Mr. Irrelevant drops the ball
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Alex Coolman
The note in the middle of the box score didn’t look like much: “Finn,”
it said. “1-1.”
But for Jim Finn, the Indianapolis Colts fullback who was named Mr.
Irrelevant in 1999, that tiny mention represented the fulfillment of
major expectations.
The box score, a report on Sunday’s Colts game against the New York
Jets, recorded Finn’s first NFL carry.
The only problem? Finn fumbled. Two yards away from the end zone, he
dropped the ball like a politician ditching a campaign promise.
Finn’s actions turned out to be thoroughly irrelevant. Indianapolis
won, anyway.
To Paul Salata, the man who created the Mr. Irrelevant contest 25
years ago to celebrate the last player picked in the NFL draft, the
explanation for Finn’s gaffe seemed perfectly obvious.
“We’re attributing that to the fact that his Irrelevant Week trophy
that he took home has a guy fumbling the ball,” Salata said. “He thought,
if that’s the way it’s done, that’s the way I’m going to do it.”
The men who are tapped as Mr. Irrelevant manage to accomplish a wide
variety of things, Salata noted. One has gone on to graduate from West
Point; another has become a senator.
But never before has an Irrelevant honoree made such a prominent goof.
“This is the high point of the 25 years, of course,” Salata said.
“Most of our guys were in unskilled positions, like tackles and guards
and linebackers and stuff. They haven’t stepped forward and had the game
on the line based on their actions like this was.”
The jury is still out, however, on what, if any, action the Irrelevant
Week organizers will take to recognize Finn’s accomplishment.
“We’re calling a meeting of the board of directors to see how far we
ought to take this,” Salata said. “Maybe we’ll take the Daily Pilot
article and laminate it onto a sewer pipe or something and run it
upstream.”
In all seriousness, though, Salata stressed that he wants to keep his
response to Finn’s actions in the same spirit as Irrelevant Week itself:
upbeat, and focused on helping the underdog.
“I thought about sending him a note,” Salata said, “just to say ‘Hey,
it happens to the best of us.’ ”
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