Posted on 02/06/2016 5:50:46 PM PST by nickcarraway
Eddie DeBartoloâs journey from Youngstown, Ohio, to owner of the 49ers will reach its final destination just 60 miles from his hometown.
DeBartolo was elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday in a vote of the 46-member board of selectors on the eve of Super Bowl 50 at Leviâs Stadium, CSN Bay Areaâs Mindi Bach reported Saturday.
The enshrinement ceremony will take place on Aug. 6, in Canton, Ohio.
DeBartolo, 69, this yearâs lone nominee as a âcontributorâ was selected for the Class of 2016.
The latest group of Hall of Fame inductees, as selected during a meeting that lasted approximately nine hours at Moscone Center, is scheduled to be announced Saturday evening.
Former 49ers wide receiver Terrell Owens announced on Twitter that he fell short of the required vote during his first year of eligibility. Owens wrote:
"Unfortunately I did not make it. CONGRATS to the 2016 HOF CLASS. Thanks to ALL MY FANS for ur unwavering love & support."
Owens ranks second in NFL history with 15,934 receiving yards, third with 153 receiving touchdowns, and sixth with 1,078 career receptions.
Owens was certainly not passed over for his on-field performance. The voters discussed Owensâ pros and cons for 43 minutes, 12 seconds, according to Rick Gosselin of the Dallas Morning News.
He played his first eight seasons with the 49ers, but also spent short periods of time with Philadelphia, Dallas, Buffalo and Cincinnati over his final seven years in the NFL. Owens will have to wait at least another year.
DeBartolo is no stranger to waiting. He was a finalist for the Hall of Fame on three separate occasions before this year. DeBartolo took over ownership of the 49ers in 1977. He hired Bill Walsh in 1979, and his teams averaged 13 victories per season from 1981 to 1998 â not including the strike-shortened 1982 season.
During his time in charge, DeBartoloâs teams won five Super Bowls, 13 NFC West championships, advanced to the NFC Championship game 10 times and made 16 playoff appearances. The 49ers posted the highest win percentage in the 1980s and 1990s.
But DeBartolo likely fell short of the required votes in previous years due to a 49ers salary-cap violation in the late-1990s and the way his ownership ended with the 49ers. The NFLâs salary cap was instituted to level the playing field, in part, due to DeBartoloâs eagerness to attract and stockpile top players with his spending. Then-team president Carmen Policy and vice president Dwight Clark reached settlements with the NFL as part of the league's investigation into alleged salary-cap violations. The 49ers agreed to pay a $300,00 fine and surrender draft picks in 2001 and 2002.
DeBartolo's tenure with the 49ers ended in controversy in March 2000 when he reached an agreement with his sister, Denise DeBartolo York, to split their financial interests. DeBartolo York, and her husband, John York, gained permanent control of the football team, a racetrack in Louisiana and the Edward J. DeBartolo corporate headquarters in Youngstown. Eddie DeBartolo agreed to take real estate holdings and stock.
One year earlier, then-NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue announced a one-year suspension for DeBartolo for his role in a gambling scandal that resulted in DeBartolo pleading guilty to a felony for failure to report an extortion attempt from former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards.
Leading up to Saturdayâs selection, DeBartolo said he was truly humbled to be considered for the highest honor in the sport while acknowledging the complication of his exit from the NFL. But DeBartolo was wildly popular among his players and he is the only owner in NFL history with five Super Bowl titles.
âWhatever good I did in the past, whatever bad I did in the past, I mean, it all goes together,â DeBartolo said. âItâs like baking a loaf of bread. When it comes out of the oven, people say he deserves it or he doesnât deserve it.â
Hall of Fame officials instructed voters to not to weigh DeBartoloâs legal issues when considering his candidacy, sources told CSNBayArea.com. The voters discussed DeBartolo for longest period of time, 50 minutes, 33 seconds, according Gosselin.
A players owner.
What a joke. Eddie was convicted of bribery for giving Fast Eddie Edwards of Louisiana big bucks for a riverboat gambling license. He had to yield control of the 49ers to his sister.
Take him out of the hall and museum, and put him back as owner of the Niners. Get the Niners out of the dumps.
Amen!
Ping
Homoeo erectus gift ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZmv7y_goLk&list=PL7PQwq_CzOm5eAz-lOF4O_tumBG_YxoYa&index=36
You may be too young to remember the name, “John Mackey”. He played tight end for the Baltimore Colts during Johnny U.s playing days. He died a few years ago from Parkinson’s/Alzheimer’s/brain damage.
He said in the late 60s, “NFL games are not won on the field. They are won in the front office”.
Very profound and years before its time.
Crime pays again for Youngstown’s finest.
You need to check your facts, because they aren’t true. He was never convicted. He plead guilty to B.S. charges. He never received any license. And he was never forced by the league to yield control to his sister. He was suspended by the league for one year. He was supposed to come back, but he decided not to. The league had nothing to do with it.
Hope it is true
Eddie D. was a great owner
The Yorks.....not so much.....another Jeb who is a disaster
His name is actually Jed, not Jeb.
“Crime pays again for Youngstownâs finest.”
Well,,,,, that’s what Youngstown is all about!
Eddie D was a most beloved owner, by the players and fans alike. I wish he was still in control of the team.
Yes, and Jed York makes that feeling stronger.
ping
Thank you. Well deserved.
You missed the irony.
The Yorks don’t know how to spell. Their team stinks
“What a joke. Eddie was convicted of bribery for giving Fast Eddie Edwards of Louisiana big bucks for a riverboat gambling license. He had to yield control of the 49ers to his sister.”
Yeah, I lived in New Orleans when it became exposed that Bartolo was throwing bags of money into garbage bins so Edwards cronies could pick them up. Money was to ensure Bartolo’s company would get the last riverboat casino in the state.
He plea-dealed so he could be used to testify against Edwards so he could be thrown into the federal penitentiary.
Hall of Fame? should be hall of shame instead.
read post 19
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