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Head Coach
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Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 10,790
Points: 499,118.10
Bank: 0.00
Total Points: 499,118.10
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Quote:
OSU ON SUNDAY
Cornerbacks
Thursday, November 19, 2009
By RAY STEIN
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

PHOTO (top): Dick LeBeau's mark of 171 consecutive games played remains the NFL record for corners . (Dispatch file photo)
Each week, Gameday examines Ohio State's impact on professional football with a position-by-position analysis of the Buckeyes who have made a mark in the NFL.
What is it about former Ohio State players being subjects of fans' efforts to have them inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame? Does Brent Musburger head the voting committee? Is there an anti-OSU bias that's keeping a whole slew of Woody's boys - including Jim Marshall, Randy Gradishar, Jim Tyrer and our favorite all-time corner - from immortality?
The Best
Dick LeBeau
College life: The pride of London High School in Madison County, LeBeau played three seasons for Woody Hayes at Ohio State, including the 1957 team that was voted national champion by United Press International. His shining moment with the Buckeyes may have been the 1957 Michigan game, when LeBeau, playing halfback and cornerback, scored twice to help OSU rally for a 31-14 win.
Path to the pros: The Cleveland Browns drafted LeBeau in the fifth round of the 1959 NFL draft, but apparently he didn't make much of an impression. The Browns cut LeBeau before the season began and he signed as a rookie free agent with the Detroit Lions. Fourteen years and 185 games later, he decided to retire.
Pro career: LeBeau was a fixture at cornerback for the Lions, enough so that his mark of 171 consecutive games played remains the NFL record for corners. In that time, he played in the secondary with three future Hall of Famers - safety Yale Lary and cornerbacks Dick "Night Train" Lane and Lem Barney. LeBeau retired with 62 career interceptions, then third-best in NFL history and now seventh. He made the Pro Bowl three straight seasons, from 1964 through '66.
Little-known facts: Well, of course he became - and remains - one of the best assistant coaches in league history, his zone-blitz defense standing as one of the great coaching innovations in football in the past 50 years. The Steelers seem to like it, anyway. If - when (2010?) - LeBeau makes the Hall, it will be because of his playing career plus his coaching. He is so respected by his players that when Pittsburgh played in the 2007 Hall of Fame Game in Canton, several Steelers defenders posed at Fawcett Stadium wearing throwback versions of LeBeau's No. 44 Lions jersey. In his long career as a player, LeBeau played in only one NFL playoff game. Detroit lost 5-0 to Dallas in 1970.
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