The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Mawae worked angles to Hall of Fame

- By Teresa M. Walker The Associated Press

NASHVILLE, TENN. » Dirty. A cheap shot artist. Even a dirty Christian for wearing a cross on his face mask and then using every trick Kevin Mawae knew to open holes for his running back or protect his quarterbac­k.

Mawae heard all that chatter, and it bothered him.

Then he realized he was playing football the only way he knew how as an undersized center in the NFL.

“I wasn’t stronger and bigger than a lot of guys,” Mawae said. “Early in my career, I was considered a finesse player, and that bothered me because I wasn’t. I was a technician. And I learned my craft, and I took it to an art form in some sense that I knew what I was doing. I put my body in position to do things that guys didn’t know how to counter, and they didn’t like that.”

And Aug. 3, Mawae will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame , capping a career of 241 games played over 16 seasons with three teams. A three-time All Pro, he was an eighttime Pro Bowl center and a member of the NFL’s AllDecade Team for the 2000s. He also blocked for a 1,000yard rusher in 13 seasons by five different running backs, capped by the NFL’s sixth 2,000-yard rushing performanc­e in his final season.

This honor is still a surreal feeling for Mawae, who found it difficult just going into the bust room at the Hall of Fame a couple of months ago.

“That’s where legends live, and I’m thinking about guys I played against that are there or played with or the legends I grew up watching play and I get to be among them,” Mawae said. “And you know it’s exciting, but it’s still like you got to pinch yourself to make sure it’s still a reality.”

Mawae earned his spot by finding ways to fend off men bigger and stronger than he was at 6-foot-4 and 289 pounds. That meant studying each opponent, knowing the game, making calls and run checks at the center spot. Mawae never made a mistake when making a run check.

“It definitely was the right decision,” Chris Johnson said with a chuckle of Mawae’s calls while in Tennessee.

Mawae started learning that skill at LSU and kept working to improve after being drafted 36th overall in 1994 by the Seahawks. He credits coaches and former teammates such as Ray Donaldson and Jim Sweeney in Seattle for teaching him what to look for before snapping the ball. That turned him into the quarterbac­k of the offensive line, easing some of the workload on his quarterbac­ks.

He blocked for two of Chris Warren’s 1,000-yard rushing seasons in Seattle. When the Seahawks told Mawae he wasn’t the caliber of player he thought he was after four seasons, he became the highest-paid center in the NFL in 1998 playing for Coach Bill Parcells with the Jets.

That’s where Mawae and his fellow offensive linemen started including running backs in their meetings called me a dirty player,” Mawae said.

Michael Roos, who played left tackle in Tennessee with Mawae, said the key was simply watching film.

“He rode that line perfectly of what I would call crafty at times, creative and crafty, and using all the tools in his toolbox, as Munch always put it,” Roos said.

Mawae’s final game was in Seattle, where Johnson ran for 134 yards to reach 2,006 yards. He jumped over Mawae on a 4-yard run for the milestone.

His contract up, Mawae didn’t hear from any team in the league in 2010 despite being in the best shape of his life at age 39. He also was president of the NFL Players Associatio­n during the 2011 lockout ended by the current collective bargaining agreement he helped negotiate. Mawae calls it a “perfect storm” and was one of the most influentia­l people on the union’s side during the protracted negotiatio­ns.

“I walked away from the game and I never looked back,” Mawae said. “And here I am now eight years later I’m getting ready to go in the Hall of Fame.”

 ?? JOHN RUSSELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Titans quarterbac­k Vince Young scrambles against the Colts as Kevin Mawae blocks during a 2009 game in Nashville. Mawae will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Aug. 3.
JOHN RUSSELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Titans quarterbac­k Vince Young scrambles against the Colts as Kevin Mawae blocks during a 2009 game in Nashville. Mawae will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Aug. 3.

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