When Walter Abercrombie entered the NFL 15 years ago, talk was of his being a
member of the greatest running-back class in league
history. He and fellow draftees Marcus Allen, Melvin
Carver, Larry Cowan, Dwayne Crutchfield, Joe Morris, Mike
Morton, Darrin Nelson, Rick Porter,
Barry Redden, Gerald Riggs, Robert Weathers and Butch
Woolfolk constituted a new breed of speedy, powerful,
somewhat boastful rushers who were expected to run defenses
ragged for the next decade or so. One problem: They didn't
turn out to be that good.
Outside of Allen, members of the class of '82 need to pay
full-price admission to Canton. Abercrombie, the Pittsburgh
Steelers' top pick out of Baylor, had a decent pro career,
rushing for 3,357 yards and 22 touchdowns in six seasons
with the Steelers
and another with the Philadelphia Eagles. "You have a
window of opportunity for greatness," says
Abercrombie, 38, now director of education and special
projects for the American Football Coaches Association in
his hometown of Waco, Texas. "I didn't step
through
that."
He did come close. On Dec. 30, 1984, Abercrombie's 75 yards
rushing and 18 receiving lifted Pittsburgh to a stunning
24-17 playoff win over the Denver Broncos at Mile High
Stadium.
The performance was gritty and explosive enough to land
Abercrombie on our
cover,
and
the win catapulted the Steelers to their first AFC
Championship game in
five years. Although Pittsburgh wound up getting beaten by
the Miami Dolphins a week laterAbercrombie rushed for 68
yards in the 45-28 losshis day of glory still glows
brightly. "It's my Number 1 highlight," he says.
"Playing in a high-pressure playoff
game with a lot on the line. I think of
guysO.J. Simpson, Archie Manningwho didn't have much, if any,
postseason play. I had the honor of playing with guys like
Terry Bradshaw and
Franco Harris and Mike Webster on very good Steelers teams.
I can't
complain."
After Abercrombie's career was cut short by knee injuries,
he returned to Baylor for a master's in athletic
administration and then worked for the school as an
academic counselor. In his current position he coordinates
a game-tape exchange program
between the NFL and major colleges and heads an operation that
arranges coaching seminars. "I love being a part of
football's policymaking," says Abercrombie, who, with
his wife, Kim, has two sons, Wesley, 4, and Warren, 1.
"I'm able to see different football
perspectives. For 23 years I played the game. Now, it's
still exciting.
Football means so much to me, I have to be a part of
it."
by Jeff Pearlmanphotograph by Andy Hayt
Issue date: December 1, 1997
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