PAGE 16 THE BEHREND BEACON MARCH 17 2000 NATIONAL SPORTS Was he the best? Dan Marino retires with mixed reviews by Don Pierson Chicago Tribune March 13, 20( X ) CHICAGO - By record and reputa tion, Dan Marino retired Monday as the greatest passer in National Foot ball League history. If passers can he separated from quarterbacks, however, he leaves a legac, open to debate. He threw more passes for more completions for more yards and more touchdowns than anybody who ever lived. His quick release, strong arm, deep accurac>. and astonishing num bers made him the envy of his peers. Yet Marino never won a Super Bowl in his 17 seasons with the Mi ami Dolphins. He got to only one, in 1984, after the most extraordinary season in passing history, 48 touchdown passes. That ac complishment in only his sec- and pro season, an unprec edented avera,e of three touch down pitse, a ~ ,!aine, hay been approached only once, by Marino when hc threw .44 in his fouith v e,lr. 19s1) Thoso tau phenomenal scars established Marino as a legend for the duration of career in which he reached 30 touch- down pa , ,sc-, only one more season 19 1 )4I Marino took his team to the playoits in toot Ins 1 7 `,CaIIIIS. the IMlplun Ikl.l champi- 011i1111 in 1985 and 1992. .111 d >c a rccoi (I with tlic'illik) Il pity,c., 111 13 can- sccutiv e pla But the phiws' pos,l ~ eason record ith him tartine v..a 8-10. He spent his last tew cars in a desperate A in. and had to think twice hetore rejecting. an otter to join the Minnesota Vikin‘2s next season for ore last Clin "Everyone 11011Iti love to play for ever. but Mat •, impossible." Marino said before last season. "As long as We'k C got a chance to in and I feel like I can help, I \\ ant to play. But you never know aholli The circumstances around the team." XlltertheUulhhiti were eliminated, (2-7, Jack.onville. Nlarino again expressed lii, desire to return, hut without coining right out and saving it, the Dolphins didn't want the 38- year-old quartet hack an\ more. New coach Dave Wannstedt referred to the dilemma as — The Dan Thing.'' On the dio. Wannstedt replaced Jinun\ Johnson, he had this answer to a question about Marino: - Ah, you know w hat. I yeah, I mean, Dan had a toug.h \ ear because of some in juries :ind so forth . What his plans are for the future. I don't know." Marino pl.xed gulf last week with Dolphins' owner Wayne Huizenga in an attempt to smooth over xt, hat team mates felt NA as insensitive handling of a Miami ix on, and Marino is expected Elliott by Bill Plaschke I.os Angeles Times Niarch 15, 2000 SAN ANTONIO - Midway through the third quarter. the crowd sliding from the edge of its seats, the star tee tering on the edge of his nerves, Sean Elliott did the only appropriate thing. He performed another transplant. A basketball, taken from his right hand, fitted into a metal rim. A soaring slam dunk that rattled not only 26,708 screeching Alamodome fans, but medical and sports history. Elliott became the first professional athlete to play after an organ trans plant Tuesday, scoring his first and only points on that dunk, inspiring the San Antonio Spurs to a 94-79 victory over the Atlanta Hawks less than seven months after receiving a new kidney But this wasn't about a kidney. This was about a heart, which carried Elliott through 12 bruising minutes most basketball people never thought possible. He bounced off hard floor boards, ran through thick forwards, to swallow any hard feelings. His standing as a hero in the Miami corn munity for his charity work is impec cable, unaffected by losses or inter ceptions. Because of his efforts, there is a Dan Marino Center at Miami Children's Hospital, a legacy more important to many than his future Hall of Fame bust. When it comes to gauging Marino's standing among quarter backs, there are differences of opin ion. Former Bears coach Mike Ditka once said Marino would go down as the greatest player in NFL history, but Ditka's opinion might have been prejudiced by their common Univer sity of Pittsburgh background and his memory of Marino and the Dolphins ruining the Bears' perfect 1985 sea Green Bay Packers' general man ager Ron Wolf did not place Marino on his list of top 10 all-time quarter backs a year ago, when he ranked Denver's John Elway sixth. Marino and Elway were the last of the six first-round quarterbacks drafted in 1983 to retire. "His (Marino) problem is he never won the big one," Wolf said. "That's how everybody is judged." But Wolf didn't included five-time world champion Bail Starr on his list, Minnesota Vikings' pro scout Paul Wiggin, a former player and coach, also downgraded Marino "because I don't like the number of Super Bowls he's won." Marino's reputation among col leagues was better. When The Sport ing News ranked Marino 27th among all-time football players and sixth among all-time quarterbacks last No vember, former New York Giants' quarterback Phil Simms argued Marino should be "much higher." Simms said Marino's pure physi cal talent separated him from quar terbacks such as Joe Montana who benefited from a passer-friendly sys tem and a better team. shows 'em how he dented all common sense "I was just shocked. ... I couldn't even think about it ... it was a miracle," Hawk center Dikembe Mutombo said. "I ask myself, 'Why is he coming to the basket so hard?' Then the next time he comes even harder, and I get out of the way." This was also about eyes, those of Sean and older brother and donor Noel. Their gaze met during the na tional anthem with a look that nearly swallowed them both in tears. "It was breathtaking," said Noel, sitting in the courtside seats Sean had jokingly promised in exchange for the kidney. "It was overwhelming." This, too, was about hands, which his mother Odie laid on Sean before the game, reminding him that this come back ended where it began. "This," she said, "is a night for family." Finally, this was about what is probably best described as a soul. Or whatever it is that kept Elliott chug ging through open skepticism by his coach, lonely hours running stairs, and a December bout with pneumo- "Elway and Marino are completely different quarterbacks," Simms wrote. "It wasn't about the system with them. It was their physical ability to throw the ball like nobody else could." The NFL separates quarterbacks from passers in its "passer rating sys tem," a complex formula combining percentage of completions, touch down passes, interceptions and aver age yards gained per attempt that is supposed to enable statisticians to compare passers from different eras. By that measure, Marino ranks fifth all-time behind Steve Young, Mon tana, Brett Favre, and Otto Graham. But the formula includes the caveat: "It is important to remember that the system is used to rate passers, not quarterbacks. Statistics do not reflect leadership, play-calling, and other in tangible factors that go into making a successful professional quarterback." Wolf rejects the separation and judges quarterbacks solely on their ability "to make the right throw at the right moment," which is why he ranks Detroit's Bobby Layne, 106th in all time passer ratings, ahead of Marino as a quarterback. Layne won three championships. To George Young, NFL vice presi dent of football operations and a former Giants' general manager, rank ing the great quarterbacks is as impos sible and unnecessary as ranking five star generals. To him, greatness is earned by "the guys who create great anxiety before the ball is even snapped ;that's when you have a true great player." There is no doubt Marino gave de fensive coordinators and cornerbacks nightmares. Simms calls Marino's numbers "hilarious, so absurd they're funny." To put the numbers into perspective for fans accustomed to watching the Bears, Marino threw for more touch downs (420) and more yards (61,361) than the top five Bears quarterbacks of all-time combined. His 66 games of passing for at least 300 yards are nia that left him too weak to even walk to the bathroom. "I hope this gives people encour agement, I hope it helps them not to be afraid," Elliott said with a tired smile. "That dunk was probably more memorable than the Memorial Day Miracle." He was referring to one of the last times anyone had seen him play before Tuesday, his three-point shot in the final seconds that beat the Portland Trail Blazers in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals last spnng The Spurs used that dramatic win to launch them to an NBA champion ship while Elliott quietly was sinking under the weight of degenerative kid ney disease. He kept his problem quiet until af ter the playoffs, then underwent trans plant surgery Aug. 16. At the time, the Spurs assumed his career was over. All except Elliott, who looked dumb when he began his comeback, and dumber as he kept trying. "When we first started running wind sprints in November, he looked 23 more 300-yard games than all the Bears quarterbacks in the team's 80- year history have managed together. Barely mobile, Marino neverthe less was sacked only 291 times in 9,045 passing attempts because of quick feet and a quicker release. His 147 regular season wins put him one behind Elway on the all-time list. But only twice in 10 playoff seasons was his postseason passer rating higher than his regular season rating. Over all, it was 10 points lower. Said former teammate Bryan Cox, who faced him twice with the New York Jets last season: "His arm is, like, 20 years old. But his body is, like, 50 now." Marino and wife Claire have five children, including an autistic son and an adopted daughter. His desire to re- main close to his family was one rea son for turning down the Vikings. Another was the memory of one of his old Pittsburgh Steeler heroes, Franco Harris, limping out in the uni form of the Seattle Seahawks. By retiring a Dolphin, Marino avoided the incongruous career fin ishes of Johnny Unitas in a San Di ego Chargers uniform or Joe Namath in a Los Angeles Rams uniform. In five years, when he is eligible for Hall of Fame selection, Marino will join Sonny Jurgensen, Y.A. Tittle, Fran Tarkenton, and Dan Fouts as prolific passers without a championship. But he will go way to the head of that class. The sixth and final quarterback drafted in the first round in 1983, Marino quickly dispelled any doubt about his ability. Former coach Don Shula said he sat him down and told him what he had heard and what he expected. "He said, Coach, all I want is to be the best quarterback in the NFL and I'll do whatever you want me to do to be that.' He has," Shula said as early as 1984. terrible," teammate Steve Kerr re called. "But he kept showing up. Ev ery day he showed up. He kept tug ging on Pop's (Coach Greg Popovich) sleeve until he finally gave him a chance." On Tuesday, after purposely skipping what could have been his first game in New York, Elliott gave his home town fans a chance. A chance to cheer like their team won another championship. A chance to clutch their armrests in amaze ment. A chance to joyfully chant "We Want Sean" in the final minute of the game, as if their resting star was a beloved bench-warmer. Not to mention, it was a chance for Popovich to take it all back, all those times he said it would take more than a doctor's orders or a veteran's pleas to return Elliott to the floor. Take it back he did, putting Elliott in the starting lineup at the last minute in deference to last season. "It was a surreal experience," Popovich said. "It was just magic." It began 15 minutes before the game when Elliott walked to the court to a Tough NCAA panel by Andrew Bagnato Chicago Tribune March 13, 2000 Everything seemed to be falling into place even before the NCAA Di vision I men's basketball committee gathered in Indianapolis the first weekend of March to hammer out the tournament field. Cincinnati, perched atop the polls, was a lock for the No. 1 seed in the Midwest Regional. Duke, still click ing along despite losing four players to the NBA draft, was a gimme No. 1 in the East. Stanford looked like a solid No. 1 in the West, and either Michigan State or Ohio State would come out of the Big Ten tournament as the No. 1 in the South. But then Cincinnati center Kenyon Martin took a spill in Memphis. Stanford lost to Arizona. The NCAA lifted UCLA star Jaßon Rush's sus pension. And Arkansas and St. Louis, seemingly destined for NIT oblivion, charged out of nowhere to win the Southeastern Conference and Confer ence USA tournaments, respectively, and earn automatic berths. Faster than you can say "Valparaiso," the brackets were in shambles. "With the injuries, the suspensions, the tournament upsets, it was a phe nomenal weekend," said rookie chair man Craig Thompson, in his fifth year on the panel. "It seemed like every new game brought a new result that made us reconsider something we had just talked about. It was highly un usual." And highly controversial The committee handed No. 1 seeds to Duke in the Bast, Michigan State in the Midwest, Arizona in the West and Stanford in the South, then slot ted the Bearcats No. 2 in the South. Coach Bob Huggins took no con solation in being spared a weekend in Cleveland, where Cincinnati seemed headed as No. 1 in the Mid "It's ridiculous, totally ridiculous," Huggins said. "We must be the first team in history to be No. 1 in the RPI and not get a No. 1 seed." Said Thompson, commissioner of the Mountain West Conference: "The Ratings Percentage Index is some thing that is very overrated." Bracketologists often try to sift the seeds in search of a message. This year the committee made it clear that it pays to play the big boys. Strength of schedule was a big fac tor in selecting the top seeds, Thomp son said, and it helped DePaul, Mis souri and North Carolina sneak into the field while excluding Virginia, operates standing ovation. Noel Elliott, that is. He was followed by Sean, and the ovation grew louder, and more insis tent, and repeated itself every time Sean touched the ball or appeared on the video scoreboard. The game began, and Sean took a pass, dribbled toward the baseline, and promptly slipped and fell hard. The guy whose kidney he was car rying fell with him. "I was like, `Ohhhh,"' Noel said. "It was really strange. I couldn't even talk." But Sean stood up smiling, and that was that. Doctors who claimed the body's natural muscle and bone mechanisms would protect the kidney were one for one. Sean bounced around for the rest of his five-minute first half, picking up a rebound and an assist. Then, with 7:04 remaining in the third quarter, frustrated by an earlier missed layup, he dribbled around Roshown McLeod and flew. Sitting underneath the basket just steps away, Noel flew with him, leap- calls for selection Vanderbilt, Villanova and Bowling Green. Tulsa, which leads the field with 29 wins, is only a seventh seed because it loaded up on the likes of Arkansas-Pine Bluff and Centenary. "I was afraid I may have overscheduled," North Carolina coach Bill Guthridge said. But while the committee's empha sis on strength of schedule was clear, its decision to seed Arizona ahead of Cincinnati seemed a contradiction. Like the Bearcats, the Wildcats will be without their dominant cen ter in the tournament. Thompson said Arizona notified the committee that back problems would keep Loren Woods out of action. This came as a stunning injustice to Cincinnati, whose only losses be fore the Conference USA tournament had come in an upset by crosstown rival Xavier and by Temple, the sec ond seed in the East. "That's a historical thing those guys just did," Huggins said. "How do they know how good we'll be without Kenyon?" They don't. But the committee does know how good Arizona can be without Woods. The Wildcats knocked off Stanford and destroyed UCLA with Woods in street clothes. "There was a test there," Thompson said. The Wildcats also lost to Oregon and Oregon State, but the committee finally decided, unanimously, that Arizona was less of a question mark than Cincinnati. "When you lose a potential and probable player of the year, that's go ing to affect your team," Thompson said. "We did not have an opportu nity, other than one 37-minute span in one game, to judge how Cincin nati would play without Martin. And it was very difficult because that was such an emotional period." It's possible that the snub will in spire the Bearcats. It's also possible that they will repeat their history of early wipeouts. That won't be known until Cincinnati tips off with UNC- Wilmington on Friday in Nashville. Until then, hoop-a-holics have plenty to quarrel about. Anyone fill ing out a bracket in the next few days will appreciate what the selection committee went through. The uncer tainty may foretell a wild ride to the Final Four. "It brings back into the perspective of the whole college basketball land scape how college basketball is just so competitive," Thompson said. "It was a very difficult process this ing to his feet with the dunk and cheering. "To break the ice like that, I couldn't believe it," Noel said. "Amazing." Sean, as usual, agreed. "You dream about something like that," he said. "But it's not realistic." It is now. Lots of things are realistic now. A basketball player's message to transplant patients everywhere was The body part may belong to some body else, but the courage is still yours. Like Sean Elliott's sneakers, hope was everywhere. "Watching him, we were alt like, `Damn,'' eammate Malik Rose said. "That's all we could think. 'Damn!' " Walking off the floor to the locker room amid camera lights and blaring music and one final standing ovation Tuesday night, Sean stopped to en close Noel in a long, sweaty embrace. The brothers said nothing. The broth ers said everything.