| FLORENCE, Ala.
-- Three legends of NCAA Division II football who went
on to earn a combined seven Super Bowl rings, will be honored
on December 8 as the second class of inductees into the
Division II Football Hall of Fame in Florence, Ala.
Former South
Carolina State University linebacker Harry Carson, former
Angelo State University defensive lineman Pierce Holt, and
former Alabama A&M University receiver John Stallworth
comprise the 2000 class of inductees into the Division II
Football Hall of Fame.
The three
inductees were selected by a 20-member Division II Football
Hall of Fame selection committee and will be inducted on
December 8 as part of a combined Harlon Hill Trophy and
Division II Football Hall of Fame Banquet at the Florence
Conference Center.
The initial
class of inductees in 1999 included running back Johnny Bailey
of Texas A&I (now Texas A&M-Kingsville), quarterback
Jeff Bentrim of North Dakota State and the late Walter
Payton of Jackson State University. The Division II
Football Hall of Fame is housed at Braly Municipal
Stadium, which has hosted the Division II Football
Championship Game since 1986.
The 28th
annual Division II Football Championship Game will be played
at Braly Stadium on December 9, 2000, and the Harlon Hill
Trophy presentation to the Division II Player of the Year, and
the Hall of Fame inductions are part of the Shoals area's
championship week activities.
The Division
II Football Hall of Fame is sponsored by Coca-Cola, The
Florence Utilities Gas Department, The Real Yellow Pages from
BellSouth and Northwest Airlink.
Carson was
a four-year letterman at South Carolina State from 1971-75.
He set a then school -record and Mid-Eastern Athletic
Conference record for sacks with 17 in 1975. He also set
school and conference records with 112 tackles as a senior.
He was named MEAC Defensive Player of the Year in both 1974
and 1975, becoming the first player to win the honor
back-to-back. He was All-State, All-MEAC, and
All-American in 1974 and 1975, and runner up for South
Carolina Player of the Year in 1975. He anchored
the 1975 team that set a still-standing NCAA record for points
allowed with 29 in 10 games. The team had six shutouts,
and his team's finished with a 23-6-2 regular season record
during his three years as a starter. Carson was drafted
in the fourth round of the National Football League draft
by the New York Giants in 1976. He went on to a stellar
13-year career that included nine Pro Bowl appearances
in 10 years from 1978-1987, with 1980 as the only season in
that period where he wasn't selected for the Pro Bowl . He was
voted All-NFL in 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1985 and 1986.
His 13 years with the Giants is the sixth longest period by
any player in franchise history and is just two seasons shy of
the record of 15 years by Phil Simms and Me Hein. He
played on the Giants' 1986 Super Bowl Championship team.
He was named to the Sheridan Broadcasting Network 100 Year
Anniversary Black College All-America Team, the Division II
Team of the Quarter Century (1973-96), and he is a member
of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Hall of Fame and the
South Carolina Athletic Hall of Fame.
Holt was
a four-year letterman as a defensive lineman at Angelo State
from 1984-87. He helped lead Angelo to Lone Star Conference
Championships in 1984 and 1987, and to the NCAA quarterfinals
in 1987. He was a three-time first-team All-Lone Star
Conference selection. In 1986 and 1987, he was chosen as
LSC Defensive Lineman of the Year, and first-team Kodak and
Associated Press Little All-America. Holt played
professional football from 1988 to 1995. He was a second
round draft pick in 1988 (39th overall pick) by San Francisco
49ers and played with them from 1988-1992, including playing
on the 1988 and 1989 49er Super Bowl championship teams. He
was awarded All-NFL Rookie Honors in 1988. During his
career with the 49ers, Holt played on three NFC Championship
teams. He was named NFC Defensive Player of the Week in
1989, with fours sacks vs. NY Giants. He was selected
All-NFC by Pro Football Weekly, All-Pro USA Today and
was an AFC-NFC Pro Bowl starting selection in 1992. He
also played with the Atlanta Falcons from 1993-95. He
was the highest paid defensive player in the NFL and the first
Falcon with a guaranteed contract at the time of his signing.
He was named to the Lone Star Conference All-Pro Team for the
decade of the 1980s and the LSC All-Decade team for the '80s.
He was voted the LSC Defensive Player of the Decade of the
'80s, and he was inducted into the College Football Hall of
Fame in 1997. Also in that year, Holt was named to the
Division II Football Team of the Quarter Century (1973-96).
In 2000 he was selected for the Lone Star Conference Hall of
Fame.
Stallworth
set numerous receiving marks at Alabama A&M in 1972 and
1973. At A&M he caught 103 passes, including 48
as a senior for 925 yards, and was a two-time All-Southern
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference pick. He played in the
Senior Bowl, following the 1973 season. He later had his
jersey number retired. He earned a B.S. degree in
management and later added a master's degree in business
administration with a concentration in finance.
Stallworth went on to become an All-Pro receiver in the
National Football League. From 1974-87 he set numerous
Pittsburgh Steeler records, including 63 touchdowns in a
career, 67 straight games with one or more pass reception, 25
games with 100 or more yards receiving, seven games in one
season with 100 or more yards receiving, 8,723 career yards
receiving, 1,395 receiving yards in a single season and 80
catches in a season. In addition to his 80 catches in
1984, he added 75 in 1985 and 70 in 1979 for the top three
performances in Steeler history. His 537 career catches
is also a record. He led the team in receiving five
times, was Steeler MVP in 1979 and 1984, Pro Bowl selection in
1980, 1983 and 1985 and was a member of the championship team
in Super Bowls IX, X, XII and XIV. He was twice chosen as the
Steelers' Most Valuable Player and was named Dapper Dan Man of
the Year in 1984. He was also named to the All-Time Steelers'
team in 1982 and he was selected Vector's Sports Man of the
Year in 1987. He was voted to the Senior Bowl Hall of
Fame and the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1989. In
1997, Stallworth was named to the Division II Football Team of
the Quarter Century. Stallworth, a native of Tuscaloosa,
Ala., was born on July 15, 1952. He has been honored with John
Stallworth Days in Huntsville, Ala., Tuscaloosa, Ala., and Los
Angeles, Calif. He serves as President of Madison
Research Corporation - an aerospace engineering company in
Huntsville.
Tickets for
the Harlon Hill Trophy and Division II Football Hall of Fame
Banquet can be purchased at the Shoals Chamber of Commerce at
764-4661. Tickets are $35 each or $250 for a table of
eight. Contact -- Shirley Tucker.
The inductees
into the Division II Football Hall of Fame were selected by
a nation-wide panel comprised of media representatives, sports
information directors and current and former collegiate
administrators. To be eligible for consideration for the
Division II Football Hall of Fame, a player must have competed
at least two years in Division II football since the division
was created in 1973. A player becomes eligible 10 years
after his last year of intercollegiate competition. Players
who are still competing on the professional level are not
eligible until after they retire. Coaches and other
persons associated with Division II football will become
eligible for consideration beginning in 2002. The
initial ballot for the Division II Football Hall of Fame was
comprised of players nominated for the Division II Team of the
Quarter Century in 1997. The Division II Football Hall
of Fame has a potential pool of 278 schools to draw from.
NCAA Division II football began in 1973 and currently has a
membership of 156 schools competing in football. There are an
additional 122 schools that have competed in Division II at
some point since 1973. |