49ers LB Patrick Willis named finalist for Pro Football Hall of Fame

Patrick Willis is a Pro Football Hall of Fame finalist, and it feels like this is the year for him:

Legendary 49ers linebacker Patrick Willis is a finalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame for the third time in as many years.

Willis was also a semifinalist for the fifth consecutive year, so it appears he’s trending toward finally being enshrined with a bust in Canton.

A short career has likely been the main culprit for Willis not getting into the Hall of Fame just yet. He played for just eight seasons, but he packed a hall-of-fame resumé into those years. Willis was the 2007 Defensive Rookie of the Year, a five-time First-Team All-Pro, a one-time Second-Team All-Pro, a seven-time Pro Bowler, a two-time top-10 finisher for Defensive Player of the Year, and a member of the Hall of Fame’s All-Decade team for the 2010s.

Along with that, Willis changed the way the linebacker position was played with his ability to not only get downhill and deliver big hits as a run stopper, but his athleticism helped redefine how to maximize linebacker play in an NFL that was increasingly pass-happy.

Willis is a finalist alongside CB Eric Allen, DE Jared Allen, OT Willie Anderson, G Jahri Evans, DE Dwight Freeney, TE Antonio Gates, S Rodney Harrison, WR/KR Devin Hester, WR Torry Holt, WR Andre Johnson, DE Julius Peppers, RB Fred Taylor, WR Reggie Wayne and S Darren Woodson.

Now the selection committee will choose as many as five of these finalists to make up the 2024 Hall of Fame class. That group will be announced Feb. 8 during the NFL Honors ceremony.

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3 former 49ers among 25 semifinalists for 2024 Hall of Fame class

Three former #49ers landed among the 25 Pro Football Hall of Fame semifinalists for the class of 2024.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame moved into the next phase of the selection process for the class of 2024 and named 25 modern-era finalists. Among the 25 semifinalists are three former 49ers.

That trio is made up of linebacker Patrick Willis, wide receiver Anquan Boldin and running back Ricky Watters.

Willis is a semifinalist for the fifth time in five years. He’s reached this stage every year he’s been eligible after spending all eight of his NFL seasons with the 49ers. Willis’ resume speaks for itself with seven Pro Bowl trips, five First-Team All-Pro nods, a Defensive Rookie of the Year award and a placement on the Hall of Fame All-Decade team for the 2010s.

Boldin was with San Francisco for three years from 2013-15. Despite being in his mid-30s he was a very productive receiver for the 49ers with 237 catches, 3,030 yards and 16 touchdowns in 46 games. Boldin finished his 14-year career with 1,076 receptions for 13,779 yards and 82 touchdowns. He was the Offensive Rookie of the Year in 2003 and a three-time Pro Bowler. This is his third time making the list of semifinalists in three years.

Watters has been a semifinalist four times now including once in 2020 and then every year from 2022-24. He was with the 49ers for his first four seasons and helped them win a Super Bowl in the 1994 campaign. Watters posted 2,840 rushing yards and 1,450 receiving yards across three years on the field for San Francisco. He also put up 33 total touchdowns while going to the Pro Bowl every year he was in red and gold. He finished his career with five total Pro Bowls, 10,463 rushing yards, 78 rushing touchdowns, 4,248 receiving yards and 13 receiving touchdowns.

The next step in the selection process includes a cutdown to 15 finalists, and then the Hall of Fame class will be announced Feb. 8 during the NFL Honors ceremony.

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Patrick Willis named finalist for 2023 Pro Football HOF class

Patrick Willis is a finalist for the 2023 Pro Football Hall of Fame class. He deserves a gold jacket.

In his fourth year on the ballot, former 49ers linebacker Patrick Willis is one of 15 Modern-Era finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame class of 2023. This is his second time landing among the group of finalists.

Willis spent his entire eight-year career with San Francisco, and while he doesn’t have the longevity of some Hall of Famers, his impact during his time in the NFL was still profound.

In eight years, Willis was a seven-time Pro Bowler, a five-time First-Team All-Pro and once a Second-Team All-Pro. He was named to the Pro Football Hall of Fame All-Decade team for the 2010s, and was the Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2007.

His dominance at middle linebacker for the 49ers included six seasons with more than 100 tackles and two seasons as the NFL’s leading tackler. He also posted 20.5 sacks, 60 tackles for loss, eight interceptions, 53 pass breakups and 16 forced fumbles.

Willis stood at the heart of a 49ers defense that helped define the NFL in the early 2010s, and his skill set ushered in a new style of linebacker that could run with wide receivers in coverage while still getting downhill to meet running backs at the line of scrimmage. It only took eight seasons for Willis to become synonymous with the NFL’s all-time great linebackers.

The legendary 49ers LB won’t have an easy trip to Canton though. He’s joined by DE Jared Allen, OT Willie Anderson, DB Ronde Barber, DE Dwight Freeney, KR Devin Hester, WR Tory Holt, WR Andre Johnson, CB Albert Lewis, CB Darrelle Revis, OT Joe Thomas, LB Zach Thomas, DE DeMarcus Ware, WR Reggie Wayne and DB Darren Woodson.

The 2023 class will be comprised of up to five of the modern-era finalists, and will be announced Feb. 9 at the NFL Honors ceremony.

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How Hall of Famer Bryant Young made impression on Patrick Willis

Patrick Willis’ “welcome to the NFL” moment with the #49ers? Hall of Famer Bryant Young rag dolling an offensive lineman.

Patrick Willis and Bryant Young didn’t spend a ton of time playing on the same team, but their one season together was enough for the 14-year veteran defensive lineman to make an impression on the rookie linebacker.

Willis in November joined the Candlestick Chronicles podcast and talked about his one year with Young, who retired following the 2007 season. While the former 49ers linebacker talked about some of the off-field wisdom Young imparted, there was an on-field ‘welcome to the NFL’ moment that also sticks out when Willis recounts his rookie year.

“The one play in particular that I do remember,” Willis said. “We were playing against the St. Louis Rams, and we were playing them at home, and I’ll never forget B.Y. had done a club – he had this powerful club move that he would do where he would step-step and club you – and man I saw him hit an offensive guard and just complete de-cleat him. Like a bowling ball and a bowling pin and you see a bowling pin fall over? That’s what he did to him. And I’ll never forget saying to myself, ‘Holy (expletive), man! These are grown men. These are grown men out here.’ That’s what I was thinking in my head, and I’m glad I’m on his side.”

The play in particular Willis remembered came during a tremendous performance from Young. That home game vs. the Rams in 2007 came in Week 11. San Francisco lost 13-9, but Young put up four tackles, two tackles for loss, 2.5 sacks, three QB hits and a pass breakup.

That was Young’s Age 35 season, but he was still a force on the interior. He had 6.5 sacks that year to go along with seven tackles for loss and 12 QB hits.

Willis had a great year of his own as a rookie, earning a Defensive Rookie of the Year award, a First-Team All-Pro nod and a trip to the Pro Bowl thanks in part to the play of the defensive line in front of him.

Now the two could wind up being teammates again in Canton. Young was inducted as part of the 2022 class. Willis was a finalist, but missed out on being inducted alongside his former teammate. It feels like a matter of ‘when’ not ‘if’ that Willis will wear a gold jacket alongside the teammate who welcomed him to the NFL.

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Pro Football Hall of Fame finalists: 2 49ers in 2022 class

Two of the 15 finalists for the 2022 Pro Football Hall of Fame class are #49ers legends.

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The 49ers have a chance to be well-represented at the Class of 2022 Pro Football Hall of Fame induction. Two 49ers legends, Bryant Young and Patrick Willis were among the 15 finalists to be inducted in next year’s class.

For Young this is his 10th year of eligibility and the second time he’s reached this stage of the selection process. He was a finalist in 2020 as well but fell short of getting his gold jacket.

Young garnered all of his Hall of Fame credentials in a 49ers uniform after they selected him No. 7 overall in the 1994 draft. Across 14 seasons Young posted 89.5 sacks and 93 tackles for loss. He was a four-time Pro Bowler, a First-Team All-Pro selection once, a Super Bowl champion and a member of the Hall of Fame’s All-1990s team.

For Willis this is his third year of eligibility and the first time he’s been named a finalist.

His relatively short eight-year career is the only thing keeping him from Canton at this point. In those eight seasons he was the 2007 Defensive Rookie of the Year, a seven-time Pro Bowler and a five-time First-Team All-Pro. Willis led the NFL in tackles twice, had 100-plus tackles in six of his eight seasons, notched eight interceptions and 53 pass breakups, and forced 16 fumbles while racking up 20.5 sacks.

There was nothing Willis couldn’t do as the cornerstone of a dominant 49ers defense that helped define the early 2010s. For his contributions Willis was named to the Hall of Fame’s All-2010s team.

For both Young and Willis, a bust in the Pro Football Hall of Fame feels more a matter of ‘when’ than ‘if.’

Here’s a list of the 15 finalists for the 2022 class:

Jared Allen
Willie Anderson

Ronde Barber
Tony Boselli
LeRoy Butler
Devin Hester
Torry Holt
Andre Johnson
Sam Mills
Richard Seymour
Zach Thomas
DeMarcus Ware
Reggie Wayne
Patrick Willis
Bryant Young

The Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2022 will be revealed on Feb. 10.

Patrick Willis on his post-football pursuits and why he walked away knowing he could still play

Patrick Willis walked away from football at the right time, and now the #49ers legend is working with CoachTube.com and building a park in his hometown.

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To hear Patrick Willis tell it, the former 49ers All-Pro linebacker isn’t up to much since his retirement after the 2014 season. While he’s taken up some entrepreneurial opportunities, including an ambassadorship with an online athlete training tool CoachTube, he’s still getting into a groove outside of the game he played his entire life until hanging up his pads at Age 29.

“Most of the time when people ask I joke with them and I tell them, ‘I positively do nothing all day long.’ And they look at me like, ‘what?’ And I’m like ‘I absolutely, positively do nothing all day long,” Willis said in an interview on the Candlestick Chronicles podcast. “But I say that jokingly. The game ended, but life goes on. And so just trying to find my rhythm. I just try to take it in stride. It ebbs and flows but I can’t complain too, too much. I’m blessed to be where I am at this moment.”

Willis, 36, is now seven years removed from retiring and doesn’t look back and consider he might’ve walked away too soon. His dedication to the sport had consumed him for his entire adult life and his retirement came once that mindset shifted.

“It wasn’t that I could not absolutely go,” Willis said. “That was never the thing. The thing was me truly being honest to my heart and my soul. I once heard Bob Marley say when I was younger … ‘don’t gain the world, but lose your soul in the process.’ I don’t want to get too technical on it, but at one point in time the innocence of me playing the game was — you could’ve told me anything outside of football and I wouldn’t care. I was all about ball. Life outside didn’t matter, then all the sudden that had began to change in a way.”

Toe injuries were the first thing that made Willis consider walking away. He was dealing with issues on each foot, so fixing one was still going to impact him physically and mentally with the other foot still unhealthy. Playing with bandaged up hands is one thing, but playing linebacker at a high level in an increasingly pass-happy NFL that required more from the linebacker position without the benefit of healthy feet made Willis reconsider playing into his 30s.

“It was never about me not being able to continue to go. It was just knowing how I play the game and I played the game with passion and with heart and with joy,” Willis said. “And I told myself when I no longer have the passion to play, when I no longer have the energy to give my teammates everything I have, and most importantly when these feet went out I knew it would be time to step to the side.”

Now that he’s stepped away from the game, Willis is sorting out where to aim the energy he used to expend on the gridiron. Among those opportunities is a service called CoachTube.com. He’s part of the brains behind this digital platform that offers online coaching courses in sports. CoachTube takes current and former coaches and players from the NFL, NBA, MLB and hockey and soccer world and allows them to share their expertise with a wider audience of athletes.

Willis went on to a sterling career without the benefit of online coaching, but he explained that a service like this would’ve been something he gravitated to growing up without the benefit of affording a personal coach.

Even without additional training, Willis went on to earn seven Pro Bowl nods and five First-Team All-Pro honors in eight seasons. He twice led the NFL in tackles, hauled in eight interceptions, broke up 53 passes, notched 20.5 sacks and racked up 60 tackles for loss. There’s a chance he winds up in the Pro Football Hall of Fame despite only playing for eight years.

You won’t find Willis campaigning for a gold jacket or vying for a position on an NFL sideline or front office. He’s content focusing his energy on businesses outside of the game now that he’s removed from it. Next on his list? A fitness park in his hometown of Bruceton, Tenn.

“The entrepreneurial world I got in was philanthropy and humanitarian work. I’m doing my first The Whinkers Mind Youth Foundation project. And hopefully December 3rd we’ll be having the ribbon cutting for that,” Willis said. “I’m partnering with Greenwood to do a park. So do weights in the park and what not, free weights we’re putting in the park. It’ll be like a workout facility. It’s gonna be called P. Willie Fit Zone 42. 42 is my high school number and we’re doing it back in my hometown. So I’m looking forward to completing that.”

John Taylor, Patrick Willis are 49ers Hall of Fame inductees

John Taylor and Patrick Willis will be the newest inductees into the San Francisco 49ers Hall of Fame.

The San Francisco 49ers during Wednesday’s State of the Franchise announced wide receiver John Taylor and linebacker Patrick Willis would both go into the Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. Hall of Fame.

Taylor and Willis will be honored during the club’s Week 15 home game against the Atlanta Falcons.

The 49ers selected Taylor in the third round of the 1986 draft out of Delaware State. He wound up spending nine seasons in San Francisco as a punt returner and receiver.

In 1988 he made his first of two Pro Bowls thanks to his league-best 556 punt return yards and two punt return touchdowns. The following year he was back in the Pro Bowl as a receiver thanks to his 60 receptions, 1,077 yards and 10 touchdowns. The yardage and touchdown totals in 1989 were his career highs.

Taylor amassed 347 receptions for 5,598 yards and 43 touchdowns while working as an integral part of three 49ers Super Bowl wins.

His biggest moment came in the waning minutes of Super Bowl XXIII when he hauled in a last-minute, game-winning touchdown from Joe Montana to put away the Bengals and secure the team’s third Lombardi trophy.

Willis was a first-round pick in 2007 and immediately made his mark on the league. He was a Pro Bowler, First-Team All-Pro, and Defensive Rookie of the Year all in his first season while racking up a league-best 174 tackles, eight tackles for loss and 4.0 sacks.

That was the start of a career that saw Willis ascend to the elite tier of all-time great linebackers. He never won a Super Bowl, though he did play in one while helping spearhead a 49ers defense that helped define the early 2010s.

By the time he hung up his pads after the 2014 season, Willis had earned seven Pro Bowl nods and five First-Team All-Pro selections in just eight seasons. He stepped into the NFL as one of the league’s best, and maintained his position throughout his short career.

Willis finished his eight seasons with 950 tackles, 60 tackles for loss, 20.5 sacks, eight interceptions and 53 pass breakups. He was one of the early versions of the modern, athletic, sideline-to-sideline linebacker who’s also an asset in coverage. His induction into the 49ers’ Hall of Fame should only be the precursor to his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Ranking 49ers pairs of 1st-round picks

The 49ers have selected two players in the first round of the NFL draft 14 times since the AFL-NFL merger.

The 49ers enter the 2020 NFL draft with two first-round picks. If they wind up using two selections on the first day of the draft, it’ll be the 15th time since the AFL-NFL merger that the organization has used a pair of first-round selections in one draft.

Some of those turned out well, others did not. We went back through all the team’s first-round duos since the 1967 draft and ranked them in order from worst to best.

No. 14 | 2017 draft

Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports

Pick 3: DL Solomon Thomas
Pick 31: LB Reuben Foster 

Thomas hasn’t been a necessarily bad player, but he was selected to be a dominant force on the edge for the 49ers. He’s fallen into a more rotational defensive tackle role. Thomas has just 6.0 sacks and 16 tackles for loss in his three NFL seasons.

The 49ers traded back into the first round to take Foster with the 31st pick. He is no longer with the 49ers after being accused of multiple domestic violence incidents, including one at the team hotel in Tampa Bay that led to his release. His rookie season was marred by injury, and his second year was derailed by his legal issues. Foster had 101 tackles in 16 games across two seasons.

Four 49ers land on NFL All-Decade team

Frank Gore, Joe Staley, Richard Sherman and Patrick Willis all made the NFL all-decade team.

The 49ers were well-represented on the NFL’s All-Decade team released Monday.

Four current and former 49ers made the list, including running back Frank Gore, left tackle Joe Staley, linebacker Patrick Willis and cornerback Richard Sherman.

Gore was one of four running backs to make the list, along with Marshawn Lynch, Adrian Peterson and LeSean McCoy. Darren Sproles made it as a specialist. He’s the only other running back besides Gore left from the 2005 NFL draft.

The third-round pick out of Miami finished his career with the 49ers as the franchise’s all-time leading rusher, and he’s continued to churn ahead to No. 3 on the all-time rushing list. Gore was a stalwart at running back for the 49ers through their best and worst years, and racked up more than 1,200 yards from scrimmage in an NFL record 12 consecutive seasons.

The argument can be made that Gore was never the best running back in the league in the 2010s, but he was easily the most consistent player among that group.

Staley is another no-brainer choice. He earned a nod alongside Joe Thomas, Tyron Smith and Jason Peters. Staley has been an outstanding player at left tackle since the 49ers took him in the first round of the 2007 NFL draft.

Injuries bookended the decade for Staley, but in those 10 years, he made all six of his Pro Bowls and went to two Super Bowls. There’s a really good chance Staley winds up in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and the strength of his performance through the 2010s will be what carries him there.

Willis’ dominance as a player is underscored by the fact he made the All-Decade team despite playing just half the decade. In his five seasons in the 2010s though, Willis made four Pro Bowls and three All-Pro teams while anchoring one of the NFLs best defenses for the first part of the decade.

Making an impact on a short timeline is a perfect metaphor for Willis’ career. He’ll make the Hall of Fame despite spending fewer than 10 years in the league. He was so singularly great in the time he was on the field that his effect on the 49ers and the league is impossible to ignore. It’s how he winds up on an All-Decade team with Luke Kuechly and Bobby Wagner with only five years of his production under his belt.

There’s no denying that Sherman has been excellent in two years with the 49ers, but the bulk of his dominance in the 2010s came with the Seattle Seahawks’ Legion of Boom defense. Those Seattle teams helped defined the early part of that decade, and Sherman was the outspoken face of it.

He was going to land on the All-Decade team anyway, but closing the 2010s strong with two good years in San Francisco surely solidified his standing. Sherman joined Patrick Peterson and Darrelle Revis in the group of cornerbacks.

Here are the full teams:

Luke Kuechly joins growing list of NFL greats who retired early

Walking away now means Kuechly joins a growing list of NFL superstars who decided to hang it up early.

Panthers linebacker Luke Kuechly announced his retirement in an emotional video released by the team last night. The news came as a shock. After all, he still had two years left on his contract and was still playing the game at a relatively high level, even if it no longer matched his high standard.

Walking away now means Kuechly joins a growing list of NFL superstars who decided to hang it up early. Here are some of the best of them.

49ers LB Patrick Willis

Patrick Willis
Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

Stats: 112 games, 950 combined tackles, 60 tackles for a loss, 20.5 sacks, eight interceptions, 16 forced fumbles

Awards: Defensive Rookie of the Year, seven Pro Bowls, five first-team All Pros

What happened: Willis’ career was eerily similar to Kuechly’s. For a while he was the top middle linebacker in the game. Injuries cut his career short, though. At different points, he had hand, knee, toe and Achilles injuries. Six weeks into the 2014 season, he was put on injured reserve. He never played another game and officially retired March 10, 2015.