Vancouver Sun

Eccentric receivers highlight class of ’18

Owens and Moss among eight named to Pro Football hall

- MARK MASKE Washington Post

Linebacker­s Ray Lewis and Brian Urlacher and wide receivers Randy Moss and Terrell Owens were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Saturday as part of an eight-member class with plenty of star power and a good measure of controvers­y.

Bobby Beathard, the former Washington Redskins general manager, also was elected, along with Brian Dawkins, Jerry Kramer and Robert Brazile.

Former Redskins left tackle Joe Jacoby was among the modern era finalists passed over by the selection committee, comprised primarily of media members, which met at a Minneapoli­s-area hotel on the eve of the Super Bowl.

The new hall of famers will be officially enshrined at a ceremony in August in Canton, Ohio.

Owens and Moss, considered two of the leading divas among the attention-grabbing wide receivers of their generation, will go into the Hall of Fame together. Is any stage big enough or any spotlight bright enough for both?

They along with Lewis, the cornerston­e of terrific Baltimore Ravens defences, were the headliners of a class with plenty of sizzle.

Lewis, Moss and Urlacher, the former Chicago Bears standout linebacker, were in their first year of Hall of Fame eligibilit­y, while Owens had been rejected twice.

Owens’ production clearly was hall worthy. He played 16 seasons for the San Francisco 49ers, Philadelph­ia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills and Cincinnati Bengals. He ranks eighth in NFL history in career catches.

He’s second behind only Jerry Rice in receiving yards and third behind Rice and Moss in receiving touchdowns.

Moss wasn’t made to wait by the selectors, despite being viewed as similarly egotistica­l and accused of giving less than full effort on certain plays during his career. But like Owens, Moss produced, often in spectacula­r fashion.

Moss ranks fourth in league history in receiving yards behind Rice, Owens and Larry Fitzgerald. He’s second in receiving touchdowns behind Rice.

Lewis was regarded as a nodoubt Hall of Fame choice as one of the greatest defensive players in league history during a 17-year career with the Ravens. But his career also included off-field controvers­y thanks to a guilty plea on a count of obstructio­n of justice in connection to the stabbing deaths of two men outside an Atlanta nightclub in January 2000. Initially he was charged with murder.

Urlacher played 13 seasons for the Bears, ending in 2012, and was named to eight Pro Bowls.

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