The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

HOF dedicates Canton Centennial Plaza

- By Barry Wilner

It was going to be the “greatest gathering in football ever.” And then the coronaviru­s pandemic swept across America.

David Baker, president and CEO of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, makes that assessment of the planned 100th birthday celebratio­n for the NFL. The league was born on Sept. 17, 1920, and Canton, the home of the hall, was going to stage events a century in the making.

While those plans, including the induction of a special 2020 class, have been delayed until next August, the enthusiasm of Baker and his colleagues can’t be dimmed. Sept. 17, at halftime of the Bengals-Browns game — fittingly, the “Battle of Ohio” — the hall and the NFL dedicated Centennial Plaza in downtown Canton.

“The game we all honor is a great teacher and we sometimes have to call some audibles in life,” Baker says. “Sometimes we face some big adversarie­s.”

So thousands of fans and hundred of “Gold Jackets,” the members of the Hall of Fame, couldn’t be on hand at the ceremonies. But the plaza, which honors every man who has played in the NFL and every city that has been home to a team, has no time print on it. In fact, it will be everlastin­g.

“It is really spectacula­r, with spires at one end of the dome of the Pro Football Hall of Fame,” he says, “a stage at the other end with massive a big screen TV. In the middle is a huge kind of football field like an oval park and amphitheat­er. There’s a beer garden and cafe. It has kind of a monument of pavers that represent every city that ever had an NFL team.

“And the very best part of it is the 11 pylons for each decade (of the league). We have the names of all 25,488 players who played in the first century of the NFL.”

Everyone who played a down in an NFL regular or postseason game has been etched into posterity on the pylons’ surfaces.

Centennial Plaza, developed with the help of $12 million in funding from the citizens and businesses of Canton, occupies a twoacre city block formerly known as Market Square. It sits a short walk from the site of the former Hupmobile dealership where Ralph Hay, who also owned the Canton Bulldogs, organized a meeting with other owners of profession­al football teams that led to the creation of what has become America’s most popular sport.

The Hall of Fame will schedule programmin­g for the plaza — from viewing parties for NFL games to musical performanc­es to nightly laser light shows synchroniz­ed with music from popular bands covering all genres.

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