gold star for USAHOF
Committee Chairman

Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] .
          Here is something you may not have noticed….. We here at Notinhalloffame.com have altered our logo a tad. With the new design of the website, the logo has taken a bit of a smaller profile; however it is a design that is meant to fluctuate.

          In our first incarnation, the four profiled were Alice Cooper, Don Cherry, Randy “Macho Man” Savage and Pete Rose. Cooper would receive his first nomination and subsequent induction shortly after our initial logo. We replaced Alice with Rush, and we actually thought that the Canadians would stay on the logo for a few years. We were pleasantly surprised that they were inducted, and were happy to remove them.

          As such, we are here to launch our third version of the Notinhalloffame.com logo. In Rush’s place is KISS, a band who will always have a top ten spot on our list, and is likely to remain out of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for an extended period of time. The new logo also has Barry Bonds in place of Pete Rose. Although the “Hit King” has not entered the Hall, and is banned from Baseball, Bonds is the top player of the PED era, and the man with the career Home Run record appears to be forever banished from Cooperstown. As such, we thought, this was an effective change.

          Gang, there is a lot more coming on this site, and we can’t wait to show you what is coming next!  



Our work on the existing Hockey Hall of Fame Classes continue. We have now made our way to the year of 1983 (which for the record is easily among our favourite Classes). The Class of 1983 contains:

Bobby Hull

Harry Sinden

Ken Dryden

Stan Mikita


Gang you know the drill. Check it out, and cast your votes and let us know whether you think they deserved their Hall of Fame induction. Look for upcoming classes soon!

     

    
Today the Hockey Hall of Fame has announced their Class of 2013, with three players, a builder and a female player.


          In our eyes, the star of the star of this year’s class is our #2 Selection on the NIHOF list, Chris Chelios. The three time Norris Trophy winner and three time Stanley Cup Champion enters the Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility. The American Defenceman also led his country to World Cup Gold in 1996.

          Our #5 Selection and current NHL Head of Hockey Discipline, Brendan Shanahan was also selected. This was his second year of eligibility, and was one of the most complete players of his time. Frankly, we thought he was going to get in last year.

The neutral zone trap is represented well by Scott Niedermayer who also enters in his first year of eligibility. Niedermayer was the consummate winner, as he is the only hockey player to win the Stanley Cup, Memorial Cup, Olympics, World Cup, World Junior and IIHF World. The Defenceman is also a Norris Trophy winner and Conn Smythe Award winner. We had him ranked at #6.

The group is rounded out by Fred Shero, who twice coached the famed “Broad Street Bullies” in Philadelphia to two Stanley Cups. Female hockey player, Geraldine Heaney was also selected, making her the third woman to enter the Hall.

Next year three large notables become eligible in Dominik Hasek, Peter Forsberg and Mike Modano; all of which have first year Eligibility resumes. This will make it more difficult for perceived snubs like Eric Lindros, Theoron Fleury and Dave Andreychuk to get in next year.

We congratulate this Class, and we will have the 2014 list up on our site by August 1, 2013.


It wasn’t much of a build-up was it? The UFC may have come a long way in the last ten years, but its Hall of Fame is in the dark ages.


Six weeks ago, Dana White announced that Stephen Bonnar and Forrest Griffin would be inducted into the UFC Hall of Fame at their event on July 6, 2013. That day has arrived, and they are now officially part of the Hall of Fame, but has this really mattered as much as it should? That answer is easy: No.

Let’s forget about the fact that there is no physical Hall of Fame. There are a lot of high profile HOF’s that don’t have a structure yet. We won’t even say that an issue is the relative young age of the sport. The first few inductees of Royce Gracie, Dan Severn and Ken Shamrock were legendary figures when they were inducted, and it is not that anyone can make a claim that enough time has not passed that they should be on this institution. This shows that the UFC Hall of Fame has the right to exist alone. However without a structure on how to get in, how can anyone start to really care?

Think of the Baseball Hall of Fame for a minute. No matter what criticism you can come up with in regards to the Cooperstown based Hall, you know exactly when a player is eligible, how long he will remain on the ballot, how many votes he got, and when the process will take place. The Football, Hockey and Basketball Halls of Fame, at least has many of those transparencies in place. The UFC Hall of Fame gives us none of these.

The first two inductees were Shamrock and Gracie in November of 2003. Some years there are inductees, some there are not. Not only is there not an assigned time after retirement when one becomes Hall of Fame eligible, we have had fighters compete on the weekend of their induction, basically putting in an active contestant into a Hall of Fame. There is no committee deciding who gets in; basically whoever UFC owner, Dana White wants to induct. For that matter, we never know when he will induct someone next, as there is no pattern to it.

This past weekend, White was on the defensive as to why Bonnar was inducted despite having what was an up and down career. If there was a process that was clear (or even Basketball Hall of Fame clear) as to the induction process of the UFC Hall of Fame, this criticism probably would not have happened. Either way, it is UFC HOF weekend, and nobody cares, and despite what you may think Dana, that is your fault.