The Vikings have drafted 8 Hall of Fame players

Throughtout the storied history of the Minnesota Vikings, they have drafted eight players currently in the Hall of Fame.

The Minnesota Vikings have seen a lot of success in the NFL draft. They have drafted multiple Hall of Fame players and a ton of Pro Bowlers.

Their success, like any team, has seen their fair share of ups and downs in the draft Their biggest successes came in the 1960’s with multiple Hall of Fame players taken in the first round.

Overall, the Vikings have drafted eight Hall of Fame players to date with more potentially joining them in the coming years.

Washington’s Bubba Tyer honored by Pro Football Hall of Fame

Washington’s legendary former trainer receives a big honor.

Former Washington Redskins and Commanders trainer Lamar “Bubba” Tyer is becoming a recipient of the Pro Football Hall of Fame Awards of Excellence for the class of 2023.

Tyer spent 37 years in the Washington organization; in 25 of those years, Tyer was the head athletic trainer. He retired in 2009.

Tyer’s service began with the Washington Redskins in 1971 when the team’s headquarters was in Herndon. During his career, he served under head coaches George Allen (1971-77), Jack Pardee (1978-80), Joe Gibbs 1981-92), Richie Petitbon (1993), Norv Turner (1994-200) and Marty Schottenheimer (2001).

Then in 2002, he moved to serve as a front-office administrator, retired and was inducted into the franchise’s Ring of Fame at FedExField in 2003. However, when Joe Gibbs returned, Tyer rejoined “Coach Joe” as Washington’s Director of Sports Medicine. He served with Gibbs (2004-07) and Jim Zorn’s first season 2008, before retiring in January 2009.

When the Washington Football Team lost its head trainer in 2021, Ryan Vermillion, due to a criminal investigation, resulting in his being placed on administrative leave on Oct. 4, 2021, the team, in desperate need with several injuries, contacted Tyer, still retired. He rose to the occasion, volunteered and served the remainder of the season.

The 17 recipients for 2023 will be recognized by the Pro Football Hall of Fame with an evening reception on June 28. There will also be an awards luncheon the following day, which will be hosted by Dan Fouts, the former San Diego Chargers HOF quarterback.

 

 

 

Former Ravens public relations advisor wins prestigious award

Public relations advisor Kevin Byrne was given the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Award of Excellence after spending 41 years with the Ravens

The Baltimore Ravens are known to host a tight-knit and highly competent front office that defines the cutting-edge of administrative superiority in the NFL. One of the most recognized members of their team, senior public relations advisor Kevin Byrne, was granted the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s prestigious Award of Excellence on Wednesday for his role in making Ravens football into the juggernaut it is today.

According to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, which first started giving this distinguished recognition in 2022, the Award of Excellence program is “an effort to recognize individuals from various groups that have propelled the success of teams and the sport of professional football”.

Byrne certainly played an integral part in keeping Baltimore at the forefront of the NFL’s extremely competitive landscape, serving in various capacities as a part of the Ravens’ public relations staff over the course of his 41 years with the team. He is considered to be an “original Raven”, having moved with the team as a member of the Cleveland Browns in 1996 to lay the groundwork for Baltimore football as fans know it today.

According to the Ravens’ official website, the team’s public relations staff won three Pete Rozell awards under his direction between 2010 and 2016 for their excellent work, and Byrne was a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from Marquette’s Department of Intercollegiate Athletics.

For all of his accomplishments though, this official recognition by the Pro Football Hall of Fame for the work he did as a member of Baltimore’s front office should stand apart from the rest. Byrne is no longer with the Ravens after electing to retire after the 2021 season, but his legacy lives on as Baltimore looks to continue pushing the envelope in every way it can.

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Dante Scarnecchia to get high honor from Pro Football Hall of Fame

Dante Scarnecchia is being immortalized with an award from the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Former New England Patriots offensive line coach Dante Scarnecchia will be recognized with an Award of Excellence from the Pro Football Hall of Fame, according to ESPN’s Mike Reiss.

Scarnecchia started with the Patriots organization in 1982 as the special teams coach and tight ends coach. He left for the Indianapolis Colts in 1989 and stayed there for two seasons. He then returned to New England and served a variety of roles for the organization, most notably as the offensive line coach, over the next 28 years.

The longtime Patriots coach was a part of all six Super Bowl victories and was often thought of as one of the best assistant coaches in the NFL.

The award recognizes assistant coaches, athletic trainers, equipment managers and public relations staffers, per Patriots.com’s Evan Lazar.

Scarnecchia’s impact on the Patriots organization was immeasurable. Now, he will get the chance to be recognized for his vast and impressive career.

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Private memorial set for former Vikings head coach Bud Grant

The family of the late Bud Grant has announced that they will be holding a private memorial service for the former Minnesota #Vikings coach

The family of the late Bud Grant has announced that they will be holding a private memorial service for the former Minnesota Vikings coach, who passed away on March 11th at the age of 95. The family has also revealed that there will be a public celebration of Grant’s life at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, although a date for the event has not yet been set.

Grant is widely regarded as one of the greatest coaches in NFL history, having led the Vikings to four Super Bowl appearances and 11 division championships during his tenure from 1967-1983. He is also a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, inducted in 1994.

In lieu of flowers, the Grant family has requested that memorials be made to either the Minnesota Vikings Foundation or the DAV (Disabled American Veterans) Foundation. Both organizations align with Grant’s passion for supporting veterans and their families.

Former Washington RB Adrian Peterson to make formal announcement on NFL future soon

Could Adrian Peterson be officially announcing his retirement soon? Peterson spent two productive seasons in Washington.

Could legendary running back Adrian Peterson be retiring soon?

That’s certainly what it sounded like when CBS NFL insider Josina Anderson sent out the following tweet on Sunday:

Peterson, of course, spent the first 10 seasons of his career with the Minnesota Vikings, where he was the NFL’s top running back for much of that time. In 2017, Peterson was traded to the New Orleans Saints. After just four games, the Saints traded a disgruntled Peterson to the Arizona Cardinals.

Peterson appeared in six games with the Cardinals, rushing for 448 yards. He was released the following March.

When Washington running back Derrius Guice went down with an injury in the 2018 preseason, the team tried out Peterson, and he made the team. Peterson proved he still had plenty left in the tank, starting all 16 games, rushing for 1,042 yards and seven touchdowns. He also scored a receiving touchdown.

In 2019, Peterson started 15 games, rushing for 898 yards and five touchdowns. He averaged over four yards per carry in each of his two seasons with Washington.

Washington released Peterson on Sept. 4, 2020, choosing to go with rookie Antonio Gibson as the lead back. He signed with the Detroit Lions for the remainder of the season. In 2021, he split time between the Seattle Seahawks and Tennessee Titans and did not play in 2022.

Peterson will be 38 years old later this month.

If Peterson does call it a career, he will be remembered as one of the greatest running backs in NFL history and a lock for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Peterson is currently No. 5 on the NFL’s all-time rushing list.

NEW: Browns will play in Hall of Fame game in Canton, face off with Jets

The Browns will play in the Hall of Fame game as Joe Thomas enters immortality.

The Cleveland Browns will have their first player since the return of the franchise in 1999 enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame when Joe Thomas joins football immortality this summer. And now, the Browns will get to see the fireworks up close as it has been announced that they will be playing in the Hall of Fame game in Canton, Ohio this summer. They will be facing off against the New York Jets, who have two members getting enshrined into the Hall of Fame as well in Joe Klecko and Darrelle Revis.

Look for the city of Cleveland to make the short migration and take over Canton for a weekend.

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LOOK: It’s Art Monk week at the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Art Monk is on special display at the Pro Football Hall of Fame this week.

Remember when, foolishly, voters kept former Washington wide receiver Art Monk out of the Pro Football of Fame? During that time, we heard the excuses as to why Monk hadn’t been voted into the Hall of Fame.

Monk finally made it in 2008. He joined former teammate Darrell Green in the 2008 class that ranks as one of the more special nights in franchise history since Dan Snyder bought the team in 1999.

Since retirement, Monk has maintained the same low profile as when he played. He did make a trip to Ashburn during the 2022 NFL season, along with fellow “Posse” members Gary Clark and Ricky Sanders, to spend time and have dinner with Washington’s current wideouts.

This week, the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Oh., is honoring Monk with a special display celebrating his career during its “Gold Jacket Spotlight.”

It’s good to see Monk receiving some love. Fans these days will never know how great of a player Monk was. And he did it much like current Washington star Terry McLaurin.

Monk was unassuming, hard-working and the ultimate teammate. When he retired, he was the NFL’s career leader in receptions, a record since surpassed by multiple players. However, considering the era Monk played in, his 940 career receptions were an outstanding achievement. He also held the record for most consecutive games with a reception, which has also been surpassed.

Records are meant to be broken, but Monk’s greatness will forever be on display in Canton.

How Cowboys greats delivered Hall of Fame news to Chuck Howley

Suffering from late-stage dementia, Chuck Howley got a visit from a cadre of Cowboys teammates to tell him he’ll be enshrined in Canton. | From @ToddBrock24f7

The moment was a very long time in coming, 45 years, to be exact.

That’s how long Cowboys linebacker Chuck Howley had been eligible for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. But despite a one-of-a-kind career that saw him soaring to the pinnacle of the game, leading one of the great dynasties in the sport’s history, and achieving a singular honor that not another soul who has ever played can lay claim to, Howley had never even been a finalist for Canton.

So for the moment when one of the Cowboys’ very first stars was to be finally added to the permanent constellation of football immortality, it would require an assemblage of the legends who had shined alongside him.

Roger Staubach, Bob Lilly, Lee Roy Jordan, Mel Renfro, Cliff Harris, and Charlie Waters all took part in telling their former teammate that he would be a member of the Hall of Fame’s Class of 2023. (Click here to see the full video.)

For Howley’s family, his friends, his teammates, and his fans of a certain age, last week’s announcement finally set right a long-overdue omission. But for Howley himself, it’s sadly not clear if the news of his enshrinement is even fully understood.

Howley, now 86, suffers from late-stage dementia. It’s why he wasn’t in Phoenix last week when his name was called at the NFL Honors ceremony. It’s why Howley’s son Scott took his place on the stage with legends like DeMarcus Ware, Joe Thomas, and Darrelle Revis. It’s why he wasn’t on the field at Super Bowl LVII to be recognized by the crowd.

And it’s why so many of Howley’s teammates gathered to first bring Howley the news. The more of his friends, the more gold jackets in the room, the better the chances of the message being received.

Even though it’s a message Howley had long hoped for.

“Even after all these years, my dad never gave up his dream of making the Hall of Fame,” Scott said.

He certainly always had the credentials: six Pro Bowls and five first-team All-Pros nods over 13 years with the Cowboys. Two Super Bowl appearances- a win in one, and a two-interception, forced-fumble performance that earned him MVP honors in the other. He was so dominant in that 16-13 defeat that he remains the only Super Bowl MVP ever from the losing team.

And he was the early leader of the iconic defense that dominated the 1970s and forever changed the way football is played.

“There wouldn’t have been a ‘Doomsday’ defense without Chuck,” Lilly said.

None other than Coach Tom Landry said when Howley retired, “I don’t know that I’ve seen anybody better at linebacker.”

And yet Howley fell through the Hall of Fame Selection Committee’s cracks for nearly five decades.

By the time the recognition finally came and he was named a senior finalist for the first time in August 2022, Alzheimer’s disease had already knocked on Howley’s door, eight years prior. The onetime athletic dynamo who lettered in five sports at the University of West Virginia showed no comprehension of what he was being told.

But there are still good days mixed in with the bad days. And every once in a while, a ray of sunshine pierces even the darkest clouds and fog of late-stage dementia.

Shortly after that visit last fall, Howley’s round-the-clock caregiver was talking about the possibility of making the Hall… and something happened.

“My dad looked at him and said, ‘Well, I’m going to need a new suit,'” Scott recounted. “There was a moment of clarity where he appeared excited about it.”

When the contingent of Cowboys greats arrived en masse on Jan. 24 to deliver the news of Howley’s induction, Staubach knew better than to have similar expectations.

“His dementia makes me sick when I think about it,” Staubach said. “It’s a major thrill to go into the Hall of Fame, and I am praying that he will understand. But it’s going to be tough.”

Surrounded by family and friends and teammates, Howley got the news from his former quarterback.

“Oh. Thank you,” Howley said, with a nod that one wants to believe came with crystal-clear understanding of the moment.

Staubach and his mates would gently repeat the news to Howley several times over the course of their visit. And with everything that comes standard with a Hall invitee- from gold jacket fittings to bust-sculpting sessions- he’ll no doubt be reminded often between now and August’s ceremony.

“We’re going to make sure we record every moment,” Scott said, “so that he has every opportunity to live as much of it as he can.”

But just as with the official announcement last week in Phoenix and the public curtain call at Super Bowl LVII, Howley likely won’t be in Canton to be enshrined in-person.

“It would be very difficult for him,” Scott said, as per Mickey Spagnola of the team website. “He can’t handle of lot of sensory input; the crowd and the regiment of the schedule would be hard.”

So it will fall, once again, to Howley’s family, friends, and Cowboys teammates to see No. 54’s place in football history finally solidified.

“I’m so proud to be able to tell Chuck he’s in the Hall of Fame,” Staubach said, according to columnist John McClain. “It’s an honor that’s well-deserved. He was a fantastic linebacker. He did everything. He could run, hit, drop into coverage, rush the passer. It’s such a thrill because it brings back so many memories.”

One hopes that the memories have come back- even if only in fleeting moments- for Howley, too.

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Charles Woodson: Despite many accolades one regret was not winning Super Bowl with Raiders

Even with his long list of accomplishments there’s one thing Charles Woodson wishes he could’ve done: ‘winning a Super Bowl with the Raiders’

You won’t see another resume as impressive as Charles Woodson’s. That’s not opinion, it’s a fact. No other man on earth has checked all these boxes:

Heisman Trophy
College Football National Championship
NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year
NFL Defensive Player of the Year
Super Bowl ring
Pro Football Hall of Fame

That means he’s won at every level, both on a team level as well as every personal award possible.

But even with all that, there was one thing that eluded Woodson in his career.

“Winning a Super Bowl with the Raiders,” Woodson said without hesitation. “I feel like that’s the one thing that got away from me, man. To be able to win a Super Bowl in the Silver & Black, man, if I could’ve accomplished that, on top of all the other things – and don’t get me wrong I’m not complaining – but, man, to have won it with the team that drafted me…Getting there was great, but, man, if we could’ve closed that deal, I would’ve definitely said ‘You know what, I did it all.”

Woodson got close to helping the Raiders to a Super Bowl win a few times. First in 2000 when the Raiders made it to the AFC Championship game, but lost to the Ravens.

Then the following year when Woodson forced the would-be game-ending fumble on Tom Brady only to have it overturned by the improper implementation of the now defunct Tuck Rule.

Then finally in 2002 when the Raiders made it to the Super Bowl only to face their old coach Jon Gruden.

The Raiders fell off after that and a few years later, Woodson would be allowed to leave in free agency to sign with the Packers. That’s where he would eventually get his ring in 2010.

Getting his ring came a year after Woodson won Defensive Player of the Year. And a year later, at the age of 36, Woodson was asked to switch to safety, which for many defensive backs, signaled the end of his career.

But not for Woodson. He had unfinished business.

Woodson returned to the Raiders at the age of 37 and played three more seasons before finally stepping away from the game.

Right to the end, even with nothing left to prove, Woodson was not going to go out with a whimper.

“Making it through that season was a feat in its own self,” Woodson said of his final NFL season. “In that first game I dislocated my shoulder, and then the third game of the season, playing against the Browns, I suffered a grade two MCL sprain and, man, every day from that game forward… And then even against the Bears, I suffered a left shoulder sprain, and, aw man, it was hard each and every game to get myself in position to practice, just the little bit that I could practice to go into the game and still have to play at a high level and to go through all that and to actually in my 18th year, make a Pro Bowl, having gone through all that, I feel like that was a career all wrapped up into that 16-game schedule.”

“I just kept telling myself… I’m not going to spend my last season on the sideline.”

Though all that, Woodson would make his ninth Pro Bowl at the age 39 and at a second position before riding off into the sunset.

He obviously never got to hoist the Lombardi Trophy in Silver & Black. But he gave everything he had to the team that drafted him. From the moment he set foot on an NFL to the day he left it for the last time.

He may have took a trip to Green Bay for a time to get his ring, but he has never really left the Raiders.