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August 3, 2013
LEXINGTON, OHIO
CHRIS BERMAN: Welcome back, everybody, to the Hall of Fame. What a night so far. We're only starting to roll. When Bill Parcells took over as head coach of the New York Giants in 1983, they were not very good. In 1986, they won Super Bowl XXI, in 1990, they won Super Bowl XXV. When he was named head coach of the New England Patriots in 1993, they were not very good. In 1996, they made it to Super Bowl XXXI. When he became head coach of the New York Jets in 1997, they really weren't very good. They stunk. They were 1 and 15. In 1998, the Jets won their first division title since the AFL days of Joe Namath in 1969, and they advanced to the AFC Championship game.
In 2003, when he returned to the sidelines to coach the Dallas Cowboys, they weren't that good. He twice led them to the playoffs becoming the only coach to ever take four NFL franchises to the postseason. Now that's pretty good.
Oh, yeah, when he became President of the Miami Dolphins, they weren't any good either, and they soon thereafter made the playoffs. So, you see, you get the pictures, don't you? You get it.
From under the boardwalk in New Jersey to 183 coaching wins in the NFL, to Canton, Ohio. Bill Parcells, yeah, he was tough on his players, but in so many ways he embraced them. Here's one to present him, captain and defensive end from those New York Giants, George Martin.
[Video playing].
ANNOUNCER: Ladies and gentlemen, presenting Bill Parcells for enshrinement into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, George Martin.
BILL PARCELLS: I want to thank George for his kind words, and I want to mention why I picked him to present me. In the '83, '84, '85 seasons in my formative years as a head coach, George was a co‑captain along with the great Harry Carson. He was also my player representative. And in those days, the rules and regulations in the league weren't the same, and we had to figure a lot of things out on our own, and George had to kind of please three masters, the organization, the coaching staff, and his own teammates.
He was unwavering in his support to all three factions; and quite frankly, ladies and gentlemen, without that support, I don't think I'd be here tonight. He was a great, great help to me, and I'm honored to have him present me.
I want to thank the committee for their expressed confidence in me. I know there are a lot of deserving people out there, some deserve it more than I do. But I want to tell the committee members that none of those could possibly appreciate it more than I do. I'm extremely grateful. The only thing I would ask them to do is when they put my bus in the hall tomorrow, I'd like to be somewhere near Lawrence Taylor, so I can keep an eye on that sucker. [ Applause ].
My classmates, we've got a good group. I've seen them all play extensively, and I'm proud to be among them, and I'm proud to join with you in paying tribute to them.
I'm going to talk first a little about my professional life. I worked for four organizations as a coach and one as an administrator in the NFL. This time of year, most organizations try to portray themselves in a manner that gives their fan base an indication that they're trying to compete for the division and the championships and all those kinds of things. But I found out over the years that the commitment has varying degrees in the NFL.
Now I worked for the New York Giants, a flagship franchise, the Mara family, Robert Kraft of the New England Patriots, the late Leon Hess, and the great Jerry Jones and his family there in Dallas. More recently, as an administrator, Steve Ross, and Wayne Huizenga. And I've seen coaches go to these franchises and get fired very quickly because the situation would not allow them to succeed.
Fortunately, for Bill Parcells, I was never in one of those situations. Every organization that I worked for supported me to the fullest, and I'm grateful to the ownership of those places, because that's what allows you and the players to succeed and go forward and become champions. Without that, you've got no shot, but I was lucky to have that all the time.
Now, my coaching staff, history has showed what I had, ladies and gentlemen. Top assistant coaches, sometimes full‑time assistant coaches their whole career, great position coaches, some retired, some still going, others on to college head coaching jobs and bowl championships. Then others in pro football, division championships, conference championships, and several Super Bowls. I was lucky to have some of the top names currently as head coaches in pro football. I want them to know that I'm grateful for their support of me, very, very grateful. I know I couldn't do it. That is the nuts and bolts of a football operation is your assistant coaches. I just want to say I take pride in their individual accomplishments, and I'm looking for a couple more championships out of some of them, so let's go.
Players, I've got four or five of them up here on the stage with me, so that ought to tell you all you need to know. But there was a time in my career when this whole thing could have gone either way. After the '83 season and into the '84 season, it was touch and go. Another loss or two in a row probably would have meant the end. I'm not positive, but that's the way I was thinking at the time, and I knew my players knew it.
But coincidentally, there was kind of a confluence of circumstances that just occurred all at once, and the best way to put it is I had the exact right kind of players, understood my personality, bought into the program, at the absolute most critical time in my career. That's that '84‑'85 group that had to run that gauntlet, and I know how hard it was, and I love you guys for it. I'm proud that you became champions because of it.
A lot of people, when I first came into the league, that helped me. I have to mention a few names quickly, the late Al Davis, I don't know why I befriended me. But he advised me over a number of years. Tom Landry, Chuck Knox, Chuck Knolls, some of the great names in football history took the time when I solicited information from them. I always made up my mind, if I was ever in that position, I would help any young coach that ever asked, and I've tried to follow through with that.
On the personnel side, Bucko Kilroy, the late Mike Hallorack, Gil Brandt, and my long time friend and confidante, Ron Wolf, helped me on the personnel side, and I'm grateful to them for that.
You know, coaches like players, now they need agents. My first one was named Robert Fraley, I shared him with Cortez Kennedy. He was killed on a plane crash in the mid '90s, and when the induction results were announced this year for this Hall of Fame class, Cortez called me and said, Coach, you know what, Robert would have been proud of us. And you know what, Cortez, we were lucky to have him, Man. I tell you.
Since that time, Jimmy Sexton picked it up for me. He's been a great friend. His secretary, Amy, have done all the things necessary to support me in my efforts, and did a great job. I thank you, Jimmy, appreciate it, Man.
Now, you know, a coach has secretaries, unfortunately for them. You might not know this, but Mondays are literally blue Mondays in the NFL no matter what happened on Sunday. Because on Monday, no matter whether you won or lost, something's bad. Some group on your team didn't play the way you wanted them to, someone's hurt, someone can't practice, someone's out for the season; and you've got your pro department scurrying around and trying to find his replacement in 48 hours. Someone has an issue, and you've got to deal with it. And there are five things that happen every day. I always told all my coaches when out coaching that happen in football every day that you wish wouldn't happen. And if you don't have the mentality to deal with that, you need to get out of the business.
But these secretaries are pretty sharp. They learn when they start hearing these short, one‑word answers that a coach should not be talked to Monday, because he's not worth talking to Mondays. So I thank those girls. They're here tonight for their understanding and appreciate their support.
On a more personal note, I didn't come up the hard way, I didn't come up the easy way. I grew up in an average American family in northern New Jersey. Had a great dad. Had a lot of wisdom imparted to me. Had a mother that was highly confrontational, I probably got a little of that as well. Had two brothers, one of whom is deceased, I know he's looking down, my other brother is here tonight. And I had a sister, I know she's watching tonight. It was all good, I guess that is the phrase now everybody's using. It was all good, and that is the way it was.
I have three lovely daughters, and I can remember in the pursuit of my jobs traveling around the country, that every once in a while probably usually about every two or three years I used to gather them around when they were school girls that kitchen table and tell them that we were going to have to move again. To look at the dismay and consternation and uncertainty on their faces was very painful to me. I always was on alert when we got to our next destination to hear something that gave me an indication that the acclamation process was under way. Like they liked their school. I met a new friend. The teacher seemed okay.
Now retrospectively as I see them as grown women, raising families of their own, they know how proud I am of them, how much I love them. I think the experience that they had in moving to different quadrants of the country, I know that they travel fearlessly now. They're not intimidated by change, and they're directing their children in a proper manner, and they're productive citizens in society. And I felt like that was my main job as a parent. So I love you girls.
My former wife, Judy, who kept the home fires burning, when I either couldn't be, and there was a lot of this next thing, or wasn't there, she kept them burning. And I have repeatedly told her over the years that I think there is a great integrity about that. I know full well that if it was just left to me that I wouldn't have gotten the job done. I was not only married to her, but I was married to something else as well. So I commend her for a job well done, and I thank her very much for it.
Now I've got to tell you about a special guy. He's here tonight. He's 92 years old. He's my high school basketball coach. His name's Mickey Corcoran. He's pretty famous in North Jersey. He was everything that a 14‑year‑old guy needed. He was a coach, a teacher, a disciplinarian, a butt kicker. And I don't know how to characterize this relationship that we've had for 58 years, but whatever adjective you could use to portray something good, you could use it with this relationship. He's been a great friend to me. He's been like a second father. He's somebody I could always talk to, my guidance counselor. He knows the love I have in my heart for him. As I said, he's 92, and I've got to get 10 or 15 more years out of you, Buster, so let's go.
Another man, first guy to ever give me a head coaching job, Hastings College in the mid '60s, Dean Pryor, he's here tonight, thank God. And I want to tell you something, he taught me one vital, vital piece of information that I took with me and preached to every organization, to every university, to my coaching staff, to my individual coaches, and I remind myself every day. That vital piece of information was, Bill, the players deserve a chance to win, and you as an organization or university and a coaching staff and an individual coach and a head coach, have an obligatory responsibility to give it to them. I thank Dean for that piece of advice, because I carried it with me and I preached it all my life. So thank you.
One other guy I would be remiss if I didn't mention, I know he's down in Mississippi tonight. He's still coaching. He's a sick puppy like I was. His name's Ray Perkins. He's the one that got me involved in pro football along with the late Ron Erhardt, and I just wanted to mention, Ray, and tell him how much I appreciate him taking a chance on me when he didn't really know what he was getting. So I say thanks, Ray, I know you're watching.
Now, I want to just say something about my experience in pro football, and there is a guy up on this stage that kind of got me thinking about something. His name is Steve Young. I heard him say this‑‑ I don't mean to put you on the spot, Steve. I heard him say this several years ago. He said that the locker room is a great laboratory for human behavior. When he said that, it just kind of hit me. I said, you know what? This guy's right. This guy is absolutely right.
Now, talent aside, we know it's the football business, but the only prerequisite for acceptance into that locker room is you've got to be willing to contribute to the greater good, and if you are willing to do that, you are readily accepted. If you're not, you're pretty much quickly rejected.
Now we've got all kinds in this place. We've got white, we've got black, we've got Latin, we've got Asian, we've got Samoans, we've got Tongans, we've got Native‑Americans. Ladies and gentlemen, I played and coached with them all, and the only thing that made any difference is are you willing to help? And if you are, come on in. If you're not, get the heck out of here.
Now, there are a lot of exit doors in pro football, and by exit doors, I mean vehicles that organizations or players or coaches could use to incident mate to the public that it wasn't their fault that the team performed poorly. But Monday, about 5:00 o'clock in the afternoon after we've all watched those films, very seldom are any of those exit doors taken, because accountability is at a premium in guys like this. It's at a premium.
So we've got the greater good and we've got accountability. Now we've got some rules and regulations in the locker room. But they're not written down. But after you've been there just a couple of days, you know what they are. If someone should deviate and violate those rules, you find out that there is a judge and jury in that room and they act decisively. Their decisions are final, because we don't have any appellate courts in there. Okay.
So, we've got the greater good, we've got accountability, and now we've got lawandorder.  Now we've got a wide range of emotions in this place, ladies and gentlemen. We've got happiness, we've got humor, practical jokes, hilarity, success, achievement. Then we've got that momentary time of exhilaration where you hoist that championship trophy over your head, and I don't know what happens, but some mystical blood kinship is formed, and although it's a fleeting moment, that kinship lasts for the rest of your life.
And the thing I'm most proud of with my teams is they have it, and I know, because I lived it. Because when something goes wrong with one, all the others run to help, and I know, because they've run to help me.
Now, on the other side of that locker room there's darkness. There's defeat. There's despondency, there's pain. You see those players carrying those IVs on to the aircraft after a mid‑summer or early season game in a hot weather city, and they're carrying their own IVs on to the plane and the trainers are rushing to pack them in ice, and they can't sit in their seats because they'll cramp up, so they've got to lay in the aisle. Ladies and gentlemen, they don't put that on television, but I was there to see it. There is pain. There is injury. There is tragedy, and even death.
I wish all of American society could have experienced what I experienced in this place, because, ladies and gentlemen, it is a priceless, priceless education.
In closing, about ten minutes after I was named head coach of the Giants and my first press conference was over, the patriarch owner of the New York Giants, the late Wellington Mara was at my office door, and he said, Bill, let's take a walk. And he took me down the stairs, of course, to that same place that I was just talking about.
In the old Giants Stadium, the Giants players will remember that as you walk through the players' entrance, there was a little room to the left that was like a little Al cove room and had a couple chairs in it. Wellington took me over to the wall in that place, and on the wall was a little plaque and it had an inscription on it. Coincidentally, that inscription was attributed to the first black player ever inducted into this Hall of Fame, his name was Emlen Tunnell, and he was inducted in the class of 1967. That inscription said losers assemble in little groups and complain about the coaches and the players in other little groups, but winners assemble as a team.
Well, tonight, ladies and gentlemen, I get to do just that. I'm honored, I'm grateful, and I'm thankful to every single one of you out there that had something to do with this. Thank you very much.
FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports
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