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"Steel Curtain" Doomsday Golf Classic
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DC_Clone
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Post: #1
 
Though this might be of interest to some during this lull before the beginning of FOOTBALL. Post by Harry from the Mean Green board.
A good cause & names you'll recognize. Plus a great Mean Joe Green story.
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STEEL CURTAIN DOOMSDAY GOLF CLASSIC, Friday, June 25, 2004
Tangle Ridge Golf Course, Grand Prairie, Texas
Please consider joining the Steel Curtain Doomsday Golf Classic to
help raise money for scholarships.

The tournament will include such names as Hall of Famers "Mean" Joe
Green and Mel Blount, along with Dwight White, Ernie Holmes, LC Greenwood,
Jethro Pugh, Rayfield Wright, Chuck Beatty, Cedric Hardman, Ed "Too Tall"
Jones, and Preston Pearson.

Proceeds will benefit the UNT Dallas Campus Ron Shanklin Memorial
Scholarship Fund.

Please see the attachment for more details.


RON SHANKLIN ANNUAL GALA, Saturday, June 26, 2004
Adams Mark Hotel, Downtown Dallas

The Ron Shanklin Annual Gala will benefit the Boys & Girls Clubs of
Greater Dallas to help youth develop athletic ability in a positive
environment; the UNT Athletic Department where Ron played football and later became a coach; and your very own NT Exes Alumni Association. Dona tions will also be made to research, prevention, and awareness of colorectal cancer to combat the disease which claimed Ron's life.

Please see the attachment for more details.

Two links and a story

<a href='http://www.steelergridiron.com/history/art...lejoeroast.html' target='_blank'>http://www.steelergridiron.com/history/art...lejoeroast.html</a>

<a href='http://www.steelergridiron.com/history/art...lejoedraft.html' target='_blank'>http://www.steelergridiron.com/history/art...lejoedraft.html</a>

Not the Average Joe

On September 24, 1946 Charles Edward Greene was born in Temple, Texas. It
was there that Charley played sport pick-up games with his family and
friends. In time one game just interested him. It got him into North Texas
State College. It was there he had two majors. In the classroom it was
Physical Education, so he could earn a living. However, at 6'4" and 280 lbs
he also majored on the football field. In that classroom he excelled at
terror.

He was big, fast, smart, and had a heart for the game of football. All of
which lead him to be elected "All American" in 1968. All of which really
allowed him to earn a living being called a "tackle" the following year. The
pro scouts wanted him. Every team at the time wanted him. One got him and in 1969 he began his first of 13 seasons with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Just one more element in what became Pittsburgh's legendry "Steel Curtain".
A curtain that many say was the reason the Iron City players rolled into a
few championship games. If it is true the Steel Curtain was the cornerstone
of the team, then it is also true Charley was the heart of it. The heart
beat his way into four Super Bowls, six AFC Title games, and ten pro bowls.
Along the way he was twice named NFL Defensive Player of the year, and All
Pro or All AFC player of the year nine times. Along the way he played with
greats named Jack Lambert, Mel Blount, Andy Russell, Dwight White and many more. Those were the lucky ones on his side.
Some changes were made to reflect his style of playing. His jersey number
changed from 72 in his first year to twelve years as 75. His name changed
also during those playing days. He was no longer Charles Edward; he was now Mean Joe Greene. A name nobody disagreed with, except maybe his family.

However in 1980 even that changed. Mean Joe did a Coca Cola commercial with a kid. Mean Joe was not so mean, not when it came to kids. That commercial featured a mean grizzled NFL veteran who took some kindness from a little boy in the form of a soda drink. Smiles were exchanged and it seems America loved it. Mean Joe stirred up a new career calling. The commercial went on to win a "Clio" award. That would be advertising's equivalent of a Super Bowl Ring. Something Joe already knew about. TV Guide named it the seventh best television commercial of all time. The American Association of Advertising Agencies simply said it was the most memorable sports commercial of the time. The bottom line for the mean guy was it lead to numerous television and film appearances. He still did not have to fall back on to that Physical Education training to make a living.

Things worked out, and nobody can play pro football forever. There must be
life after ones playing career. In 1982 Joe left the football playing field,
and the Steelers. He worked as a color analyst for CBS-TV, and owned a few
restaurants in the Dallas, Texas area. It was good work and something many
people dream of. However, for Mean Joe Greene, something was missing. In
1987 two things happened to number 75. He entered the NFL Hall of Fame, and he shook hands with other members of the Steelers team on the payroll. He had become their new defensive line coach. He was now in the hunt for another Super Bowl Ring. He was now where he wanted to be.
From 1987 to 1991 he was on the field with the Steelers again. It was during
Greene's tenure that the Steelers were the AFC's top rated team in
giveaway-takeaway ratio. In addition Pittsburgh finished among the top five
AFC teams in run defense for four of those years. To cap off the stay in
1990 his guys ruled the NFL in total defense and pass defense. Then he moved onto the Miami Dolphins from 1992 till 1995. Under his guidance in 1994 they set a club record of allowing only 89.4 yards per game rushing. This ranked them second in the AFC and fourth in the NFL. Today Charles Edward Greene is in his seventh season with the Arizona Cardinals. Still looking for one more Super Bowl ring, still happy, still doing what he loves.
His Alma Matter, North Texas State College, changed names. It is now known
as the University of North Texas. As mentioned his playing number changed,
and so once again has his name. It is now Coach Joe Greene, Honey to his
wife Agnes, Dad to three grown kids, and anything but "Mean" to four
grandchildren.

Change has been good for Charles Edward. He is not you average Joe. He is a man, earning a living, his way.
06-22-2004 04:04 PM
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SwampHound Offline
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Post: #2
 
Quote:"Mean" Joe Green, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes, and LC Greenwood

Hell of a front four.
06-22-2004 04:30 PM
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DC_Clone
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Post: #3
 
SwampHound Wrote:
Quote:"Mean" Joe Green, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes, and LC Greenwood

Hell of a front four.
At North Texas Mean Joe played next to DE Cedric Hardman who earned All American honors in 1969, the year after Mean Joe. He was also a #1 draft pick by the San Francisco 49ers. He played in 6 championship games & Pro Bowls before retiring in 1981. A pretty tough twosome. 04-bow
06-22-2004 05:11 PM
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Post: #4
 
MeanGreen61 Wrote:
SwampHound Wrote:
Quote:"Mean" Joe Green, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes, and LC Greenwood

Hell of a front four.
At North Texas Mean Joe played next to DE Cedric Hardman who earned All American honors in 1969, the year after Mean Joe. He was also a #1 draft pick by the San Francisco 49ers. He played in 6 championship games & Pro Bowls before retiring in 1981. A pretty tough twosome. 04-bow
I remember Hardman playing with the 49ers very well, did not know he was a UNT alumnus. 04-cheers
06-22-2004 05:14 PM
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DC_Clone
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Post: #5
 
SwampHound Wrote:
MeanGreen61 Wrote:
SwampHound Wrote:
Quote:"Mean" Joe Green, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes, and LC Greenwood

Hell of a front four.
At North Texas Mean Joe played next to DE Cedric Hardman who earned All American honors in 1969, the year after Mean Joe. He was also a #1 draft pick by the San Francisco 49ers. He played in 6 championship games & Pro Bowls before retiring in 1981. A pretty tough twosome. 04-bow
I remember Hardman playing with the 49ers very well, did not know he was a UNT alumnus. 04-cheers
The 68-69 team had some really good players in addition to Greene and Hardman who went on to successful Pro careers.

QB Steve Ramey who set 7 NCAA passing records played for the Denver Broncos & New Orleans Saints.

WR Ronnie Shanklin went to the Steelers and was their leading receiver for several years until his career was cut short with an injury. The charity drive is in his memory and honor.

LB Charles "Hatchett" Beatty also played for the Steelers. He's now the Mayor of Waxahatchie, TX and on the UNT BOR.

Several others, names elude me, went to the pros from the 68-69 team. Pretty special group.
06-22-2004 07:35 PM
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Post: #6
 
I do remember Ramey also (vaguely) the other 2 I do not recall.
06-22-2004 07:38 PM
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