Stover stands toe-to-toe with greatest Ravens of all time
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Trent Dilfer acknowledges the crowd during the 10-year anniversary celebration for the 2000 Ravens Super Bowl team. (Baltimore Sun photo by Karl Merton Ferron /October 24, 2010)
Me, I still picture Stover working out on a dusty high school field, a couple of kids shagging balls as he kicks field goals through the uprights for hours in the hot sun.
I still picture him hoping the phone will ring and praying it's the Ravens on the other end, telling him they screwed up back in 2009 when they let him go for the training camp tag team of Steve Hauschka and Graham Gano.
Or maybe I see Stover trying to find another situation like he did with the Colts two years ago, when Adam Vinatieri went down with a bum knee, Stover filled in and Indianapolis went to the Super Bowl.
But instead of all that, Stover, one of the greatest Ravens of them all, will make his NFL retirement official at a news conference Thursday at the Castle in Owings Mills.
Ravens owner Steve Bisciotti will be there, and so will general manager Ozzie Newsome and coach John Harbaugh.
All three men will say lots of nice things about Stover and talk about all he did with that accurate right foot and those riverboat-gambler nerves in his 13 seasons here — and all he did in the community, too, the civic and charitable work he rarely talked about.
And the truth is, this little ceremony Thursday is only fitting. Because in terms of what he did for this franchise and the way he represented himself year in and year out, Matt Stover belongs up there with Ray Lewis and Jonathan Ogden and Ed Reed and anyone else you'd care to name.
If you're one of these fools who would dismiss Stover as "only a kicker," then you didn't follow Stover's career too well.
The numbers tell part of the story, of course.
Stover goes into the record books as the Ravens' all-time leading scorer with 1,464 points. In his 20-year NFL career, he kicked 471 field goals and scored 2,004 points to rank fourth in league history in that category.
But it was how reliable Stover was year in and year out that Ravens fans will always remember, how cool and clutch he was in big games, in those moments when another kicker might have been hyperventilating and ready to lose his lunch.
If you were a Ravens fan and saw Stover trot onto the field for a big kick, saw him go through his setup ritual — as precise as a Buddhist tea ceremony — you figured it was money in the bank.
Go ask Brian Billick what it was like to have his team driving for a late field goal and see Stover, cool and unruffled, warming up on the sideline.
Or go back to that glorious 2000 season, when the Ravens had the best defense in the NFL and an offense that was such a mess, it failed to score a touchdown in five straight games.
All Stover did that season was kick 35 field goals to lead the league and keep the Ravens in games all the way until they beat the New York Giants, 34-7, in the Super Bowl.
Which leads to the big question.
Does he get into the Pro Football Hall of Fame with all those gaudy numbers?
Probably not.
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Comments (3)
Add / View comments | Discussion FAQMatt is one of only four players to ever score more than 2000 points in the history of the NFL , if he doesn't get into the Hall of Fame , shame on the NFL...............
Automatic. Its amazing that in our SB season we didnt score a TD in 5 straight games and end up winning 3 of them due to the clutch kicking of one of the all time best FG kicer in NFL history.
I for one will always hold Matt Stover high on my list of one of the top 5 Ravens. Prolific scorer and dependable teammate is what I'll remember about him. He never backed away from a challenge and always held hiself together wjen the challenge came. I can say I never saw him miss when they were shots he was supposed to make. More importantly, he made so many shots that others thought he would miss. I also remember a guy who was great to my kid when I took him to training camp. Once when all of the other players were running off the field at camp, refusing to sign anymore....Matt while running told my son "if you run along to the end of the fence with me...I'll sign yours", this was around 2002-03... well we still have the signed football and my son cherishes the moment. He remembers him shaking his hands and asking his name. My son says to the day that Matt Stover is "his boy". We hope to see him in the HOF one day! Classy player and human being!!!
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