Where Are
They Now?
MERRIL
HOGE
Running Back
1987-93
Resides inFort
Thomas, Kentucky
What is your current job
and what does it entail?
I have a development
company in Idaho I started about five years ago. We deal
mainly in residential, but I am getting involved in commercial. It’s started to
evolve into a building company. It’s primarily a West thing for me. I have
another company where we build car washes in Ohio and Kentucky. We are looking into moving into
Pennsylvania
too. Those are two business ventures that I have gotten into. It’s been exiting.
I enjoy doing it.
I am also the Chairman of
the Board for the Caring Place in Pittsburgh. I have a lot going on with that. I
do a lot of speaking. I am also in the process of writing a book. And of course
I do work for ESPN.
What is the fondest
memory from your playing career?
Two things pop into my
head. One was the day I showed up in the Steelers locker room and it was
announced the locker I was in used to be Franco Harris’. The guy next to me was
Donnie Shell. And the first coach I met in the locker room was Joe Greene. My
football life as a kid flashed before. My two favorite teams when I was a kid
were Pittsburgh
and Chicago.
Playing with guys I had watched was overwhelming. My next one was when we played
the Bears the second preseason game my rookie year and I got to meet Walter
Payton. It was the highlight of my career. For him to be as classy a guy as I
envisioned was rare. I got to know him a lot better when I went to Chicago and
played.
What was your best
game?
I think the best one was
against the Houston Oilers in the playoffs on the road. My rookie year started
with Chuck Noll and Gerry Glanville having a feud. The vindication of us beating
them and him getting fired was amazing. I have never been as spent in a game as
I was in that game. I was a big part of it to at critical times. I scored the
tying touchdown. To make plays in a game like that and win it. Most people point
to the Denver
game, but we didn’t win it.
What did you like most
about playing for the Steelers?
The thing I liked the
most was the reputation that had been established there and the respect that you
got and had to live up to that had been established by the people that came
before you and the standard that they had set. Immediately you had
to
play at that level and conduct
yourself in that fashion. I had never been around anything like that before. It
all started with the Rooney family. I remember the end of my rookie year and I
was hoping one of the coaches would pull me aside and say, hey great year you’ll
be back again next year, like they do in college. Chuck Noll walked right by me
like I didn’t exist. Dick Hoak walked right by me. But I went to get a drink of
water and The Chief came around the corner and he said, ‘I am going to tell you
this. You are a hell of a football player. I love how you play.’ That was it for
me. I didn’t get what I was trying to get, but I got more than I asked for. I
never forgot that impact. It was a great reminder of the class that organization
stood for. It started there.
Teammates you were
closest to during your playing days?
The guys I was closest to
and always have been and is like a brother to me is Bubby Brister.
Dermontti Dawson, John Jackson and Mike Mularkey were close to me, but
Bubby will always be special.
Do you still keep in touch with former
teammates?
My wife was driving to
Michigan with
friends and runs into John Jackson at
a gas station in Bowling Green, Ohio. We ended up
talking to each other. I talk to Bubby all the time. I talk to Dermontti.
Who is the one player who
you thought was a must for the 75th season
team?
If you took the one
player that changed the game, and that’s rare where they had to make rules
because of their ability, Mel Blount did that. If there is one guy who was the
poster child for what the Steelers were all about, I would say Jack Lambert.
Do you still follow the
Steelers and if so, how closely?
I follow them pretty
close. I watch almost every game during the week from Sunday. There are some
teams I don’t watch because they are not a factor. I would never do that with
the Steelers. I know a lot of the organization internally and feel closer to it.
But no matter when the Steelers are in
the season I am on top of them.
Visit the Steelers
Alumni page for more on the team's former
players.