Ohio State Football Parents Discuss Problems With Big Ten At Rally In Front Of Ohio Stadium

Parents from Ohio State football, as well as baseball, stood in front of a large crowd of Ohio State fans at Ohio Stadium Saturday to talk about why they believe that their kids should be playing football in the fall, despite the Big Ten’s decision to postpone football for the remainder of the year.

The group, which is led by Football Parents at Ohio State (FPAOS) President Amanda Babb, mother of wide receiver Kamryn Babb, talked for about 30 minutes, with multiple parents making their voices heard on what they believe needs to be done by the Big Ten and, specifically, buy Big Ten Commissioner Kevin Warren.

“The schedule came out, I called coach (Ryan) Day and said ‘OK, what can we do as a parents’ organization?’ We had a plan, and then three days later, it’s like the whole world was taken out from under us,” Babb said at the rally. “We just want that transparency. What happened? What happened from Aug. 5 to Aug. 11? We think the commissioner and the presidents of the universities owe that to us as parents, they owe it to you as fans, that’s what we want.”

Though Babb is president of FPAOS, it was Randy Wade, father of cornerback Shaun Wade, who originally posted on social media about the idea of holding a rally at Ohio Stadium. Wade’s major talking point was about not taking the easy way out, which he had the audience repeat throughout his speech, as neither he nor his son have throughout Shaun’s football career.

“This week right here was a hard week for my job. I got put on a leave because of a situation that has nothing to do with this, and I could have easily said ‘Man, you know what? Shaun’s going first round, I don’t have to be here,'” Wade said. “But you know what I did? I came here to support the Buckeyes, because I didn’t want to take the easy way out.”

Among the other speakers were Gee Scott Sr., father of wide receiver Gee Scott, Corey Teague, father of running back Master Teague, Monica Johnson, mother of offensive tackle Paris Johnson and Andrea Tate, mother of cornerback Sevyn Banks.

Scott had a specifically emotional speech talking about the heartbreak of not being able to play that conference-only schedule, and how it should be up to the parents and the players if there is football played this fall.

“When that schedule came out, was it not the best looking schedule you’ve seen in your life?” Scott asked the crowd. “And four days later, rip, the season was yanked from us.

“I always believe in a call to action, and a call to action is this: for the commissioner and the Big Ten, help us understand. Help us understand why it’s OK for you and your family, Mr. Warren, to decide if your kids play football, but it’s not OK for me and our parents to decide if our kids play football?”

Johnson said to the crowd of fans that when her son committed to Ohio State that he was also committing to the Big Ten, but that she now is uncertain that the Big Ten’s commitment is the same to the teams and players.

The Ohio State parents were part of a group that wrote a letter to Warren under Big 10 United on Aug. 26 that asked for more transparency, a parent organization forum and a request in the findings from the conference’s Return To Competition Task Force.

“We are extremely disappointed in your Aug. 19, 2020 correspondence in response to widespread requests for an explanation. Candidly, at this point, the parent organizations have a total lack of confidence in your ability to lead and communicate effectively with all key stakeholders,” the letter reads. “This correspondence is intended to convey the total lack of confidence in the Big Ten Conference’s leadership, specifically in the lack of planning, collaboration and/or communication.

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