At Ohio State, Kern quarterbacked the freshman team in 1967, which included 11 high school
All-Americans, but suffered a back injury playing freshman basketball. Despite back surgery in June, Kern recovered in time to be named first-string quarterback for the varsity football team ahead of senior Bill Long, who had quarterbacked the Buckeyes in 1967. The Super Sophomores finished their three-year varsity careers with a record Kern was a fine
passer and a dangerous runner. As a quarterback, from 1968–70, he passed for 2,303 yards with a 52.1
completion percentage, 17
touchdowns and 23
interceptions. 583, and 468 yards respectively. He rushed for 24 touchdowns in three years. and went on to an undefeated season, and a berth in the
Rose Bowl. Kern was named Most Outstanding Player in the Rose Bowl as No. 1 ranked Ohio State defeated
O. J. Simpson and the No. 2 ranked
USC Trojans, and were consensus national champions. In
1969, the Buckeyes were expected to repeat as national champions. Kern directed a high-scoring (averaging 46 points per game) junior-dominated Buckeye offense that cruised through its first eight games. But Kern and the 8–0 Buckeyes were devastated by an upset at
Michigan on the last day of the season, a game in which Kern threw four
interceptions and was replaced. Despite the loss, Ohio State finished as Big Ten co-champions with Michigan and Kern was third in balloting for the 1969
Heisman Trophy. He was also named a first-team
All-American. Kern was named an All-American as a running back, because there were so many great college quarterbacks that year. Ohio State did not play in a bowl game, because prior to the
1975 season, the Big Ten and Pac-8 conferences allowed just one bowl team each, to the Rose Bowl. The super sophomores rebounded as seniors in
1970 to win the Big Ten title outright, gaining revenge against
Michigan with a 20–9 victory one year later. The Buckeyes finished the regular season undefeated earning another trip to
Pasadena to play in the Rose Bowl. However, the No. 2 ranked Buckeyes were upset by the 27–17, led by quarterback
Jim Plunkett, the
Heisman Trophy winner. Kern, elected
team captain in 1970, finished fifth on the
1970 Heisman ballot. Kern was elected to the
Ohio State Varsity O Hall of Fame in 1978, Kern co-wrote a book, with Lee Caryer, about his early life in Ohio and Ohio State experience,
The Road to the Horseshoe and Beyond: How a Small-Town Athlete Benefited from Ohio State to Build a Life. ==Professional career==