Ex-Jayhawk was a tackling machine

By Chuck Woodling     Jun 23, 2000

Brendon Dlouhy/Edmonton Sun
Willie Pless acknowledges his fans at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton, Alberta, on Wednesday night. The CFL standout, who retired from professional football, played one series and one play in Edmonton's preseason game Wednesday.

Some men are born to dance. Others are born to sing. Some can shoot the three-point shot. Others can perform magic with a golf club.

Some guys can play football. Some can’t. I’ve seen big men who couldn’t play a lick. And I’ve seen little guys with extraordinary ability.

Willie Pless was to me the Barry Sanders of defense.

Both Sanders and Pless are about the same size. Whereas Sanders possessed the knack of making tacklers miss him, Pless had the uncanny ability to make tackles.

Too bad Sanders and Pless never had the opportunity to perform in the same NFL venues. The NFL will find a home for a small running back, but it has no use for a 5-foot-10, 210-pound linebacker.

Willie Pless, who retired from the Canadian Football League this week at the age of 36, was simply the best defensive player in CFL history. Yet there was a time when he yearned to play in the NFL.

Ignored in the 1986 NFL draft, Pless went to Canada and played three years for the Toronto Argonauts before deciding he would try to make an NFL team as a free agent. Pless picked New Orleans, but suffered a lower back injury in a preseason Saints’ game and was placed on waivers. Later he tried out with the Chiefs. Sorry, Willie.

So Pless returned to Canada where he tackled his way into history.

Along the way, Pless was revered by the local populace for his involvement in community affairs, and respected by his contemporaries for his humility.

Willie Pless never met a microphone he liked, never looked into a television camera he loved and continually urged pen-and-pencil pushing media-types to talk to his teammates instead.

Leads CFL in career regular season tackles with 1,24111 time CFL All-Star (1986, 88, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98)Five-time winner of the CFL Most Outstanding Defensive Player Award (1992, 94, 95, 96, 97)Set CFL record for most career tackles in 1992Led the CFL in tackles in 1995, 97 & 98At Kansas University, he set the school and Big Eight Conference record for career tackles with 633Three-time All-Big Eight selection at KansasIn 1985, KU established an annual award in his name that goes to the Jayhawks’ leader in tackles each season

When Pless was a freshman at Kansas University in 1982, he rarely talked to the media because mostly he played only on the punt and kickoff coverage teams. Then, under first-year KU coach Mike Gottfried, Pless became a starting linebacker in 1983.

As his talent became more and more obvious with every game, Pless became a media target. He would have preferred an appendectomy with a church key.

All during the 1983 season, for example, Pless refused all requests from television reporters to stand in front of a camera. Eventually, though, he relented, saying: “I guess there’s no way of getting around it. You just have to come out of a shell and do it.”

Willie Pless broke the mold in his family, too. The youngest of five boys, he was the first to go to college. The other four had enlisted in the military. Pless would have loved to stay close to his Anniston, Ala., home and play for either Alabama or Auburn, but neither school was interested. Too small, you know.

How did Kansas University discover him? The Anniston High team doctor, a Kansas grad, sent films of him to the KU football office.

“When they offered me a scholarship,” Pless said later, “I was thrilled to death.”

Even though he was a starting linebacker for just three seasons, Pless established career tackling records for both Kansas University and the Big Eight Conference.

”I’m interested in making Lawrence my home.”

Willie Pless

Pless was credited with 633 tackles. To put that number in perspective, it is 230 more tackles than the runner-up, Rick Bredesen, another linebacker who played for four seasons. Moreover, the three highest single-season tackling performances by a Jayhawk are the property of Pless.

For the last decade or so, Pless has made his offseason home in Edmonton. In his last visit to Lawrence in 1997, Pless talked with KU coach Terry Allen about the possibility of joining his staff some day.

Allen says he has maintained a correspondence with Pless, and who knows?

During that ’97 visit, Pless didn’t hedge about what he wanted to do after he retired from pro football.

“I’m interested in making Lawrence my home,” he said. “My heart’s always been there.”

And what a heart it is. Willie Pless is 210 pounds of heart.

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