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TOM FLORES
Tom Flores, a
gradate of Sanger High School, in his hometown of Sanger, California, was a
three-sports letterman: Football, Basketball, and Baseball. Tom captained
all three teams his senior year. The Sanger football stadium is named in his
honor.
In 1956, Flores transferred to the
College of Pacific (now University of the Pacific) in Stockton, California,
where he competed in football and baseball. As a senior, he ranked fourth in
the nation in total offense and sixth in passing efficiency. Flores was
drafted and released by the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian League in
1958. In 1959, he tried out for the Washington Redskins, but a shoulder
injury spoiled the effort.
In 1960, Tom signed with the
Oakland Raiders, and has spent 35 years in the National Football League. He
spent 10 seasons with the Oakland Raiders (1960-61, 1963-66), the Buffalo
Bills (1967-68), and the Kansas City Chiefs (1969-70-). He led the AFL in
completion percentage (54.0) and fewest interceptions (12) in 1961,
finishing second to the Houston Oilers’ George Blanda in passing.
In 1962, he led the Silver and
Black to a 10-4 record. On December 22, 1963, Flores passed for six
touchdowns against the Houston Oilers, a Raiders’ record that still stands
today. Tom finished his six seasons with the Raiders, having thrown for 93
touchdowns. He played two s
Flores served for 12 years as NFL
Head Coach with an overall record of 105-90-0. He was an assistant coach
with the Buffalo Bills in 1971. and the Oakland Raiders from 1972-1978.
Flores was appointed head coach of the Raiders in 1979 and stayed with them
for nine years, where he captured three AFC Western Divisions titles (1982,
1983 and 1985). He served as President/General Manager of the Seattle
Seahawks from 1989-1994.
Tom
Flores is one of only two people in NFL history, along with former Chicago
Bear player head coach Mike Ditka, to have a Super Bowl ring as a player
assistant coach and head coach. His four Super Bowl Rings place him in the
company of a prestigious group of NFL players and coaches.
RAY NORTON
Ray Norris, a
native of the Bay Area, got himself noticed while he ran track for San Jose
State in the late 1950’s. While he was there, he obtained 4 world records in
the 100 meters, 200 meters, 100 yards, and 200 yards. And unlike the
athletes of today, his career was finished at the age of 22. Ray held the
title of the “World’s Fastest Human.”
He participated in the 1959 Pan
American Games, where he won the 100 & 200 and anchored the leg of the
winning 4/100-meter relay team. He was a member of the 1960 Rome Olympic
team. He was the National USA Champion in the 100 & 200 for two consecutive
years.
Upon his return to the United
States, he was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers and joined the team and
made his mark playing professional football. He would stay busy throughout
the year, by running track clinics in the off-season & eventually training
several athletes.
The 1968 100-meter Champion Jimmy
Hines and several Olympic athletes were his students over his wonderful
career. He till works with athletes that have made the Olympics, Pan
American and National teams. Ray Norton has conducted free track clinics
throughout the United States to expose youths 7-8 years old of the
importance of participating in sports. He feels the experience will create
lasting impression while they build relationships.
He continues to conduct workshops
in the Maryland, Washington D.C. area, the Midwest and other parts of the
country. He also finds time to conduct workshops and seminars using athletes
from UC Berkeley and Stanford to assist with the training.
Ray
Norton resides in the Bay Area and remains active in his community. He works
with youth organizations and the 49ers Alumni Association. Because of his
love for Track & Field, he can’t leave it behind, so he is currently working
with several Olympic track hopefuls, in hope that they can run 100 meters in
Ray Norton’s shoes. He is also sought out for autographs and travels
throughout the United States for that purpose.
WILLIAM (BUBBA) PARIS
William H. Paris Jr. better know to
us as “Bubba” Paris, hails from Louisville, Kentucky, where he attended
DeSales High School and was team captain and MVP. He attended the University
of Michigan where he played for Bo Schembechler. While playing for Michigan
they won two Big Ten Titles, a Rose Bowl Championship, and a Blue Bonnet
Bowl Championship.
He was a four-time letterman, and
All-American, two times All-Big Ten and Academic All District. He also
played in two college All-Star games the Japan and Hula Bowls.
In 982 he was the San Francisco
Forty-Niners first draft choice. He played with them for nine years, eight
of which he started at left tackle. In those nine, years, they won three
Super Bowl Championships, eight Western Division Titles, and played in five-NFC
Championship games.
In the beginning of the 1992
football season, Bubba signed with the Indianapolis Colts as a free agent.
He played with them for thirteen games. The Detroit Lions were desecrated by
injuries on the offensive line so they signed him to a contract to help
shore up their offensive line and teach a young team how to stay focused and
win the post season. They won the Central Divisional Title and played in the
NFC Championship.
Paris formed his own marketing and
promotional company, Paris Enterprises, in 1982, which specialized in
motivational speaking, education seminars, and self-esteem workshops,
promotional appearances and auctioneering.
He has distinguished himself as one
of the nation’s premier speakers, addressing groups ranging from IBM
executives to San Quentin Prison inmates, from Little League Teams to the
California State Assembly.
He is presentably making extensive
television appearances, and has served as a sports analyst for KGO TV in San
Francisco, California. Paris has produced a special segment entitles,
“Behind the Face Mask.”
Bubba has founded the Bubba Paris
Friends of the Homeless, a non-profit organization to aide and assist the
homeless in the Bay Area.
BRIAN
SHAW
Brian Shaw was selected by the
Boston Celtics in the first round (24th overall) of the 1988 NBA
Draft, and was the first to play every game since Kevin McHale in 1980, and
had the most starts by Celtic rookie since Larry Bird in 1979.
Brian played the 1989-90 season
with I Messaggero of the Italian League and led the team in scoring,
rebounding and assists. Averaged 25 ppg and 9 rpg. He was named to play in
the in the 1989 Italian All-Star Game. In 1988-89, he was named to the NBA
All Rookie Second Team after averaging 8.6 ppg. 5.8 apg and 4.6 rpg.
He was signed as a free agent with
Orlando Magic in 1994. He notched his 3,000th career assist, for
the magic against the New York Knicks. In 1994, he was named the Magic’s
“Subway Sub of the Year,” after leading the team in scoring off the bench in
a team-high 30 games. He recorded his first career triple-double, with 11
points, 10 assists and 10 rebounds, against the L.A. Clippers in December
1995.
He scored a career-high 32 points,
hitting 10-of-15 three pointers to set a Miami Heat franchise record against
the Milwaukee Bucks in April 1993. He posted a 1997-98 season-high 24 pints
(10-14 FG), 4 rebounds and 3 assists against the Clippers in February 1998.
Brian signed with the Los Angeles
Lakers in 1999 and was a member of the Lakers 2000 and 2001 championship
team appearing in every game of the 2000 NBA Finals. He has appeared in 80
career NBA Playoff games, averaging 7.0 ppg, 2.9 apg and 3.05 rpg.
Brian is very committed to the
Oakland and Orlando communities. Every year during his NBA career he took
time out of his busy schedule to donate turkey dinners and gifts to less
fortunate families. He has volunteered as a guest columnist for Florida’s
“Fitness and Sports” monthly newsletter, urging teens to stay away from
drugs and is very involved with the Parent Service project, which was
established by his late mother, Barbara E. Shaw
Each year he makes a significant
contribution to the Barbara E. Shaw Scholarship Fund. He also host an annual
Brian Shaw Celebrity Pool Tournament, which benefits the Parent-Child
Development Centers, Inc. lastly, he annually host The Brian Shaw NBA
Basketball Camp in Oakland, California for boys and girls ages 8-14. The
City of Oakland declared Auguest 10, 2000 as “Brian Shaw Day.”
GEORGE ATKINSON
During his 11 years with the
Oakland Raiders, George was Rookie of the Year his first year, played in
three Pro Bowls, nine championship games and one Super Bowl, beating the
Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl XL. He was known as the Destroyer.
During his career, he set the NFL
record for most punt return yardage (205) in a single game. He was
nominated for NFL Man of the Year in 1972. Atkinson holds the record as
the 3rd leading interceptor and is number 2 in punt returns in
Raider history.
George is the host for “Behind
the Shield, a sports talk show on Fox Sports Net, he host the Oakland
Raiders pre and post games shows, he is also the color analyst and co-host
of the pre-game show for the San Jose Sabercats of the Arena League. He
hosts his own radio talk show during the football season on the Ticket
1050-in San Francisco. George has television and radio experience as a
host and producer. He was an assistant producer of the Ron Barr National
Talk Show “Sports Byline U.S.A.” from 1990-1992
He was inducted into the Morris
Brown College Hall of Fame in Atlanta, Georgia in 1980, the Southern
Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Sports Hall of Fame in 1997. He is a
board member of the African-American Ethnic Sports Hall of Fame.
In April 1997, George was
elected to the Advisory Board of the Character Counts Coalition, a
consortium of educational and youth service providers. In 2000, he was
inducted into the State of Georgia Hall of Fame.
George also is active in the
community. He was a speaker for the United Way, served on the Oakland
Mayor’s Drug Task Force; he worked for the Governor’s Sumner Youth
Employment Program for three years, helping to develop jobs in California
for youth.
Atkinson has a wealth of
broadcast experience: Behind the Shield, Oakland Raider Weekly Magazine
Show, Sideline Report, Oakland Raiders Pre-Season Television, and Game
Analyst.
My education has allowed me to
experience many things and I urge our young people to get an education
because being a successful high school and college athlete does not
guarantee you will be a professional. “Get that education,” says Atkinson.
SAM SKINNER (Wendell
Smith Media Award)
Sam Skinner integrated Northern
California press boxes as one of the first African American sportscasters,
became confidant for many of the most recognized names in sports, and
broke the biggest Olympics stories of his generation. Yet, it was Sammie’s
style as an interviewer and press box presence that has been the lasting
impression since his death in January 1996.
As a result, Sam Skinner was to
sports press conferences what United Press Internationals’ Helen Thomas
was to the White House press corps. Merely a raise of the hand would
command the attention of even the most prominent of speakers. Sam, with
his trademark extended microphone, became the confident to the likes of
Muhammad Ali, Kareem-Abdul Jabbar, John Madden, Martina Navratilova, Carl
Lewis, Al Davis, and many more. “Sam was one of the biggest people in
sports,” USA Today columnist Tom Weir once wrote.
It was the persona which
ultimately set Samuel J. Skinner, Jr. apart from other members of the
media: who else could call Deion Sanders and say in the San Francisco
49ers’ press conference room, “This is my house.”
Sam is known for being the first
to report the Israeli hostage situation during the 1972 Olympics in
Munich, and the first to learn of the Ben Johnson-steroids incident during
the 1988 Summer Games in Seoul. But it was his role in two other Olympics
that is the most telling: During the Mexico City Games in 1968, athletes
behind the Black Power Movement chose Sam as the only reporter with whom
they would speak. During the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles, Carl Lewis
refused to speak with the media-except Sam Skinner-while he captured four
gold medals. True to form, Sam shared tapes of his Lewis interviews with
the other journalist gathered from around the world.
“Sam Skinner was more than a
journalist to me. He was a friend. He touched people both in and out of
the sports. As a reporter, he treated everybody with respect. He truly
cared about the athletes he interviewed. Professionally, he worked to work
things out,” said Olympic champion Carl Lewis.
Sam provided his stories to
Associated Press, UPI, Mutual Broadcasting and ABC, and also distributed
his stories to many Black radio stations throughout the country through
his own company, Skinner’s International News Syndication. |