Texarkana Gazette

Cowboys’ Ware, Hawley elected to Pro Football Hall of Fame

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Former Dallas Cowboys defensive end DeMarcus Ware and linebacker Chuck Howley were named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Thursday night.

Ware and Howley were among the new members named during the 12th annual NFL Honors show. The Cowboy duo will be inducted into the hall in Canton, Ohio, this summer.

Ware played for the Cowboys from 2005-2013 before finishing his final three seasons with the Denver Broncos in 2014-16. He led the Cowboys in sacks for eight seasons, 20052012 and led the NFL with 20 sacks (2008) and 15.5 sacks (2010). He still holds the Cowboys career sacks record with 117. He was voted first-team All-Pro four times (2007-09, 2011); second-team All-Pro three times (2006, 2010, 2012) and selected to nine Pro Bowls (2007-2013, 2015-16). He was named to the NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 2000s.

Ware won Super Bowl 50 with the Broncos and ended his career with 138.5 sacks. Ware played on only one team with a losing record during his career and helped lead his teams to five playoff appearance­s.

Howley was a five-time All-Pro in 15 seasons with Chicago and Dallas with his biggest claim being the only player from a losing team ever picked as Super Bowl MVP. Howley won MVP after intercepti­ng two passes in Super Bowl V when Dallas lost to Baltimore, 16-13. He ended up on the winning side the following season when he two takeaways in a 24-3 win over Miami.

Howley was originally drafted by the Chicago Bears. After spending a couple of seasons with the Bears and missing a year recovering from injuries, he joined the Cowboys in 1961 and payed 13 seasons.

Howley was named All-Pro five times and is in the Cowboys’ Ring of Honor.

Joe Thomas gave fans of the new version of the Cleveland Browns something they could finally celebrate.

The six-time All-Pro offensive lineman will join lockdown cornerback Darrelle Revis as inductees into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on their first try, becoming the first Browns Hall of Famer from the team’s inglorious expansion era.

“It’s really special for me because the franchise has endured some really tough times,” Thomas said. “But those fans are so loyal and passionate, and they still show up and it still is their identity that they’re Browns fans. It’s great for all of Browns Nation.”

Since returning to the NFL in 1999, the Browns have had two playoff berths, one playoff win and the worst record in the league — including an 0-16 season in Thomas’ last year in the NFL.

Thomas and Revis join a new class of Hall of Famers that also includes return finalists Zach Thomas, Ronde Barber. Senior candidates Joe Klecko and Ken Riley, along with coaching candidate Don Coryell, also got voted into the Hall.

“I didn’t set out to be a Hall of Famer,” Barber said. “I was trying to make the team. I was trying to get on the field. All you can do is take your opportunit­y and run with it. And we all took our opportunit­ies and ran with it.”

The headliners of the class are Joe Thomas and Revis — the two firstround picks from the 2007 draft who took far different journeys to this ultimate honor.

Revis bounced around teams seeking his best opportunit­ies to win and thrive financiall­y, while Thomas never moved.

Picked third in the draft by Cleveland, Thomas stepped in as an immediate starter and never moved until a torn triceps ended his final season in 2017.

Thomas played 10,363 consecutiv­e snaps before that injury as one of the only dependable parts on one of the NFL’s sorriest franchises.

Thomas was a Pro Bowler in all 10 healthy seasons, a first-team All-Pro six times and a second-team selection two other years. But he never even made it to the playoffs a single time with the Browns.

Revis was always moving, whether it was following top receivers from one side of the field to the other as the game’s top lockdown cornerback of his era.

Revis’ best stretch came in New York with the Jets, where he was a first-team All-Pro from 2009-11 and finished second in Defensive Player of the Year voting in 2009 when he repeatedly shut down top receivers by sending them to “Revis Island.”

“I was probably the most nervous of anybody on the field,” Revis said. “You look at yourself in the mirror and say to yourself: ‘It’s either me or him.’ I had to stand up to the challenge. I took that responsibi­lity to take on that assignment and shut them down.”

Revis spent one year in New England, helping the Patriots win the Super Bowl in the 2014 season, and also played for Tampa Bay and Kansas City, along with a second stint with the Jets.

Ware, Barber and Zach Thomas all had longer waits before getting voted into the Hall. Ware was also a finalist last year, while Barber got in on his third time at this stage and Thomas on his fourth try.

Barber was a key cog to the Tampa-2 defensive scheme as a cornerback for the Buccaneers. He was a three-time All-Pro, led the NFL with 10 intercepti­ons in 2001 and won a Super Bowl the next season.

Zach Thomas was a fivetime All-Pro who spent 12 of his 13 seasons with Miami before finishing with one year in Dallas. He won Defensive Rookie of the Year in 1996, had at least 100 tackles in his first 11 seasons.

Coryell didn’t have the team success comparable to other coaches to get voted into the Hall, winning 111 regular-season games for the Cardinals and Chargers and never reaching a Super Bowl.

But his impact on the game with his famous “Air Coryell” offense in San Diego was transcende­nt as he took advantage of rule changes that opened up the passing game in the late 1970s and put together an offense that still influences the game today.

Klecko was a mainstay on the Jets famed “New York Sack Exchange,” earning Pro Bowl honors at nose tackle, defensive tackle and defensive end in a 12-year career that ended with one season on the Indianapol­is Colts.

Klecko was an All-Pro twice, including in 1981 when he unofficial­ly led the NFL with 20 1/2 sacks and finished second to Lawrence Taylor in the Defensive Player of the Year voting.

Riley’s 65 career intercepti­ons in 15 seasons with Cincinnati rank fifth highest in NFL history and second to Dick “Night Train” Lane’s 68 for players who were exclusivel­y cornerback­s.

 ?? ?? DeMarcus Ware
DeMarcus Ware
 ?? ?? Chuck Howley
Chuck Howley

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