Vintage State Of Ohio Football Shape Tapestries
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Description: Show your love for the Buckeye State with this cute and charming My Heart Is Ohio Shaped design! It features an adorable, smiling face perfectly centered within a heart-shaped buckeye, along with the word OHIO using the state's shape. This fun graphic is a perfect way for Ohioans and fans of Ohio to show their state pride and Buckeye love. Whether you're from Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, or anywhere else, this cute design is great for everyday wear, birthdays, or game days!
Description: Show your game day spirit with this sarcastic rivalry tee! The design features a parody vacuum logo for the fake company “Wolvey-Wring Vacuums – A Proud Product of Michigan” with the punchline: “Nothing Sucks Like a Michigan Wolvey-Wring.” Perfect for fans who love to poke fun at Ann Arbor football, this design is a hilarious gift idea for Big Ten rivals — whether you cheer for Scarlet and Gray, Green and White, or any team that enjoys seeing Michigan lose. Great for tailgates, rivalry week, or just reminding everyone that Michigan sucks (literally).
Description: Show your game day spirit with this sarcastic rivalry tee! The design features a parody vacuum logo for the fake company “Wolvey-Wring Vacuums – A Proud Product of Michigan” with the punchline: “Nothing Sucks Like a Michigan Wolvey-Wring.” Perfect for fans who love to poke fun at Ann Arbor football, this design is a hilarious gift idea for Big Ten rivals — whether you cheer for Scarlet and Gray, Green and White, or any team that enjoys seeing Michigan lose. Great for tailgates, rivalry week, or just reminding everyone that Michigan sucks (literally).
Description: Ohio fans design is the perfect gift for men, women youth and kids or anyone who love that. For dad, father, mom, mother, brother, sister, youth, adult, baby, child, toddler, girl, boy, friend, family. Perfect gift idea for Father's Day, Mother's Day, Valentines Day, Birthday, Christmas, New Year. For all occasion. Available on wall art, furniture, home decor, bed and bath, tablettop and other.
Description: The Ohio Glory played one season (1992) in the World League of American Football. Columbus, Ohio was awarded the WLAF franchise after the Raleigh-Durham Skyhawks posted an 0-10 season. Ohio did not do much better, posting a 1-9 record after just one season of play. The sole win came at the expense of the Galaxy in week 7, a 20-17 victory in Columbus. The franchise folded in September 1992 when the WLAF league went on an indefinite hiatus.
Description: The Canton Bulldogs were a professional American football team, based in Canton, Ohio. They played in the Ohio League from 1903 to 1906 and 1911 to 1919, and the American Professional Football Association (later renamed the National Football League (NFL) in 1922), from 1920 to 1923, and again from 1925 to 1926. The Bulldogs won the 1916, 1917, and 1919 Ohio League championships. They were the NFL champions in 1922 and 1923. In 1921–1923, the Bulldogs played 25 straight games without a defeat (including 3 ties). This remains an NFL record.
Description: The Dayton Triangles were an original franchise of the American Professional Football Association (now the National Football League (NFL)) in 1920. The Triangles were based in Dayton, Ohio, and took their nickname from their home field, Triangle Park, which was located at the confluence of the Great Miami and Stillwater Rivers in north Dayton. They were the longest-lasting traveling team in the NFL (1920–1929), and the last such "road team" until the Dallas Texans in 1952, who, coincidentally, descended from the Dayton franchise.
Description: The Dayton Triangles were an original franchise of the American Professional Football Association (now the National Football League (NFL)) in 1920. The Triangles were based in Dayton, Ohio, and took their nickname from their home field, Triangle Park, which was located at the confluence of the Great Miami and Stillwater Rivers in north Dayton. They were the longest-lasting traveling team in the NFL (1920–1929), and the last such "road team" until the Dallas Texans in 1952, who, coincidentally, descended from the Dayton franchise.