15 FINALISTS FOR HALL OF FAME ELECTION Canton, OH – Michael Irvin, Dan Marino, Derrick Thomas, and Steve Young, four first-year eligible candidates, are among the 15 finalists who will be considered for election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame when the Hall’s Board of Selectors meet in Jacksonville, Florida on Saturday, February 5. Joining the four first-year eligible players as finalists are eight other modern-era players, a highly successful team/league administrator, and two players nominated earlier by the Hall of Fame’s Senior Committee. The Senior Committee nominees, who were announced in August 2004, are Benny Friedman and Fritz Pollard. The other modern-era player finalists include defensive ends Richard Dent, Claude Humphrey, and L.C. Greenwood; linebacker Harry Carson; offensive linemen Russ Grimm and Bob Kuechenberg; cornerback Roger Wehrli; and wide receiver Art Monk. The team/league administrator is George Young. To be elected, a finalist must receive a minimum positive vote of 80 percent. Listed alphabetically, the 15 finalists with their positions, teams, and years active follow:
Harry Carson – Linebacker – 1976-1988 New York Giants Richard Dent – Defensive End – 1983-1993, 1995 Chicago
Bears, Benny Friedman – Quarterback – 1927 Cleveland Bulldogs, 1928 Detroit Wolverines, 1929-1931 New York Giants, 1932-1934 Brooklyn Dodgers L.C. Greenwood – Defensive End – 1969-1981 Pittsburgh Steelers Russ Grimm – Guard – 1981-1991 Washington Redskins Claude Humphrey – Defensive End – 1968-1978 Atlanta
Falcons, Michael Irvin – Wide Receiver – 1988-1999 Dallas Cowboys Bob Kuechenberg – Guard – 1970-1984 Miami Dolphins Dan Marino – Quarterback – 1983-1999 Miami Dolphins Art Monk – Wide Receiver – 1980-1993 Washington Redskins, 1994 New York Jets, 1995 Philadelphia Eagles Fritz Pollard – Back/Coach – 1919-1921, 1925-1926 Akron Pros/Indians, 1922 Milwaukee Badgers, 1923-1924 Gilberton Cadamounts (independent pro team), 1923, 1925 Hammond Pros, 1925 Providence Steam Roller Derrick Thomas – Linebacker – 1989-1999 Kansas City Chiefs Roger Wehrli – Cornerback – 1969-1982 St. Louis Cardinals George Young – Contributor – 1968-1974 Baltimore Colts, 1975-1978 Miami Dolphins, 1979-1997 New York Giants, 1998-2001 National Football League Steve Young – Quarterback – 1985-1986 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 1987-1999 San Francisco 49ers
Carson, Dent, Greenwood, Humphrey, Kuechenberg, Monk, and George Young have all been finalists in previous years. Although they have been eligible prior to this year, this is the first time that Friedman, Grimm, Pollard, and Wehrli have been finalists.
From this year’s list, eight players – Carson, Greenwood, Grimm, Irvin, Kuechenberg, Marino, Thomas, and Wehrli – spent their entire NFL career with just one team. Friedman and Pollard were selected as senior candidates by the Hall of Fame’s Seniors Committee at their August 2004 meeting. The Seniors Committee reviews the qualifications of those players, coaches, and contributors whose careers took place more than 25 years ago. The remaining 13 modern-era finalists were determined by a vote of the Hall’s 39-member Board of Selectors from a list of 90 preliminary nominees that earlier was reduced to a list of 25 semi-finalists. To be eligible for election, modern-era players must be retired at least five years while a coach needs only to be retired. The Board of Selectors will meet in Jacksonville, Florida on Saturday, February 5, 2005, to elect the Hall of Fame Class of 2005. To be elected, a finalist must receive a minimum positive vote of 80 percent. At the 2005 election meeting, the selectors will thoroughly discuss the careers of each finalist before narrowing the field to six candidates. At least three candidates must be elected but the total class cannot number more than six. Of the 2005 finalists, Friedman and Pollard have been eligible 43 years, Greenwood and Humphrey 19 years, Wehrli 18 years, Kuechenberg 16 years, Carson 12, Grimm nine years, Monk five years, Dent three years, and for Irvin, Marino, Thomas, and Steve Young 2005 is their first year of eligibility. The Class of 2005 will be announced at a press conference at 12 noon (ET) on Saturday, February 5, at the Super Bowl media center in the Prime Osborn Convention Center. Representatives of the accounting firm Deloitte & Touche will tabulate all votes during the meeting. At the press conference, they will present Hall of Fame President John Bankert with an envelope containing the names of the nominees elected. The Hall will contact each new member immediately after the announcement. Members of the Class of 2005 in Jacksonville for the Super Bowl will be asked to join the press conference. Those not able to attend will be asked to join via teleconference. Enshrinement of the Class of 2005 will take place at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, on Sunday, August 7, 2005. NOTE: Detailed biographies and statistics for the 15 finalists as
well as photos are available on the Pro Football Hall of Fame's media
website: Profootballhof.com/media CLASS OF 2005 15 FINALISTS Harry Carson Linebacker . . . 6-2, 237. . .South Carolina State . . .
1976-1988 New York Giants . . . 13 seasons, 173 games Richard Dent Defensive End. . .6-5, 265. . .Tennessee State. . .1983-1993, 1995 Chicago Bears, 1994 San Francisco 49ers, 1996 Indianapolis Colts, 1997 Philadelphia Eagles. . .15 seasons, 203 games. . .Selected by Chicago in eighth round (203rd player overall) of 1983 NFL Draft. . .Played in every game as rookie. . . Became full-time starter early in 1984. . .An intimidating player, could speed rush or power rush the quarterback. . .One of game’s premier pass rushers with 137.5 career sacks. . .Recorded double-digit sacks eight times including a streak of five consecutive years (1984-1988). . .Led NFC with team record 17.5 sacks, 1984. . .Following year, led NFL with 17 sacks as an integral part of Bears dominating defense. . .Earned Super Bowl XX MVP honors following Bears lopsided 46-10 win over Patriots. . .Career statistics include 8 interceptions (one touchdown), a safety, and fumble recovery for a touchdown. . .Named first- or second-team All-Pro four times, All-NFC five times. . . Selected to play in four Pro Bowls (1985, 1986, 1991, 1994). . .Born December 13, 1960 in Atlanta, Georgia. Benny Friedman Quarterback . . . 5-10, 183 . . . Michigan . . . 1927
Cleveland Bulldogs, 1928 Detroit Wolverines, 1929-1931 New York Giants,
1932-1934 Brooklyn Dodgers . . . 8 seasons, 81 games . . . A two-time
All-America choice
L. C. Greenwood Defensive End . . . 6-6, 245. . . Arkansas AM&N . . . 1969-1981 Pittsburgh Steelers . . . 13 seasons, 170 games . . . Three-year regular, Ebony All-America in college. . .10th-round pick (238th player overall) in 1969 draft . . . Served as fifth defensive lineman first two years before becoming regular left defensive end in 1971 . . . Teamed with Hall of Famer Joe Greene, the left defensive tackle, to give Steelers superior left-side strength for their "Steel Curtain" defense . . . Consistent, possessed exceptional quickness, speed . . . Used height to knock down passes or force passers to rush throws . . . Noted for free-wheeling style as pass rusher . . . Had 73.5 sacks, 14 opponents fumble recoveries in career . . . Missed five games with knee injury in 1977, but rebounded with superior 1978 campaign . . .Played in six AFC title games, Super Bowls IX, X, XIII, XIV . . . Batted down three Fran Tarkenton passes in Super Bowl IX; sacked Roger Staubach three times in Super Bowl X . . . All-Pro twice, All-AFC five times . . . Born September 8, 1946, in Canton, Mississippi. Russ Grimm Guard . . . 6-3, 273 . . . Pittsburgh . . . 1981-1991 Washington Redskins . . . 11 seasons, 140 games . . . Selected in 3rd round (69th player overall) in 1981 NFL Draft . . . Originally pegged to play center, moved to left guard as rookie . . . Immediate starter on Redskins offensive line that earned nickname "The Hogs" . . . By second season gained much notice from around the league . . . Teaming with tackle Joe Jacoby, formed perhaps most punishing side of an offensive line in football at the time . . . With Grimm’s speed and strength, Redskins rode success of dominating running attack to victory in Super Bowl XVII in which John Riggins rushed for then-record 166 yards. . . During playoff run that year, team averaged 152 yards rushing . . . In 1983 Grimm was selected to first of four straight Pro Bowls . . . Also marked start of four consecutive years (1983-1986) of All-Pro recognition . . . Also named All-NFC in each of those seasons . . . In 1987 moved to center and started five games before being sidelined until season finale with knee injury. . . Missed 11 games in 1988 with knee injury . . . Appeared in five NFC championship games and four Super Bowls including wins in Super Bowls XVII, XXII, XXVI . . . Elected to NFL's 1980s All-Decade Team . . . Born May 2, 1959 in Scottsdale, Pennsylvania. Claude Humphrey Defensive End . . . 6-4, 252 . . . Tennessee State . . .
1968-1978 (inj. res. - 1975) Atlanta Falcons, 1979-1981 Philadelphia Eagles
. . . 14 seasons, 171 games . . . Falcons’ first-round pick (3rd player
overall) in 1968 draft . . . Recorded 11.5 sacks as rookie . . . Named
National Football League Defensive Rookie of the Year, 1968 Michael Irvin Wide Receiver . . . 6-2, 207 . . . Miami (FL). . . 1988-1999 Dallas Cowboys . . . Selected by Dallas in first round (11th player overall) of 1988 NFL Draft . . . 12 seasons, 159 games. . . Earned starting role as rookie, but injuries caused him to miss 12 games in first two seasons . . . His 20.4 yard per catch average during rookie year led NFC . . . Feared by opponents for his combination of speed, size, strength . . . In 1991, caught 93 passes for a league-leading 1,523 yards and 8 touchdowns . . . Consensus All-Pro that year and earned the first of five straight Pro Bowl trips . . . Recorded 1,000-yard seasons in all but one year from 1991 through 1998 . . . In 1995 recorded finest season with 111 receptions for 1,603 yards, recorded an NFL record eleven 100-yard games, and scored 10 touchdowns . . . Had seven receptions for 100 yards and two touchdowns in the Cowboys' 38-27 win over Packers in 1995 NFC Championship Game. . . Capped off year with five catches for 76 yards in Dallas' 27-17 victory over Steelers in Super Bowl XXX . . . Accumulated 750 receptions for 11,904 yards, 65 TDs during career . . . A member of the NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1990s . . . Had 100 or more yards receiving in a game forty-seven times . . . Born March 5, 1966 in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.
Bob Kuechenberg Guard. . .6-2, 253. . .Notre Dame. . .1970-1984 Miami Dolphins (inj. res. - 1984). . .Selected by Philadelphia Eagles in 4th round (80th player overall) of 1969 AFL-NFL Draft. . .15 seasons, 196 games. . .Spent 1984 season on injured reserve. . .Released by both the Eagles and Atlanta Falcons. . .Played semi-pro football before signing as free agent with Miami Dolphins in 1970. . .Highly competitive and driven to succeed, played in more regular season games (196) than any other player in Dolphins history at the time of his retirement. . . Also only player to play in all 19 playoff games in franchise’s history at that time. . .A versatile player, spent time at tackle and center positions. . .In 1978 played eight games at guard and seven at tackle, earning Pro Bowl spot at guard and Sporting News All-AFC honors at tackle. . .In 1977 suffered a pair of fractures in back in August but returned to lineup after missing just two regular season starts. . .Named to six Pro Bowls (1975, 1976, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1984). . .All-Pro 1975, 1978; All-AFC 1974, 1975, 1978; All-Pro Second Team 1975, 1977, 1978. . .Had memorable performance in Super Bowl VII victory. . .Born October 14, 1947 in Gary, Indiana.
Dan Marino Quarterback . . . 6-4, 218. . . Pittsburgh. . . 1983-1999
Miami Dolphins. . . 17 seasons, 242 games. . . Selected in first round (27th
player overall) of 1983 NFL Draft. . . Earned starting role early in rookie
season
Art Monk Wide Receiver. . .6-3, 210. . .Syracuse. . .1980-1993 Washington Redskins, 1994 New York Jets, 1995 Philadelphia Eagles. . .16 seasons, 224 games. . .Selected by Washington in first round (18th player overall) of 1980 NFL Draft. . .Prototype for today’s bigger, stronger receivers. . .Caught 58 passes as a rookie and was unanimous All-Rookie choice. . .Had 50 or more receptions in a season nine times. . .Gained 1,000 or more receiving yards in a season five times. . .Set then-NFL records for catches in a season (106), most consecutive games with at least one reception (164), and career receptions (820). . .Finished career with 940 catches. . . Had finest season in 1984, catching eight or more passes in six games, five games of 100-plus receiving yards, and in one game caught 10 passes for 200 yards. . .Named Redskins 1984 Most Valuable Player. . .First Redskin to produce three consecutive 1,000 receiving yard seasons. . .A three-time Pro Bowl selection, was All-Pro choice in 1984 and 1985. . .First- or second-team All-NFC three times. . .Born December 5, 1957 in White Plains, New York.
Fritz Pollard Halfback/Coach. . . 5-9, 165 . . . Bates, Brown . . .
1919-1921, 1925-1926 Akron Pros/Indians, 1922 Milwaukee Badgers, 1923-1924
Gilberton Cadamounts (independent pro team) 1923, 1925 Hammond Pros, 1925
Providence Steam Roller . . . 8 seasons . . . All-America halfback from
Brown. . . A pro football pioneer Derrick Thomas Linebacker. . . 6-3, 243. . . Alabama. . . 1989-1999 Kansas City Chiefs. . . 11 seasons, 169 games. . . Selected in the first round (4th player overall) in 1989 NFL Draft. . . Consensus All-America. . . Amassed 10 sacks and 75 tackles to earn Defensive Rookie of the Year honors . . . In 1990 recorded league-leading and team record 20 sacks; including NFL record seven sacks in game vs. Seahawks . . . Also recorded six forced fumbles, two fumble recoveries, 63 tackles, five pass deflections, 35 quarterback pressures and was named to first of nine Pro Bowls. . . No player amassed more sacks during 1990s than 116.5 by Thomas . . . e He HFinished career with 126.5 sacks; fourth highest total by linebacker in NFL history . . . Had 10 or more sacks in a season seven times; recorded multi-sack games 27 times. . . Forced 45 fumbles, had 19 fumble recoveries, scored four touchdowns on fumble returns and added three safeties during career . . . Lone interception came in final season. . . Member of NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1990s. . .All-NFL three times. . .Named first-team All-AFC seven times during eight-year stretch (1989-1996). . . In 11 years Thomas anchored defense, Chiefs finished first or second in AFC West ten times, made seven playoff appearances, won three division titles. . . Born January 1, 1967 in Miami, Florida. . . Died February 8, 2000. Roger Wehrli Cornerback . . . 6-0, 190 . . . Missouri . . . 1969-1982 St. Louis Cardinals . . . 14 seasons, 193 games . . . Selected in first round (19th player overall) in 1969 NFL Draft . . . Starter as rookie recording three interceptions and leading team in punt returns. . . In 1970 picked off career-high six passes (a feat he matched in 1975) to earn first All-Pro, All-NFC, and Pro Bowls honors . . . Led or tied for lead in interceptions for Cardinals four times during. . . Maintained enough speed and savvy to play demanding position for 14 seasons . . . Registered interception in all but two seasons and amassed 40 career interceptions – two for touchdowns . . . From 1974 to 1976, picked off 12 passes as Cardinals put together string of three straight double-digit win seasons including back-to-back NFC East titles (1974, 1975) . . . Intercepted three Roger Staubach passes during key 31-17 win over division rival Dallas, Dec. 7, 1975 . . . In 1981, was moved to left cornerback position . . . In first start on left side made four tackles and broke up two passes as Cardinals shutout Bills, 24-0 . . . Besides ability to cover receivers, had a knack for finding ball . . Recovered franchise record-tying 19 fumbles during career . . . Named to NFL's All-Decade Team of 1970s, was first-team All-Pro choice five times (1970, 1974, 1975, 1976, and 1977) and All-NFC five times, and named to Pro Bowl seven times. . . Born November 26, 1947 in New Point, Missouri.
George Young Contributor. . .Bucknell, Johns Hopkins, Loyola. . .1968-1974 Baltimore Colts, 1975-1978 Miami Dolphins, 1979-1997 New York Giants, 1998-2001 National Football League. . .Little All-America and All-East honors as a defensive tackle at Bucknell. . .General manager of Giants, rebuilt team by drafting key players such as Phil Simms and Lawrence Taylor. . .Hired Bill Parcells as head coach. . .During tenure, Giants earned eight playoff berths, and victories in Super Bowls XXI, XXV. . .Prior to Young’s arrival, Giants had not made playoffs since 1963. . .Was named NFL Executive of the Year unprecedented five times, 1984, 1986, 1990, 1993, 1997. . . Following 1997 season, joined NFL front office as executive vice president for football operations. . .Served as chairman of NFL Competition Committee. . . Prior to joining Giants was on staff of Baltimore Colts (1968-1974) as scout, offensive line coach, director of player personnel, offensive coordinator. . .With Miami Dolphins (1975-1978) was director of personnel and pro scouting. . .Born September 22, 1930 in Baltimore, Maryland. . .Died December 8, 2001.
Steve Young Quarterback . . .6-2, 205 . . . Brigham Young . . . 1985-1986 Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 1987-1999 San Francisco 49ers . . .15 seasons, 169 games . . . Entered NFL in first round of 1984 supplemental draft after two seasons in USFL . . . Traded to 49ers in 1987. . . Initially served as backup quarterback . . . Saw limited action first four seasons with 49ers . . . Stepped into starting role in 1991 . . . Despite knee injury that forced him out of five games, passed for 2,517 yards and 17 touchdowns for league-high 101.8 passer rating – first of four straight passing titles . . . Added two more passing titles in 1996, 1997 to tie him with legendary Sammy Baugh as only quarterbacks to win six NFL passing crowns. . . In 1994, set then-record 112.8 passer rating, added seven rushing touchdowns. . . In NFC Championship Game, threw two touchdowns and rushed for one as 49ers downed Cowboys 38-28 . . . Passed for 325 yards and a Super Bowl record six touchdowns in 49-26 win over Chargers in Super Bowl XXIX . . .Was named Super Bowl MVP . . . During his NFL career threw for 3,000-plus yards six times and 20 or more touchdown passes in a season five times, and posted a passer rating of 100 or higher six times . . . Rushed for 4,239 yards and 43 touchdowns . . . Named All-Pro four times, earned All-NFC honors three times, named to seven Pro Bowls and two-time league MVP. . . Born October 11, 1961 in Salt Lake City, Utah.
IF ELECTED . . . SPECIAL NOTES ON 2005 FINALISTS THE ROSTER OF HALL OF FAME MEMBERS COULD INCREASE FOR 10 NFL TEAMS The New York Giants have three finalists; the Miami Dolphins, and Washington Redskins have two finalists who spent all or a significant part of their careers with that team. The Chicago Bears, Pittsburgh Steelers, Atlanta Falcons, Dallas Cowboys, Kansas City Chiefs, St. Louis Cardinals, and San Francisco 49ers are represented by one finalist who spent all or a significant part of the their careers with those teams. If elected . . . Harry Carson, Benny Friedman, and/or George Young would be the 17th, 18th and/or 19th member(s) of the New York Giants to be elected. Red Badgro, Roosevelt Brown, Frank Gifford, Mel Hein, Sam Huff, Tuffy Leemans, Tim Mara, Wellington Mara, Steve Owen, Andy Robustelli, Ken Strong, Fran Tarkenton, Lawrence Taylor, Y.A. Tittle, Emlen Tunnell, and Arnie Weinmeister, preceded them. Richard Dent would be the 27th longtime Chicago Bear to be added to the Hall of Fame honor roll. Doug Atkins, George Blanda, Dick Butkus, George Connor, Mike Ditka, John "Paddy" Driscoll, Jim Finks, Dan Fortmann, Bill George, Harold "Red" Grange, George Halas, Dan Hampton, Ed Healey, Bill Hewitt, Stan Jones, Sid Luckman, Link Lyman, George McAfee, George Musso, Bronko Nagurski, Walter Payton, Gale Sayers, Mike Singletary, Joe Stydahar, George Trafton, Clyde "Bulldog" Turner are the others.
L.C. Greenwood would become the 18th member of the Steelers to be elected. Other Steelers Hall of Fame members include Mel Blount, Terry Bradshaw, Bill Dudley, Joe Greene, Jack Ham, Franco Harris, John Henry Johnson, Walt Kiesling, Jack Lambert, Bobby Layne, Chuck Noll, Art Rooney, Dan Rooney, John Stallworth, Ernie Stautner, Lynn Swann, and Mike Webster. Russ Grimm and/or Art Monk would be the 16th and/or 17th Washington Redskins Hall of Fame members. They would join George Allen, Cliff Battles, Sammy Baugh, Bill Dudley, Albert Glen "Turk" Edwards, Ray Flaherty, Joe Gibbs, Ken Houston, Sam Huff, Sonny Jurgensen, George Preston Marshall, Wayne Millner, Bobby Mitchell, John Riggins, and Charley Taylor. Claude Humphrey would be the first player to play a significant part of his career with the Atlanta Falcons to be elected to the Hall of Fame. Michael Irvin would be the 8th Dallas Cowboys Hall of Fame member. Tony Dorsett, Tom Landry, Bob Lilly, Mel Renfro, Tex Schramm, Roger Staubach, and Randy White are the current Cowboys Hall of Fame members. Bob Kuechenberg and/or Dan Marino would be the 9th and/or 10th long-time members of the Miami Dolphins to be elected. Nick Buoniconti, Larry Csonka, Bob Griese, Jim Langer, Larry Little, Don Shula, Dwight Stephenson, and Paul Warfield are the other Dolphins Hall of Fame members. Derrick Thomas would be the 8th Kansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame member. He would join Bobby Bell, Buck Buchanan, Len Dawson, Lamar Hunt, Willie Lanier, Jan Stenerud, and Hank Stram. Roger Wehrli would be the 11th long-time member of the Arizona (Chicago, St. Louis) Cardinals franchise to be elected to the Hall of Fame. Other Cardinals to be elected include Charles Bidwill, Jimmy Conzelman, Dan Dierdorf, John "Paddy" Driscoll, Dick "Night Train" Lane, Ollie Matson, Ernie Nevers, Jackie Smith, Charley Trippi, and Larry Wilson. Steve Young would be the 11th member of the San Francisco 49ers to be elected to the Hall of Fame. He would join Jimmy Johnson, Ronnie Lott, Hugh McElhenny, Joe Montana, Leo Nomellini, Joe Perry, Bob St. Clair, Y.A. Tittle, Bill Walsh, and Dave Wilcox.
THE MODERN-ERA POSITION ROSTER WILL CHANGE AFTER 2005 ELECTION If elected . . . Harry Carson and/or Derrick Thomas would be the 16th and/or 17th modern-era Hall of Fame linebacker(s) joining Bobby Bell (also DE), Nick Buoniconti, Dick Butkus, George Connor (also DT and OT), Bill George, Jack Ham, Ted Hendricks, Sam Huff, Jack Lambert, Willie Lanier, Ray Nitschke, Joe Schmidt, Mike Singletary, Lawrence Taylor, and Dave Wilcox. Richard Dent, L. C. Greenwood and/or Claude Humphrey would become the 13th, 14th and/or 15th modern-era defensive end(s) to be elected to the Hall of Fame. Other Hall of Fame defensive ends are Doug Atkins, Elvin Bethea, Willie Davis, Carl Eller, Len Ford, Dan Hampton (DT-DE), Deacon Jones, Howie Long, Gino Marchetti, Andy Robustelli, Lee Roy Selmon, and Jack Youngblood. Michael Irvin and/or Art Monk will join 17 other modern-era receivers in the Hall of Fame. Other Hall of Fame modern-era receivers include Lance Alworth, Raymond Berry, Fred Biletnikoff, Tom Fears, Elroy Hirsch (also a halfback), Charlie Joiner, Steve Largent, Dante Lavelli, James Lofton, Don Maynard, Tommy McDonald, Bobby Mitchell (also a halfback), Pete Pihos, John Stallworth, Lynn Swann, Charley Taylor (also a halfback), and Paul Warfield. Benny Friedman would become the 8th pre-modern era quarterback elected to the Hall of Fame. The seven who preceded him include Sammy Baugh, Earl "Dutch" Clark, Jimmy Conzelman (also a coach), John "Paddy" Driscoll, Arnie Herber, Sid Luckman, and Clarence "Ace" Parker. Russ Grimm and/or Bob Kuechenberg would be the 9th and/or 10th modern-era player(s) who played primarily as a guard to be elected. The other Hall of Fame guards previously elected are Joe DeLamielleure, John Hannah, Larry Little, Tom Mack, Mike Munchak, Jim Parker (G-T), Billy Shaw, and Gene Upshaw. Dan Marino and/or Steve Young would join 19 modern-era quarterbacks in the Hall of Fame, including George Blanda (also a kicker), Terry Bradshaw, Len Dawson, John Elway, Dan Fouts, Otto Graham, Bob Griese, Sonny Jurgensen, Jim Kelly, Bobby Layne, Joe Montana, Joe Namath, Bart Starr, Roger Staubach, Fran Tarkenton, Y.A. Tittle, Johnny Unitas, Norm Van Brocklin, and Bob Waterfield. Fritz Pollard would be the 16th pre-modern era running back to be elected. He would join Cliff Battles, Tony Canadeo, Bill Dudley, Harold "Red" Grange, Joe Guyon, Clarke Hinkle, Earl "Curly" Lambeau (also a coach), Alphonse "Tuffy" Leemans, George McAfee, John "Blood" McNally, Bronko Nagurski, Ernie Nevers, Ken Strong, Jim Thorpe, and Steve Van Buren. Pre-modern era is defined as the majority of an enshrinee’s career occurred prior to 1946.
Roger Wehrli would be the 17th modern-era defensive back in the Hall of Fame. Other Hall of Fame defensive backs include Herb Adderley, Lem Barney, Mel Blount, Willie Brown, Jack Christiansen, Mike Haynes, Ken Houston, Jimmy Johnson, Paul Krause, Dick "Night Train" Lane, Yale Lary, Ronnie Lott, Mel Renfro, Emlen Tunnell, Larry Wilson, and Willie Wood. George Young would be the 18th contributor elected to the Hall of Fame. He would join Bert Bell, Charles Bidwill, Joe Carr, Al Davis, Jim Finks, George Halas, Lamar Hunt, Curly Lambeau, Tim Mara, Wellington Mara, George Preston Marshall, Hugh "Shorty" Ray, Dan Reeves, Art Rooney, Dan Rooney, Pete Rozelle, and Tex Schramm. Replace this text with your text. |