List of National Football Conference West Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees
This is a list of inductees into the Pro Football Hall of Fame who were at one point part of teams in the National Football Conference (NFC) West. Inductees into the Hall of Fame include players, coaches, and contributors (e.g., owners and team or league officials) who have "made outstanding contributions to professional football". As of 2016, 303 individuals have been enshrined,[1] with 86 having been part of an NFC West team, either the Arizona Cardinals, Los Angeles Rams, San Francisco 49ers, and/or Seattle Seahawks.
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 eight individuals are selected each year.[2] 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.
Contents
Hall of Famers by team
Tables updated through the Class of 2016
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- 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[3] to credit the Hall of Famers with stars.
- The statistical and biographical information came from the NFL Hall of Fame website.[4]
Arizona Cardinals
Chicago Cardinals | Card-Pitt | St. Louis Cardinals | Phoenix Cardinals | Arizona Cardinals |
---|---|---|---|---|
1920–1943, 1945–1959 | 1944 | 1960–1987 | 1988–1993 | 1994–present |
Arizona Cardinals | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[3] |
Charles Bidwill | 1967 | Team owner | 1933–1947 | Financial help saved Bears' ownership for George Halas, 1932 - Built famous "Dream Backfield" but died before it could bring him a Cardinals championship.[5] |
Guy Chamberlin | 1965 | End & Coach | 1927–1928 | 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. Also had major impact for the Canton Bulldogs. |
Jimmy Conzelman | 1964 | Coach | 1940–1942, 1946–1948 |
Coached Cardinals to 1947 NFL Championship, 1948 division crowns - Player-coach of four NFL teams in the 1920s, including 1928 champion Providence. - Player-coach-owner of Detroit team, 1925-1926 |
Dan Dierdorf | 1996 | Offensive Tackle | 1971–1983 | Equally effective as passing, rushing blocker. . .Right tackle who anchored line that led NFL three years, NFC five years in fewest sacks allowed. . . All-Pro five years - Six Pro Bowls. . .Named best blocker three years by NFL Players Association. |
John "Paddy" Driscoll | 1965 | Quarterback Coach |
1920–1925 1920–1922 |
Triple-threat on offense, excellent on defense, Dropkicked record four field goals one game, Dropkicked 50-yard field goal. Also had major impact for the Chicago Bears |
Walt Kiesling | 1966 | Offensive Line Defensive Line Coach |
1929–1933 1944 |
Pittsburgh Steelers |
Earl "Curly" Lambeau | 1963 | Coach | 1950–1951 | Green Bay Packers |
Dick "Night Train" Lane | 1974 | Cornerback | 1954–1959 | Set NFL interception record (14) as rookie, 1952 - All-NFL six years - Seven Pro Bowls - Selected all-time NFL cornerback, 1969 - Career interception record: 68 for 1,207 yards, five TDs Also had major impact with the Detroit Lions |
Ollie Matson | 1972 | Running Back | 1952, 1954–1958 |
U.S. Olympic medal winner in track, 1952 All-NFL five years, 1952, 1954-1957 - Traded to Rams for nine players, 1959 ... Career: 12,884 combined net yards, 438 points, nine TDs on punt, kickoff returns - Elected to six Pro Bowl games Also had major impact with the Los Angeles Rams |
Don Maynard | 1987 | Wide Receiver | 1973 | New York Jets |
Ernie Nevers | 1963 | Fullback Coach |
1929–1931 1930–1931, 1939 |
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 Duluth Eskimos |
Emmitt Smith | 2010 | Running Back | 2003–2004 | Dallas Cowboys |
Jackie Smith | 1994 | Tight End | 1963–1977 | Played in five Pro Bowls, 1967-1971. . . All-NFL, 1967, 1969 - Had 40 or more catches seven seasons - Leading tight end receiver at retirement with 480 receptions, 7,918 yards, 40 TDs - Played in Super Bowl XIII with Cowboys |
Joe Stydahar | 1967 | Coach | 1953–1954 | Chicago Bears as an Offensive Tackle |
Emmitt Thomas | 2008 | Assistant Coach | 1981-1985 | Kansas City Chiefs as a cornerback |
Jim Thorpe | 1963 | Running Back | 1928 | Canton Bulldogs 1920 -1st NFL President |
Charley Trippi | 1968 | Running Back | 1947–1955 | Part of Cards' famed "Dream Backfield". Scored two TDs in 1947 NFL title win. All-NFL, 1948. Played halfback five years, quarterback two years, defense two years. |
Roger Wehrli | 2007 | Cornerback | 1969–1982 | Led or tied for lead in interceptions for Cardinals four times. - 40 career interceptions, recovered franchise record-tying 19 fumbles. NFL's All-Decade Team of 1970s - All-Pro and All-NFC five times - Seven Pro Bowls. |
Aeneas Williams | 2014 | Cornerback | 1991–2000 | 3rd round pick, 1991; Played cornerback for 12 seasons before switching to safety; Named to Pro Bowl seven times as CB, once as S; First interception was in NFL debut; Five or more interceptions in a season six times; Career 55 interceptions for 807 yards, 9 TDs; Then-record 104-yard fumble return vs. Redskins, 2000; NFL's All-Decade Team 1990s [6] |
Larry Wilson | 1978 | Safety Coach General Manager |
1960–1972 1979 1988–1993 |
Became NFL's top free safety, made "safety blitz" famous - All-NFL six times - Eight Pro Bowl games. . .Had steals in seven straight games, led NFL interceptors, 1966. - Had 52 career interceptions. |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[3]
Los Angeles Rams
Cleveland Rams | Los Angeles Rams | St. Louis Rams | Los Angeles Rams |
---|---|---|---|
1937–1945 | 1946–1994 | 1995–2015 | 2016–present |
Los Angeles Rams | ||||
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Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[3] |
George Allen | 2002 | Coach | 1966–1970 | At retirement he was 10th all-time in coaching victories. Record of 118-54-5. His motto was the "Future is Now" and made 131 trades in career. No losing season in 12 years as NFL head coach. Coach of the Year, 1967, 1971. Also had major impact for the Washington Redskins |
Jerome Bettis | 2015 | Running Back | 1993–1995 | Pittsburgh Steelers |
Bob "Boomer" Brown | 2004 | Offensive Tackle | 1969–1970 | Philadelphia Eagles |
Dutch Clark | 1963 | Coach General Manager |
1939–1942 1939–1940 |
Detroit Lions as a Quarterback |
Eric Dickerson | 1999 | Running Back | 1983–1987 | Rams' first-round draft pick, second player overall, 1983 draft. Rushed for 2105 yards, 1984 and set a new NFL-rushing record. Gained over 1800 rushing yards in 3 of his first 4 seasons. At retirement was second all time leading rusher amassing 13259 yards on 2996 attempts. Selected to six Pro Bowls. Also had major impact for the Indianapolis Colts |
Marshall Faulk | 2011 | Running back | 1999–2005 | Colts' first-round pick (second player overall), 1994. Rushed for 1,000 yards in seven of first eight seasons. Second player in NFL history to have 1,000-yard marks in both rushing and receiving in same season, 1999. That year also set then-record for yards from scrimmage (2,429). NFL MVP, 2000. First player ever to gain 2,000 yards from scrimmage four straight seasons (1998-2001). Also had major impact for the Indianapolis Colts |
Tom Fears | 1970 | Offensive End | 1948–1956 | Led NFL receivers first three seasons, 1948-1950. Best season: 84 catches, 1950. In 1950 division title game he had three TD receptions. His 73-yard catch won 1951 NFL title. Set a new record with 18 receptions in one game, 1950. All-NFL, 1949, 1950. Button-hook route was his specialty. Career stats: 400 catches for 5,397 yards, 38 TDs. |
Bill George | 1974 | Linebacker | 1966 | Chicago Bears |
Sid Gillman | 1983 | Coach | 1955–1959 | Los Angeles/San Diego Chargers |
Kevin Greene | 2016 | Linebacker / Defensive End |
1985–1992 | Had back-to-back seasons with career best 16.5 sacks, 1988-89 … made 4.5 sacks in 1989 finale win, clinching a playoff spot for Rams … double digit sack totals 10 seasons, tied for second all time at retirement … 160 career sacks … NFL sack titles in 1994, 1996 |
Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch | 1968 | Running Back Wide Receiver General Manager |
1949–1957 1960–1969 |
On College All-Star team that upset of Rams, 1946. Was key part of Rams' innovative "three-end" offense, 1949. NFL receiving and scoring leader 1951. That year 10 of 17 TD catches were long-distance "bombs". Had sprinter speed. Named all-time NFL flanker, 1969. Career stats: 387 catches for 7,029 yards, 60 TDs; 399 points scored. |
David "Deacon" Jones | 1980 | Defensive End | 1961–1971 | Not drafted till 14th-round, 1961. Part of the new move for fast and mobile defensive linemen. Known for clean, hard-hitting play. He coined the term quarterback "sacks". Unanimous all-league six straight years, 1965-1970. Voted to eight Pro Bowls. NFL Defensive Player of Year, 1967-1968. |
Dick "Night Train" Lane | 1974 | Cornerback | 1952–1953 | Chicago Cardinals, Detroit Lions |
James Lofton | 2003 | Wide Receiver | 1993 | Green Bay Packers |
Tom Mack | 1999 | Guard | 1966–1978 | Rams' first round draft pick, second player overall in 1966 draft. Was one of only two rookies on team that year, and earned starting role as rookie. Kept starting left guard position for next 13 seasons. Iron man, never missed a game during 184-game career. Elected to 11 Pro Bowls. All-NFL five times. |
Ollie Matson | 1972 | Running Back | 1959–1962 | Won Olympic medal winner in track, 1952. No. 1 draft pick, 1952. All-NFL five years, 1952, 1954-1957. Rams traded nine players for him, 1959. Career stats: 12,884 combined net yards, 5,173 yards rushing, 222 receptions, 438 points, nine TDs on punt, kickoff returns. Also had major impact with the Chicago Cardinals |
Tommy McDonald | 1998 | Wide Receiver | 1965–1966 | Philadelphia Eagles |
Joe Namath | 1985 | Quarterback | 1977 | New York Jets |
Merlin Olsen | 1982 | Defensive Tackle | 1962–1976 | All-America, Outland Trophy winner. Rams' No. 1 draft pick, 1962. Leader of famous "Fearsome Foursome" defensive line. All-NFL, 1964, 1966-1970. Rookie of Year, 1962. Selected to Rams' all-time team, 1970. Played in 208 games, last 198 in a row. |
Orlando Pace | 2016 | Offensive Tackle | 1997–2008 | First overall pick, 1997 NFL draft … blocked for three straight NFL MVPS (QB Kurt Warner, 1999, 2001 and RB Marshall Faulk in 2000) … Led Rams offensive line that helped QB surpass 3,000-yards passing seven times including three surpassing 4,000 yards … blocked for seven 1,000-yard rushers |
Dan Reeves | 1967 | Team owner | 1941–1971 | Moved Rams to Los Angeles, 1946 and opened up West Coast to major sports. Experimented in game TV and help development of modern NFL policies. First post-war NFL owner to sign an African-American (Kenny Washington), 1946. Had first full-time scouting staff. Started free football for kids attendance program at Rams games. |
Les Richter | 2011 | Linebacker Guard Kicker |
1954–1962 | Second player picked overall, 1952 draft. The Rams traded 11 players to trade up for him. Richter had a punishing style of play. Voted to eight straight Pro Bowls. First- or second-team All-NFL each season, 1955-1960. Played also at center and placekicker early in career. Led Rams in scoring, 1955 and 1956. |
Andy Robustelli | 1971 | Defensive End | 1951–1955 | New York Giants |
Pete Rozelle | 1985 | General Manager | 1957–1959 | NFL Commissioner |
Tex Schramm | 1991 | Team administrator | 1947–1956 | Dallas Cowboys |
Jackie Slater | 2001 | Offensive Tackle | 1976–1995 | Third-round draft pick, 1976. Career lasted 20 seasons, 259 games. At retirement was tied for third most seasons played and most ever by offensive lineman. He blocked for seven different 1,000-yard rushers. First- or second- team All-Pro five times. Was in seven Pro Bowls. |
Joe Stydahar | 1967 | Coach | 1950–1952 | Chicago Bears as an Offensive Tackle |
Norm Van Brocklin | 1971 | Quarterback | 1949–1957 | Rams' No. 4 draft pick, 1949. NFL in passing leader three years, punting twice. His 73-yard pass won the Rams 1951 championship. Passed for 554 yards one game, 1951. Career stats: 1,553 completions for 23,611 yards, 173 TDs. Quarterback for Eagles 1960 NFL title. NFL's Most Valuable Player, 1960. Voted to nine Pro Bowl games. |
Bob Waterfield | 1965 | Quarterback Coach |
1945–1952 1960–1962 |
NFL's Most Valuable Player as rookie, 1945. His Two TD passes helped earn Rams' 1945 title win. NFL passing champ twice. All-NFL three years. Career stats - 11,849 yards, 97 TDs passing; 573 points on 13 TDs, 315 PATs, 60 FGs; 42.4-yard punting average. Played defense as well his first four years. |
Aeneas Williams | 2014 | Cornerback/ Safety | 2001–2004 | Arizona Cardinals [6] |
Ron Yary | 2001 | Offensive Tackle | 1982 | Minnesota Vikings |
Jack Youngblood | 2001 | Defensive End | 1971–1984 | Rams' No. 1 draft pick, 1971. Was starting left defensive end, 1973. Very durable, played in team-record 201 consecutive games. Played every defensive down in title game, Super Bowl XIV despite a fractured left fibula from 1979 first-round playoff. Was in five NFC championship games. All-Pro five times. Voted to seven straight Pro Bowls. |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[3]
San Francisco 49ers
San Francisco 49ers | |||||||||||
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Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[3] | |||||||
Larry Allen | 2013 | Guard | 2006–2007 | Dallas Cowboys | |||||||
Jack Christiansen | 1970 | Coach | 1963–1967 | Detroit Lions as a Safety/Kick Returner | |||||||
Fred Dean | 2008 | Defensive End | 1981–1985 | Feared pass rusher. Career sack total near 100, but unofficial since sacks were not an official NFL statistic until 1982. - 17.5 sacks, 1983 - All-Pro in 1980, 1981, - Four Pro Bowls Also had major impact for the San Diego Chargers |
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Edward DeBartolo, Jr. | 2016 | Team Owner | 1977–2000 | Purchased 49ers, 1977 … Soon built environment conductive to winning … his teams averaged 13 wins per season, including playoffs, from 1981-1998 (except strike-shortened '82 season) … during his ownership the team made 16 playoff appearances; won 13 division titles, played in 10 championship games … first team to win 5 Super Bowls | |||||||
Richard Dent | 2011 | Defensive End | 1994 | Chicago Bears | |||||||
Chris Doleman | 2012 | Defensive End/ Linebacker | 1996–1998 | Minnesota Vikings | |||||||
Tony Dungy | 2016 | Defensive Back | 1979 | Indianapolis Colts as a Coach | |||||||
Kevin Greene | 2016 | Linebacker / Defensive End |
1997 | Los Angeles Rams | |||||||
Charles Haley | 2015 | Defensive End/ Linebacker | 1986–1991, 1999 | Selected by 49ers in 4th round, 1986; Only player to play on five winning Super Bowl teams;Led 49ers in sacks in each of first six seasons; Twice named NFC Defensive Player of the Year; Five Pro Bowls; Played on 10 division championship teams; Had six double-digit sack seasons; career total: 100.5 Also had major impact for the Dallas Cowboys |
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Bob Hayes | 2009 | Wide Receiver | 1975 | Dallas Cowboys | |||||||
Rickey Jackson | 2010 | Linebacker | 1994-1995 | New Orleans Saints | |||||||
Jimmy Johnson | 1994 | Cornerback | 1961–1976 | No. 1 draft pick, 1961. Played on offense, and safety. Moved to cornerback permanently, 1963. All-Pro four times. Selected to five Pro Bowls. Career record: 47 interceptions, 615 yards (49ers records at his retirement). Played in two NFC title games. | |||||||
John Henry Johnson | 1987 | Fullback | 1954–1956 | Pittsburgh Steelers | |||||||
Ronnie Lott | 2000 | Cornerback Safety |
1981–1990 | First round draft pick, 1981. Starter, left cornerback position as rookie. Moved to safety, 1985. All-Pro at three different positions (cornerback, free safety, strong safety). 100-plus tackles five seasons. Interceptions leader twice, 1986, 1991. Strong presence on defense during 49ers four Super Bowl seasons - 63 career interceptions for 730 yards, 5 TDs. | |||||||
Hugh McElhenny | 1970 | Running Back | 1952–1960 | 49ers' No. 1 draft pick, 1952. Scored 40-yard TD on his first play. All-NFL, Rookie of Year honors. Six Pro Bowls. Made 11,375 combined net yards in 13 years. 5,281 yards rushing, 264 pass receptions, 360 points. | |||||||
Joe Montana | 2000 | Quarterback | 1979–1992 | Third round draft pick, 1979. 31 come-from-behind victories. Four Super Bowl wins. Super Bowl MVP three times. Led 92-yard winning drive in closing seconds, Super Bowl XXIII. All-NFL three times, All-NFC five times. 8 Pro Bowls. Career statistics: 3,409 completions, 40,551 yards, 273 TDs, 92.3 passer rating. | |||||||
Leo Nomellini | 1969 | Defensive Tackle | 1950–1963 | 49ers' first-ever NFL draft choice, 1950. Played every game for 14 seasons, 174 regular-season games. Two way player, defensive pass rusher, and crushing offensive blocker. Named NFL's all-time defensive tackle. All-NFL six times, two years on offense, four years on defense. 10 Pro Bowl games. | |||||||
Joe Perry | 1969 | Running Back | 1948–1960, 1963 | Signed as free agent by 49ers. Very fast runner nicknamed "The Jet". First to gain over 1,000 yards two straight years, 1953-1954. - 12,532 career combined net yards, 9,723 yards rushing, 260 receptions, 513 points. Three Pro Bowls. | |||||||
Jerry Rice | 2010 | Wide Receiver | 1985–2000 | First round draft pick (16th player overall), 1985. Set then NFL record with 22 TD receptions, 1987. Receiving yards and touchdown receptions leader six times. Another record 1,848 yards receiving, 1995. At retirement had every major receiving mark including receptions (1,549); receiving yards (22,895); most 1,000-yard receiving seasons (14) - Record 208 total touchdowns; 23,546 combined net yards. Super Bowl XXIII MVP | |||||||
Deion Sanders | 2011 | Cornerback Kick Returner |
1994 | Atlanta Falcons, Dallas Cowboys | |||||||
O. J. Simpson | 1985 | Running Back | 1978–1979 | Buffalo Bills | |||||||
Mike Singletary | 1998 | Asst. Head Coach Coach |
2005–2008 2008–2010 |
Chicago Bears as a Linebacker | |||||||
Bob St. Clair | 1990 | Offensive Tackle | 1953–1963 | Third-round draft pick, 1953. Loved to hit. Superb as both running, passing blocker. Also played on goal line defense, special teams. Blocked 10 field goals, 1956. All-NFL four years. 49ers team captain. | |||||||
Dick Stanfel | 2016 | Offensive Coordinator | 1971–1975 | Detroit Lions as a Guard | |||||||
Y. A. Tittle | 1971 | Quarterback | 1951–1960 | AAFC Rookie of Year, 1948. Career record: 2,427 completions, 33,070 yards, 242 TDs, 13 games over 300 yards passing. Threw 33 TD passes in 1962, 36 in 1963. NFL's Most Valuable Player, 1961, 1963. All-NFL, 1957, 1961, 1962, 1963. Seven Pro Bowls. Also had major impact for the New York Giants |
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Bill Walsh | 1993 | Coach General Manager |
1979–1988 1979–1982 1999–2000 |
Coached 49ers to three Super Bowl wins (XVI, XIX, XXIII) in 10 years. Installed and improved the West Coast offense. Overall record: 102-63-1. In just three years, earned first-ever NFL title. Six NFC Western division titles, three NFC championships. Coach of Year, 1981; NFC Coach of Year, 1984. | |||||||
Dave Wilcox | 2000 | Linebacker | 1964–1974 | Third round draft pick, 1964. Nicknamed “The Intimidator" for style of play. Probably the finest outside linebacker of his era. Very effective at keeping tight ends from getting off line. All-NFL five times. Named All-NFC three times. Seven Pro Bowls. | |||||||
Rod Woodson | 2009 | Cornerback/ Safety Kick Returner |
1997 | Pittsburgh Steelers | |||||||
Steve Young | 2005 | Quarterback | 1987–1999 | Bucs' first round pick of 1984 supplemental draft. Traded to 49ers, 1987. Tied with Sammy Baugh as the only QBs to win six NFL passing titles. At retirement, owned the record 112.8 paser rating, 1994. Passed for 6 TDs, earned Most Valuable Player, Super Bowl XXIX. Statistics include 33,124 yards and 232 TDs passing, also rushed for 43 TDs. NFL MVP twice, seven Pro Bowls. |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website..[3]
Seattle Seahawks
Seattle Seahawks | |||||||||||
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Inductee | Class | Position | Seasons | Major part of Primary Contribution[3] | |||||||
Carl Eller | 2004 | Defensive End | 1979 | Minnesota Vikings | |||||||
Franco Harris | 1990 | Running Back | 1984 | Pittsburgh Steelers | |||||||
Walter Jones | 2014 | Offensive Tackle | 1997–2008 | Selected in 1st round (6th player overall) in 1997; Became starting left tackle in rookie training camp; Consensus pick for multiple all-rookie teams; All-Pro six times; NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 2000s [7] | |||||||
Cortez Kennedy | 2012 | Defensive Tackle | 1990–2000 | 1st-round draft pick (3rd player overall), 1990 NFL Draft. Played in 167 of possible 176 games, including streak of 116 straight games played. Established club record of 100 consecutive starts. First-team All-Rookie by PFWA. Seahawks record eight Pro Bowls (1992–97, 1999, 2000) - First-team (1992, 1993, 1994) or second-team (1991, 1996) All-Pro five times - NFL Defensive Player of the Year, 1992 - NFL's All-Decade Team of 1990s | |||||||
Steve Largent | 1995 | Wide Receiver | 1976–89 | In rookie year had 54 receptions. Had a reception in 177 straight games. Caught 70 or more passes six seasons, 50 or more 10 years. Career stats: 819 catches, 13,089 yards, 100 TDs. Led NFL in receiving yards, 1979, 1985. Selected for seven Pro Bowls. Missed only four games with injuries first 13 seasons. | |||||||
Mike McCormack | 1984 | Coach | 1982 | Cleveland Browns as an Offensive Tackle | |||||||
Warren Moon | 2006 | Quarterback | 1997–98 | Houston Oilers | |||||||
John Randle | 2010 | Defensive Tackle | 2001–03 | Minnesota Vikings | |||||||
Jerry Rice | 2010 | Wide Receiver | 2004 | San Francisco 49ers |
- All Career Highlights listed at the Pro Football Hall of Fame website.[3]
See also
All Team Lists
References
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External links
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