Kent Hull: Solid, solid as a rock
Posted on: August 20,2013
(This was the column I wrote on Oct. 18, 2011, the day Kent Hull died at the age of 50.)
Solid. That’s the one word to best describe Kent Hull. He was solid. Solid as a football player. Solid as a teammate. Solid as a person. Solid as a friend. Solid. Solid as granite.
There was no pretense, nothing phony, about Kent Hull.
Hull, whom I covered when he was a skinny, 18-year-old freshman at Mississippi State, became one of the greatest centers in NFL history. He died Tuesday from gastrointestinal bleeding at 50, far, far too young.
Kent was a good friend, so this is going to be personal.
He was in his first month at State, and I was in my first month at The Clarion-Ledger when we met in September of 1979. He was tall and long-limbed, the son of former Mississippi State basketball star Charlie Hull. Kent looked more basketball player than football player at that point, and the truth is, first-year State coach Emory Bellard probably wanted to redshirt him and bring him along slowly.
Injuries changed all that. Early on, Kent was starting, usually outweighed by 70 pounds or so by the guys whom he was assigned to block.
Orley Hood, then the sports editor of the old Jackson Daily News, interviewed Kent a couple days after his first start against Florida when a senior nose tackle thoroughly abused Hull.
“How was it?” Hood asked.
“I thought I was going to get killed,” Hull answered.
“You mean hurt?” Hood asked.
“No, killed. I thought the guy was going to kill me.”
That was Kent. He was a great interview, so honest, from Day One.
Another time, Orley and I followed Mississippi State to Maryland. There, Kent was to face an All-America noseguard who was five years older and 80 pounds heavier. I was sitting by the late Senator, John C. Stennis, in the press box. He was scanning the lineup and came across Kent’s name and saw he was from Greenwood.
“That must be ol’ Charlie Hull’s boy,” Stennis said in that syrupy drawl of his.
I told him Kent was indeed.
Minutes later, that Maryland noseguard bowled over Hull with a vicious forearm to the chin.
Said the Senator, “I don’t believe I’ll mention that play to ol’ Charlie.”
Go-to guy at MSU
I particularly remember one Super Bowl Media Day in Minneapolis. Kent was on one of the main interview stages, surrounded by reporters and TV cameramen from ESPN and the networks. Reporters were shouting their questions, often interrupting one another when Hull, seemingly amused by all the fuss, spotted me at the back.
“Hey Rick, how you doin’ buddy?” Hull asked. “Whatcha need?”
Hull reached over the network cameras to shake my hand. That was Kent.
Media threw party
“He was everybody’s go-to guy,” Sully said. “Up here, we let him know how much we thought of him.”
When Hull announced his retirement, the Buffalo media arranged for a private room at popular Italian restaurant and threw Hull a retirement party. Folks, you don’t see that often.
“When Kent walked in, he got a standing ovation,” Sullivan said.
“When it came time for Kent to talk, he started crying,” Sully continued. “Pretty soon, all of us were crying.”
Many people in Buffalo – and in Mississippi – have shed tears the past two days. The thing is, when you think of Kent Hull, you cannot help but smile through the tears.
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