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The Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project: 1992 Preliminary VOTE Not in Hall of Fame News

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MLB Wildcard Preview: Upsets, Predictions & Playoff Chaos! The Buck Stops Here

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Top 30 NFL Hall of Fame Hopefuls: Kirk Buchner’s Ultimate Countdown The Buck Stops Here

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Why the Pro Football Hall of Fame Is Broken | Kirk Buchner & Paul Lawrence Tell All The Buck Stops Here

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Top 30 NFL Hall of Fame Hopefuls: Kirk Buchner’s Ultimate Countdown The Buck Stops Here

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Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .

Kyle Vanden Bosch began his career with the Arizona Cardinals, serving four years there, but he is arguably best known for missing one complete season due to an ACL injury.  Vanden Bosch joined Tennessee in 2005, and the change of scenery proved beneficial for the Defensive End.

Vanden Bocsh played five years for the Titans, and in alternating years (2005, 2007 & 2009) was a Pro Bowl Selection.  Vanden Bosch showed off a nice blend of pass-rushing and run-stuffing in this five-year run, twice having a 12-Sack year and becoming a fan favorite.  

He joined Detroit in 2010 and would have 270 Combined Tackles with 38.5 Sacks as a Titan.

Haywood Jeffires was a First Round Pick (20th Overall in 1987), but injuries and the depth chart held him to only nine Games with 138 Yards in his first two seasons.  That changed in his third year.

The Wide Receiver from North Carolina State had 47 Receptions with 619 Yards that year, and he became a top target for Warren Moon afterward, hitting at least 1,000 Yards the next two seasons.  In 1991, Jeffires led the NFL in Receptions (100) and was a First Team All-Pro with a Pro Bowl Selection.  He would go to the Pro Bowl the next two years, remaining a top wide out for the Oilers, completing seven straight years with at least 600 Yards.

Jeffires signed with New Orleans in 1996 but only played one more year before he retired.  With the Oilers, Jeffires totaled 6,119 Yards with 47 Touchdowns.

A First Round Pick from Illinois, Brad Hopkins was an All-Rookie for the Oilers in 1993 at Left Tackle.  This would be his role for the franchise for the next 12 years.

Hopkins played his entire career with the Oilers/Titans, starting 188 of his 194 Games.  Twice named to the Pro Bowl (2000 & 2003), Hopkins was a dependable presence on the left side of the line, allowing the organization to worry about holes elsewhere for a decade-plus.  

It is grunt work but necessary.

A bust in his first two NFL seasons with Washington, Frank Wycheck signed with the Houston Oilers in 1995, who would soon relocate to Tennessee and become the Titans.  It was in the Volunteer State that Wychek would find his groove.

Wychek’s first two years as an Oiler/Titan was good, but his offensive production jumped in 1997, where he began a five-year streak of at least 600 Receiving Yards.  A Pro Bowl Selection from 1998 to 2000, Wychek was instrumental in one of the most famous plays in franchise history, "The Music City Miracle."  In the 2000 AFC Wild Card Game, the Titans were down 16-15, with 16 seconds left.  Wycheck took the handoff from Lorenzo Neal and then passed it to Kevin Dyson, who ran 75 Yards for the winning Touchdown.  The play is disputed to this day as to whether it was a backward or forward pass.  The Titans made it to the Super Bowl that year, albeit in a losing effort.

Wycheck was extremely popular in Tennessee, and he finished his career for the team, retiring in 2003.  With the Titans, Wycheck accumulated 4,958 Yards with 27 Touchdowns.  The franchise inducted him to their Hall of Fame in 2008.