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Heisman winners Brown, Torretta in Hall class

Spielman, Warner, Robinson, MacPherson among those also to be inducted

NEW YORK - Tim Brown played on a high school football team that won four games in three seasons and he went to Notre Dame thinking about a career as a computer scientist.

Gino Torretta went to Miami because Stanford didn’t want him. He wasn’t sure he’d ever get to start for the Hurricanes, but football was at least a path to a free education.

Brown and Torretta didn’t begin their college careers aspiring to be Heisman Trophy winners and Hall of Famers, but that’s what they became.

The two Heisman winners were among the 18 players and coaches selected to the College Football Hall of Fame on Thursday.

“When you picked up a helmet and a football when you were 8, 9 years old, the last thing you thought about was ending up in the college football Hall of Fame,” said Brown, the 1987 Heisman winner for Notre Dame.

Brown and Torretta, the former Miami quarterback, and former Syracuse coach Dick MacPherson were at a news conference at the Nasdaq stock market to announce the latest National Football Foundation’s latest Hall of Fame class.

“To be able to be selected in this tremendously honored group, there’s nowhere to go from here,” said MacPherson, who won 111 games with Syracuse and Massachusetts.

Others selected for induction were: Ohio State linebacker Chris Spielman, a two-time AP All-American; Penn State running back Curt Warner; New Mexico State halfback Pervis Atkins; Arizona defensive back Chuck Cecil; Auburn fullback Ed Dyas; West Virginia quarterback Major Harris; BYU tight end Gordon Hudson; Alabama linebacker Woodrow Lowe; Stanford receiver Ken Margerum, Texas defensive lineman Steve McMichael; Iowa linebacker Larry Station; Georgia Tech defensive end Pat Swilling; and Nebraska defensive end Grant Wistrom.

The NFF’s veteran’s committee selected Williams Lewis, who played center for Harvard from 1892-93 and was the first black player to be picked as an All-American by Walter Camp, one of the pioneers of the game.

John Robinson, who coached Southern California and UNLV, will also be inducted in December.

Brown grew up in Dallas and was the best player on a bad high school team. It left him humble.

“I had no reason to be jumping for joy. Everybody was 5-foot-9 and I was 5-11,” Brown said. “I went to college to get a great education. That’s why I chose the University of Notre Dame. I was content with just doing that until Lou Holtz got there.”

Holtz became the Fighting Irish coach in 1986, two years after Brown arrived in South Bend, Ind. Holtz revitalized the program and pushed Brown to aspire to greatness.

“When Lou got there he started putting more pressure on me and putting me in position to really succeed,” Brown said. “All of sudden I realized I could be more than just a good football player.”

Brown became one of the most-dynamic players in the country.

During his junior season in 1986, he set a Notre Dame record with 1,937 all-purpose yards. The next year, Brown caught 39 passes, scored three touchdowns and became Notre Dame’s first Heisman winner since 1964.

Brown went on to be drafted in the first round by the Oakland Raiders and became one of the most productive receivers in NFL history, recording 10 consecutive seasons of at least 75 catches.

Torretta grew up just outside of San Francisco, wanting to play for the Cardinal.

“I knew Stanford’s education was very valuable and a great degree and that’s the way I looked at it. I was going to have an opportunity to get a scholarship but to me that meant it paid for my education,” he said.

“Unfortunately, (Stanford) said I wasn’t good enough — or fortunately.”

Torretta’s brother, Geoff, was the backup quarterback to Miami’s first Heisman Trophy winner, Vinny Testaverde, and hardly ever played.

When the Hurricanes recruited Gino, they warned him he might end up following his brother’s path.

“It’s awful hard to turn down, when you go into their offices and the last five (starting quarterbacks) are on the cover of Sports Illustrated,” Torretta said. “I wanted to have a chance to win a national championship.”

Torretta started his final two college seasons, won the 1992 Heisman and went 26-2 as a starter.

“Everything worked out, we won a couple of titles,” he said. “You do good things and you’re a good person, you end up in good places.”

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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