From the NFL Hall of Fame website, with my player comments added at the bottom:
Sixty-Seven on the Hall's Nomination List for the Class of 2004
Former Denver Broncos quarterback John Elway, a first-year eligible candidate,
heads a list of sixty-seven former players, coaches, and contributors who make
up the preliminary list of nominees for election to the Pro Football Hall of
Fame's Class of 2004.
From this preliminary list, Hall of Fame selectors will choose 23
semi-finalists that will be added to two carryover candidates from last year.
Former New York Giants linebacker Harry Carson and team and league executive
George Young are automatic finalists because they finished in the top six in
the voting last year. The list of 25 semi-finalists will be announced in early
November.
The 25 semi-finalists list will be reduced by a mail ballot to 13 modern-era
candidates (11 plus Carson and Young). That list will increase to 15 finalists
with the addition of two previously announced Senior Committee nominees, Bob
Brown and Bob Hayes. Brown was an All-NFL tackle with the Philadelphia Eagles
(1964-1968), Los Angeles Rams (1969-1970), and Oakland Raiders (1971-1973), and
Bob Hayes, an All-NFL wide receiver with the Dallas Cowboys (1965-1974) and the
San Francisco 49ers (1975).
The Class of 2004 will be selected from the list of 15 finalists. The actual
voting will be conducted at the Selection Committee's annual meeting, which
will be held on Saturday, January 31, 2004, in Houston, Texas, the day before
Super Bowl XXXVIII. The election results will be announced immediately after
the meeting at a press conference in the media headquarters. While there is no
set number for any class of enshrinees, the ground rules provide that between
three and six new members will be selected. This is a change in the Hall of
Fame's By-Laws as of 2004. Prior to 2004, the rules stipulated that between
four and seven members would be selected.
This is also the first year that Hall of Fame selectors will have the
opportunity to consider two senior nominees among the 15 finalists. Previously,
only one senior nominee was considered each year. Additionally, this is the
first time the selectors will vote to reduce the preliminary modern-era
candidate list to 25 semi-finalists before reducing to 15 finalists.
Other first-year eligible candidates joining Elway for consideration for the
Class of 2004 include running back Barry Sanders, wide receiver Henry Ellard,
and defensive back Albert Lewis. Also on the impressive preliminary list are
three former head coaches, and seven contributors, including NFL Commissioner
Paul Tagliabue.
To be considered for Hall of Fame election, a nominated player must have been
retired at least five years. For a non-player, there is no mandatory retirement
period, but a coach must be retired before he may be considered. A contributor,
who is a nominee who has made outstanding contributions to pro football in
capacities other than playing or coaching, may still be active in his pro
football career.
Quarterbacks
Ken Anderson - Augustana (IL) - 1971-1986 Cincinnati Bengals
John Elway# - Stanford - 1983-1998 Denver Broncos
Jim Plunkett - Stanford - 1971-1975 New England Patriots, 1976-1977 San
Francisco 49ers, 1979-1986 Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders
Phil Simms - Morehead St. - 1979-1993 New York Giants, injured-1982
Ken Stabler* - Alabama - 1970-1979 Oakland Raiders, 1980-1981 Houston Oilers,
1982-1984 New Orleans Saints
Elway is an absolute lock to be enshrined on the first try. I'd like to see
Stabler go in, and Ken Anderson was one of the most underrated QB's in NFL
history although I doubt he has any chance of enshrinement. I don't think any
of the others will ever get much support.
Running Backs
Roger Craig - Nebraska - 1983-1990 San Francisco 49ers, 1991 Los Angeles
Raiders, 1992-1993 Minnesota Vikings
Barry Sanders# - Oklahoma State - 1989-1998 Detroit Lions
Herschel Walker - Georgia - 1986-1989, 1996-1997 Dallas Cowboys, 1989-1991
Minnesota Vikings, 1992-1994 Philadelphia Eagles, 1995 New York Giants
Like Elway, Sanders will go in on the first try. I'm probably in the minority
on this, but I think Herschel Walker should go into the HOF at some point. His
career stats in the NFL were hurt severely by the three years he spent in the
USFL at the start of his career. He ran roughshod over the USFL, and there is
every reason to believe that he would have done very well in the NFL. He is
perhaps the one player whose performance in the USFL has to be taken into
consideration when evaluating his career. He was IMO one of the twenty
greatest running backs in Pro Football history, and probably lost three
thousand career rushing yards that he would have gained in the NFL had he
stayed his final season at Georgia and had gotten two years in the NFL during
his USFL career.
Wide Receivers
Cliff Branch - Warton County (TX) Junior College; Colorado - 1972-1985
Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders
Henry Ellard# - Fresno State - 1983-1993 Los Angeles Rams, 1994-1998 Washington
Redskins, 1998 New England Patriots
Art Monk* - Syracuse - 1980-1993 Washington Redskins, 1994 New York Jets, 1995
Philadelphia Eagles
Drew Pearson - Tulsa - 1973-1983 Dallas Cowboys
Sterling Sharpe - South Carolina - 1988-1994 Green Bay Packers
Wesley Walker - California - 1977-1989 New York Jets
Tight End
Todd Christensen - Brigham Young - 1979 New York Giants, 1979-1988 Oakland/Los
Angeles Raiders
Art Monk should go in this season. Branch and Pearson will go into the HOF
eventually.
Offensive Linemen
Centers
Ray Donaldson - Georgia - 1980-1992 Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts, 1993-1994
Seattle Seahawks, 1995-1996 Dallas Cowboys
Kent Hull - Mississippi State - 1986-1996 Buffalo Bills
Rich Saul - Michigan State - 1970-1981 Los Angeles Rams
Jeff Van Note - Kentucky - 1969-1986 Atlanta Falcons
Guards
Russ Grimm - Pittsburgh - 1981-1991 Washington Redskins
Chris Hinton (also T) - Northwestern - 1983-1989 Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts,
1990-1993 Atlanta Falcons, 1994-1995 Minnesota Vikings
Bob Kuenchenberg* - Notre Dame - 1970-1983 Miami Dolphins
Tackles
Leon Gray - Jackson State - 1973-1978 New England Patriots, 1979-1981 Houston
Oilers, 1982-1983 New Orleans Saints
Joe Jacoby - Louisville - 1981-1993 Washington Redskins
Mike Kenn - Michigan - 1978-1994 Atlanta Falcons
Rayfield Wright - Fort Valley State - 1967-1979 Dallas Cowboys
Gary Zimmerman* - Oregon - 1986-1992 Minnesota Vikings, 1993-1997 Denver
Broncos
Why is Tommy Nobis not on this list? I guess he must be on the Senior
Committee list, but he should already be in there.
Defensive Linemen
Fred Dean (DE) - Louisiana Tech - 1975-1981 San Diego Chargers, 1981-1985 San
Francisco 49ers
Richard Dent (DE) - Tennessee State - 1983-1993, 1995 Chicago Bears, 1994 San
Francisco 49ers, 1996 Indianapolis Colts, 1997 Philadelphia Eagles
Carl Eller (DE) - Minnesota - 1964-1978 Minnesota Vikings, 1979 Seattle
Seahawks
Mark Gastineau (DE) - Eastern Arizona College (J.C.), Arizona State, East
Central (OK) - 1979-1988 New York Jets
L.C. Greenwood (DE) - Arkansas AM&N - 1969-1981 Pittsburgh Steelers
Claude Humphrey* (DE) - Tennessee State - 1968-1974, 1976-1978 Atlanta Falcons,
1979-1981 Philadelphia Eagles
Ed "Too Tall" Jones (DE) - Tennessee State - 1974-1978, 1980-1989 Dallas
Cowboys
Joe Klecko (DE-DT-NT) - Temple - 1977-1987 New York Jets, 1988 Indianapolis
Colts
Jim Marshall (DE) - Ohio State - 1960 Cleveland Browns, 1961-1979 Minnesota
Vikings
Harvey Martin (DE) - East Texas State - 1973-1983 Dallas Cowboys
I can't believe Jim Marshall is not already in there. LC Greenwood and Donnie
Shell will be the final two 70's Steelers to be inducted into the HOF.
Linebackers
Matt Blair - Northeastern Oklahoma A&M (JC), Iowa State - 1974-1985 Minnesota
Vikings
Harry Carson** - South Carolina State - 1976-1988 New York Giants
Randy Gradishar* - Ohio State - 1974-1983 Denver Broncos
Rickey Jackson - Pittsburgh - 1981-1993 New Orleans Saints, 1994-1995 San
Francisco 49ers
Clay Matthews - Southern California - 1978-1993 Cleveland Browns, 1994-1996
Atlanta Falcons
Karl Mecklenburg - Augustana (SD); Minnesota - 1983-1994 Denver Broncos
Chris Spielman - Ohio State - 1988-1995 Detroit Lions, 1996-1997 Buffalo Bills
Darryl Talley - West Virginia - 1983-1994 Buffalo Bills, 1995 Atlanta Falcons,
1996 Minnesota Vikings
Andre Tippett - Iowa - 1982-1993 New England Patriots, injured - 1989
Defensive Backs
Cliff Harris (S) - Ouachita Baptist - 1970-1979 Dallas Cowboys
Lester Hayes* (CB) - Texas A&M - 1977-1986 Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders
Albert Lewis# (CB) - Grambling State - 1983-1993 Kansas City Chiefs, 1994-1998
Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders
Ken Riley (CB) - Florida A&M - 1969-1983 Cincinnati Bengals
Donnie Shell (S) - South Carolina State - 1974-1987 Pittsburgh Steelers
Mike Wagner (S) - Western Illinois - 1971-1980 Pittsburgh Steelers
Roger Wehrli (CB) - Missouri - 1969-1982 St. Louis Cardinals
Lester Hayes was a good defensive back who was the player most responsible for
the banning of Stickum because he would smear it all over his uniform. I've
often felt that he gained an unfair advantage from his fetish to stickum, and
would not move him to the front of the list.
Special Teams/Position Players
Elbert Shelley (DB) - Arkansas State - 1987-1996 Atlanta Falcons
Steve Tasker (WR) - Dodge City CC (KS), Northwestern - 1985-1986 Houston
Oilers, 1986-1997 Buffalo Bills
Tasker will probably make the HOF eventually; he was probably the most famous
"twelfth man" in NFL history, who made a name for himself for his play on
covering punts and kickoffs.
Punter/Kicker
Ray Guy (P) - Southern Mississippi - 1973-1986 Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders
Nick Lowery (K) - Dartmouth - 1978 New England Patriots, 1980-1993 Kansas City
Chiefs, 1994-1996 New York Jets
I think they should both be in the HOF; Ray Guy should have been inducted ten
years ago. Ray Guy was probably the best punter in NFL history with the
possible exception of Sammy Baugh
I am in the process of completing a analytical research paper on placekickers
that should be published before the end of the year, and through my research
have reached the conclusion that Nick Lowery was arguably the greatest kicker
in NFL history, and at the very least ranks with Lou Groza and Jan Stenerud as
the very best of all time. I feel that Lowery made a greater contribution to
his teams than either Gary Anderson and Morten Andersen, both of whom will go
into the HOF.
Coaches
Don Coryell - Washington - 1973-1977 St. Louis Cardinals, 1978-1986 San Diego
Chargers
Jimmy Johnson - Arkansas - 1989-1993 Dallas Cowboys, 1996-1999 Miami Dolphins
Chuck Knox - Juniata College (PA) - 1973-1977 Los Angeles Rams, 1978-1982
Buffalo Bills, 1983-1991 Seattle Seahawks, 1992-1994 Los Angeles Rams
The fact that Jimmy Johnson couldn't get the Dolphins over the hump does not
help his HOF case.
Contributors
Ed DeBartolo, Jr. - Notre Dame - 1979-1997 San Francisco 49ers
Art McNally - Temple - 1968-1991 National Football League
Art Modell - 1961-1995 Cleveland Browns, 1996-Present Baltimore Ravens
Paul Tagliabue - Georgetown, New York University - 1989-present National
Football League
Ralph Wilson, Jr.* - Virginia, Michigan - 1959-Present Buffalo Bills
Ron Wolf - Georgetown, New York University - 1991-2001 Green Bay Packers
George Young** - Bucknell University - 1979-1997 New York Giants
I think his being banned from the NFL for his shady business dealings does not
help DeBartolo; also the whole Carmen Policy Salary Cap mess was not a good
thing either.. I would hate to see Art Modell inducted for what he did to the
football fans of Cleveland when he moved his Browns to Baltimore; he does not
deserve to be inducted into the HOF but should be hung in effigy outside every
NFL stadium. Pete Rozelle had to wait twenty five years after he took over as
Commissioner before he was inducted into the HOF, and Tagliabue will probably
have to wait a while.
* On last year's 15 Finalists List | ** Automatically on the 15 Finalists
List for 2004 | # First year of eligibility
Michael O'Connor - Modern Renaissance Man
"The likelihood of one individual being correct increases in a direct
proportion to the intensity with which others try to prove him wrong"
James Mason from the movie "Heaven Can Wait".
Archived from group: rec>sport>football>pro