If you are drafted in the First Round and you played for the University of Alabama for Nick Saban you are expected to be good. As of this writing, Marlon Humphrey is blossoming into just that on the pro level.
There has been a lot of speculation of late that Larry Fitzgerald, the free agent Wide Receiver, will be retiring shortly. If he does, this would make a loaded group of first ballot eligible even stronger, as Drew Brees, Philip Rivers, Jason Witten and Maurkice Pouncey have all called it a career in 2020.
Fitzgerald, who is 37, had career-lows last season (54 Receptions, 409 Yards, 1 Touchdown), and after 17 seasons in the National Football League, this might be it. Playing his entire career with the Arizona Cardinals, Fitzgerald has accumulated 17,492 Receiving Yards, which is second all-time behind Jerry Rice, who is more than 5,000 Yards ahead of him. Fitzgerald’s 121 Touchdowns are currently sixth all-time.
If Fitzgerald plays in 2021, it won’t likely be with Arizona, who just signed A.J. Green. In our 2020 pre-season rank of active players with Hall of Fame credentials, Fitzgerald was ranked #5.
We don’t what Fitzgerald will be doing in 2021, but we will always wish him the best at whatever it is.
We thought that the WWE Hall of Fame had completed their selections for the combined 2020/2021 Classes, but we were wrong.
Ozzy Osbourne, who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as the lead singer of Black Sabbath, will be joining William Shatner as the second Celebrity Wing inductee.
Osbourne was in the corner of the British Bulldogs at Wrestlemania 2 when they won the WWF World Tag Team Championship and during the RAW Guest Host era, he was one of the more entertaining ones. He also performed live at a Smackdown show in 2007.
He joins JBL, Jushin Liger, the NWO, Davey Boy Smith, The Bella Twins, Molly Holly, Eric Bischoff, Rob Van Dam, Kane, The Great Khali and the Warrior Award recipient, Titus O’Neill.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate Ozzy Osbourne for earning this honor.
An era has come to an end in North Carolina.
At age 70, Roy Williams is announcing that he is retiring after an 18-year run as the Head Basketball Coach at UNC. Williams brought the Tar Heels to three NCAA Championships (2005, 2009 & 2017), and won 903 Games over his 33 years as a Head Coach.
Williams was also the Head Coach at Kansas for 15 years, where he brought the Jayhawks to four Final Fours and two National Title Games.
Williams, who was inducted both the Naismith Basketball, and College Basketball Hall of Fame, is also a nominee for our first-ever class for our United States Athletic Hall of Fame, which you can all vote on.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to wish Roy Williams the best in his post-coaching life.