UNA'S
MCKINNON ELECTED TO ALABAMA SPORTS
HALL OF FAME
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala. --
The
Alabama Sports Hall of Fame
announced its Class of 2010
inductees Wednesday afternoon, and
the list includes former University
of North Alabama football standout
Ronald McKinnon.
In
all, the Class of 2010 includes six
from the modern class, two
old-timers and a Distinguished
American Sportsman. The official
induction is scheduled for next May.
McKinnon
,
a native of Elba, Ala., was a
four-year starter on Lion football
teams from 1992-95 and is one of the
most honored athletes in college
football history. In 2007 he was
elected to the Division II Football
Hall of Fame and in the summe of
2008 he was inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame. A
four-time, first-team All-GSC
selection, McKinnon is one of just a
handful of three-time consensus
All-Americans in NCAA Division II
history. He was selected the winner
of the 1995 Harlon Hill Trophy as
NCAA Division II National Player of
the Year, becoming the first - and
so far only - defensive player to
win the award. He helped lead UNA
to a combined 48-5-1 record that
included three straight GSC
championships and three straight
NCAA Division II National
Championships. He closed his career
as the leading tackler in school and
GSC history with 621 total stops
and 407 primary stops. He had 29
career tackles for loss, seven
sacks, 11 interceptions and
recovered five fumbles. As a senior
he had 139 tackles, 11 tackles for
loss, four interceptions and four
sacks.
He was named to the Gulf
South Conference "Team of the
Quarter Century" for 1971-95, was
selected the "GSC Defensive Player
of the Quarter Century" for 1971-95
and was named to the NCAA Division
II "Team of the Quarter Century" for
1973-97. He was selected for the
50th Anniversary UNA Football Team
for 1949-98, the Gulf South
Conference Team of the 1990s and
was named Alabama Sports Writers
Association State Professional
Athlete of the Year for 1998. He
signed a free agent contract with
the Arizona Cardinals of the
National Football League following
his senior season and spent the next
10 seasons in professional football.
McKinnon played in 157 NFL games,
spending nine seasons with the
Cardinals and one with the New
Orleans Saints. He finished his
professional career with more than
1,000 tackles, 12 sacks and 10 pass
interceptions.
McKinnon becomes the fourth former
UNA student-athlete and seventh
person overall with connections to
North Alabama to be elected to the
Alabama Sports Hall of Fame. Former
Lion football players Harlon Hill
and George "Goober" Lindsey and
former UNA basketball player Winfrey
"Wimp" Sanderson, hold Hall of Fame
membership, as do former Lion
football coaches Hal Self, Mickey
Andrews and Bobby Wallace.
A
look at the Class of 2010:
>>
Reita Clanton
(handball) -- The Auburn University
product was a two-time AAIAW
all-state pick in basketball and
volleyball as a collegian and an
All-American ASA shortstop in
softball. She took up the sport of
handball relatively late in her
career, yet represented the U.S. in
the 1984 Summer Olympics and was
named the USOC Sportswoman of the
Year in 1985. She remained in the
sport as a coach, leading her teams
to three gold and one bronze medals
in the U.S. Olympic Festival.
Clanton was born in LaFayette on
July 30, 1952.
>>
Howard Cross
(football) -- A standout tight end
at Alabama under Ray Perkins and
Bill Curry, Cross as a senior was
named the Jacobs Award winner, given
to the SEC's premier blocker. As a
member of the NFL's New York Giants,
he earned a Super Bowl ring in the
second season of a 13-year career,
retiring with a club record of 207
games played. He was born Aug. 8,
1967, in Huntsville.
>>
Robert Horry
(basketball) -- The Andalusia native
was named the state's premier player
as a high school senior. At Alabama,
he set the record for career blocked
shots and was selected to the
league's All-SEC, All-Defensive and
All-Academic teams. The 11th pick in
the 1992 draft, Horry was a part of
seven NBA championships and is one
of just two players to win titles
with three different teams. Horry,
who owns the NBA record with 53
career postseason 3-pointers, was
born Aug. 25, 1970, in Harford
County, Md.
>>
Bobby Johns
(football) -- A three-time All-SEC
defensive back and a two-time
All-American, Johns was team captain
of the 1967 Alabama team. He was
named to Bama's Team of the Decade
in 1969. As a coach, he worked for
more than 30 years, including a
stint as head coach at West Alabama
from 1997-2000. Johns was born in
Birmingham.
>>
Ronald McKinnon
(football) -- At Division II North
Alabama, he became the only
defensive player to win the Harlon
Hill Trophy while leading the Lions
to three consecutive national
titles. He was also named the Gulf
South Conference's Player of the
Quarter Century. A 10-year NFL
veteran, McKinnon was voted into the
College Football Hall of Fame last
year. McKinnon was reared in Elba.
>>
Ben Tamburello
(football) -- A two-time
All-American at center for Auburn,
Tamburello was named SEC Lineman of
the Year as a senior by the Atlanta
Touchdown Club and also earned SEC
All-Academic honors as the anchor of
Pat Dye's team. He was later named
to Auburn's team of the century
before embarking on a five-year NFL
career. Tamburello was born Sept. 9,
1964, in Birmingham.
>>
Ed Salem
(old-timers) -- The Birmingham
native was an All-American in 1950,
when he led Alabama in passing,
rushing, scoring and interceptions
while playing both ways. In the 1948
revival of the Iron Bowl, Salem
threw three touchdown passes, ran
for another and kicked seven extra
points in a 55-0 victory. Salem
played two ways for most of his NFL
and CFL career and also kicked a
53-yard field goal.
>>
George "Mule" Suttles
(old-timers) -- The Blocton native
played 21 seasons in the Negro
Leagues, including a stint with the
Birmingham Black Barons, and
finished with 237 homers, the most
recorded in the league's history.
Suttles once hit three home runs in
a single inning and helped the St.
Louis Stars to three pennants. He
was inducted into the Baseball Hall
of Fame in 2006.
>>
Rick Woodward
(Distinguished American Sportsman)
-- He owned the Birmingham Barons
from 1909-37, a span that saw the
club win five pennants and two Dixie
World Series. He later served as a
minor league vice president. His
most memorable contribution to the
state of Alabama came in 1910, when
he built Rickwood Field, the oldest
existing baseball stadium in the
country. Woodward's stadium
celebrates its centennial next
summer.