At first he thought it
was a crank call. Phil Hansen didn't know what to make of the two people
at the other end of the phone call he had answered. That is until he
heard Ralph Wilson's trademark laugh. Wilson and his wife Mary were
trying to congratulate Hansen after being named the 27th inductee for the Buffalo Bills Wall of Fame.
“First,
I was kind of shocked,” said Hansen by phone from his North Dakota
home. “And then I quickly looked down at the number and I saw the 716
phone number and then Mr. Wilson got a chuckle out of something. I said,
“No, that's Mr. Wilson. I'd recognize that laugh anywhere.”
Hansen
was so surprised because he never envisioned he'd be on the Wall of
Fame, but after putting together a solid 11-year playing career for the
Bills, and only the Bills, the Wall of Fame committee saw him as a
fitting member.
”When I look back I think of my time in Buffalo, I
wasn't a superstar,” said Hansen. “I look back at my career and I'd say
I was a consistent, dependable and accountable football player. That's
not fancy, but it's who I was. And with all of the great names around me
on the football field, I did my role. I did my job and I did it as well
as I could.”
Hansen's blue collar approach to the game was
fitting of his roots in rural North Dakota where he grew up on a 4,000
acre farm. It also endeared him to a Bills fan base that has always
revered hard work and dedicated play.
A second-round pick in
1991, Hansen walked into what most college prospects would consider a
dream scenario. Fresh off a gut-wrenching defeat in Super Bowl XXV,
Buffalo still had the core of a championship caliber team and Hansen was
an additional piece to the puzzle. True to Hansen's workmanlike
approach, he only wished his time with the Bills had come sooner.
“One
of the biggest regrets I have is that I came when the Super Bowls were
already happening,” he said. “I came after the first one, so I got to go
to three. But one thing I really regret is not being there when those
teams were making what it takes to go to those Super Bowls in the late
1980s. Those were the building years and where those bonds were made
between those players. They accepted me when I got there, but I had
never really felt a part of that great group of Kelly, Hull, Smith,
Talley and all of those guys that made that team what it was by the time
they got to the Super Bowl. I got there for the frosting on the cake,
not the first layer.”
Still, Hansen proved himself early in his career earning 10 starts as a rookie while earning NFL All-Rookie team honors.
His
career year arguably came in 1995 when he posted his only double-digit
sack season with 10 and his first of three consecutive 100-tackle
campaigns (110).
“Bryce Paup was a tremendous addition to our
defense during those years. I just remember thinking I moved around a
little bit after that because Bryce and Bruce were both outside guys. So
I kind of found my place on the inside of that pass-rushing group,”
Hansen said. “You never know it at the time, but those were the glory
days in my span of time anyway. Those are some serious pass rushers
there and I was certainly a beneficiary of having those two guys garner a
lot of attention.”
Though Hansen wasn't all that interested in
mentioning any of the personal highlights of his career, some that stand
out include his interception of Dan Marino in the 1992 AFC Championship
game victory at Miami (29-10). He stoned Barry Sanders in his own end
zone along with Bruce Smith for a safety that provided the game-winning
points in a 1997 home win over Detroit (22-13). He had a pair of fumble
recoveries including one that he returned 13 yards for his only career
touchdown in a win over Oakland in 1998 (44-21). And Hansen was
instrumental in the final victory of his career when he tipped and
intercepted a Vinny Testaverde pass to preserve a 14-9 win over the Jets
at the Meadowlands in his final season (2001).
Late in his
career he was part of one of the most formidable defensive fronts in
Bills history as he along with Ted Washington and Bruce Smith helped
lead Buffalo's defense to a number one league ranking in 1999. The Bills
allowed just over 85 yards rushing per game that season (85.6).
“Ted
Cottrell did a great job that year as defensive coordinator,” said
Hansen. “You'd rather trade out all those things for a Super Bowl win,
but to be recognized as the number one defense in the league that says
something as well. Looking back on it I think you never realize how good
and how special those days were until they're not there anymore. That
was a pretty special time. Ted Washington in the middle… I would go to
battle with him every day of the week and Bruce Smith as well. The three
of us up front for several years we really felt good about what we had
there.”
A three-time AFC Champion, Hansen still ranks third in
franchise history in sacks (61.5) behind only former teammate and Hall
of Famer Bruce Smith and Aaron Schobel. And only 10 Wall of Famers have
appeared in more games than the 156 that Hansen suited up for Buffalo.
Currently
residing in Detroit Lake, Minnesota, Hansen is still involved in
football as he does radio color commentary for his alma mater at North
Dakota State. He also officiates high school football games in
Minnesota.
The former defensive end has not yet selected a home date from the Bills 2011 schedule for his Wall of Fame induction ceremony.
(Courtesy of Chris Brown, Lead Journalist Buffalo Bills.com)