PFHOF Profile: Tim Brown
The Pro Football Hall of Fame has always had their long debate over who should and who shouldn’t be in the hall.
PFHOF Profile: Will Shields
There is a theme among the two lineman selected as a part of the Class of 2015 in the Pro Football Hall of Fame this year, toughness.
PFHOF Profile: Ron Wolf
The builder category is an interesting group of people as executives can at one moment be a hero or at another moment be the enemy.
PFHOF Profile: Bill Polian
Much like the senior nominees in the Hall of Fame executives have their own committee to evaluate if they belong.
PFHOF Profile: Mick Tingelhoff
The Pro Football Hall of Fame is not the toughest hall to get into as classes usually run around five people every year.
HOF Profile: Warren Sapp
The NFL is full of great personalities and the personalities are what make the NFL so special and such a successful league. The NFL is one of the most successful leagues in North America and the personalities are a big part of this. The fans love to follow these personalities whether they are good or bad. Fans love to hate players and also love to cheer for them depending on the type of personality.
HOF Profile: Bill Parcells
The Hall of Fame is much like the NFL itself as the players take the focus throughout the election process. That does not leave a lot of room for the builder and coaching classes as these people rarely get a lot of recognition. In a week when the players on the field will take the majority of the focus but there will be one man who stood on the sidelines that will be standing alongside the players in the class.
HOF Profile: Jonathan Ogden
The NFL is full of personalities and that is what makes it a very appealing league as fans learn to love and hate players. There are the players who seem to be all about themselves and are more concerned with their own stats than if the teams wins. Then there are the players who are so competitive that nothing but a win can be tolerated making them extremely intense.
HOF Profile: Larry Allen
Curley Culp was an example of someone being overlooked for their size which is a common occurrence in the NFL. Teams regularly overlook very skilled smaller players because they simply don’t have the size many think they need to compete in the league. That can mean a lot of very good players do not get the chance to play which is a bad thing for the league as they miss out on a lot of talent.
HOF Profile: Curley Culp
In 2012 Shannon Sharpe was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a player caught in between two different positions. Sharpe was considered too slow to be a wide receiver but too small to be a tight end. He proved everyone wrong when he became one of the best tight ends in the NFL and would have a hall of fame career.