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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, July 19, 2009

Holtz leads 21 into Hall of Fame


By TOM COYNE
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Holtz

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. — The only way Lou Holtz knows how to coach is all out.

That's why he couldn't speak much louder than a whisper last evening after coaching a group of former Notre Dame players for three days as they practiced for an exhibition game in Japan. It's also a big reason why he was among 21 people enshrined into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Holtz took over six struggling programs and turned them into bowl teams within two years. He led the Fighting Irish to their last national championship in 1988. Holtz said the key is to have a plan, to hold people accountable and to believe it can be done.

"You have to get people to make good decisions. Wherever you are in life, good or bad, it's because of the choices you make. Choose to succeed rather than fail. Choose to work hard rather than to loaf your way through it. We had a plan, a vision and we wouldn't compromise our core values," he said.

Among the others honored yesterday were former UCLA quarterback Troy Aikman, former Oklahoma State tailback Thurman Thomas, former Army quarterback Arnold Tucker and John Cooper, who coached at Ohio State, Arizona State and Tulsa.

Thomas, who still holds the Oklahoma State records for career rushing with 4,595 yards and went to four straight Super Bowls with the Buffalo Bills, joked his biggest accomplishment might have been keeping Barry Sanders on the bench for two years.

"I practiced real hard and kept giving my coach a lot of money," he said.

Former Syracuse quarterback Don McPherson, the Heisman Trophy runner-up in 1987, said being enshrined was a surreal experience.

"Because I don't see myself in the same class as some of the guys that are in the Hall of Fame, like this guy right here," McPherson said as former Arizona State offensive guard Randall McDaniel walked past. "It's fun just to be associated with these guys. I'm just a fan of college football. So for me, it's just fun to be around."

Former LSU tailback Billy Cannon was enshrined into the hall 26 years after he was first elected. He was selected for the Hall of Fame in 1983, but that honor was rescinded after he was arrested on federal counterfeiting charges. Cannon pleaded guilty and was sentenced to five years in prison in 1983. He served 2 1/2 years.

Cannon, who won the Heisman in 1959 and played on the national championship team in 1958, said he holds no grudges about being the only person to ever have his selection rescinded.

"I thank the people who voted for me initially, and I really thank the people who voted for me the second time," said Cannon, who is now the dental director at the Louisiana State Penitentiary.

Cannon didn't have the longest wait to get in, though. That honor went to Tucker, who went undefeated at Army, going 27-0-1 from 1944-46 playing with Heisman Trophy winners Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis, known as Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside.