IT WAS NOT so long ago that "Mean" Joe Greene was thinking how fortunate they were. For better than 10 years, he, Dwight White, Ernie Holmes and L.C. Greenwood would occasionally get together again to do autograph shows. They were the "Steel Curtain," the formidable defensive line that led the Steelers to victories in four Super Bowls in January 1975, '76, '79 and '80. Greene had been especially close to White, who had been his roommate and in June had died of complications following back surgery. He was just 58, another Steeler from the glory days who had passed away too soon.
Greene spoke at the funeral at Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. As the graying former defensive tackle looked out upon the crowded pews, which included dozens of ex-Steelers and Gov. Rendell, it occurred to him that suddenly there were now just two of them left from the old Steel Curtain. "Fats" Holmes (59) had succumbed to injuries he received during a car accident in January. Though Greene was at an age when the death of old friends seems to be a yearly occurrence, the loss of "Fats" and then Dwight had happened so quickly that it left him reeling in grief.