Chattanooga Times Free Press

An easy decision

Owens is worthy of a place in Canton

- BY ROB MAADDI

When Pro Football Hall of Fame voters meet the day before the Super Bowl to choose this year’s inductees, the decision to select Terrell Owens should take less time than it does to microwave a bag of popcorn.

T.O. belongs in Canton. It’s a no-brainer.

Owens — who played at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a before being drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in 1996 — is second to Jerry Rice in all-time receiving yards and third in touchdown catches behind Rice and Randy Moss, a finalist in his first year of eligibilit­y.

No. 81 was a five-time AllPro, a six-time Pro Bowl pick and one of the most entertaini­ng players of his generation. Owens deserved first-ballot induction. Case closed. Yet he’s been snubbed twice because voters are punishing him for his off-field and locker room “antics” during a sensationa­l 15-year career.

But there is no “character clause” for the Pro Football Hall of Fame — and that’s not saying Owens should fail it. Owens was never arrested nor suspended by the NFL. He didn’t have legal troubles or drug problems.

Still, he has been kept out because of questionab­le behavior and the perception he was a malcontent.

Sure, Owens often spoke his mind and sometimes got under the skin of teammates and coaches. He threw some of his quarterbac­ks — Jeff Garcia, Donovan McNabb and Tony Romo — under a rapidly moving bus. He also defended Romo from criticism and famously cried once while doing it.

Owens should be judged for his value on the field. He made each of the five teams he played for better. He wasn’t the perfect teammate and was disruptive at times, but when he stepped on the field, he was exceptiona­l and durable.

Owens only missed 12 games in his long career, plus the nine he didn’t play in 2005 after Andy Reid kicked him off the Philadelph­ia Eagles after a nasty feud with McNabb and a dispute with management over a new contract.

That came only several months after Owens helped McNabb have his best season, and then heroically returned from ankle surgery — against doctor’s orders — to play in the Super Bowl. Owens would have been MVP of that game against the New England Patriots if McNabb didn’t throw three intercepti­ons in the 24-21 loss.

Anyone who covered the T.O. circus in Philadelph­ia and the aftermath knows Owens wasn’t solely to blame for the way things went down.

McNabb was overly sensitive and didn’t like all the attention Owens received. McNabb was booed by Eagles fans at the 1999 draft, and he never forgot it. The same fans embraced Owens from the second he arrived in Philadelph­ia after eight seasons in San Francisco. More than 20,000 people went to see his first practice of 2004 training camp at Lehigh University. That led to jealousy from McNabb, a problem that finally escalated a year later.

After things got ugly in Philly, the locker room was divided between McNabb supporters and Owens supporters. If the mess was entirely Owens’ fault, some of the well-respected veterans who sided with him wouldn’t have done so. But it was easier for Reid to dismiss a 32-year-old receiver who wanted more money than a 28-year-old franchise quarterbac­k who never ruffled any feathers.

Owens ended up in Dallas and had three excellent seasons with the Cowboys before he wore out his welcome. He played one year in Buffalo and one more in Cincinnati.

Those who argue that Owens bounced around the league because teams couldn’t wait to get rid of him should consider that Rice played for three clubs and Hall of Fame receiver James Lofton played for five. Lofton is on the 48-member selection committee and voted for Owens last year.

This really shouldn’t be a difficult decision. It certainly doesn’t compare to the steroids dilemma Baseball Hall of Fame voters face each year.

Terrell Owens is one of the greatest players in the history of the sport and earned the right to receive a gold jacket.

When he finally puts one on, get your popcorn ready — because it’ll be the most mustsee induction speech ever.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Terrell Owens scores against San Francisco during a game on Nov. 23, 2008, in Irving, Texas.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Terrell Owens scores against San Francisco during a game on Nov. 23, 2008, in Irving, Texas.

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