TOLEDO, Ohio – The University of Toledo Athletic Department will honor its three members of the College Football Hall of Fame during the Rockets' football game vs. UMass at the Glass Bowl (Saturday, Sept. 10/7:00 p.m.). Representatives from the National Football Foundation and College Football Hall of Fame will make presentations to each inductee on the field during timeouts in the first quarter.
The honorees are Chuck Ealey and Mel Long, stars of the 1969-71 Rockets that went 35-0 and put Toledo on the college football map, and Coach Gary Pinkel, who set the school record for victories during his tenure from 1991-2000. Ealey and Pinkel are being officially inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in Las Vegas on Dec. 6. Long was previously inducted into the prestigious group in 1998.
The three inductees will also be honored with a special College Football Hall of Fame Celebration on Friday, Sept. 9 at the Pinnacle in Maumee. At the celebration on Friday, all three inductees will be presented with a framed water-color portrait that was painted by Aaron Bivins, the Toledo Football team's all-time leading tackler and 2006 inductee into the school's Varsity T Hall of Fame. Attendees at the celebration dinner will receive football card replicas of the portraits. The commemorative football cards will also be given out to the first 5,000 fans attending the UMass game.
Tickets for the UMass game can be purchased online at UTRockets.com/tix, by phone at 419-530-GOLD (4653), at the Rocket Ticket Office in Savage Arena or at the stadium on the day of the game.
Toledo vs. UMass
Saturday, Sept. 10
7:00 p.m.
The Glass Bowl
College Football Hall of Fame Celebration; The first 5,000 fans receive commemorative College Football Hall of Fame football cards
Tickets:
UTRockets.com/FBTix
About Toledo's College Football Hall of Fame Members
Chuck Ealey (2022 Induction)
The quarterback during the best run in Toledo football history, Chuck Ealey never lost a game in his three seasons as the Rockets' starting quarterback.
Named a 1971 First Team All-American, Ealey went a remarkable 35-0 as Toledo's starting quarterback. The three-time MAC Back of the Year became the first player in conference history to receive votes for the Heisman Trophy, tallying 168 points for an eighth-place finish in 1971. A three-time First Team All-MAC selection, Ealey led the Rockets to three consecutive conference titles. While guiding the team to three-straight Tangerine Bowl victories, he earned MVP honors following standout performances in the 1969 and 1971 editions.
A 1971 team captain, Ealey finished his career as Toledo's all-time leader with 5,275 passing yards and 45 touchdown passes, both marks that still rank in the top 10. In both 1970 and 1971, he received the team's Jim Nicholson Award as the team's most valuable player. Voted No. 1 on Toledo's All-Century Football Team in 2017, the Portsmouth, Ohio, native is one of just four players to have his number retired by the Rockets. He was inducted into the University of Toledo Varsity T Hall of Fame in 1978.
After going undrafted by the NFL, Ealey signed with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League. He went on to win the CFL's Most Outstanding Rookie Award and led the Tiger-Cats to a victory in the Grey Cup, where he earned MVP honors. In total, Ealey played seven seasons in the CFL with Hamilton, Winnipeg and Toronto.
Following his professional football career, Ealey served as a financial advisor in the Toronto area. He founded the Chuck Ealey Foundation, which annually awards academic scholarships to college and high school recipients of The Chuck Ealey Undefeated Spirit Award. The Chuck Ealey Foundation also provides opportunities to high school students to help build their mentoring skills while guiding underprivileged youth to discover and embrace their sense of self-worth and "undefeated spirit."
Gary Pinkel (2022 Induction)
Toledo's all-time leader in victories with 73 from 1991-2000, Gary Pinkel, is being inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as the winningest head coach at both the University of Toledo and the University of Missouri.
Pinkel began his head coaching career at Toledo in 1991 and during the next 10 years he would take the Rockets to new heights, winning 65.9 percent of his games and amassing a 73-37-3 record. His nine winning seasons at Toledo included the 1995 MAC championship, with the Rockets going 11-0-1 and finishing at No. 24 in the final polls. Pinkel would lead Toledo to three other MAC West Division titles.
In 1997, the Rockets finished 9-3, climbing as high as No. 18 in the national rankings. They repeated as division champions again in 1998 with a 7-5 record. In his final season with the Rockets in 2000, the team went 10-1, including a 24-6 win at Penn State. The team finished the regular season with a share of the MAC West Division title and ranked No. 25 in the AP Poll. Pinkel was named the MAC Coach of the Year in 1995 and 1997.
Pinkel was inducted into the University of Toledo Varsity T Hall of Fame in 2009.
Pinkel took over at Missouri in 2001, leading the Tigers to 10 winning seasons, five conference division titles, 10 bowl appearances and six bowl victories. He finished his career at Missouri with an overall record of 118-73. Pinkel's Missouri teams posted final top-20 national rankings five times, including AP rankings of No. 4 in 2007 and No. 5 in 2013. In 2007, he was named the National Coach of the Year by FieldTurf, and he won conference coach of the year honors in 2007 (Big 12) and 2014 (SEC). In 2007, Mizzou claimed the school's first No. 1 national ranking since 1960. In 2011, the Tigers were SEC East Division champs, won the Cotton Bowl and finished with a final No. 5 ranking in the national polls.
Pinkel is one of only three coaches in history to be the winningest coach of two college football programs, joining Bear Bryant (Kentucky, Alabama) and Steve Spurrier (Florida, South Carolina). He retired from coaching in 2015 due to a diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Active in the community, Pinkel created the GP Made Foundation to help youth facing difficult challenges and has raised more than $10 million for charitable causes. In 2017, Pinkel released an autobiography "The 100-Yard Journey: A Life in Coaching and Battling for the Win."
Mel Long (1998 Induction)
Mel Long was a three-time, first-team All-Mid-American Conference selection from 1969-71 as a defensive tackle. He was first-team Newspaper Enterprise Association All-America, second-team AP All-America and third-team Central Press All-American in 1970.
In 1971 he was a first-team pick of the AP, UPI, NEA, Football Writers Association and several others, thus becoming the first consensus All-America in Mid-American Conference history. He was MAC "Defensive Player of the Year" in 1971 and played in the All-America Bowl Game in Tampa.
Long was tri-captain of the 1971 team that concluded a 35-game unbeaten, untied streak. He helped UT win three consecutive MAC and Tangerine Bowl crowns and earn top-20 rankings each season.
Long was drafted by Cleveland in the 1972 NFL Draft and spent the 1972-75 seasons with the Browns. He was inducted into the University of Toledo Varsity T Hall of Fame in 1982. He was voted the No. 4 all-time player on Toledo's All-Century Football Team in 2017.