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Jim Daopoulos inducted into the Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame

Former NFL official and supervisor, Jim Daopoulos is only the second official enshrined.

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Jim Daopoulos, an NFL official for 11 years and an officiating supervisor for 12 years was inducted into the Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame on Friday.

The Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame honors residents of Kentucky “who have impacted professional football.” Daopoulos and Tommy Bell are the only NFL officials in the Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Daopoulos was born in Massachusetts and played college football at the University of Kentucky. After his college playing career, Daopoulos started officiating football at the high school level, and then college football first at the Ohio Valley Conference and then the Southeastern Conference. He joined the NFL in 1989 as a back judge (the position swapped names with the field judge in 1998). He wore number 75 for his entire career and he worked on crews lead by Gordon McCarter, Dale Hamer, Bob McElwee, Larry Nemmers, Ed Hochuli, Jeff Triplette and Johnny Grier.

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In one game, the umpire was hurt and had to come out of the game. Daopoulos came in from his deep wing position to work the umpire position. Officiating supervisor Jerry Seeman was so impressed with his work, that he encouraged Daopoulos to move to the umpire position permanently after the 1996 season.

In the postseason, Daopoulos worked eight playoff games in 11 years — four as a back judge and four as an umpire. He worked four wild card games, two divisional games, one conference championship game and Super Bowl XXXIII.

After the 1999 season, Daopoulos retired from the field and became an assistant supervisor of officials — first under Jerry Seeman and then under Mike Pereira. He assisted Pereira in scouting officials, grading them, and observing crews at games. After retiring from the front office after 12 years, Daopoulos appeared as a guest on several football broadcasts offering perspective on specific calls and NFL rules.

Not for long

For all of Daopoulos’ accolades, and there are many, he will forever be the official who was Jerry Glanville’s officiating prop for his most famous outburst. Glanville, never one to turn down a chance to be mic’d up during a game, was in rare form in a Week 1 preseason game featuring his Houston Oilers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. This was Daopoulos’ first-ever NFL game. He called a late hit out of bounds on an Oilers player, and Glanville saw the chance to get in a soundbite-worthy dig at the rookie.

As has been noted, Daopoulos went on to have an excellent career as a NFL official and today that career earned him enshrinement into the Kentucky Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Congratulations to Jim Daopoulos!

Mark Schultz is a high school football official, freelance writer and journalist. He first became interested in officiating when he was six years old, was watching a NFL game with his father and asked the fateful question, "Dad, what are those guys in the striped shirts doing?"