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Wisconsin Athletic Director Barry Alvarez said he was “totally surprised” at being elected to the College Football Hall of Fame. The former Nebraska player rebuilt the Wisconsin program as coach, winning three Rose Bowls.


KENT SIEVERS/THE WORLD-HERALD


Football: Ex-Husker Alvarez is emotional over college Hall honor

Video: Howard, Alavarez elected to College Football Hall of Fame:



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NEW YORK (AP) — Barry Alvarez resurrected a Wisconsin program that looked hopeless on the field and off and went on to become the only Big Ten coach to win consecutive Rose Bowls.

Desmond Howard scored two of the most memorable touchdowns in the storied history of Michigan football and struck the pose that Heisman contenders have been mimicking since.

The program-builder and the game-breaker are now Hall of Famers.

Alvarez, Howard and the late Pat Tillman were among the 14 newly elected members of the College Football Hall of Fame announced Thursday by the National Football Foundation at a press conference at the Nasdaq Stock Exchange in Manhattan.

Alvarez learned of the honor while he was at the Big Ten meetings in Chicago.

“I was totally surprised — actually broke down,” he said. “The first thing you think about is all the people who have something to do with it.”

Alvarez played linebacker for Nebraska in the 1960s and later coached at Lincoln Northeast and Lexington High Schools.

He said three Hall of Fame coaches helped mold him. He played at Nebraska under Bob Devaney, then worked as an assistant under Hayden Fry at Iowa and Lou Holtz at Notre Dame.

When he arrived in Madison in 1990, the Badgers hadn't been to a Rose Bowl since 1963, and the football program was losing money and games (36 over the previous four seasons) at an alarming rate.

The bar for the Badgers was set low when Alvarez took over.

“Pat Richter, our athletic director, said if you can ever win six games, these people will think you hung the moon,” he said. “We've been competitive since 1992. So our people now, they expect you to be good.”

In 1994, Alvarez snapped Wisconsin's long Rose Bowl drought and led the Badgers to a 21-16 victory against UCLA. He added two more Rose Bowl victories in 1999 and 2000 and took on the role of athletic director in 2004. After two years of handling both duties, Alvarez stepped down as coach with a record of 118-73-4.

Howard, who won the Heisman Trophy in 1991, found out from his mother he'd made the Hall of Fame.

“I just knew it was something special,” he said recalling the phone call. “Just to hear those words and the way she said them let me know it was something she was very proud of.”

The speedy and diminutive receiver dominated the Big Ten in 1991 for the Wolverines, scoring a school-record 23 touchdowns and 138 points.

But two plays stood out above all.

In September against Notre Dame, Howard's diving catch in the end zone on fourth-and-1 helped beat the Fighting Irish.

Then to put an exclamation mark on his spectacular season, Howard returned a punt 93 yards for a touchdown against rival Ohio State. As he was being mobbed by teammates in the end zone, Howard lifted a knee high to his chest and jabbed out a stiff arm. And just like that, a college football tradition was born. The Heisman pose.

The details of those touchdowns might fade, and even the fact that Howard was a Super Bowl MVP for the Green Bay Packers in 1997 gets lost amid the memories of Brett Favre celebrating his only NFL title.

But no football fan forgets Howard's Heisman pose.

“That thing resonates with everyone,” said Howard, who now works for ESPN. “When we travel, all the college kids, they're chanting, ‘Do the Heisman.”'

Howard was the fourth pick in the 1992 draft by the Washington Redskins, but never reached the same stardom as a receiver in the pros that he did at Michigan.

But his 5-foot-10 frame didn't hold him back when he arrived at Ann Arbor from Cleveland as a tailback. He switched to receiver early in his career and finished with 134 receptions for 2,146 yards.

Tillman played linebacker for Arizona State from 1994-97 and gave up an NFL career with the Arizona Cardinals to enlist in the Army in 2002. He was killed while serving in Afghanistan in 2004.

The other inductees included defensive lineman Dennis Byrd of North Carolina State; center Ronnie Caveness of Arkansas; defensive lineman Ray Childress of Texas A&M; guard Randy Cross of UCLA; running back Sam Cunningham of Southern California; quarterback Mark Herrmann of Purdue; receiver Clarkston Hines of Duke; defensive back Chet Moeller of Navy; halfback Jerry Stovall of LSU; and linebacker Alfred Williams of Colorado.

Gene Stallings, who led Alabama to a national title in 1992, was the other coach elected to the Hall of Fame.

The newest class will be inducted in December in New York and enshrined at the Hall of Fame in South Bend, Ind., in the summer of 2011.


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