Ravens' Reed made the impossible possible
BALTIMORE — Combining instinct and tireless film study with an unyielding urge to be a difference maker, Ed Reed established himself as one of the greatest safeties in NFL history.
What he did with a football after plucking it from the air set him apart from anyone who ever played the game.
Reed made 64 interceptions over a stellar 12- year career. He owns an NFLrecord 1,590 yards in interception returns, including the two longest runbacks: 107 yards against the Eagles in 2008, 106 yards versus the Browns in 2004. Reed considered every pass thrown in his direction to be his property. And when he got hold of it, his lone objective was to take it to house.
"My philosophy was simple. I was trying to score when I got the football in my hand. There was no question about that," Reed said. "When I caught the interception, I knew there weren't too many defenders on (the opposing) offense."
Selected to the Pro Bowl nine times and voted NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 2004, Reed will become the 15th safety inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday. Whether he's the best of all time at his position is a matter of opinion unless you're asking Baltimore Ravens coach John Harbaugh, whom Reed helped win a Super Bowl.
"It would be hard to argue that he's not the greatest safety in the history of football, right?" Harbaugh said. "He's one of the top 10 players maybe in the history of the game."
Yes, his coach is expected to say something like that. But Reed, who gained entry into the hall on the first ballot, also drew that kind of praise from his opponents.
"He just does things that nobody else at that position does, or I don't know if they've ever done it," Patriots coach Bill Belichick said.
When Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger dropped back to throw, his first priority was to determine where Reed was on the field. Then he'd find out that it didn't matter because Reed was going to meet up with the football anyway.
"You see the safeties out in the middle of the field and have a wide open throw on the right. The next thing you know he's intercepting it," Roethlisberger said. "Where did he come from? That's what made him such a challenge. He made the impossible possible."
Reed played football, baseball and basketball while growing up in Louisiana. He idolized Michael Jordan, and patterned his play in each sport after a player known for excelling in the clutch.
A defensive player with the mindset of an offensive star, Reed scored 14 touchdowns during his career (including playoffs) and became the first player to score return touchdowns off a punt, blocked punt, interception and fumble recovery.
"Ed was among the smartest and most remarkable,
clutch playmakers in NFL history," Ravens general manager Eric DeCosta said. "You never felt the game was out of reach when No. 20 was on the field."
Reed starred at Miami before taking his talent to the Ravens as the 24th overall pick in the 2002 draft. After learning the fine art of studying game film under a coaching staff that included Chuck Pagano, Mark Stoops and Greg Schiano, Reed honed the craft with Baltimore.
Asked whether his knack for tracking down the football could be attributed most to film study or instinct, Reed replied, "I guess you could go 50-50. I studied a lot of tape, but I can't say a lot of things weren't instinctive."
It was one heck of a combination.
"Ed Reed is the smartest player I've ever coached," former Ravens coach Brian Billick said. "His natural intuition and preparation for the game exceeds anything I've ever been around. He was a truly unique and impactful player in the history of the NFL. No player had better range."