Morning Sun

Jim Brown remembered as ‘man among men’ during tribute

- By Tom Withers

On the last of his many visits to Jim Brown’s home in Los Angeles, Ray Lewis recalled the legendary running back being as powerful as ever.

As a feeble Brown, in the final months of his life, slowly approached the Hall of Fame linebacker, Lewis braced himself.

“He said, ‘If I put this walker down, I still don’t think you can stop me,’” Lewis said.

No one stopped Jim Brown.

With dozens of fellow Hall of Famers dressed in their signature gold jackets in attendance, Brown’s extraordin­ary life — on and off the field — was celebrated Thursday during a moving tribute for a man NBC broadcaste­r and event emcee Mike Tirico perfectly described as “one of a kind, unique, complex and different from anyone you ever met.”

Brown, who died in May at the age of 87, was remembered for not only being one of America’s greatest allaround athletes and one of the top players in NFL history, but a visionary for social change, his work with gang members in Los Angeles and an ability to unite people from different background­s.

The touching 90-minute event drew a varied crowd featuring a Who’s Who of football royalty with Emmitt Smith, “Mean” Joe Greene, Ronnie Lott, Barry Sanders mingling with Commission­er Roger Goodell, comedian Dave Chapelle and rapper Flava Flav.

Following a video highlighti­ng Brown’s many accomplish­ments during nine seasons with the Cleveland Browns — eight-time Allpro,

three-time MVP and 12,312 yards rushing — along with his work during the civil rights movement in the 1960s, Browns owner Jimmy Haslam was the first of six speakers.

“He transcende­d football,” Haslam said. “Jim got into the entertainm­ent business as an actor, and then Jim was into social justice before there was social justice.”

Rudolph “Rockhead” Johnson, a former California gang leader who spent much of his early life in prison, followed Haslam and expressed his deep love for Brown.

“He is the reason why I am in front of you and alive,” Johnson told the audience, which included hundreds of fans who waited in long lines to pay their final respects to Brown, who retired after the 1964 season.

Johnson recalled that after meeting Brown, he was invited to the star’s home and went there carrying a .357 magnum handgun. He also explained that Brown talked him out of seeking revenge after his 15-yearold daughter was murdered — on his birthday.

“And for the first time in my life, I fought my bad negative feelings and I went against my own neighborho­od,”

Johnson said. “I started crying in front of a man, and I’ve never done that before in my life. That’s how much he meant to me.

“Because of him and what he stood for and what he helped me understand about myself, it allowed me to be a man today, a responsibl­e father and hardworkin­g citizen in our society. But Jim Brown was every bit of a man. He was a man among men.”

Bob Arum told two remarkable stories about Brown.

The 91-year-old sports entertainm­ent maven was practicing law in New York, when Brown was the one who convinced him in 1965 to become a boxing promoter. The founder and CEO of Top Rank, Arum also recalled how it was Brown who organized the famed “Cleveland Summit,” when Muhammad Ali, Kareem Abdul-jabbar (then Lew Alcindor) and other prominent Black athletes met to promote economic empowermen­t.

Following Arum, singer Johnny Gill did a stirring rendition of Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come,” with his final words bringing many in the auditorium to their feet.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis speaks during a tribute to NFL player Jim Brown on Thursday, in Canton, Ohio.
SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hall of Fame linebacker Ray Lewis speaks during a tribute to NFL player Jim Brown on Thursday, in Canton, Ohio.

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