Sterling Sharpe and Mike Holmgren
are picked as Hall of Fame finalists
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[December 04, 2024]
By JOSH DUBOW
Prolific receiver Sterling Sharpe and Super Bowl-winning coach Mike
Holmgren advanced to the final stage of voting for the 2025 Pro
Football Hall of Fame class.
Sharpe was picked as one of three finalists in the Seniors category
for players whose career ended in 1999 or earlier, along with Maxie
Baughan and Jim Tyrer, in voting results announced Tuesday. Holmgren
was picked as the lone finalist in the coaching category and Ralph
Hay, who helped found the NFL more than a century ago, was the
finalist in the contributor category.
The five will be grouped together for voting by the full selection
committee in January. Voters can pick three of the candidates,
meaning a maximum of three can reach the 80% threshold needed for
induction. If no one gets 80% of the votes, then the leading
vote-getter will get into the Hall.
The selection committee will vote separately on 15 finalists from
the modern era, with the 2025 inductees being announced during Super
Bowl week in New Orleans in February.
Sharpe had a short but productive career for the Green Bay Packers
from 1988-94. His best season came in 1992, when he became the sixth
player to win the receiving triple crown, setting set an NFL record
with 108 catches for 1,461 yards and 13 touchdowns.
He broke his own record with 112 catches in 1993 and led the NFL
with 18 touchdown receptions in his final season, 1994, before a
neck injury cut his career short.
Sharpe was a three-time All-Pro and had 595 catches for 8,134 yards
and 65 TDs. He trailed only Jerry Rice over his seven-year career in
receptions and TD catches.
Baughan was one of the top linebackers in the game in the 1960s for
Philadelphia and the Los Angeles Rams. He helped the Eagles win an
NFL title as a rookie in 1960 and made nine Pro Bowls in a 10-year
span with one first-team and five second-team All-Pro selections.
Tyrer was a six-time All-Pro and member of the AFL all-decade team
for the 1960s as the left tackle protecting Len Dawson on the Kansas
City Chiefs. He won three AFL titles and one Super Bowl with the
Chiefs franchise before ending his career with Washington in 1974.
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This is an Aug. 6, 2011 file photo showing Sterling Sharpe at the
Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio. Sharpe was elected to the
College Football Hall of Fame Thursday, May 22, 2014. (AP Photo/Tony
Dejak, File)
Tyrer was considered a shoo-in for the Hall of Fame
at the time of his retirement. Every other nonspecialist who was a
six-time All-Pro and is eligible for the Hall has been inducted.
But shortly after he was picked as a finalist for the first time,
Tyrer shot his wife in a murder-suicide in September 1980. Tyrer had
been dealing with depression and severe headaches that experts now
believe might have been CTE, the degenerative brain disease that has
been found in many former NFL players who endured repeated blows to
their heads in their career. CTE can be diagnosed only posthumously.
Tyrer didn't get voted in that year and wasn't nominated again until
this year.
Sharpe and Baughan were never finalists during their time in the
modern era category.
Holmgren was one of the most influential offensive coaches, starting
with his time as an assistant on two Super Bowl champion teams in
San Francisco.
He went on to coach Green Bay for seven seasons, winning a Super
Bowl following the 1996 season. He coached 10 years in Seattle and
finished with a 161-111 record, going to three Super Bowls overall.
Holmgren also had a big impact on future coaches, with Andy Reid and
Jon Gruden going on to win Super Bowls after working under him in
Green Bay.
Hay owned the Canton Bulldogs from 1918-22 and hosted the meeting
the led to the formation of the NFL. He beat out a group of
semifinalists that included six-time Super Bowl champion owner
Robert Kraft.
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