Ohio

Ohio governor nominates ex-football coach Jim Tressel for lieutenant governor

Jim Tressel, who won a national title at Ohio State University, has long been mentioned as a potential candidate for elected office.

Jim Tressel
David Purdy/Getty Images

Ohio State Buckeyes head coach Jim Tressel looks on from the sidelines during first half action against the University of Iowa Hawkeyes at Kinnick Stadium on Nov. 20, 2010 in Iowa City, Iowa.

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine has nominated Jim Tressel, a former star college football coach who guided Ohio State University to a national championship, to be his next lieutenant governor.

“I want someone who every single day is working to come up with ideas, and this is a guy with ideas,” DeWine, a Republican, said at a news conference Monday. “And they’re thoughtful and they’re based on what he has seen and what he has learned.”

Tressel, 72, must first be confirmed by the state legislature. He would succeed Sen. Jon Husted, DeWine's former ticket-mate whom the governor recently appointed to fill the Senate vacancy left by Vice President JD Vance.

DeWine is term-limited, and Husted’s elevation to the Senate has had a domino effect on Ohio’s political scene. Tressel did not indicate whether he plans to run for governor himself in 2026. Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost already is seeking the Republican nomination for governor, and Vivek Ramaswamy, a biotech entrepreneur with close ties to President Donald Trump and Vance, is expected to launch his campaign for the job this month.

Tressel, who most recently served as president of Youngstown State University, has long been mentioned as a potential candidate for elected office, but he has never pulled the trigger on a run of his own.

Trestle was a prominent fundraiser for former Rep. Anthony Gonzalez, R-Ohio, who had played football for him at Ohio State. (Tressel also coached the Youngstown State Penguins to four NCAA Division I-AA national championships before moving on to the Buckeyes.)

“It was a surprise for sure,” Tressel said Monday of his nomination.

Tressel resigned from Ohio State in 2011 with the school’s football program mired in controversy and an NCAA investigation involving players selling memorabilia to a tattoo parlor.

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com. More from NBC News:

Copyright NBC News
Contact Us