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O (gesture)

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The "O" is a gesture used predominantly at the University of Oregon and at events in which the school's athletic teams, the Oregon Ducks, are taking part.[1]

History

The "O" gesture was popularized by Oregon Ducks football quarterback Joey Harrington, who was photographed displaying it on the front page of The Oregonian in 2001.

The gesture was first used by University of Oregon band directors, who relied on visual cues to direct the ensemble due to crowd noise. Steven Paul, who served as band director from 1983 to 1989, used the sign to prompt musicians to begin performing the fight song "Mighty Oregon". It was one of several gestures used by Paul and subsequent band directors, including Todd Zimbelman, who served as the band director from 1999 to 2005. It became popularized after a photograph of quarterback Joey Harrington making the "O" appeared on the front page of The Oregonian one day following the Civil War game in 2001. Harrington had made the gesture at the band, hoping to hear the fight song one more time.[1] In 2014, Harrington recalled:

We're walking back up the tunnel and through my career I'd noticed that the band director made that 'O' symbol with his hands to signal to the band that he wanted them to play the fight song. The crowd is loud, so you can't yell, 'Play the fight song!' so instead, he'd come up with the 'O' symbol and he'd give the symbol and the band would play the song... I'm walking toward the tunnel for the last time and I had one of those nostalgic moments. I wanted to hear the fight song one more time... I made the 'O' signal. I wanted to hear it one more time... Did I invent the 'O'? No. Was I the first player to use it in that fashion? Yes. But it's not for the purposes that everyone does it today.[1]

The moment was photographed by Bruce Ely, photographer at The Oregonian, and Thomas Boyd, who worked for the Eugene Register-Guard at the time. Ely recalled, "I remember calling editors and telling them it would be a cool picture for the front page. It took off from there. I think Tom and I are the only two people that happened to be in position."[1]

Harrington displayed the gesture again at the Fiesta Bowl.[1]

Adoption

Fans continued displaying the "O" at sporting events following the 2001 game. Nike, Inc. gloves and other merchandise have been produced showing the symbol. According to John Canzano, sports writer for The Oregonian, the gesture has become "a universal non-verbal rally cry for the university".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Canzano, John (November 24, 2014). "Canzano: Oregon Ducks 'O' becomes a teenager this Civil War". The Oregonian. Retrieved November 24, 2014.