Newsday (N.Y.): All-time leaders Rice, Smith lead 2010 class into Hall

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


CANTON, Ohio -- Some called it the greatest class ever enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. That can be debated, but there is no question that the group that was honored yesterday -- seven men, including the all-time rushing and receiving leaders -- was outstanding.

The class was led by Emmitt Smith of the Dallas Cowboys, who ran for 18,355 yards, and Jerry Rice of the San Francisco 49ers, who caught 1,549 passes. Also enshrined were Russ Grimm, Rickey Jackson, Dick LeBeau, John Randle and Floyd Little.

Grimm, a guard, was part of The Hogs, the Redskins' offensive line of the 1980s. Jackson, a linebacker for New Orleans, was a sack master. LeBeau, now 72, played defensive back for Detroit and now is the Steelers' defensive coordinator. Randle, an undrafted free agent, was an All-Pro defensive tackle. Little, 68, while a member of the Denver Broncos of the late 1960s and early '70s, led the league in rushing three times with a last-place team.

"If I stopped to think about it," Grimm said, "my eyes started to tear up. I just tried to blame it on the humidity. I say to myself, am I sitting here, a grown man, 51, with the emotions coming over me?"

Those previously inducted and sitting around the stage, individuals such as Franco Harris, Deacon Jones, Bob Lilly and Harry Carson, had bets among themselves about which inductee would be the first to break down during his scheduled 10-minute speech.

"Everyone was pointing to me as the one," Rice said. "I already cried when they called me to tell me I was going in."

LeBeau, who like Little was chosen by the veterans committee, said, "This means everything in the world to me. What could you ever ask for? I'm trying to comprehend what this means."

Little knew what it meant: recognition of what he achieved.

"I knew when they were calling me," he said when notified by the Hall, "it wasn't to let me know they overlooked me again. I didn't want to go in posthumously. As I sat there and hugged my wife, I said, 'It's our time. It's the minute we've been waiting for, and I'm still standing.' "

Jackson had said he deserved to enter the Hall at an earlier date, having retired from the game 10 years ago.

"I think it's because the Saints weren't very good for all those years," Jackson said. "But I set all kinds of records. Nobody had my combination of hitting and speed. I hit quarterbacks. I made interceptions."

The majority of spectators at a packed Fawcett Stadium, adjacent to the Hall itself, were Cowboys and 49ers fans, lured respectively by Smith and Rice. One T-shirt on sale had the word "Triplets" and images of Smith, Michael Irvin and Troy Aikman, all former Cowboys now in the Hall of Fame.

Would Smith have had big yardage in the current two-back offense? "I did what I did," he responded, "and I'm not going back on it."

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Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.

SF Examiner: Rice ready to tackle next challenge

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner


SAN FRANCISCO — What is it about golf that beckons so many athletes, that challenges a Michael Jordan or a John Elway or the man who caught the fever with no less impact than the way he used to catch a football, Jerry Rice?

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 SF Newspaper Company

RealClearSports: If There's Ever Been a Hall of Famer, It's Jerry Rice

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


He was the bricklayer's son with the hands of a craftsman and the heart of a poet. He was driven by the fear of failure, motivated by the joy of success, figuratively always looking behind him to stay in front of those who literally never could catch him.

From the line of scrimmage to the goal line there may never have been a more productive offensive player than Jerry Rice, who came to the San Francisco 49ers from the dirt roads and self-doubt of rural Mississippi and for years never missed a game and rarely missed a pass.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010

SF Examiner: Reunion reminds fans of Niners’ glory days

By Art Spander
Special to The Examiner



SAN FRANCISCO — The talk was about what used to be.

“Those were the days,” ex-mayor Willie Brown affirmed.

The talk was about what might be again.

Eddie DeBartolo had come back to his adopted home, to be inducted into the Hall of Fame that bears the name of his father, Edward J. DeBartolo Sr.

He had come back to reminisce, to laugh and, even for a brief emotional moment, to cry.

He had come back for a reconciliation which could only mean good things for the 49ers, the team which won five Super Bowls when they were owned by Eddie, the team which talks about winning Super Bowls now that they are run by Eddie’s nephew, Jed York.

Let’s address the issue. The 49ers were champions because of Bill Walsh, a visionary who coached and managed them out of the darkness. And it was terrific to see Bill’s widow, Geri, among the many at the Sheraton Palace for the DeBartolo presentation.

But without Eddie, there’s no Walsh. Without Eddie, there are no resources. DeBartolo, Walsh and John McVay all had a hand in the success, along with Joe Montana, Ronnie Lott and so many others.

“We weren’t supposed to lose,” Steve Young said. “Eddie would say, ‘You tell me what you need to be great,’  but in return you’d better be great.”

Young, Lott and Jerry Rice offered an unintentional comedy routine during their time on stage. Rice made everyone aware of Young’s expanding bald spot. Young responded, “You wouldn’t say five words, but ever since ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ you won’t stop talking.”

Yes, John York was there. In the same room with Eddie. The new owner and his brother-in-law the old owner, two people we were told who didn’t get along, two people who had different ideas on how to run a pro football team.

But now John’s son, Jed, is in charge. And he was thanking his uncle, Eddie, for providing advice, apparently last year on when to get rid of Mike Nolan as head coach and bring in Mike Singletary. The family is together once more.

“We were always together,” said Denise DeBartolo York, John’s wife and Eddie’s sister.

She was distressed by what a certain columnist through the years had written to the contrary.

The idea, expressed more than once, by everyone from Willie Brown to Rice, is to get Eddie D into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

That may not be terribly easy, even if DeBartolo is deserving. Some voters will be hesitant because he was stripped of the Niners after illegally trying to obtain a casino license in Louisiana.

But this is a start. Just as the Yorks and DeBartolos showing unity is a start of a process to regain the Niners’ old glory.

“Eddie changed the world of sports for the better,” said Brown.

At least as far as Northern California is concerned.

Paul Anka, the singer and composer, the man who wrote “My Way” for Frank Sinatra, was a guest, bringing revised lyrics for DeBartolo, a long-time pal.

“Your football star,” sang Anka to Eddie, “you raised the bar, and did it your way.”

A way the Niners, very much in the family, would love to find once more.

Art Spander has been covering Bay Area sports since 1965 and also writes on www.artspander.com and www.realclearsports.com. E-mail him at typoes@aol.com.

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Copyright 2009 SF Newspaper Company