Drew Brees and Larry Fitzgerald
headline a Hall of Fame class missing Bill Belichick
[February 06, 2026]
By JOSH DUBOW
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Drew Brees and Larry Fitzgerald headlined the
2026 Pro Football Hall of Fame class featuring five players but not
six-time Super Bowl winning head coach Bill Belichick.
Brees and Fitzgerald both made it in their first year of eligibility
in results announced at NFL Honors on Thursday night after prolific
careers. Luke Kuechly and Adam Vinatieri made it in their second
seasons of eligibility, while Roger Craig was the lone pick among
seniors, coaches and contributors.
“One of the coolest moments was getting up on that stage with all
the other Hall of Famers,” Fitzgerald said. “That moment kind of
crystallized it for me.”
But the class is also noteworthy for Belichick's absence as at least
11 of the 50 voters opted against giving him a vote despite a career
with 333 wins in the regular season and playoffs and the most Super
Bowl titles of any head coach. A report last week that Belichick
fell short in his first year of eligibility was met with widespread
criticism of both the voters and the process for choosing Hall of
Famers.
“His stats speak for themselves,” said Vinatieri, who played six
years for Belichick.
“I thought he'd have a real good chance to be up there as well. The
people who voted made their votes and I think he’ll be up here one
day.”
The man who hired Belichick in New England to set the stage for the
Patriots dynasty also fell short, with owner Robert Kraft failing to
get enough votes.

This is the second straight year with a smaller class after only
four people made it last year as new rule changes have made it
harder to get into the Hall. There had been at least seven people
inducted in the previous 12 classes before last year.
That contributed to the snub for Belichick and Kraft, who were
grouped with Craig and two other players — Ken Anderson and L.C.
Greenwood — who have been retired for at least 25 seasons. The
voters picked three of the five candidates with the highest
vote-getter and anyone else above 80% getting the honor.
Craig, who was in his 28th year of eligibility, was the only one of
those five to make it. Craig was the first player ever to have 1,000
yards rushing and 1,000 yards receiving in the same season, which
happened in 1985, and he led the NFL with 2,036 yards from scrimmage
in 1988 when he helped San Francisco win the Super Bowl.
Craig also was part of the title-winning teams for the 49ers in the
1984 and 1989 seasons. His 410 yards from scrimmage in those Super
Bowl wins are the third-most ever behind Hall of Famers Jerry Rice
and Franco Harris.
The four modern-era candidates all overlapped for several years,
waging many battles against each other.
“Very early on you realized there was something special and unique
about these guys,” Brees said.
Vinatieri was one of the most clutch kickers in NFL history, making
the game-winning field goals in the first two Super Bowl victories
during New England’s dynasty with Belichick and Kraft in charge. He
joined Jan Stenerud and Morten Andersen as the only players in the
Hall who were primarily kickers in their careers.
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Adam Vinatieri, from left, stands with Luke Kuechly, Larry
Fitzgerald, Roger Craig and Drew Brees after being announced for the
Pro Football Hall of Fame class of 2026 during football's NFL Honors
award show in San Francisco, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Brynn
Anderson)

Vinatieri helped launch the run with one of the
game’s greatest kicks — a 45-yarder in the snow to force overtime in
the “Tuck Rule” game against the Raiders in the 2001 divisional
round. He made the game-winning kick in OT to win that game and then
hit a 48-yarder on the final play of a 20-17 win in the Super Bowl
against the Rams.
Vinatieri is the NFL’s career leader in points (2,673) and made
field goals (599) over a 24-year career with New England and
Indianapolis. He also leads all players with 56 field goals and 238
points in the postseason.
Brees is second all time to Tom Brady with 80,358 yards passing and
571 touchdown passes. He spent the first five seasons of his career
with the San Diego Chargers before signing as a free agent with the
Saints in 2006, where his career took off as he helped lift a city
still recovering from Hurricane Katrina.
Brees delivered to New Orleans its first Super Bowl title following
the 2009 season, when he won MVP of the game after beating Peyton
Manning and the Indianapolis Colts. Brees made the Pro Bowl 13 times
in his career, won AP Offensive Player of the Year in 2008 and 2011,
was an All-Pro in 2006 and was a second-team All-Pro four times.
Fitzgerald spent his entire career with the Arizona Cardinals after
being drafted third overall in 2004. His 1,432 catches and 17,492
yards receiving in 17 seasons rank second all time to Jerry Rice.
Fitzgerald topped 1,000 yards receiving nine times — tied for the
fourth-most ever — and helped the Cardinals reach their only Super
Bowl following the 2008 season. Fitzgerald set single-season records
that postseason with 546 yards receiving and seven TD catches,
including a go-ahead 64-yard score with 2:37 to play in the Super
Bowl before Pittsburgh rallied for a 27-23 win over Arizona.
Kuechly’s career was brief but impactful. The first-round pick by
Carolina in 2012 was an All-Pro five times, with seven Pro Bowl nods
and a Defensive Rookie of the Year award. Over his eight-year
career, Kuechly led all linebackers in the NFL in tackles (1,090),
takeaways (26), interceptions (18) and passes defensed (66).

Voters reduced the list of 15 finalists in the modern era category
to 10 and then seven before voting for five to make it. The top
three vote-getters and anyone else above 80% got into the Hall.
Offensive linemen Willie Anderson and Marshal Yanda, and edge rusher
Terrell Suggs made it to the final seven in the modern-era category
and will automatically be finalists again next year.
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