dolphins_cc_fc.jpgWASHINGTON – Some were gray-headed, others a bit stooped, at least one carried a cane. But, despite age, there were still hints of the large frames that had once donned football pads and exploded countless times from lines of scrimmage during an unforgettable season.

Nearly three dozen members of the 1972 Miami Dolphins finally received their White House moment Tuesday, 40 years after they made history by winning 17 games and losing none –  an achievement that no NFL team has ever matched.
President Barack Obama welcomed the former players to the East Room, a periodic occurrence at the White House these days for current sports champions.
Four decades ago, however, saluting athletes was not an established tradition. And the Watergate scandal was preoccupying President Richard Nixon back then anyway. So the men of that historic Dolphins team had not received their due.
“I know that some people may be asking why we are doing this after all these years. My answer is simple: I wanted to be the young guy up here for once,” Obama deadpanned.
The faces were still recognizable: Hall of Famers Larry Csonka, the team’s star fullback; quarterback Bob Griese; offensive lineman Larry Little; linebacker Nick Buoniconti; and, of course, their leader, coach Don Shula.
“Some of them are a little harder to recognize these days,” Obama said. “They don’t have the Afros, the mutton chops, the Fu Manchus.”
Obama, an avid sports fan and regular ESPN watcher, made clear to the Dolphins and his audience that, as a Chicagoan, his football team is the Bears.
“We understand,” Shula said. “You have to root for someone.”
Obama noted that, two years, ago he recognized the 1985 Bears on the White House South Lawn. The team had not received the usual White House reception in 1986, a decision attributed to the space shuttle Challenger disaster which occurred two days after the Bears beat the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.
“That day I called them the greatest team ever. But, I mean, take it with a grain of salt,” the president added sheepishly with the Dolphins clustered behind him. “The Bears lost once in their nearly perfect season.” Then he paused for effect. “It happened to be to the Dolphins.”
Obama praised the players’ post football careers, noting that members of the team now include a minister, a mayor, a doctor, a state senator, a high school counselor and successful businessmen. He singled out Buoniconti for helping found a leading spinal cord research center, the result of an injury sustained by his son on the football field.
Shula and the players gave Obama a Dolphins jersey with No. 72 on it. It didn’t bear his name; instead, it said, “Undefeated.”
At least three players, including Hall of Fame center Jim Langer, did not make the trip to the White House, citing political differences with Obama.
Little and Griese, speaking to reporters afterward, said they regretted that those former teammates missed the ceremony.
“I don’t have any thoughts about those guys. I’m just sorry that they weren’t here,” Griese said. “We had a great day.  The White House treated us greatly. Everybody who was here was happy they were here.”
Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, a Republican, paid the players’ expenses.
Little said the visit felt like a career capstone.
“I can go no higher. This is it,” he said. “Hall of Fame, 17 and 0, 32 and 2 over two years, and now being on the White House grounds. Can’t beat it.”

*WHITE HOUSE HONOR:  Coach Don Shula and members of the 1972 perfect season Miami Dolphins present President Barack Obama with a signed jersey during their welcome at the White House Tuesday.