NFL: Salata honored as Man of the Year by NFL Alumni’s local
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Richard Dunn
Newport Beach’s Paul Salata, the founder of Irrelevant Week, will
be honored as Man of the Year at the NFL Alumni-Greater Los Angeles
Chapter Awards Banquet on Dec. 6 at the Long Beach Marriott.
“I like it,” Salata said of the award, “because it gives me a chance
to talk about my school (USC), my church and my newspaper.”
But, before his NFL peers crown Salata as the new millennium’s first
honoree, the locally famous philanthropist and all-time public hero will
celebrate a more important aspect of life on Sunday -- 50 years of
marriage to his wife, Beverly.
“That’s the golden anniversary, so it’s everything golden,” said
Salata, known for dramatic themes and parties during zany Irrelevant
Week, the annual tribute to the last player picked in the NFL draft.
Salata, known as a man of laughter, once surprised his wife on her
birthday by hiring the USC band to march up to the front door of his
Linda Isle home to serenade Mrs. Salata.
“We met at USC,” said Salata, who was an end at USC and caught a
touchdown pass for the Trojans in the 1945 Rose Bowl game, a 25-0 USC
victory over Tennessee.
“Yeah, (the touchdown) is what caught her eye,” he quipped. “And her
dad thought I could help him in gambling.”
Salata, who turned 75 on Oct. 17, has emceed or been the guest of
honor, the roaster or the roasteree, of an endless parade of events and
has received countless honors and memberships, including being honored
with a Lifetime Achievement Award on the national level by the NFL Alumni
in April 2000.
“I’m pleased because they’re my peers,” Salata said of the Man of the
Year recognition by the local chapter of the NFL Alumni, which previously
honored Maury Nipp (1998), Skip Giancanelli (1999) and Costa Mesa’s Jack
Faulkner (2000), the longtime Rams executive.
Salata, who survived cancer surgery in February and is off
chemotherapy, started Irrelevant Week with the sentiment of wanting “to
do something nice for someone for no reason.”
The hokey, tongue-in-cheek Irrelevant Week festivities, which raises
money for charities, has been a way to put college football’s so-called
underdog on the map.
“When I played, I was sort of a champion of the guy who never gets
recognized,” Salata said in a 1978 Sports Illustrated story that never
appeared in the magazine. “I always said if I ever could afford it, I was
going to do something for the guy you never heard of.”
Never a starter in college, Salata managed to play for the San
Francisco 49ers, Baltimore Colts and Pittsburgh Steelers, as well as the
Calgary Stampeders in the CFL. He laughs in claiming he invented the wide
receiver position, because he “didn’t like to block and kept moving
farther and farther out.”
Actually, Salata was pretty good, according to veteran Baltimore
sports editor and columnist John Steadman, who covered the Colts in 1950
when Salata played and once wrote: “Just wondering if the best pass
catching hands belonged to Don Hutson, Raymond Berry, Tom Fears or Paul
Salata.”
As for the madcap celebration every June in Newport Beach, Sports
Illustrated covered the 25th anniversary Irrelevant Week in 2000, which
was attended by numerous former Mr. Irrelevant honorees, including NFL
players Matt Elliott and Marty Moore.
The NFL lets Salata announce the last pick on the podium each year at
the NFL draft.
“No one else could think about doing something like that,” Steadman
once said.
Too bad the Sports Illustrated story didn’t make it into print 23
years ago, because Joe Jares’ bumped feature had a hot lede: “Paul Salata
is a screwball, an ex-professional football player and millionaire sewer
contractor, probably in that order.”
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