A Guest Post by Editor Neil White

In the fall of 1970, I sat in my fourth-grade Sunday school class. Our teacher, Mrs. Hemphill, posed a question to the class of three girls and three boys.

“Who is your hero?” she asked.

The girls in the class mentioned Bobbie Gentry and Jackie Kennedy and Nancy Sinatra. The three of us boys agreed on the same hero — Archie Manning.

Mrs. Hemphill spent the next twenty minutes trying to convince us that only one man was worthy of hero worship. And at the end of the Sunday school period, Mrs. Hemphill polled us again. The three girls in the class had changed their answers to Mrs. Hemphill’s satisfaction.

“Boys?” Mrs. Hemphill asked, looking over her reading glasses.

I glanced at my two buddies and in unison we answered, “Archie Manning.”

In Mississippi, we love our football. And no state can compare to the kind of talent we breed here. Consider —

Jerry Rice’s receiving records will stand for generations.

Brett Favre’s toughness, durability and desire to win are unparalleled.

Walter Payton’s name is synonymous with greatness.

Lance Alworth proved that the pass game could be a team’s primary offensive weapon.

Wide receiver Lance Alworth #19 of the San Diego Chargers catches a touchdown pass from quarterback John Hadl during the first quarter of a game on November 6, 1966 at Municipal Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. The Chiefs’ defender is Fred Williamson #24. (Photo by: John Vawter Collection/Diamond Images/Getty Images)

Charlie Conerly actually “coached” Vince Lombardi on how to motivate professionals.

Ray Guy redefined the role of a punter.

Left: Oakland Raiders Ray Guy (8) in action, punt vs San Diego Chargers at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum. Oakland, CA 11/17/1974

Gene Hickerson proved that a tough, speedy guard could create freeways for the Jim Browns of the NFL.

Lem Barney blazed the trail for cornerbacks like Deion Sanders and Charles Woodson.

Deacon Jones (the man who coined the term “sacks”) redefined the defensive end position.

Right: Defensive Tackle Deacon Jones #75 of the Los Angeles Rams in action against the San Francisco 49ers (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

Robert Brazile did the same for the outside linebacker position.

• The aforementioned players grew up admiring the tenacity of Mississippi’s Frank “Bruiser” Kinard.

A 2006 study conducted collaboratively between USA Football and Wharton Business Initiative ranked Mississippi the #1 state in the nation for football. We already knew this . . . but it’s nice to hear it from experts.

And, now, in the first edition of Mississippi’s 100 Greatest Football Players of All Time we have ranked the top players from the top state — #1 through #100.

The book is meant to be fun. Any attempt to quantify the greatest is, at best, subjective; at worst, flawed (watch for our Methodology post in a few days).

We welcome your thoughts, comments, opinions and criticisms. We’d even love to see your own rankings (top ten, top 25). Post here and compare to our list when it’s revealed to the public on November 15th at Lemuria Books.

Unlike Mrs. Hemphill, we believe there is more than one valid answer. After all, my childhood hero, Archie, came in at a mere #6.

Neil White, Editor


Neil White will be at Lemuria signing Mississippi’s 100 Greatest Footbal Palyers of All Time, on Tuesday at 5:00. Some football players should be on hand to sign as well. Stay tuned!

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