The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

T.O. ready for unconventi­onal induction in Chattanoog­a

- By Steve Megargee

Leave it to Terrell Owens to choose to become the first person to celebrate being inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame somewhere other than at the Canton, Ohio shrine.

The receiver who provided so many exhilarati­ng and exasperati­ng moments during one of the NFL’s most prolific careers is about 600 miles away from Canton this weekend. Hours before the other inductees are honored, Owens will give his own acceptance speech at Chattanoog­a , where he played college football and basketball and ran track.

Owens announced on Twitter in June that, while “incredibly appreciati­ve,” he wouldn’t attend the induction ceremony. Owens never shared his reasons for staying away. Less than a month later, Owens again used social media to say he’d hold his own induction ceremony in Chattanoog­a.

“Getcha popcorn ready!” wrote

the man who once celebrated a touchdown with popcorn.

Owens said Friday in Chattanoog­a there’s a “flaw in that system” about how Hall of Famers are selected and he wanted to “make a stand” for future candidates. Owens, who wasn’t selected to the Hall of Fame until his third year of eligibilit­y, noted how grateful he was to accept this honor “right here where it all began.”

He’s been quite chatty on social media in the weeks leading up to his induction. Owens tweeted that he “wouldn’t have a PRO career if it wasn’t for Chattanoog­a (hash) THIS IS FOR YOU .” When asked why he’s bypassing the Canton ceremony, Owens tweeted that “I don’t need to be on their stage to do it. I’ll be fine & im

sure they will be too.”

Chattanoog­a remains a place where Owens is loved for what he accomplish­ed well before becoming an NFL star. Owens had 2,320 career yards receiving in college and also played basketball on two NCAA Tournament teams before the San Francisco 49ers selected him in the third round of the 1996 draft.

In the NFL, Owens strung together numerous antics — posing on the Dallas Cowboys’ star logo at midfield, engaging in sideline tirades — with five teams over 15 seasons. But his college coaches marveled at his work ethic and considered him fun to coach.

“First guy (on the field), last guy off,” former Chattanoog­a football coach Buddy Green said. “He worked hard, man. He tried to get better every practice. You’d put him on a special team, and he was the first guy down the field. He just loved

to play the game. He was great to coach. He worked as hard as anybody on the field, even harder probably.”

Mack McCarthy coached Chattanoog­a basketball during Owens’ years on campus and remembers a guy who could come off the bench and defend at any position.

“He could not have been a better teammate,” McCarthy said. “He couldn’t have been better to coach.”

Owens has a busy weekend planned for his return to campus.

He spoke to Chattanoog­a’s current student-athletes Friday morning and also took 35 area youths on a shopping spree . Athletic director Mark Wharton said the school will have a private dinner for him Friday night and estimates about 2,000 people will gather at McKenzie Arena for Owens’ induction speech Saturday afternoon.

Plans to celebrate Owens’ Hall of Fame career in Chattanoog­a

had been in the works since March. That’s when Wharton attended Owens’ induction into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame and heard some of the receiver’s stories from his college days for over an hour.

“From there, his team started saying fairly immediatel­y that he wanted to do something in Chattanoog­a round the Hall of Fame,” Wharton said. “I assumed — we all assumed (since) nobody’s not gone to Canton — we assumed and started planning for the weekend before. Then in May or so, Terrell notified all of us his desires to have it here.”

Owens’ decision to avoid Canton has been called a mistake by Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, Owens’ former boss who was inducted into the Hall of Famer last year. Several former players and Hall of Famers also have criticized Owens.

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