Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

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  • fordfixer
    Legend
    • May 2008
    • 10921

    Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

    Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

    By Jerry DiPaola, TRIBUNE-REVIEW

    Friday, August 7, 2009

    [url="http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/steelers/s_637164.html"]http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsbu ... 37164.html[/url]

    The noise streaming from the big mouth of the third-year cornerback finally became too much for Rod Rust to ignore.

    As the Steelers' defensive coordinator, Rust was talking to his players during a walk-through practice one day in 1989, trying to share wisdom gained from a coaching career that eventually spanned five decades. Meanwhile, one disruptive young man in the group just would not shut up.

    "I was disrespecting him," Rod Woodson said Thursday. "I was talking while he was talking. When we came off the field, he gave me a tongue-lashing."

    Luckily for Woodson, it didn't end there.

    "He asked me: 'Do you want to learn how to think like a coach?' I didn't have anything else to do, so he took me into a meeting room, and we broke down (film of opposing) offenses."

    Strangely, that confrontation became one of the defining moments in one of the greatest playing careers in NFL history.

    "He was the one coach who challenged me as a player," Woodson said. "Without him taking me into that meeting room by myself and showing me how to tackle offenses, I don't know what would have happened.

    "The green light went on. I realized what it took."

    From that moment, Woodson's career accelerated, coming to rest, finally, in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He'll be inducted Saturday in Canton, Ohio, along with players Bob Hayes, Randall McDaniel, Bruce Smith and Derrick Thomas and Buffalo Bills owner Ralph Wilson Jr.

    Woodson, 44, was elected in his first year of eligibility and will become the 20th Hall of Famer with Steelers ties. His presenter will be business associate Tracy Foster, a childhood friend and rival from Fort Wayne, Ind.

    After the '89 season, Woodson was named a first-team All-Pro cornerback, his first of six such honors in a 17-year career, and he played in his first of 11 Pro Bowls. Five years later — and 10 years before he retired — he was named to the NFL's 75th anniversary team.

    Woodson retired as the all-time NFL leader in interceptions returned for touchdowns (12) and yards (1,483), but his time in Pittsburgh wasn't always rosy.

    An All-American at Purdue, he was the 10th selection in the 1987 draft, but with a players' strike going on, he didn't sign a contract until November. He considered pursuing a career as a hurdler with an eye on the 1988 Olympics, and he was invited — but did not attend — the U.S. Olympic track and field trials. He did join the European track circuit, recording the fourth-best time in the world in the 110-meter hurdles (13.29 seconds).

    "I beat everybody, except (1984 Olympic silver medalist) Greg Foster," he said. "It would have been exciting to run in the trials, but I was a football player who ran track. When the strike was over and the league started up again, I knew I wanted to come back."

    And when he did, Woodson never stopped working.

    "He did his job, and that's the biggest difference that separates a lot of college players," said Steelers assistant head coach John Mitchell, who joined the team late in Woodson's time in Pittsburgh. "They don't understand it's a job. And you've got to get better at your job every day because somebody's trying to take your job."

    In the 1995 season opener, Woodson tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee while trying to tackle Barry Sanders. Out of respect to Woodson's work ethic, coach Bill Cowher saved him a roster spot.

    Sure enough, Woodson recovered in time to play nickel back in Super Bowl XXX against the Dallas Cowboys only four months after the injury. At one point, he broke up a pass to Michael Irvin and gleefully jumped up and pointed to his reconstructed knee as a badge of honor.

    "I got a little excited, but we still lost the game," he said.

    The Steelers incorrectly thought Woodson's injury and a sore shoulder stripped him of his special athleticism, and they did not offer him enough money — in Woodson's view — when he became a free agent in 1996.

    Woodson played seven more seasons with three teams, moving to safety and helping the Baltimore Ravens win a Super Bowl and getting there with the Oakland Raiders.

    All these years later, he said he doesn't hold a grudge against the Steelers.

    "They did the best thing for their organization, and I thought I did the best thing for me," he said. "Unfortunately, we parted ways. But if I wouldn't have left Pittsburgh, I wouldn't have gotten a ring."

    In retirement, Woodson lives with his wife Nickie and their five children in northern California. He is an analyst for the NFL Network, and on off days, he helps coach his 16-year-old son Demitrius' football team at Valley Christian High School.

    "I try not to step on too many toes," he said.

    Meanwhile, Woodson has taken up the cause of men's health, joining The Depend Campaign to End Prostate Cancer.

    Woodson said he didn't know much about the disease that took the life of Hayes in 2002 until he discovered it strikes one in four black men. He is encouraging men to get the prostate screening, which he did a few weeks ago.

    "It's an easy test," he said. "You get it done in the doctor's office in five minutes."

    For more information, visit Dependpca.com.

    Meanwhile, Woodson is studying for the ministry at a church in Dublin, Calif.

    So far, he hasn't done much preaching.

    "That's God's call," he said. "I will go where he leads me."

    Molon labe

    People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf. George Orwell

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  • Jooser
    Legend
    • Jul 2008
    • 5102

    #2
    Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

    I won't say it.....
    ​2019 MNFE CHAMPION

    Comment

    • ghettoscott
      Starter
      • May 2008
      • 735

      #3
      Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

      Originally posted by Jooser
      I won't say it.....

      ..say it! say it! say it!!!
      http://a345.ac-images.myspacecdn.com...95fe3d7f70.gif

      Comment

      • stlrz d
        Legend
        • May 2008
        • 9244

        #4
        Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

        I will go Wayne Brady on yinz.



        [url="http://www.videovat.com/videos/969/chappelle-brady.aspx"]http://www.videovat.com/videos/969/chappelle-brady.aspx[/url]

        Comment

        • Jooser
          Legend
          • Jul 2008
          • 5102

          #5
          Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

          ​2019 MNFE CHAMPION

          Comment

          • ghettoscott
            Starter
            • May 2008
            • 735

            #6
            Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

            ...there is only one Nation Rod.....
            http://a345.ac-images.myspacecdn.com...95fe3d7f70.gif

            Comment

            • Steelgal
              Pro Bowler
              • Aug 2008
              • 1286

              #7
              Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

              Loved the part in his speech when he thanked the Steeler Nation for booing him when he was a Raven and Raider. That he would have lost a little respect for us, if we didn't boo him in another uniform.

              Comment

              • pfelix73
                Hall of Famer
                • Aug 2008
                • 3458

                #8
                Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

                I never booed him. That's tacky on the fans part for booing Hot Rod. It wasn't his fault he left us. I blame it all on that Donahoe loser.

                Congratulations Mr. Woodson on your super career.

                6- Time Super Bowl Champions......
                IX X XIII XIV XL XLIII

                2012 MNF Executive Champion

                sigpic



                Comment

                • RuthlessBurgher
                  Legend
                  • May 2008
                  • 33208

                  #9
                  Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

                  Originally posted by Steelgal
                  Loved the part in his speech when he thanked the Steeler Nation for booing him when he was a Raven and Raider. That he would have lost a little respect for us, if we didn't boo him in another uniform.
                  We booed the laundry, never the man. It's like Pavlov's dogs...Steeler fans are conditioned to boo anything purple or silver & black.



                  and since we don't have the pre-made smileys...

                  Steeler teams featuring stat-driven, me-first, fantasy-football-darling diva types such as Antonio Brown & Le'Veon Bell won no championships.

                  Super Bowl winning Steeler teams were built around a dynamic, in-your-face defense plus blue-collar, hard-hitting, no-nonsense football players on offense such as Hines Ward & Jerome Bettis.

                  We don't want Juju & Conner to replace what we lost in Brown & Bell.

                  We are counting on Juju & Conner to return us to the glory we once had with Hines & The Bus.

                  Comment

                  • stlrz d
                    Legend
                    • May 2008
                    • 9244

                    #10
                    Re: Woodson set for Hall of Fame induction

                    Originally posted by pfelix73
                    I never booed him. That's tacky on the fans part for booing Hot Rod. It wasn't his fault he left us. I blame it all on that Donahoe loser.

                    Congratulations Mr. Woodson on your super career.

                    I blame Rod. The team knew he couldn't play corner anymore, asked him to move to safety and offered him safety money. Rod refused, went to the 49ers for a season, found out he couldn't play corner anymore, went to the Rats and moved to safety.

                    I love Rod as a player and I always will, but it will also always piss me off that he left because his ego wouldn't let him move to safety when the team that drafted him asked him to do so.

                    Comment

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