10 Bills greats nominated for Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2025

10 Bills greats nominated for Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2025

The nominations for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2025 were announced on social media Wednesday by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport.

Of the 167 players nominated for the HOF, 10 Buffalo Bills players made the list: Larry Centers, Marshawn Lynch, Ruben Brown, Pat Williams, Cornelius Bennett, London Fletcher, Takeo Spikes, Troy Vincent, Gary Anderson, and Brian Moorman.

Some of the names most notably played for other franchises, but all made an impact for the Bills in some way. And, most of them have been nominated for many years without ever reaching football immortality.

Seeing a lot of them get into the HOF would be great, but a few names stand out as some that are more deserving.

Lynch, although he will most likely enter the HOF as a Seattle Seahawks running back, has a real shot to be a first-ballot selection.

Fletcher was selected as a semifinalist for the HOF in 2024, meaning he made it to the top-25 of finalists. The linebacker has not gotten the nod yet. His numbers in his career can be stacked up with just about anyone.

Moorman should get more love from the HOF committee. The punter was one of the best special teams players in the 2000s decade, making the All-Decade team while being a weapon for the Bills at punter. He was also a 1st Team All-Pro.

A couple of fun ones would be Cornelius Bennett and Larry Centers. Bennett was an integral part of the Bills’ defense in the early 90s which went to four consecutive Super Bowls. Centers, although he only played two years in Buffalo, would shine some light on the forgotten fullback position in the NFL. Centers led the Bills in receptions in 2001 with 80.

Here is the full list of the 167 nominees for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2025.

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The Pro Bowl may be gone, but Sean Taylor’s hit on Brian Moorman will live forever

Fifteen years ago, the late Sean Taylor nearly decapitated a punter.

The NFL finally did away with the Pro Bowl game, it was announced Monday, confirming something I had long suspected, that the game just wasn’t as good or interesting as it used to be.

It’s not that the players I grew up watching ever went full throttle in the Pro Bowl, but it wasn’t the joke of a football game it’s been over the last decade or so. A part of me had wondered if I simply aged out of a demographic that actually cared about the game, that maybe the kids were still watching. But the NFL’s decision to convert the game into a week of skills competitions tells me that demographic doesn’t exist.

With the Pro Bowl now a thing of the past, I’m left with one awesome memory to remind me of a time when I did watch and enjoy. You already know what I’m talking about, because it’s probably your last great memory too — maybe even your only memory from the game. It’s the late great Sean Taylor’s hit on punter Brian Moorman.

My favorite part about the play is the collective “oooooooo” from the crowd and announcer, and all of us at home too. Taylor isn’t even in the picture for the majority of the play, then he comes from out of nowhere to flatten a punter. It’s just something you don’t expect to see. Not even in a regular season game. I’m not sure Moorman would’ve made the first down anyway, but Taylor made sure he definitely didn’t get it. The way Moorman laid on the ground suggests he wasn’t sure if his body was still in tact.

To put the hit in context, this was the 2007 Pro Bowl. Fifteen years later, and nothing has topped it as the greatest Pro Bowl highlight ever. Unless they revive the game sometime in the future, nothing ever will.

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Still got it: Former Bills punter Brian Moorman can kick (video)

It won’t happen but yes Brian Moorman can still bomb a football down the field:

Brian Moorman hasn’t been a punter in the NFL since 2013… but maybe?

Probably not if we’re being honest, but the former All-Pro punter for the Bills knows the team has a vacancy post-Matt Araiza release.

Moorman went on to prove, in case anyone was wondering, that he’s still got it.

Moorman took to his social media account on Twitter over the weekend. A Buffalo fan replied to a tweet that Moorman was tagged in and the punter saw it.

The comment said “Father Time is undefeated” and pointed out that Moorman is 46 years old.

In a witty reply, Moorman posted a video of him punting a ball, which appears recent, and… not bad. He’s still got it.

Again, it’s very unlikely that the Bills add a punter who hasn’t played in almost a decade…but it would be a heck of a story considering how much of a fan favorite Moorman was.

Technically it would be Moorman being the “Legend Of The Game” in 2021 to actually being on the team in 2022…

One can dream.

Check out Moorman’s reply and video below:

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Brian Moorman to be ‘Legend of the Game’ for Bills-Falcons

Brian Moorman to be ‘Legend of the Game’ for #Bills-#Falcons:

The Buffalo Bills will continue to honor some of their past players against the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday.

For Week 17, the Bills will bring back former punter Brian Moorman as a “Legend of the Game.”

While some younger fans might look at Moorman and question a punter being dubbed this, longtime Bills Mafia members will love Moorman being selected. During his tenure with the team, Moorman was one of the biggest fan favorites.

Moorman punted for the Bills from 2001-2013. He departed in 2012 and spent time with the Dallas Cowboys.

Upon returning, Moorman recalled the way the fans welcomed him back after the Cowboys spell in 2013.

“We were playing the Bengals and I was about to punt before the end of the first half and they gave me a standing ovation and cheered like, I’d never heard them cheer before. That feeling was second to none, quite frankly,” he said to the team’s website.

Moorman was a first-team, All-Pro for the team in 2005 and 2006.

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Bills players of past & present celebrate AFC East title

Buffalo Bills alumni, players react on Twitter to AFC East title win.

From Josh Allen to Jim Kelly, the guys who’ve dawned the red, white and blue of the Buffalo Bills were celebrating on Saturday. After their 48-19 beat down of the Denver Broncos, all of the above were happy to yell from the mountain tops the the Bills are the 2020 AFC East champs.

Check out some of their social media reactions to the title win below:

RB Fred Jackson

QB Jim Kelly

Team owner Kim Pegula

LB Darryl Talley

LB Cornelius Bennett

RB Thurman Thomas

WR Steve Tasker

P Brian Moorman

OL Jon Feliciano

OL John Fina

LS Reid Ferguson

S Micah Hyde

LB Lorenzo Alexander

S Jordan Poyer

QB Josh Allen

WR James Lofton

DL Fred Smerlas

OL Eric Wood

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Bills players of past & present celebrate AFC East title

Buffalo Bills alumni, players react on Twitter to AFC East title win.

https://embed.sendtonews.com/oembed/?SC=E8bO1iwo4u-1079101-7498&format=json&offsetx=0&offsety=0&floatwidth=400&floatposition=bottom-right&float=on

From Josh Allen to Jim Kelly, the guys who’ve dawned the red, white and blue of the Buffalo Bills were celebrating on Saturday. After their 48-19 beat down of the Denver Broncos, all of the above were happy to yell from the mountain tops the Bills are the 2020 AFC East champs.

Check out some of their social media reactions to the title win below:

RB Fred Jackson

QB Jim Kelly

Team owner Kim Pegula

LB Darryl Talley

LB Cornelius Bennett

RB Thurman Thomas

WR Steve Tasker

P Brian Moorman

OL Jon Feliciano

OL John Fina

LS Reid Ferguson

S Micah Hyde

LB Lorenzo Alexander

S Jordan Poyer

QB Josh Allen

WR James Lofton

DL Fred Smerlas

OL Eric Wood

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