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4,000 seat facility to replace Ohio State's St. John Arena

brennan.164@osu.edu

Published: Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Updated: Tuesday, December 4, 2012 23:12

St/ john

Daniel Chi / Asst. photo editor

OSU senior outside hitter Emily Danks goes up to spike the ball in an Oct. 17 game against Penn State at St. John Arena. OSU lost, 3-0.

For Ohio State women’s volleyball home games, the Ohio State Marching Band travels down one of four ramps in St. John Arena that lead from the main concourse down to the event level. It’s 20 paces, give or take, down the cement-gray walkway onto the arena’s hardwood playing surface, and it’s one of the program’s cherished traditions — the indoor version of the famed Ohio Stadium ramp entrance.

“When the band comes down the ramp into St. John and the music fills the arena, that’s a real special and unique part of our home-court advantage,” said OSU women’s volleyball coach Geoff Carlston. “That’s something that’s been really special for our players.”

The team’s indoor ramp tradition is one of many pieces of nostalgia contained under St. John Arena’s corrugated metal roof, but the days of such traditions will be numbered as the 56-year-old arena will be replaced in the foreseeable future.

A $10 million donation to OSU athletics from Covelli Enterprises owner and CEO Sam Covelli will aid in the eventual construction of a 4,000-seat, multi-sport arena named for the donor. Covelli did not respond to the Lantern’s request for comment. Covelli Arena will house OSU’s wrestling, fencing, gymnastics and men’s and women’s volleyball competitions, according to a Nov. 21 athletics release.

“It is truly an honor for (wife) Caryn and me to make this gift to the university,” Covelli said in the release. “With a son who recently graduated from Ohio State and businesses in Columbus, we realize how special Ohio State is both academically under the leadership of Dr. (E. Gordon) Gee and athletically under the direction of Gene Smith.”

For now, St. John Arena remains standing, its halls bedecked with black and white images of athletes from across OSU’s many sports. Scores of trophies sit in glass cases that line the concourse; championship ball caps and basketball nets adorn some of OSU’s aging pieces of athletics hardware.

In its heyday, St. John was the stuffy home to Buckeyes’ men’s and women’s basketball in addition to the other sports. Built for about $4 million and with 13,276 seats, St. John’s time as home to the basketball programs lasted from 1956 until the 1998-99 seasons when both teams began playing at the then-new Schottenstein Center.

St. John was home to arguably the greatest era of OSU men’s basketball — the 1960 national championship team, as well as the 1961 and 1962 national runner-up teams, called the arena home. From 1960-1964, coach Fred Taylor led the team to five consecutive Big Ten Conference titles, a streak that remains unmatched to this day.

The OSU men last played a game at St. John in 2010-11, while the women’s team won two NCAA Tournament games at the venue during the same year.

Like the women’s volleyball team, OSU men’s volleyball still calls St. John its home. On Jan. 14, the men’s team, guided by its coach of 28 years, Pete Hanson, added to St. John lore with a banner hung along the rails of the stadium’s upper deck to celebrate its 2011 NCAA National Championship. Hanson said St. John holds many other special memories for he and his current and former players.

“It’s kind of hard to describe, I guess,” Hanson said of the stadium he’s coached in for nearly three decades. “It’s one of those things — it’s kind of like putting on a good pair of shoes or a nice pair of gloves, it just fits right. It just feels good when you’re in that arena.”

St. John was palatial in its day but will soon clear out for the modern amenities of 21st century stadium. Covelli Arena will feature administrative offices, a ticket office, concession area, catering space and meeting facilities for most of the athletic department’s 13,000 annual campers, according to an OSU release.

There’s still something about the musk of St. John and the hardback, wooden seats that grabs people when they walk inside, Carlston said.

“There’s so much nostalgia built in with that building, and you feel it. You feel it when you’re in there,” Carlston said. “There’s an aura to it. It feels like a lot has happened in there, and the reality is it has.”

For Carlston and Hanson, the concept of Covelli Arena is worth a mention when they’re out on the recruiting trail, but little more considering the lack of a date for a groundbreaking ceremony and a construction timeline.

“We’re not afraid to tell our current recruits that, ‘Hey, this is a plan the athletic department has,’ … We can’t be very specific about it because … (OSU doesn’t) even know when they’re going to put the first shovel in the ground,” Hanson said. “We’re just telling those kids that, ‘Hey, there’s a chance that maybe by the fourth of fifth year of your career here, if you were to come either in 2013 or 2014, there’s a pretty good chance you might be playing in a brand new facility.’”

Carlston said he wants to see brick and mortar results on a construction site before he gets more excited about Covelli Arena.

In the meantime, St. John will suit him just fine.

“There’s hominess to it. The history oozes from everywhere in there,” he said. “Kids come in and they love (St. John Arena). St John is very impressive, so there’s an ‘oh’ and ‘ah’ factor.”

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19 comments

Anonymous
Sat Dec 15 2012 21:39
let's see..... Gee makes how many millions in one year?? 8plus,,, and his travel and entertainment expense is how much??? 7 plus,,, Hey Gordon,,,, how about you donating,,your defense in making that that kind of money (highest paid university president) has been that you give so much back.
Peter
Sun Dec 9 2012 23:14
This area and the adjacent parking lots to St John is a blackeye visually to first time visitors to OSU, and is a candidate for a massive upgrade. I hope they take advantage of the new construction to beautify Lane avenue with landscaped divider islands and sidewalks. Maybe even incentive a few higher end coffee shops and cafes, trees,the surrounding
Finally around the new arena, they could landcape the parking lot with Buckeye trees and erect statues of great coaches like Taylor, St. John, and players like Lucas Havlicec, Kellog,Jackson etc...great volleyball teams like 2011 could also get a statue. It might raise the cost a bit but this would really be a classy upgrade to a run down part of campus which gets high visibility and is often visitors impression of the campus.
Peter
Sun Dec 9 2012 22:54
Maybe they can reproduce the band ramps in the new facility. Also, The AD should save and transplant some of the old seats ,memoribilia and trophy cases to a section of the new facility. They could even make a museum of sorts that people could walk through and experience highlights of great moments in the facility. That would preserve some of the history, banners, old displays,mustiness and character that is St. John's .
Anonymous
Thu Dec 6 2012 01:42
As an Alum and avid Buckeye Fan, I have mixed emotions on replacing St. John Arena with a New State of the Art Facility. Like others, I have seen countless Games, Competitions and Skull Sessions over the Years. Many years ago My Graduation was Staged at SJA.....so it DOES have a Special Place in My Heart. St. John like the Individual it is named after Has Served Its Time. Our Students deserve The BEST Facility to Compete in the Future. My concern down the road is" WHAT will become of the Sacred Land where the Building Stands?" Creating a Green Space with a Tribute to the Arena would be Honorable.........This was a Unique Venue in it's Day (design,atmosphere and Spirit) and Is Very Much a part of Our University's History. Moving the Skull Session to The Schottenstein Center would be conceivable, just not convenient. What I pray doesn't happen is that the Land doesn't become a commercial parcel of land up for the highest bidder or worse yet, a Parking Garage. I can Live with Change and Look to The Future......it is just the thought of having a Campus Icon bulldozed that I am torn over. Years ago, The Wexner Center was built with a Tribute in it's architure to the Old Campus Armory (something Well Before My Time), will St.John Arena be remembered as favorably ? My connection to St. John will last Forever, I just hope Others truly have a Vision for WHAT needs to REPLACE Her,
Anonymous
Thu Dec 6 2012 01:36
So...for equality - if I give $100, can I get at least a small rock with my name on a name plaque placed in the middle of the oval? Can I have a 3'x3' square piece of land named after me for my money contribution? I am an alumni and Cavelli is not (according to the article - only a son is), thus I should deserve more than him! Amazing what money buys! Gee, could we not at least honor a Coach or outstanding player that played in St. John Arena with the new name of the 4000 seat building? Oh, I forgot - there is no new building without Cavelli! One will have a hard time explaining who Cavelli is to sports visitors from other teams. Oh, he just had money, no academic ties or service to OSU.
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 17:06
Several points...

Complaining about naming rights? No university builds facilities like this without major donations and naming rights anymore. NONE. This is how it works everywhere...don't blame OSU. This is the business of college sports. They can't afford to build anymore without major contributions.

Complaining about lack of seats in the new arena? The sports housed in St. John hardly draw 1k people to a game, if that. Why hold sports in a 15k seat arena with 500 people in attendance? Doesn't make sense anymore. The place is falling apart and will cost more to renovate.

Complaining about where will Skull Session go once St. John get's knocked down? Of course Covelli is too far. There is this place called the Schott that could be used...........

Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 16:52
As an alumni, it is ridiculous that a person gets their name on a building just because they give money. Names on buildings should be for professors, coaches (since it is an athletic building), or other persons who have given to the community (upstanding politicians, community service leaders, etc...) who have years of ties to OSU. This is a state university, not a private college. And, only seating 4000 people. Come on! I will withdraw my contributions to OSU if this goes through. Do not call me for any money during fundraising. What a joke!!!
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 14:32
St. John Arena is a multi-purpose arena on the campus of The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, USA. The arena was named for Lynn St. John, who served as Ohio State's men's basketball coach and athletic director until 1947. (Wiki)
OSUMB 63-66
Wed Dec 5 2012 13:03
If it must be, I guess it must be. Maybe this is a good chance for the Skull Session to charge $1 admission - just think how far that would go to help the Marching Band with instruments, etc! Pick up your feet, turn your corners square and DRIVE DRIVE DRIVE!
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 12:54
Hell hath no fury like band geeks scorned... Take the flute out of your hoo ha guys...
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 12:31
Get your facts straight! Journalism? Wrong! All your dramatic fluff about 20 paces is a bunch of hooey. Did you even contact the OSU Marching & Athletic Band Office to ensure you were accurately relating your story? Or did you think it was okay to just make this up as you go? You surely did a great job of that.

As someone else already noted, if playing at volleyball - it's going to be Athletic Band... a no-cut organization that allows entrance without audition to any student band musician. Quite a bit different from the prestigious OSUMB that has 2-days of rigorous tryouts for marching and musicianship to narrow a field of 500 or more to the 225 brass and percussion band each year. It should be noted that Men's Basketball A Band is by audition and is the cream of the crop from the available A Band field...

There is nothing similar to A Band's entrance into St. John as the official OSUMB Ramp Entrance into Ohio Stadium. Even for the OSUMB entering into St. John via the one southeast entrance for Skull Session, it is completely different than "Ramp." Even when the real TBDBITL enters for Skull Session (southeast entrance), they arrive in reverse order (X to A row) and how they enter is not even close to the precision of Ramp. The true RAMP entrance into Ohio Stadium is a venerable tradition and is done precisely the same way and order year-to-year. Percussion enters onto the field in silence and then once all have arrived, they begin the cadence at which time A Row leads the band onto the field from the left and B Row leads from the right of the tunnel. When the OSUMB leaves the field post-game, they do so in X to A order.

As others have questioned here and to other posts, exactly where will the real OSUMB go for Skull Session on game day? The new facility is way too far away and the seating capacity is way too small to accommodate the loyal audience - often at a minimum there are at least 10-13K people in attendance... Where can it possibly be held once St. John is demolished? The traditions that many of us revere are being tossed to the wind...

I realize that the Lantern is a student paper... I hope you have learned your lesson here about preparing with facts...

Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 11:50
Time and change.... just saying. It does seem a shame to downsize the Skull session though since it is open to the community and helps to make it more inclusive of OSU and Columbus :-(
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 10:55
Sad to see St. Johns go. I was at OSU in the early '60s and St Johns will be my basketball home forever. The bands before football games warmed up there also, it was the beginning of every football saturday.
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 10:31
It's not the marching band that plays at volleyball games, it's the Athletic Band. For future reference: the marching band plays at football games. The athletic band plays at everything else. Also, parade marching down a ramp in St John is nothing like the ramp entrance in Ohio Stadium. /snobbycomment
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 10:17
Those complaining about it being knocked down do not understand any of the facts behind it. If you leave it at facts and ignore any bias, it's clear that it needs to be removed in favor of a newer arena.
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 08:56
let's spend some money on the important stuff like bigger classrooms. Most of OSU classrooms are old, drafty and outdated.
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 08:52
And skull session goes where????
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 08:36
Knocking it down to build something with fancy offices and only a third of the seating space for the students, fans, and other patrons? Yes, sounds like OSU all right.
Anonymous
Wed Dec 5 2012 08:32
Sick to death of people who are thrilled to support the University as long as their names are attached to edifices. Get over yourselves. Do you even know who St. John is?




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