List of Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees from defunct NFL franchises
This is a list of inductees into the Pro Football Hall of Fame that includes players, coaches, and contributors (e.g., owners and team or league officials) who have "made outstanding contributions to professional football". These inductees played or coached for franchises that are no longer active. The "charter" class of seventeen was selected in 1963.<ref g">"History of the Pro Football Hall of Fame". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 25 January 2010.</ref>
Enshrinees are selected by a 44-person Selection Committee which meets each year at the time and location of the Super Bowl. Current rules of the committee stipulate that between four and seven individuals are selected each year.[1] Any person may nominate an individual to the hall, provided the nominee has not played or coached for at least five seasons prior to the nomination. Not including the charter class, 67 players have been inducted in their first year of eligibility.[2]
In addition to the regular Selection Committee, which primarily focuses on contributions made over the past approximately thirty seasons, a nine-member Seniors Committee (which is a subset of the larger committee) submits two nominees each year whose contributions came prior to 1985.[1] These nominees are referred as "Seniors nominees" (formerly "old-timer" nominees).[3]
Two Hall of Famers, Joe Guyon and another Indian halfback, Jim Thorpe, stayed paired together from 1919–1924 on four different teams that no longer exist. Starting with the 1919–1920 Canton Bulldogs, they next played for the 1921 Cleveland Indians, 1922–1923 Oorang Indians, and the 1924 Rock Island Independents.[4]
Hall of Famers by team
- Hall of Famers who made the major part of their primary contribution for any club have a bronze star in the right column.
- Hall of Famers who spent only a minor portion of their career with a club are listed without the star, and the team list where they made their major contribution is linked in the column.
- These tables use the Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinees by Team list[5] to credit the Hall of Famers with stars.
- The statistical and biographical information came from the NFL Hall of Fame website.[6]
- The list is complete up to the 2013 Hall of Fame class.
Akron, Baltimore, Boston, Brooklyn
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Akron Pros / Indians | ||||
Pollard, FritzFritz Pollard | 2005 | Coach | 1921 | All-America halfback, pro football pioneer. Helped Akron become NFL's first champion, 1920. One of just two African Americans in the NFL at time. NFL's first African American head coach, 1921. Played and sometimes coached four different teams in NFL career. |
Halfback | 1919–1921 1925–1926 | |||
1950 Baltimore Colts | ||||
Blanda, GeorgeGeorge Blanda | 1981 | Quarterback/ Kicker | 1950 | Chicago Bears, Houston Oilers and Oakland Raiders |
Art Donovan | 1968 | Defensive tackle | 1950 | Baltimore Colts |
Y. A. Tittle | 1971 | Quarterback | 1950 | San Francisco 49ers, New York Giants |
Boston Yanks | ||||
Ace Parker | 1972 | Quarterback | 1945 | Brooklyn Dodgers |
Brooklyn Dodgers/Tigers | ||||
Badgro, RedRed Badgro | 1981 | Offensive end Defensive end | 1936 | New York Giants |
Benny Friedman | 2005 | Quarterback Coach | 1932–1934 1932 | NFL's first great passer. League record 11 touchdown passes as rookie, 1927 – Another record with 20 TDs, 1929. Led league in touchdown passes four consecutive years (1927–1930). NFL record 66 career touchdown passes lasted for years. Triple-threat player, could run, pass, kick. Also had major impact for the New York Giants |
Kinard, Frank "Bruiser"Frank "Bruiser" Kinard | 1971 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1938–1944 | Two-time Mississippi All-America, Dodgers' third-round draft pick, 1938. Was small for tackle position, but was tough, aggressive, fast, durable. Only missed one game due to injury, 60-minute performer, excellent tackler. All-NFL, 1940, 1941, 1943, 1944. |
Ace Parker | 1972 | Quarterback | 1937–1941 | All-American tailback at Duke, All-NFL, 1938–1940, NFL's Most Valuable Player, 1940, Triple-threat, two-way back who led Dodgers to their greatest seasons in 1940, 1941, Led Yankees to AAFC Eastern title in 1946 |
Canton, Cleveland, Columbus, Dallas
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canton Bulldogs | ||||
Guy Chamberlin | 1965 | End/ Coach Pre-Modern Era: Two-Way Performer | 1922–1923 | Football hero at Nebraska, Was the premier end of the NFL in the 1920s, Iron man two-way performer. Player-coach of four NFL championship teams: 1922–1923 Canton Bulldogs, 1924 Cleveland Bulldogs, 1926 Frankford Yellow Jackets. Six-year coaching record 58-16-7 for an amazing .759 percentage. |
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1919–1920 | All-America tackle at Georgia Tech, 1918. Triple-threat halfback in pros. Played with Jim Thorpe on four NFL teams. Helped 1927 Giants compile an 11-1-1 record with his many abilities – passing, running, punting, tackling and blocking. His TD pass gave Giants win over Bears for 1927 NFL title. |
Pete Henry | 1963 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle Punter Place kicker | 1920–1923 1925–1926 | Signed with Bulldogs same day NFL organized, 1920. Largest player of his time, leader of Canton's championship lines, 1922–1923. A 60-minute performer, also punted, kicked field goals. NFL records for longest punt (94 yards), longest dropkick field goal (50 yards) |
Coach | 1926 | |||
William R. Lyman | 1964 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1922–1923 1925 | Started on four title teams: 1922–1923 Canton, 1924 Cleveland, 1933 Bears. Possibly invented the constant shifting by defensive players before each play. Also had major impact with the Chicago Bears |
Jim Thorpe | 1963 | Coach / Halfback | 1915–1917 1919–1920 1926 | 1912 Olympic decathlon champion. First big-time athlete to play pro football, playing for pre-NFL Canton Bulldogs in 1915. NickNamed "The Legend" on the all-time NFL team. Was voted top American athlete of first half of 20th century. First president of the NFL. |
Cleveland Bulldogs | ||||
Guy Chamberlin | 1965 | End/ Coach Pre-Modern Era: Two-Way Performer | 1924 | Canton Bulldogs |
Benny Friedman | 2005 | Quarterback | 1927 | New York Giants |
William R. Lyman | 1964 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1924 | Canton Bulldogs, Chicago Bears |
Steve Owen | 1966 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1925 | New York Giants |
Cleveland Indians 1921 | ||||
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1921 | New York Giants |
Jim Thorpe | 1963 | Coach / Halfback | 1921 | Canton Bulldogs |
Columbus Panhandles | ||||
Joseph Carr | 1963 | Team Owner | 1904, 1907–1922 | NFL president 1921–1939 |
Dallas Texans (NFL) | ||||
Art Donovan | 1968 | Defensive tackle | 1952 | Baltimore Colts |
Gino Marchetti | 1972 | Defensive end | 1952 | Baltimore Colts |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[5]
Detroit, Duluth, Frankford, Hammond
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Detroit Panthers | ||||
Jimmy Conzelman | 1964 | Quarterback Coach Team owner | 1925–1926 | Chicago Cardinals as a coach |
Detroit Wolverines | ||||
Benny Friedman | 2005 | Quarterback | 1928 | New York Giants |
Duluth Eskimos | ||||
Walt Kiesling | 1966 | Offensive guard Defensive Line | 1926–1927 | Pittsburgh Steelers |
John "Blood" McNally | 1963 | Halfback | 1926–1927 | Green Bay Packers |
Ernie Nevers | 1963 | Fullback Coach | 1926–1927 1927 | Scored record 40 points in one game against Bears, 1929 – Iron man, playing 1714 of 1740 minutes in 29-game 1926 season – All-league all five NFL seasons Also had major impact for the Chicago Cardinals |
Frankford Yellow Jackets | ||||
Guy Chamberlin | 1965 | End/ Coach Pre-Modern Era: Two-Way Performer | 1925–1926 | Canton Bulldogs |
William R. Lyman | 1964 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1925 | Canton Bulldogs, Chicago Bears |
Hammond Pros | ||||
John "Paddy" Driscoll | 1965 | Quarterback | pre-NFL 1919 | Chicago Cardinals, Chicago Bears |
George Halas | 1963 | Offensive end Defensive end | pre-NFL 1919 | Chicago Bears |
Pollard, FritzFritz Pollard | 2005 | Halfback Coach | 1923, 1925 1925 | Akron Pros/Indians |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[5]
Kansas City, Milwaukee, New York
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kansas City Cowboys | ||||
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1924–1925 | New York Giants |
Steve Owen | 1966 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1924–1925 | New York Giants |
Milwaukee Badgers | ||||
Jimmy Conzelman | 1964 | Quarterback Coach | 1922–1924 1922–1923 | Chicago Cardinals as a coach |
John "Blood" McNally | 1963 | Halfback | 1925–1926 | Green Bay Packers |
Pollard, FritzFritz Pollard | 2005 | Halfback | 1922 | Akron Pros/Indians |
New York Bulldogs/Yanks | ||||
Art Donovan | 1968 | Defensive tackle | 1951 | Baltimore Colts |
Bobby Layne | 1967 | Quarterback Placekicker | 1949 | Detroit Lions, Pittsburgh Steelers |
Mike McCormack | 1984 | Offensive tackle | 1951 | Cleveland Browns |
New York Yankees | ||||
Badgro, RedRed Badgro | 1981 | Offensive end Defensive end | 1927–1928 | New York Giants |
Ray Flaherty | 1976 | Offensive end | 1927–1928 | Boston/ Washington Redskins as Head Coach |
Harold "Red" Grange | 1963 | Halfback | 1927 | Chicago Bears |
Mike Michalske | 1964 | Offensive guard Defensive line | 1927–1928 | Green Bay Packers |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[5]
Oorang, Pottsville, Providence
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Oorang Indians | ||||
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1922–1923 | New York Giants |
Jim Thorpe | 1963 | Coach / Halfback | 1922–1923 | Canton Bulldogs |
Pottsville Maroons | ||||
Pete Henry | 1963 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle Punter Place Kicker | 1927–1928 | Canton Bulldogs |
Coach | 1928 | |||
Walt Kiesling | 1966 | Offensive guard Defensive Line | 1928 | Pittsburgh Steelers |
John "Blood" McNally | 1963 | Halfback | 1928 | Green Bay Packers |
Providence Steam Roller | ||||
Jimmy Conzelman | 1964 | Quarterback Coach | 1927–1929 1927–1930 | Chicago Cardinals as a coach |
Pollard, FritzFritz Pollard | 2005 | Halfback | 1925 | Akron Pros/Indians |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[5]
Rock Island, Staten Island, Washington
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[5] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rock Island Independents | ||||
Jimmy Conzelman | 1964 | Quarterback Coach | 1921–1922 | Chicago Cardinals as a coach |
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1924 | New York Giants |
Ed Healey | 1964 | Offensive tackle Defensive tackle | 1920–1922 | Chicago Bears |
Jim Thorpe | 1963 | Halfback | 1924–1925 | Canton Bulldogs |
Staten Island Stapletons | ||||
Ken Strong | 1967 | Halfback Placekicker | 1929–1932 | New York Giants |
Washington Senators | ||||
Joe Guyon | 1966 | Halfback | 1921 | New York Giants |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[5]
See also
All Team Lists
References
- 1 2 "Selection Process". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 25 January 2010.
- ↑ "Pro Football Hall of Fame Yearly Finalists". Retrieved 23 March 2012.
- ↑ "Senior Nominees, 1972–2012". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 22 January 2012.
- ↑ http://www.profootballhof.com/hof/member.aspx?PlayerId=84
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Members by Team List". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 25 May 2012.
- ↑ http://www.profootballhof.com/hof/
External links
- "Hall of Famers – Alphabetical". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 21 January 2010.
- "Hall of Famers by Position". ProFootballHallofFame.com. Retrieved 21 January 2010.