Colt in 1971.
USA TODAY SPORTS FILE PHOTOS, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/USA TODAY NETWORK Running back Tom Matte, here following Baltimore Colts linemen Alex Sandusky (68) and Palmer Pyle, was used by coach Don Shula as an emergency QB late in the 1965 season after injuries to Johnny Unitas and Gary Cuozzo. Matte had played some quarterbac­k for Woody Hayes at Ohio State in 1959 and '60. Main: Matte as a Colt in 1971.
 ?? OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES ?? Tom Matte, shown here as a sophomore in 1958, came to Ohio State from Cleveland to play halfback, but injuries at quarterbac­k forced coach Woody Hayes to use him under center in 1959 and '60.
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES Tom Matte, shown here as a sophomore in 1958, came to Ohio State from Cleveland to play halfback, but injuries at quarterbac­k forced coach Woody Hayes to use him under center in 1959 and '60.

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