Troy Polamalu | Pro Football Hall of Fame (2024)

ANNOUNCER: Presenting Troy Polamalu for enshrinement into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Dick LeBeau. (Applause.) (Cheering.)

TROY POLAMALU: Thank you guys, thank you. Congratulations to the Class of 2020, Class of 2021, and welcome back to the fellow Gold Jackets. Your presence without a doubt is most definitely felt. Thank you for being here.

I love football. I love football. It was my entire life since as long as I can remember. I fostered an obsession with the game early on that I modeled after meticulous regimens of some of the greatest artists of the past: Dickens, Beethoven, Demosthene. These great men were known to have a beast-like worth ethic coupled with an unwavering ability to create until perfection beyond what most believe the human body will allow.

To me, that's what it takes from being ordinary to extraordinary. It is the willingness to push beyond what the brain says to the body is possible and create a new order of boundaries for ones self. It is the ability to learn from greatness around you and curate for yourself a unique version of their efforts.

Football challenged me mentally, physically, and spiritually, in a way that no other feature of life could, so I was hooked. I had to succeed in order to quench this desire, or I knew I would've lived a life without direction.

Thank you to everyone had who has been a part of my journey to make this feat possible, to give me the opportunity to live my passion fulfilled knowing that I achieved my objective. (Applause.)

I come from a culture where discipline, humility, and respect are not only the foundation to our survival but the key to our existence. I am a first generation American Samoan and proudly representing my family's lineage to America through the NFL. (Applause.) (Cheering.)

My Uncle Kennedy instilled in me, who's the current running backs coach for the Minnesota Vikings, an authentic respect and passion for the game. His intensity has inspired not just me, but countless athletes to revere and love the game at all costs. Uncle, you're a true coach not just in sport, but in life. (Applause.)

My first introduction to the NFL was at our first full padded practice when Hines Ward and I hit. (Applause.) Listen, it was my legs that subsequently buckled and he held me up like a toddler and said, I'm not like any other wide receiver. No doubt Hines. I look forward to sharing the stage with you one day. (Applause.)

My locker partner and mentor unfortunately was a Notre Dame running back whose name doesn't need to be mentioned. Jerome, I know you wish you could have been here. But your life experience and knowledge spoke a language I was accustomed to from my older brothers and cousins that looked out for me. Thank you so much.

The patriarch of Steelers football, Joe Greene. He defined a standard that we would all struggle to emulate decades later. When Joe was at the front office the scouting department, elated for a defensive prospect, sought Joe's approval. He wouldn't give it because this prospect didn't properly retaliate when slapped.

This story planted deep into my psyche. When a rival opponent stood over me during a game, let's just say the NFL made more money that day.

No matter how times have changed, as Coach Tomlin often says, the standard is the standard. My rookie year was a challenge. I couldn't make a play of any significance. I recall reading the newspaper early in the season labelling me a first-round bust.

When I vowed not to read any sports column hoping it would somehow change, Mr. Dan Rooney approached me before our very last game and said, Don't pay attention to what they're saying about you. I think you're doing fine. I said, Mr. Rooney, they're still talking bad about me?

Coach Cowher would teach us to embrace misery by forcing us to practice outside no matter the weather, recalibrating us to love the hot, humid camp days and bask in the bitter cold frost of game days.

He instructed us to embody the Yinzer spirit of hard work, humility, and toughness, coupled with loyalty so that we could accurately represent the city of Pittsburgh. Thank you, Coach. (Applause.)

Mike Logan, the starting my rookie year, shared his full knowledge of the game wholeheartedly showing a level of humility that helped shape my career. Like many other teammates, his selflessness paved a greater opportunity for others at his own expense.

It is unnatural in the most competitive environment to train your replacement, yet this is our culture, Steeler culture. These virtues I learned while playing for the Steelers and what make the legacy of the black and gold timeless. They are passed down in the locker room from the Steel Curtain to anyone who valiantly wears the black and gold, creating a brotherhood that is deeper than money, business, and winning.

To be a Steeler is to consider others before you consider yourself, to protect your brother even from himself, to give support at your own expense, and when wearing the black and gold suit of armor, make sure nobody desecrates it, disrespects it. Most importantly we ourselves don't dishonor it.

The only approval any Steeler should seek is to earn the approval from previous legends who have donned the black and gold. If you've really earned their respect they'll say, You could have played with us. (Applause.)

What I truly appreciate about the Steeler way is that at its core it's a family, a culture based on the essential virtues any person respects and honors: Humility, passion, resilience, service, and legacy.

Being the youngest son, brother, cousin, and nephew leaves me with a lot of older siblings, moms and dads. They have given me everything anyone could have possibly given mentally, physically, and spiritually. I never had to ask for anything. I was nourished by everyone in every way.

Living with different ethnicities, traditions, ideologies, left me little to say or ask for. I of lived and learned from all my heros.

Like most young people, I also admired all these amazing athletes that have influenced their sport and culture, and even world history. Beautifully, divinely inspired lives where sports served as the pulpit, patriarchs of culture and sport, leaders. We all know and aspire to have those qualities.

What better person teaches the game of football than Hall of Fame defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau. (Applause.) Six of our eleven years together our team led the NFL in total defense. To be draft by a Hall of Fame coach, Bill Cowher, to observe the development of another Hall of Fame coach in Mike Tomlin. I had a Hall of Fame college coach at USC. My strength and conditioning coach was Marv Marinovich, and I even had Tom Brady's body coach, Alex Guerrero.

Some would say that it was destined for me to stand before you tonight and accept this achievement. I would agree. I receive spiritual guidance from a saint, and for those who know my wife, Theodora, truly understand how blessed I am.

Baby, thank you seems so disingenuous. I love you. Please forgive me for not always being a Hall of Famer in every aspect of my life.

Boys, the best thing I could do for you guys is love your mother. I love you guys. Thank you. Thank you for holding me accountable. (Applause.)

I'm a follower, everyone's little brother, nephew, and son. I love God. I love and thank God for my life, because I have all of you, my family, the biggest family in the world, Steeler Nation, thank you.

Troy Polamalu | Pro Football Hall of Fame (2024)
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