Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thousands stand up for Owens at UTC

- BY GENE HENLEY STAFF WRITER

Holding an unconventi­onal ceremony at an unconventi­onal venue, Terrell Owens went unconventi­onal.

He started asking people to stand up, pointing out different circumstan­ces that may have applied to their lives — misunderst­ood, lonely, etc. By the time he was done, nearly all of the 3,000 in attendance at McKenzie Arena were standing.

“Don’t be afraid to be you,” Owens said. “I celebrate and empower you today.”

After the ceremony, UTC chancellor Steve Angle and vice chancellor and athletic director Mark Wharton announced that Lansing Court on Owens’ alma mater’s campus was going to be named “Terrell Owens Way.”

The first living new inductee not to attend the traditiona­l Pro Football Hall of Fame ceremony in Canton, Ohio, Owens thanked seemingly everybody during his 40-minute speech Saturday afternoon. He spoke to his reasoning for not attending the traditiona­l ceremony (“The sports writers weren’t in alignment with the meaning of the Hall of Fame”), and he thanked his teammates, his family — getting emotional while talking about his late grandmothe­r — and former coaches.

“They say behind every great man is a great woman. Well, I had two,” Owens said of his mother Marilyn Heard, who presented him with his jacket, and his grandmothe­r Alice Black, who died of Alzheimer’s disease in 2012.

After thanking each set of people, he would tell them, “This is for you.”

Owens had a 15-year NFL career in which he amassed 1,078 catches, 15,934 yards and 153 touchdowns while playing for the San Francisco 49ers, Philadelph­ia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, Buffalo Bills and Cincinnati Bengals. He said that while a lot of people feel as though he will regret holding his ceremony at a place other than the typical venue, he wasn’t going to feel that way.

“People say I may regret not being in Canton (today) 10, 15, 20 years from now, but I choose not to live in regret,” he said. “I will leave a legacy that will leave an imprint on this world forever.”

Owens did not return to UTC until homecoming of the 2015 season, but he has been back at Finley Stadium the past three seasons for the celebratio­n. He said that during his NFL playing career, he became so consumed with “being the best” that the thought of coming back just never really happened.

“When I left Chattanoog­a I had no idea what I could become and what was going to happen,” Owens said. “Once I started to get a glimpse of what I could become on the football field, I really immersed myself to become the best athlete I could be. All I ever wanted to be and to do is to not be mediocre. In high school I wasn’t the best, in college I wasn’t the best, so all my peers around me, I watched them on the sidelines make big plays, and once I got a taste of what it felt like, I immersed myself into the craft and the coaches that helped mold me into the receiver I became along the way.

“I just got lost in trying to be the best I could be, and it wasn’t until I made it back and was walking around the campus, and I saw and felt the love and the impact I’d made over the years. Now, every time I come back, it feels like the first time.”

He was one of seven men inducted Saturday. Contributo­r Bobby Beathard, linebacker Robert Brazile, safety Brian Dawkins, guard Jerry Kramer, linebacker Ray Lewis, receiver Randy Moss and linebacker Brian Urlacher were inducted late Saturday evening in Canton.

Contact Gene Henley at ghenley@timesfreep­ress.com. Follow him on Twitter @genehenley­3.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? About 3,000 people listen to Terrell Owens during his Pro Football Hall of Fame acceptance speech Saturday in UTC’s McKenzie Arena.
STAFF PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND About 3,000 people listen to Terrell Owens during his Pro Football Hall of Fame acceptance speech Saturday in UTC’s McKenzie Arena.

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