Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Hall of Fame inducts a new class

- By Barry Wilner

CANTON, OHIO >> Kevin Mawae never betrayed the lessons he learned when he first began playing football — flag football, no less.

His dedication and perseveran­ce as one the NFL’s greatest centers landed him in the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday night.

“I learned to love the preparatio­n, the plays and the puzzle,” Mawae said. “I loved putting on my uniform and cleats. I learned to never step on the field without being ready to work.”

Mawae was an outstandin­g center for three NFL teams, and a key union force during the 2011 lockout of players. His leadership, along with his talent and determinat­ion, made him a three-time All-Pro and eight-time Pro Bowler with the Seahawks, Jets and Titans, and the center on the NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 2000s.

Offensive lineman rarely should be judged by statistics, but consider that Mawae blocked for a 1,000yard rusher in 13 of his 16 seasons — by five different running backs, capped by the NFL’s sixth 2,000-yard rushing performanc­e, by Tennessee’s Chris Johnson in 2009, Mawae’s final season.

Mawae, who was presented by his wife, Tracy, is the first player of Hawaiian descent and the second Polynesian member of the hall, following the late Junior Seau. His speech paid warm tribute to his family and the inspiratio­n and love they provided him.

“I knock on this door and I tell all of you,” he concluded in his speech, “I am home.”

The late Pat Bowlen, whose Denver Broncos made more Super Bowls (seven, winning three) than they had losing seasons, was inducted after Mawae.

Under Bowlen’s leadership, Denver went 354-240-1 from 1984 through last season. He was the first owner in NFL history to oversee a team that won 300 games — including playoffs — in a span of three decades.

On the league level, the highly respected Bowlen, who died in June, worked on several influentia­l committees, including co-chairing the NFL Management Council and working on network TV contracts such as the league’s groundbrea­king $18 billion deal in 1998.

Bowlen once said the Hall of Fame is where legends go. He’s now there, with his children huddling around the bust on the stage, several of them patting it on the head.

Mawae and Bowlen followed Gil Brandt and Johnny Robinson in being enshrined.

Indeed, Brandt has been in the NFL so long he scouted Robinson.

Brandt was procuring talent for the Dallas Cowboys in their initial season of 1960 when Robinson came out of LSU as a running back and eventually became a star safety.

Finally, in 2019, they are wearing gold jackets.

“After all this time, I thought I had been forgotten,” Robinson said. “To receive that knock on the door ... was surreal to me.”

 ?? DAVID RICHARD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former NFL executive Gil Brandt, left, and presenter Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, unveil the bust of Brandt during the induction ceremony at the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Saturday in Canton, Ohio.
DAVID RICHARD — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former NFL executive Gil Brandt, left, and presenter Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, unveil the bust of Brandt during the induction ceremony at the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Saturday in Canton, Ohio.

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