Posted on 08/07/2006 7:45:24 AM PDT by 7thson
CANTON, Ohio When you carry a burden, sometimes you hold on just a little longer.
Former NFL quarterback James Harris lived that as a player in the 1970s. Harris, a Pro Bowler in 1976 with the Los Angeles Rams, was the first black man in the modern era to start an NFL regular-season game and the first to lead his team to the playoffs.
Harris endured the sleights about lacking intelligence for the position. He sometimes reacted in anger. Mostly, he studied and studied.
And studied some more.
You never wanted to give anybody even the slightest room to think you couldnt play because you lacked intelligence, said Harris, who is now the vice president of pro personnel for the Jacksonville Jaguars. Youd study a little longer and youd hold the ball just a little longer when you were out there, just to make sure you did it exactly right.
Like Harris with a ball in his hand, Warren Moon held onto his dream when others said he should drop it. In 1978, he ignored NFL scouts who told him to give up being a quarterback and headed to the CFL to hone his craft for five years. On Saturday, Moon became the first black quarterback of the modern era to enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Appropriately, only minutes after his acceptance speech, Moon spied Harris and Doug Williams and called them over for a photo and the three had a warm embrace.
As great as this moment was for Moon individually, he didnt get here simply on resolve and talent. Moon walked through the door after men like Harris and Williams broke the barriers.
A lot has been said about me as being the first African-American quarterback [elected to] the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Moon said. Its a subject that Im very uncomfortable about sometimes only because Ive always wanted to be judged as just a quarterback. But because I am the first and because significance does come with that, I accept that. I accept the fact that I am the first.
But I also remember all the guys before me who blazed that trail to give me the inspiration and the motivation to keep going forward Like James Harris, who is here today.
Moon also mentioned the likes of Williams, Willie Thrower, Marlin Briscoe, Randall Cunningham and Vince Evans. But with Harris, there is a slightly different connection.
Harris was the Rams' quarterback when Moon was growing up in Los Angeles and eventually ended up at the University of Washington. Harris was an idol, a big pocket quarterback with a cannon arm. Unlike so many black men who were dismissed as merely athletes, Harris was purely a quarterback.
Sometimes it was hard to deal with all the things that people would throw at you, Harris said. But you have to focus on making your dream happen You look at all those guys who were so good at the high school and college level when I was coming up who never got a chance. They worked hard to enhance the chances for the guys who followed.
In turn, Moon worked at his career. Five years in the CFL made him a hot commodity in the NFL when he finally got his chance. He then spent 17 years in the NFL, playing until he was 44.
Moons career ended in somewhat vagabond fashion as he hopscotched from Houston to Minnesota to Seattle and finally Kansas City. Unlike fellow inductee and quarterback Troy Aikman, Moon didnt get a chance to be a symbol in his city.
But over Moons career, the landscape has changed. There was no better evidence of that than when Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb, who is on a Hall of Fame path, answered questions after Moon was done.
Like Moon, McNabb was told he might be better off playing another position. The difference is that was coming out of high school. By the time McNabb got through the college ranks, there were no more questions.
I stuck with it and proved those people wrong, McNabb said.
But it certainly helped that others like Moon stuck it out before him.
They also fail to mention he was drafted and played first with the Buffalo Bills. He was a pro bowler but in 1974 not 1976. This is according to NFL Reference - http://www.pro-football-reference.com/players/HarrJa01.htm.
The writer seems to have forgotten completely about Joe Gilliam. I wonder if being a drug addict had something to do with that. I remember Gilliam because he would throw the screen pass at 10G's.
Again, the attempt to pass off McDrabb as HOF material. Maybe if he sticks in it as long as Moon. I cannot stand how the league and sports writers try to pass off McDrabb as the next Joe Montana. One of the most overrated players in the NFL today. Of course, just my honest opinion.
This stuff gets old.
I watched Harris play in the 70's, and like the majority of people, could have cared less whether he was black, purple, or green.
Couldn't agree more. He's a very talented player. He is able to pull out great "clutch" plays using passing and running/strength skills. However, as great quaterbacks go, he's no Montana, Aikman or Marino. Moon and Williams were much better pure quaterbacks.
The PC media makes me sick with their constant pandering and sycophantism.
I guess I was not clear. I am not debating black or white QBs. I was trying to point out the sloppy and inaccurate writing. The author makes it seem blacks did not play in the NFL until Harris came along. And he got his pro bowl stat wrong. And going through the list of black QBs, he omits Joe Gilliam.
And I also think Steve McNair was better than McDrabb! He was inches from winning a SuperBowl. His team was down and instead of puking in the huddle and choking, he marched his team down the field. Only a fantastic, game-saving tackle made Kurt Warner the MBP and not Steve McNair.
Sorry - I wasn't saying you were debating that issue - I was just commenting on the article. Not only is it full of inaccuracies, as you point out quite well, but it is the same old, tired race stuff that gets so very old.
The MSM has been going nuts with this 'first black QB' nonsense. Enough already! Moon was a great QB (although he did have some domestic issues....).
Check this out. Peter King, the AlGore-loving writer from SI.com said the he was not going to even vote for Moon to be in the HOF until some sportswriter from the Houston Chronicle presented Moon's case.
Hmmm. Statistics and should he be in the HOF aside, if a non-AlGore lover writer made the same admission he'd be called a racial bigot for sure.
Ya think?
As far as QB's go... I cannot understand why Moon or Aikman are in before either Ken Stabler or Ken Anderson.
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