EACH AFC TEAM'S MOST DESERVING CANDIDATE
Why isn't Zach Thomas in the Pro Football Hall of Fame? John Lynch? Joe
Klecko?
Well, because they all played on defense. Is that some
$&%&? Oh. Wait. That's an article for another day. I will voice that
grievance on Monday, when the Class of 2019 will be predicted in this space.
All those guys will be mentioned, in one
way or another, as we plow through every franchise's most deserving candidate for
Canton. This beast of a piece, all 5,000 words of it (when you combine the NFC
and the AFC), gets to a lot more names, too, beyond each
team's player. Then again, if you have the patience to read that many words,
perhaps you should jump headfirst into "The Iliad."
However, if you are a history junky, or if you were pissed
Terrell Owens didn't get inducted into the Hall the minute he walked off the
field with the Bengals (his
fifth team), then you will really geek out over this. Because all of the
players listed own a legitimate gripe as to why they haven't been discussed
seriously by the voters, much less inducted.
Here is the AFC. You can find the list for the NFC here.
So take a gander and let me know your take on these Hall of Fame matters at
garyldibert1@gmail.com
BALTIMORE RAVENS: Ed Reed, S, 2002-2012. Reed
becomes eligible for the Pro Football
Hall of Fame in 2019. He should moonwalk right through the
front door. No waiting period. "Do not pass go, do not collect $200."
Reed belongs among the very best to ever play the position. In my mind, the
former Ravens safety
is among the top 10 greatest defensive players ever, irrespective
of position. He is the only safety to ever lead the NFL in interceptions three
times. Everson Walls, who also deserves Fame mention, is the only other
player to pull off that feat. Defensive Player of the Year ... Super Bowl champ ... what else do you
want?
BUFFALO BILLS: Steve Tasker, WR/KR, 1986-1997. Mike
Stratton, the great linebacker from the Bills championship teams of the
mid-'60s, deserves to have his name here. Kent Hull is another deserving
candidate. Tasker, the elite special team’s player in NFL history, needs no
other sentences written or typed about him to merit his inclusion in Canton. If
there are three phases of the game, then Tasker was THE third phase in the late
1980s and '90s. Tasker started his career as a WR/KR for the Oilers, yet it was
in Buffalo where his career took off, be it covering kicks or blocking them.
While Tasker never became a top receiver in Buffalo, plenty of his teammates
have said he could've been, and that, at times, he was uncoverable in practice.
The main point with Tasker is that nobody ever debates who the top special
teams player was ... if you were the best, you belong in Canton, yes? Unless
we've all been sold a bill of goods on the importance of special teams all
these years.
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Ken Anderson, QB, 1971-1986. Believe
it or not, the Bengals have
a whole host of deserving players for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Cincinnati is
one of the more underrepresented teams in the Hall. Maybe it's due to the
success of the Reds in the '70s, even though the Bengals were
a solid team in the early- to mid-'70s. The football team went downhill right
around the time music of that era did, but not before Anderson was drafted and
led the NFL in passing. Anderson would go on to pace the league in passer
rating four times, win league MVP in 1981, take the Bengals to
the Super Bowl, and then set a
completion percentage record in 1982 (now held by Drew Brees). Anderson was
always a sneaky scrambler, as well. If he's not your dish, then how about Lemar
Parrish, Ken Riley or the best tight end in the AFL, Bob Trumpy?
CLEVELAND BROWNS: Mac Speedie, WR, 1946-1952. Unless
you are a voracious reader of NFL history, you probably haven't heard of
Speedie. The former split end was a key piece on those elite Paul Brown teams
in the 1940s and '50s. You want to talk about a gold-star resume? Try this on
for size ... in seven short years, Speedie played in seven championship games,
winning four of them. He led the league in receptions four times. He was the
receiving yards leader twice. He was one of the first players to record a
1,000-yard season, and he pulled it off twice. He was named All-Pro three of
the AAFC's four seasons (the NFL assimilated three AAFC teams, including
Cleveland), then made the Pro Bowl two
of his three years in the new-look NFL.
DENVER BRONCOS: Pat Bowlen, owner, 1984-present. The Broncos have
as much right to complain about the Hall of Fame process as any other
organization. Any number of former players should/could hear their names called
... Randy Gradishar, Steve Atwater, Louis Wright, Rich "Tombstone"
Jackson, Karl Mecklenberg and Lionel Taylor were all premier players, and any
one of them is as quality as some of the guys who have busts in Canton right
now. The vote for Bowlen is a nod to the role ownership has played in the
growth of the game, and in Bowlen's case, the television component of the NFL's
popularity. Central to the success of a franchise is the ability to put the
right people in the right positions to build a football team from the ground
up. Bowlen's team made it to seven Super Bowls, winning three of them.
With his health
issues well-documented, many folks around the organization,
including CEO Joe Ellis and GM John Elway, have clamored for Bowlen's candidacy
now. Guessing it will happen next year.
HOUSTON TEXANS: Andre Johnson, WR, 2003-2014. Well,
Johnson is not eligible for the Hall of Fame yet.
We have to cheat on this selection, though, as no other former Texan is close
to Canton material (no, Ed Reed's cup of coffee in Houston doesn't count).
Johnson won't be on the ballot until 2022. He should have a solid chance, with
over 1,000 career catches and over 14,000 career receiving yards. There was a
time in the late 2000s when Johnson was the best player at his position in the
NFL -- shouldn't that be the criteria for receiving a gold
jacket? Johnson never played with a top-shelf quarterback, either. Yet he still
posted three seasons over 1,500 yards, and another over 1,400.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Edgerrin James, RB, 1999-2005. James
will not be in this article next time around. I've spoken to a couple of voters
who say he's getting closer. With so few Hall-worthy running backs coming down
the pike (Adrian
Peterson, Frank Gore?),
those who cover the league are starting to appreciate Edge more. Of all the
numbers the former Colts tailback
racked up, perhaps none are more impressive than the 881 total touches collected
in his first two seasons. Think about that workload, especially with all the
running back-committee crap we suffer through now. James led the NFL in rushing
each of his first two seasons. Only Jim Brown, Earl Campbell and Eric Dickerson
can make that claim. Four times, he rushed for at least 1,500 yards. No player
has done it since ... not Peterson, LaDainian Tomlinson, nobody.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS: Tony Boselli, OT, 1995-2001. The Jaguars
surprisingly can boast several former players who are Hall-worthy. Fred Taylor
rushed for over 11,000 yards. Jimmy Smith was
a top route runner who put up gaudy numbers, despite dealing with mediocre
quarterback play the back half of his career. The choice for this franchise,
though, must be Boselli, who was considered the top player at his position for
several seasons. Boselli didn't enjoy the lengthy career that Taylor and Smith
did, yet he was a standout performer almost immediately who was only stopped by
injuries -- not declining skills. In only seven years, Boselli made five Pro
Bowls and was named first-team All-Pro three times. Dominating the great Bruce
Smith in his first playoff game doesn't hurt, either.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS: Tony Gonzalez, TE, 1997-2008. The
most deserving Chief for the Hall of Fame will
be the next Chief in the Hall of Fame,
and announced, oh, about six months from now. Gonzalez was widely considered to
be the premier tight end in pro football, based on his unparalleled
productivity at the position for the better part of two decades. He is to tight
end what Jerry Rice is to wide receiver and Bruce Smith is to defensive end.
Putting his candidacy aside, Deron Cherry is another Kansas City great who has
been unfortunately forgotten among the elite safeties in league history. Albert
Lewis, Cherry's teammate and the finest punt-blocker the game has ever known,
was as well. Minority opinion: Priest Holmes deserves serious consideration,
even if his career crescendo only lasted three years. Brian Waters, he of
University of North Texas "Mean Green" fame, is another (OK, maybe
not fame, but it is my alma mater).
Legitimate senior candidate: Johnny Robinson,
S, 1963-1971. Robinson was a ballhawk in centerfield for the Hank
Stram Chiefs,
and so respected that he was named first-team All-AFL each of his last five
seasons in that league, then first-team All-Pro after the first year of the
merged NFL. Robinson is also the only player to lead both leagues in
interceptions, picking off 10 balls both seasons. Perhaps most impressive,
Robinson played on offense his first two years. He was a pretty darn good
flanker, too, finishing seventh in the AFL in scrimmage yards in 1960.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS: Walt Sweeney, OG, 1963-1973: Another
standout AFL player, like Robinson above, was Sweeney. The former Chargers guard
made a combined nine AFL All-Star games and AFC-NFC Pro Bowls. Sweeney never
missed a game for San Diego, and in his 13-year career, he missed one ...
his final season in Washington. Sweeney was a key member of the Chargers squads
that went to the AFL title game in 1963, 1964 and 1965, starting in the last
two (he was a rookie in '63). After the AFL and NFL merged, Sweeney's peers
thought enough of him to vote him into the next three Pro Bowls from 1970 to
'72. Some other highly eligible names for this franchise: running back Paul
Lowe, tackle Russ Washington, defensive end Earl Faison, defensive tackle Ernie
Ladd, and safety Rodney Harrison.
MIAMI DOLPHINS: Zach Thomas, LB, 1996-2007. Most
players who were first-team All-Pros five times in recent decades are
considered shoo-ins for the Hall of Fame.
Yet, there are many players who currently reside in Canton and can't even claim
three or four, much less the five Thomas earned during a stellar 13-year
career. For example: Michael Strahan, Warren Sapp and Aeneas Williams don't
own that many first-team All-Pro accolades. Jason Taylor, who
made it in last year, was named All-Pro three times. Ah, but he has sack
numbers. Unfortunately, that's what voters -- and, to a larger extent, the
youth movement in the voters' room -- look for. Sacks jump off the page; steady
middle linebackers win games. The three best pure Mike backers of the last 20
years were Ray Lewis, Brian Urlacher and Thomas. You know what the first two
have in common.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS: Ty Law, CB, 1995-2004. Big
ol' David Baker is going to rap on Law's door, and my guess is that it happens
next year. Law has gotten close in the voting process. After being named a
semifinalist three years in a row, Law inched a step closer to being inducted
last year. Law picked off 53 passes during his brilliant career, while leading
the NFL in that category twice. Throw in six more in the postseason and
three Super Bowl rings, and
you have a Hall of Fame resume.
Not to mention, very few corners in this age of dink-and-dunk-until-you-drop
will be retiring with anywhere near 53 picks.
NEW YORK JETS: Joe Klecko, DL, 1977-1987. Klecko
is the most deserving of the Jets not
in the Hall of Fame. That's quite
a compliment, considering defensive end Gerry Philbin and tackle Winston Hill,
two top players from the Super Bowl III
team, are waiting for their turn with the Seniors Committee. Mark Gastineau,
Klecko's partner on the defensive line and the real holder of
the sack record, is also waiting. We can argue about the Favre phantom sack.
What bears no argument is Klecko's place among the finest defensive linemen of
his era. Like Hall of Fame offensive
lineman Bruce Matthews, another elite player from the 1980s, Klecko could play
any position along the line ... at a high level, too. Klecko not only started
at DE, DT and on the nose, he made the Pro Bowl at
each position. In 1981, he helped New York get back to the postseason for the
first time in 12 years when he collected 20 sacks and a first-team All-Pro nod
from his defensive end spot. His second All-Pro honor came as the top NT in
football, when his versatility was key in the Jets making
the playoffs in 1985.
OAKLAND RAIDERS: Todd Christensen, TE, 1979-88. After
much deliberation, I decided the Raider who should be discussed most fervently
for the Hall of Fame is
Christensen. Fans of the Silver and Black undoubtedly mouthed "Cliff
Branch" in the last sentence. He was indeed special and one of the top
eight or nine wide receivers in the 1970s. What sets Christensen apart is that,
from 1983 to '86, he was numero uno at his position. While his
career catalogue isn't as lengthy as that of his former teammate, who played 14
years and won three Super Bowl rings,
Christensen was a part of two Super Bowl winners
and enjoyed a prime that was as prolific as that of any tight end in history.
From 1982 to 1987, Christensen averaged 5.2 catches for 65.5 yards and .46
touchdowns per game. Put another way: Over 16 games, that's 83 catches, 1,048
yards and seven touchdowns per year. Those are huge numbers now.
And this was in the '80s, when Jimmy Graham would
have gotten crushed on those high balls over the middle.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS: Donnie Shell, S, 1974-1987. So
many Steelers from
the 1970s reside in the Hall of Fame that
adding another one seems anticlimactic at best, low hanging fruit at worst.
Shell's prime came after Pittsburgh got old; making the playoffs here and there
in the '80s but never approaching the dynasty status the Steelers achieved
a decade prior. From 1979 through 1984, Shell intercepted an impressive 34
passes, even with the players' strike in '82 that cost every player seven
games. Shell was named All-Pro three times during that period, joining Ronnie
Lott, Kenny Easley and Deron Cherry as the most well-known safeties of the era.
Tony Dungy has been outspoken support for Shell's candidacy. The voters'
room?
TENNESSEE TITANS: Charley Hennigan, WR, 1960-66. Charley
who? I first remember reading about Hennigan when I was a kid, right around the
time Art Monk broke the NFL record for receptions in a single season (106) back
in 1984. When the former Redskins wideout
-- a Hall of Fame wideout
-- caught his 102nd pass that season, it beat a mark that had stood for 20
years -- Hennigan's record, to be precise. So many of the great pass catchers
of the AFL have been left out in the cold when it comes to post-career honors.
This includes Raiders legend
Art Powell, Broncos end
Lionel Taylor and former Jets flanker (and author) George Sauer Jr. But
none of them ever had a year like Hennigan's 1964 campaign for the Houston
Oilers, forerunners of the Titans.
All he did was catch 101 passes for 1,546 yards, the third-highest total of any
receiver pre-1980. Lance Alworth, who is in the Hall of Fame, owns the second-highest
figure at 1,602 yards in 1965. No. 1? That man Hennigan again, with a whopping
1,746 yards in 1961. And he did it in only 14 contests, with his yards-per-game
total -- 124.7 -- topping Calvin Johnson's average from his record-breaking
2012 campaign.
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