One big irrelevant night
In an Irrelevant Week Lowsman Trophy banquet for the ages -- one in
which Martha Burke would be extremely happy because women were
allowed for the first time, ending a 27-year run of stag parties --
Mr. Irrelevant XXVIII Ryan Hoag, a small-college wide receiver, made
a big impression in front of the Heisman Trophy winner and a sellout
crowd of 1,200 at the Anaheim Marriott.
Oh, sure, Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata fired off his usual
jokes and former USC quarterback and 2002 Heisman winner Carson
Palmer shared the spotlight with Mr. Irrelevant. But poor Hoag. He
shows up for Irrelevant Week XXVIII amid June’s first week of
sunshine while wearing the world’s biggest smile, then realizes right
away this is not Raider country.
“I guess most people around here don’t like the Raiders,” Hoag
said Thursday night, prior to the headline event of Irrelevant Week,
the annual Lowsman Trophy banquet that honors Mr. Irrelevant, who is
presented a bronze sculpture that depicts a football player dropping
a ball.
Hoag, you see, had no idea that Orange Countians, especially in
these parts, aren’t exactly the welcoming wagon for the silver and
black.
But Hoag, selected No. 262 by the Oakland Raiders and the absolute
dead-last pick in the NFL draft, has handled the ill-Raider feelings
well this week, like everything else.
Hoag, the former football and track and field standout at Gustavus
Adolphus College in St. Peter, Minn., is a real pro and even put the
celebrated Palmer in his place late in the banquet and, well, telling
the truth.
“I know [the banquet] is usually reserved for the Irrelevant Week
honoree. Thanks for taking the spotlight tonight,” Hoag said to
Palmer at the podium. “Just remember. There’s a reason why the
Cincinnati Bengals chose first and the Raiders picked last.”
Palmer, the first same-season Heisman winner to appear at the
Irrelevant Week Lowsman Trophy banquet, gave plenty of thanks in
receiving the 2003 Sportsman of the Year award, but added that enough
is enough. In other words, no more awards, please. “That’s enough.
Stop it,” Palmer said, in reference to the number of postseason
honors he has collected since leading USC to its victory over Iowa in
the 2003 Orange Bowl as the Trojans finished the season 11-2 and
ranked No. 4 in the nation.
Later at the banquet podium, after Palmer and Hoag had received
gifts, including a replica of each others’ college jersey, Palmer
asked Hoag to autograph it. “Right back at you,” Hoag said to Palmer.
The Lowsman Trophy night was considered the largest Irrelevant
Week banquet crowd in history inside the mammoth ballroom. The
banquet is usually held at the Newport Beach Marriott, but Salata &
Co. needed a bigger place to play this year in the Heisman meets
Lowsman buildup.
Despite how some locals might feel about the Raiders, Hoag can’t
wait to get his shot at making the Oakland roster and maybe working
his way into a starting role in the future. He also returns kickoffs
and punts. He said it’s a great situation to be in with future Hall
of Famers Jerry Rice and Tim Brown to help groom him.
Hoag, 6-foot-2, 200 pounds, played only one year of high school
football and that was as a JV quarterback. He grew up in Minneapolis,
then spent one year at Wake Forest as a walk-on soccer player. He
returned to his roots and enrolled at Gustavus Adolphus, where he was
an All-Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference performer three
times.
The Minneapolis native played tennis, basketball and soccer in
high school, before going to Wake Forest.
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