Hall has challenge displaying all items

In This Oct. 8, 2018, file photo, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees (9) reacts after breaking the NFL record for all-time passing yards during, the first half of an NFL football game against the Washington Redskins in New Orleans. Visitors to the Pro Football Hall of Fame can see both the football Drew Brees threw in becoming the NFL's all-time passing yards leader and the uniform the Saints quarterback wore while making history. Mark Baker, the hall's president and chief executive officer, holds the ball at left. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)
In This Oct. 8, 2018, file photo, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees (9) reacts after breaking the NFL record for all-time passing yards during, the first half of an NFL football game against the Washington Redskins in New Orleans. Visitors to the Pro Football Hall of Fame can see both the football Drew Brees threw in becoming the NFL's all-time passing yards leader and the uniform the Saints quarterback wore while making history. Mark Baker, the hall's president and chief executive officer, holds the ball at left. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

Visitors to the Pro Football Hall of Fame can see both the football Drew Brees threw in becoming the NFL's all-time passing yards leader and the uniform the Saints quarterback wore while making history.

Hall of Fame officials had been monitoring Brees' chase of Peyton Manning's record, hoping the quarterback would set the mark Oct. 8 at home in New Orleans. Brees did just that before halftime -- with a touchdown no less -- allowing the game to be stopped. Brees walked to the sideline and handed the ball to David Baker, the hall's president and chief executive officer.

"It was perfect," said Saleem Choudhry, vice president of exhibits and museum services. "He threw a 62-yard touchdown and eclipsed a record. We stopped the game. He comes over, shakes David's hand, hands him the ball. It was a very unique moment. I just kick myself sometimes that I was right down there to observe that, but those are some great moments that occur ... that you can plan for it."

Some NFL records, such as Tennessee running back Derrick Henry matching the longest touchdown run at 99 yards last December, mean a quick email to the team asking for an item to commemorate the moment. Henry and the Titans sent his No. 22 jersey, just one of approximately 50 significant moments in the 2018 season marked by the hall.

"The great part of a football uniform, there's lots of pieces and parts," Choudhry told The Associated Press.

Displaying all those items is both the task and challenge of the Pro Football Hall of Fame , the museum for a game in which the NFL enters its 100th season this fall with both history and records made regularly. Since opening in 1963 in Canton, Ohio, the hall just keeps growing, with a now 135,000-square foot building still not enough space to display all the jerseys, helmets, balls, gloves, Super Bowl rings and, of course, Hall of Fame busts.

"We have a massive exhibit area but have probably close to 97% of the information, documentation and artifacts that we preserve here not on display," archivist Jon Kendle said.

The Hall of Fame has more than 40 million pages of documents, including one showing the birth of pro football in 1892 in Pennsylvania with a $500 payment by a team called the Allegheny Athletic Association to play in a game against a big rival. It was found in a closet of the Pittsburgh Steelers. There are more than six million photos in a collection that keeps growing.

As a museum, the hall's mission includes preserving the history of pro football and the game's big moments. And yes, officials know exactly where every piece is, especially those in storage; everything is catalogued and accessible.

"We constantly are plucking things in and out from our collection to feature in an exhibit if we're developing something, or in a traveling exhibit, or as we continually refresh our exhibits in the hall itself," Choudhry said.

Preservation comes first. An item such as a leather helmet that may be more than 75 years old might need to be stored in a box away from light and avoid being put on display for the 363 days the hall is open each year; it's closed for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Or a jersey that's been on display for a couple of years could need some time to simply rest on a shelf.

"We're fortunate enough that we have several Johnny Unitas jerseys, so we could just swap it out for another, or we showcase another player that we'd like to bring into the limelight," Choudhry said.

Approximately 250,000 visitors tour the hall annually, a group that includes rookies from the Cleveland Browns and Philadelphia Eagles this year alone. Small groups can go behind the scenes touring the Ralph Wilson Jr. Pro Football Research and Preservation Center with an archivist.

An additional 700,000 are expected to attend at least one of the events at this year's enshrinement ceremonies, which feature a new locker exhibit with items from the inductees , such as two Super Bowl commemorative jackets owned by the late Broncos owner Pat Bowlen. Or Tony Gonzalez's Kansas City Chiefs jersey worn Jan. 1, 2005, when he broke the NFL record for most catches in a season by a tight end.

Sports on 07/24/2019

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