Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Hall of Fame honor thrills Cunningham

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When Randall Cunningham first heard of the effort to get him inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame more than a decade ago, he brushed it aside as a nice potential footnote to his legendary career.

The prestige of the honor didn’t really hit him until he got a call in January that he had been selected on his 11th time as a finalist on the ballot. The former UNLV star will officially become the school’s first inductee in December at the National Football Foundation Awards Dinner in New York.

“Coach (Harvey) Hyde was really (lobbying) to get me in, and I always just kind of thought, ‘Well, if it happens, it happens,’” the 53-year-old said Saturday after he was honored for the achievemen­t on the field at Sam Boyd Stadium during UNLV’s 42-23 loss to Colorado State. “But when it happened, Oh, my God, I almost lost it.

“Those are not the goals you set when you’re younger. You set a goal to win a state championsh­ip, to get a scholarshi­p, then your focus is on just playing in the NFL. You want to make money. When I got the call, it was just like, ‘You’re kidding me.’ You know, I had never thought about that, and these things that come along are just blessings.”

Cunningham, now the Silverado High School football coach, is the leading passer and punter in school history. He still has 13 school records, including passing attempts (1,029), completion­s (596) and yards (8,020). Cunningham, whose UNLV career spanned from 1982 to 1984, also holds the punting average marks for a game (58.0), season (47.5) and career (45.6).

His best memory from his collegiate days came from off the field. Cunningham remembers a meeting between the seniors and Hyde at Sam Boyd Stadium before the Rebels hosted No. 10 Southern Methodist in the final game of the 1984 season.

“He called us all in and said, ‘Guys, this is your last game in this stadium’ and he literally cried,” Cunningham said. “We all broke down, and it made us realize that guy really loves us like a father would love you.”

UNLV finished 11-2 and beat Toledo 30-13 in the California Bowl. Cunningham was named a first-team All-American as a punter in 1983, a requiremen­t for eligibilit­y in the Hall of Fame.

Cunningham played in the NFL with Philadelph­ia, Minnesota, Dallas and Baltimore.

 ?? JOSH HOLMBERG/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL ?? Former UNLV quarterbac­k and punter Randall Cunningham, 53, waves to the crowd Saturday at Sam Boyd Stadium while being celebrated for his upcoming induction into the College Football Hall of Fame. Cunningham, who starred for the Rebels from 1982 to...
JOSH HOLMBERG/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL Former UNLV quarterbac­k and punter Randall Cunningham, 53, waves to the crowd Saturday at Sam Boyd Stadium while being celebrated for his upcoming induction into the College Football Hall of Fame. Cunningham, who starred for the Rebels from 1982 to...

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