CHICAGO — Steve McMichael always had that big and boisterous persona and a willingness to say whatever was on his mind, so it's no stretch to think the Chicago Bears great's Pro Football Hall of Fame induction speech would have been one to remember.
''He would cut a scorcher," his wife Misty McMichael said. "He would have been amazing.''
McMichael is in the advanced stages of ALS and won't be able to make the trip from Homer Glen, Illinois, to Canton, Ohio, for his induction Saturday. He lost his ability to move and speak, though he will deliver a brief and heartfelt message he put together through an eye-gaze device: ''Hello Chicago. Thank you, Chicago.''
The 66-year-old McMichael is part of a seven-member class that includes former Bears Devin Hester and Julius Peppers.
An All-Pro defensive tackle in 1985 and 1987, he played in a franchise-record 191 consecutive games from 1981 to 1993 and ranks second to Richard Dent on the Bears' all-time sacks list with 92 1/2. His final NFL season was with Green Bay in 1994.
Whether he was terrorizing opponents or discussing the Bears on sports talk radio, the man known as ''Ming The Merciless'' and ''Mongo'' after the character in ''Blazing Saddles'' who knocked out a horse remained a prominent presence in Chicago long after his playing days ended. He also spent five years in professional wrestling in the late 1990s.
McMichael's brash personality and willingness to say whatever was on his mind made him a natural for professional wrestling. It also got him ejected from a Cubs game in 2001 for calling out home plate umpire Angel Hernandez during the seventh-inning stretch.
He began working for World Championship Wrestling at the height of the ''Monday Night Wars'' with the World Wrestling Federation, starting as a color commentator and later joining Ric Flair in the ''Four Horsemen'' group.