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Can a Man Will Himself Into the Hall of Fame?

Star-divide

He was arguably the hardest working man in the NFL during his playing days. He wasn't drafted and had to work on the practice squad and special teams for the better part of 2 years before he saw meaningful playing time. He never missed an off season workout in 12 years, not a single one. He wasn't showy. He wasn't a me-first player. He played his last few years with serious hip pain (which eventually caused his retirement). He just went out and did his job and did it well. As long as the team was winning, he was happy.

Rod Smith is exactly the kind of football player that deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. He has the stats, but he also has the intangibles that should not be overlooked.

First, the stats:

His first reception in the NFL was a game winning touchdown to beat the Redskins (over Hall of Famer Darrell Green, I might add). He is only 1 of 2 wide receivers that have caught 70 passes in 9 consecutive season, The other WR to do so? Jerry Rice. Smith is the only undrafted free agent to have surpassed the 10,000-receiving-yard mark (only 24 WRs total have that). He is ranked 12th in NFL history in career receptions (849) and 16th all time in receiving yards (11,389). He has the most catches, receiving yards and touchdown receptions (68) of any undrafted wide receiver in NFL history. He had 8 seasons of at least 1,000 receiving yards. He made the Pro-Bowl 3 times and led the league in receptions in 2001. 6th player in NFL history to have 100 receptions against at least three teams. One of seven players in NFL history to record back-to-back 100-catch seasons (2000-01). All those taken together are better than most WRs in the Hall of Fame.

Oh, and he did all that on a run first team. Speaking of run first, unlike a lot of those "me-first" WRs, Rod took pride in being the best blocker he could for the team. The Team, that's all that mattered to Rod. His former teammates spoke out when his retirement was announced, and what they said speaks to the kind of football player Rod was.

Jake Plummer:

"Rod Smith was one of the best all-around players I played with in the NFL -- and I only got play with him when he was too old and too slow (laughing). He was the undisputed leader of the team, which took a lot of pressure off of me. The standard Rod set was high and he led by example. The game will miss a player like Rod Smith."

"Probably one of the most impressive things I've ever seen him do was, in my first year there, I had just gotten hurt and we didn't have a back up for a couple of days. So they had him take 7-on-7. I think he was 6-for-6. And it wasn't like he was dumping to the back or hitting the checkdown. He was throwing a skinny route, dead on. He'd throw a go-route, he threw an out-route. I was thinking, 'Good God, he'd be good enough to take my job if he spent a year working on it.' It was sick."

"Why I felt so good around him is physically he didn't look like anything. He'd walk kind of sideways. He sometimes had this high-type voice. I mean he didn't look like a professional receiver when you put him next to Terrell Owens. But the things he didn’t do well he worked on. It's hard to pick between them but Rod and Larry Centers had the two best sets of hands I've ever seen."

Keith Burns (who entered training camp with Rod in 1994):

"He knew he was willing to do anything and everything he had to do to make the team. It was a pact we made during our rookie orientation, that we were here for work. It was good to meet new guys, new friends, but when we leave here you never know what's going to happen."

John Elway:

"He was not only a great player, but a great teammate. He was a guy that was great for the city, great for the organization and a guy that worked his tail off. I mean, the guy came in as a free agent. It shows you what he's all about. He was not only a great football player, but a class act.

He was a guy you could rely on week in and week out."

Broncos owner Pat Bowlen:

"You are the greatest player next to John [Elway] to play for me. And if ever get anybody like you are like John again, I am very fortunate."

Coach Mike Shanahan:

"Rod is the only person I've been around on a consistent basis, day in, day out, that never cared about his stats. All Rod Smith talked about was winning. When you have a guy that talks about winning consistently, regardless of any number of catchers or any honors, anyone who is able to influence the locker room like he has, then you have a chance to do something special."

That statement by Coach Shanahan is why Rod probably won't get into the Hall of Fame, yet it is exactly why he deserves it. In Superbowl 32, Rod didn't have a catch, but was he angry about it afterwards? Hell no. He was happy that the team won, he was in the game, blocking and still running routes. He got his catches and yards the next year in Superbowl 33 with 5 receptions for 152 yards including an 80 catch for a TD, but he was more excited that the Broncos won again. Rod Smith, in his 11 years, had 118 wins. There is only one other player that has that many wins in an 11-year time frame, that's Hall of Fame worthy.

The Hall of Fame probably won't call his name. I am under no illusions about that. The media are the ones who decide who gets in or stays out. They are the same ones who like the soap-operas of the Terrell Owens, Randy Mosses and Chad Johnsons in the league, they value flash and style over winning. They favor the individual stats on the ultimate team game. You give me the choice of any receiver in their prime and I'm taking Rod Smith first. He'll catch, he'll block, he will never take a play off if he isn't getting thrown the ball that down, he'll play special teams if asked. And he will work as hard as he can at everything without complaint. And we will win.

This is a Fan-Created Comment on MileHighReport.com. The opinion here is not necessarily shared by the editorial staff of MHR

11 recs  |  Comment 24 comments

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If a man were able to will himself into the hof then that man would have been

Floyd Little.

It is unfortunate, but the reality is that Rod Smith will be enshrined not in Canton but at Mile High Stadium. The Ring of Fame is our hall of fame and Rod Smith was one of the greatest men to ever put on a Bronco uniform.

I rec’d your post anyway though. ;)

If God is not a Bronco fan, then WHY are sunsets Blue and Orange? - Jon Tollerud 5/22/08
The Quest ~ TSG 5/19/08

by Tim Lynch on Jul 25, 2008 5:14 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

Much like Randy Gradishar too

If Rod or Randy or Floyd played in NY, they would easily be in the hall of fame (I did capitalize it in the piece on purpose, but won’t in the comments), and that shouldn’t happen.

by Darin H on Jul 25, 2008 5:17 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Well ...

You got to keep the rings in mind. Little and Gradishar were also hurt because they never won a title and the AFC was generally weaker than the NFC at the time.

Rod has a better case, but I still agree that the anti Bronco Hall will keep him out.

Go So Cal. I am the bigger one.

by amirebram on Jul 25, 2008 5:25 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

But its not the Hall of Rings

Plus Andre Tippett is going into the HOF and he never won a ring also. So I dont buy that argument. I just dont think Rod will make it. Its friggin sad and makes me mad. Floyd and Randy should be in, especially RG. He was a stud, during the reign of the Steel Curtain and when the faders were real good. RG stood out. SIGH

by broncfanstuckinsd on Jul 25, 2008 5:36 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

I didn't say it's right ... But believe me, it has an effect.

It isn’t right but “They” count it. That’s just the way these guys think.

That’s not to say that people who didn’t win a Super Bowl don’t get in. The Vikings and Cheifs have about 7 Hall of Famers each, and they have one super bowl between the two… but those guys had to stand out a bit more to be selected.

I think it is obvious that being on a good team helps

Go So Cal. I am the bigger one.

by amirebram on Jul 25, 2008 7:12 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

I get it

But too me those 2 guys deserved the HOF. Gradishar over Tippett definately. Plus RG lead the NFL tackles each year, plus the 1978 NFL Defensive player of the year. That 1978 Defense was as every bit as good as the 1977 team. Plus them and Pitt are the fst 2 teams to hold opponents under 200 points in a16 game schedule. They allowed 198. It would have been less if the last game of that season had meant anything. As it ended up they lost to Pitt 21-17. Norris Weese screwed up the game. 5 seconds left on the Pitt 2 or 3 and no timeouts he calls a run audible. WTF? Against the #1 rush d that year.

Plus what Little did on crappy teams is a testament into itself. But I do agree with you somewhat. I think the voters need to look at what a player did and consider how good or bad the teams they were on.

by broncfanstuckinsd on Jul 26, 2008 11:10 AM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Did you see the Football Outsiders recent work on HoF?

They were actually inspired by one of Guru’s posts about the Bronco’s soccess and the HoF … They name all the names we want. You should check it out. Guru has it posted in the FanShot section.

Go So Cal. I am the bigger one.

by amirebram on Jul 26, 2008 10:19 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Thx

I really like them and pro football reference.com PFR had an article not too far back where it ranked the 49ers best players, and lo and behold Steve Young was ranked in front of Montana. Which I agree with. Plus I never ever thought Montana was the best QB in the NFL history. I say Elway. Heck I think Otto Graham was a better QB than Montana

by broncfanstuckinsd on Jul 27, 2008 2:25 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Except they forgot Floyd Little.

Thank you Zappa for reminding them.

If this be Hell, let us make the most of it!

by Trinidad Jack on Jul 29, 2008 2:20 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Yea, the rings matter when stats are weak for other teams.

Teh argument against Floyd Little was that he had the stats, but where are the rings. Against Rod Smith it will be, sure he has the rings…but his stats aren’t good enough.

I am getting angry…avoiding this topic for a while. :)

If God is not a Bronco fan, then WHY are sunsets Blue and Orange? - Jon Tollerud 5/22/08
The Quest ~ TSG 5/19/08

by Tim Lynch on Jul 25, 2008 5:36 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

call me an optimist (which I am), but...

I think we might all be pleasantly surprised in 5 years.

by tunga77 on Jul 25, 2008 5:38 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

I think we need to point it out, too

We need to keep Rod’s name around until he gets in. Make sure that the biased media people know about him. The way he played the game, his stats and his rings.

by Darin H on Jul 25, 2008 5:52 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

I think if Rod

were to keep a place on the team , whether it be tutoring B. Marsh or a similar small role it would keep him and his name in the press ( lets face it -the HOF committee have overlooked alot of Broncos) and like you say Darin -we need to talk him up also . Good Post.

by okiebroncosfan on Jul 25, 2008 9:39 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

He may be there already

In this article from the Post Kiszla says that Rod accompanied Marshall to NYC to visit the Commish, and has opened his home to him for film study.

Perhaps not the official position some of us have wanted, it will certainly keep the Rod Smith legacy intact, if not grow it. Hopefully that ups his chances with the HOF.

by jonahsilas on Jul 26, 2008 12:31 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Great Post Darin

Highly recommended!

What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matters compared to what lies within us. - Emerson

by firstfan on Jul 25, 2008 6:57 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

I'm recommending it

If this be Hell, let us make the most of it!

by Trinidad Jack on Jul 29, 2008 2:21 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Darin, What a great post.

What a great compliment to the great player we love. I watched his retirement at the Broncos web-site and just the memories make me blubbery again.

He was such a great person and maybe that (along with the stats) will send him to the Hall.

If the NFL continues to stress character, and with the number of strange characters this game seems to attract, five years from now Rod could be an icon of example. This will only happen if Rod continues a life involved with football-if he does I know it will be with us-I hope in some compacity that he does.

Thanks again for the great post!

by Mike Clark on Jul 25, 2008 9:38 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

Thanks Darin

That’s a wonderful post. Rod Smith was one of a kind – I’m thrilled that he will be mentoring Marshall. The big young guy needs a close, mature presence to tutor him and guide him and no one, no one could do better than Rod Smith.

Think where man's glory most begins and ends,
And let me say my glory was I had such friends
-Yeats-

by Emmett Smith on Jul 26, 2008 6:53 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

Thanks for the kind comments and the rec's everyone

Maybe the more we talk about the Broncos getting screwed out of deserved hall of fame consideration, it’ll make the media think about putting more in. Can’t hurt I guess. I’d love to see #80 in Canton someday!

Owning the Patriots since September 9, 1960

by Darin H on Jul 28, 2008 4:37 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

I willed myself

to the USS Cochrane (DDG-21) Drinking hall of fame. It took some work but by the end of Oct 1990 I was inducted. Took many a beers and lots of practice so to speak

by broncfanstuckinsd on Jul 28, 2008 4:52 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

I'm sure you did our nation proud.

If this be Hell, let us make the most of it!

by Trinidad Jack on Jul 29, 2008 2:22 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

Plus

all the great stories I cant repeat here, Not too mention the ones that I cant remember and was told about the next day

by broncfanstuckinsd on Jul 29, 2008 2:33 PM MDT reply actions   0 recs

We'll have to hear those someday.

If this be Hell, let us make the most of it!

by Trinidad Jack on Jul 29, 2008 2:40 PM MDT up reply actions   0 recs

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