Joe Thomas (l) and Darrelle Revis (r) |
The month of January is about more than deciding who reaches
the Super Bowl. It’s about who reaches the Pro Football Hall of Fame, too.
But that’s why I’m here.
With the Hall’s 49 selectors choosing five modern-era
candidates from 15 finalists for the Class of 2023, there is plenty to decipher
before answering that question. So let’s get to it and start s handicapping the
field. What follows is an inside look at this year’s Hall-of-Fame class and
what may happen next:
Q: Who are the
favorites?
A: Easy. Tackle Joe Thomas and cornerback Darrelle Revis will be first-ballot
inductees, joined by defensive end/linebacker DeMarcus Ware. Ware was a probable first-ballot choice last year
but lost out when linebacker Sam Mills was an upset choice, reaching Canton in
his last year of modern-era eligibility. With his election, there were no
first-ballot choices for the first time since 2012 … and that was not expected.
In fact, in two of the prior three years there were three first-ballot inductees
each year. Cornerback Ronde Barber
should join Thomas, Revis and Ware, and I’d make him a virtual certainty if
there weren’t a couple of mitigating factors: 1) Albert Lewis’ candidacy and 2) gridlock at wide receiver.
Nevertheless, I make him a favorite, too, mostly because his resume is
bullet-proof and he reached the Top 10 in 2022. Barber is the only player in
league history with 45 or more interceptions and 25 or more sacks. He was an
all-decade choice. He won a Super Bowl. He had nearly as many interceptions
(48) as Deion Sanders (53) and over twice as many tackles. Plus, he had more
than ability. He had availability. Over his last 15 seasons, he didn’t miss a
game. In his last 13 seasons, he didn’t miss a start -- a streak of 215
consecutive games. Now the clincher: He scored 14 non-offensive TDs … or one
more than Charles Woodson, 10 more than Brian Dawkins and 11 more than LeRoy
Butler. They’re all in the Hall. The other candidate I’d insert here is linebacker
Zach Thomas for the simple reason
that he’s been knocking on the door the past three years. He’s been a Top 10
candidate each of those years, and this is an opportune time for him to take
the last step.
Q: You mentioned
mitigating factors. Can you elaborate?
A: Yes. Lewis is
one of four defensive backs in this year’s class (Revis, Barber and safety Darren Woodson are the others). But,
like Mills a year ago, he’s in his last year of modern-era eligibility. So he’s
made an unexpected last-minute run, and there will be a push to induct him
before he falls into the senior category (for players who retired more than 25
years earlier). Lewis was not all-decade, and he didn’t win a Super Bowl. But
he was one of the greatest special-teams performers in NFL history (12 blocked
kicks) and, according to Hall voter and former coach Tony Dungy (he was an
assistant with Kansas City 1989-91), was one of the top five cornerbacks of all time. That’s a powerful
statement, and, guaranteed, it will be repeated at the meeting. So how should
that impact Barber? Simple: He’s a cornerback. So are Revis and Lewis. I can’t
see voters choosing three of five inductees at the same position. My guess:
Lewis makes an initial move into the Top 10, just as first-time finalist Clay
Matthews did in 2021, but stops there. The other X factor is the logjam at wide
receiver where Andre Johnson, ReggieWayne and Torry Holt are bottled
up. It’s a situation that’s happened before, with Andre Reed, Tim Brown and
Cris Carter canceling each other out for years before one (Carter) made the
first move (2013). Then, Reed and Brown followed in each of the next two years.
Wayne and Holt have been finalists the past three years, but neither made the
first cut from 15 to 10. Johnson, however, did in 2022, his first year of
eligibility. That tells you that he has the momentum the others do not. So,
would that be enough to push him into the final five at the expense of, say, a
Barber or Thomas? I’m not sure. I don’t think so, but stay tuned.
Q: Any others we
should watch?
A: Several. Returner
Devin Hester is one. Voters
typically don’t warm up to specialists, electing three in the Hall’s 60 year
history – two kickers and one punter. But Hester is different. In his first
year of eligibility, he crashed the Top 10. That puts him in the on-deck circle
for this year. I’d keep my eye on linebacker Patrick Willis, too. In eight NFL seasons, he was named to seven
Pro Bowls, was a five-time first-team All-Pro, led the league twice in tackles
and was an all-decade choice. He was a first-time finalist last year and didn’t
crack the Top 10. But I’d expect that to change this time. Jared Allen is an intriguing case, mostly because he hasn’t reached
the Top 10 in two years as a finalist. But he should be mentioned. He ranks 12th
in career sacks, with only three-and-a-half fewer (136) than Jason Taylor
(139-1/2), who was a first-ballot choice in 2017. One potential problem: Ware.
He has 138-1/2 career sacks, and my guess is that voters will feel one pass
rusher is enough.
Q: So, the rest are
longshots?
A: Yes, but that
doesn’t mean there couldn’t be an upset. Mills was one in 2022. So was former
49ers’ star Bryant Young, who wasn’t even a finalist the prior year. Both were
elected. Dwight Freeney is a
candidate in his first year of eligibility, but with Ware and Allen as
competition I don’t see how he makes a move. The reason: Fewer career sacks
(125-1/2). I’d love to see Cincinnati tackle Willie Anderson move forward in his second year as a finalist … and
he should. But I don’t see it happening. The same goes for Woodson, who finally
made it as a finalist in his 15th year as a modern-era candidate.
Then, of course, there are Holt and Wayne, and we’ve been down this path. The
Hall already elected Marvin Harrison and Isaac Bruce. It’ll be interesting to
see how much support there is for No. 2 receivers on teams that each won one
Super Bowl. If Holt were elected, he becomes the fifth starter from “The
Greatest Show on Turf,” and that’s fine. Except if it was “The Greatest,” why
did it win only one Super Bowl?
Q: What about the coach/contributor
and senior candidates?
A: There are
four, and I don’t expect much resistance. Don Coryell is the coach/contributor
candidate, and I’d be shocked if he didn’t make it. First, there’s been ample
support within the room for him. Prior to this year, he was a six-time finalist
– more than any coach considered by the Hall – and once (2016) a Top-10
modern-era candidate. Second, he’s the
only choice in a category that was created last year and is in its first year
of operation. Overlooking him would be an indictment of the committee that
elected him, and that’s not likely to happen. The three seniors are Ken Riley,
Chuck Howley and Joe Klecko. Of that group, Klecko might incur some resistance,
but I don’t forsee enough to block his election. But I hedge because we have
three candidates. When voters have more than one, they can … and have … blocked
senior and/or contributor choices. It happened to Paul Tagliabue when he was
one of two contributor choices in 2017. It happened to seniors Dick Stanfel
(2012) and Claude Humphrey (2009), too, though both were later elected.
Q: When will we know?
A: There are
bound to be leaks, but officially … officially
… not before the Feb. 9 NFL Honors Show. Between now and then, inductees will
be notified via The Knock, where a Gold Jacket (living Hall of Famer) stops by
his home to knock on the front door while the NFL Network films.
Wayne was a better receiver in the playoffs than Harrison which should matter
ReplyDeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteUnless there is a safety fatigue, which is understandable for voters who have put in a number over the last six years, Woodson is the next in line. If the voters have safety fatigue or feel there might be too many Cowboys with possibly Howley and Ware being elected, it could finally be a year a safety doesnt get elected since 2016.
I know your comment was for Clark, but you nailed it, IMO Woodson has no chance this year. Could be wrong, but Howley and Ware locks, and voters seem to (an opinion) kind of spread out things...but Woodson will make progress--being on Final 15 is a jump (I missed on him, got 14 of 15 and he is one I missed on). Just not this year.
DeleteIf too many cornerbacks get inducted one year will cornerback haters not attend the ceremony this year?
ReplyDeleteI know you are being sarcastic, and that's fine. I just think he's right. With one CB a lock, it's a stretch to think 3 could make it. One will be out in cold is my guess.
DeleteProbably but I am still going to dislike it. I'd like to see Lewis, Revis, and Barber all get in this year.
DeleteWhy do you think there could be resistance to Klecko? Just curious. Objectively, I'd think Riley would have the highest chance of being blocked - strikes me as an especially weak choice.
ReplyDeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteIf there are leaks --usually a player being disappointed and announcing he didnt make it--please guys, let us know. I disdain social media, so wouldnt know if a leak was out there or any suspicious drawings or photos that leaked some of the all-time NFL teams about three years back ...
If Woodson gets in he'd add to the list of Cowboys who played a different position in college. He was a linebacker. Mel Renfro went from RB to DB. Randy White from LB to DT. Rayfield Wright from TE to OT.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Drew Pearson who was a QB ...
DeleteFrom Brian wolf ...
ReplyDeleteI just hope Howley makes it. We fans cant assume all nine seniors will make the Hall or coaches, as well ... anything can happen.
Agreed, Brian. I'll celebrate after Howley's induction is officially announced.
DeleteHowley is a lock--he's in. . . no way he will not make it tomorrow
Delete