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1989 SEMI-FINAL RESULTS:

Thank you for your participation in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project. If you are unaware of what that is, we acted like the PFHOF had its first class in January 1946.

We have completed the years up to 1988.

For “1989,” a Preliminary Vote with nearly 100 players whose playing career ended by 1983. We also follow the structure in which players have 20 years of eligibility, and if they do not make it into the Hall, they are relegated to the Senior Pool.

Each voter was asked to select 25 names from the preliminary list, and the top 25 vote-getters were named Semi-Finalists.

A week later, the voters were asked to pick 15 names from the 25 Semi-Finalists, and next week, they will choose five from the remaining 15. We will continue this process every week until we catch up to the current year.

32 votes were cast, with the top 15 advancing.

This is for the “Modern Era”

Bold indicates they advanced to the Finals: 

Player

Year of Eligibility

Vote Total

Mel Blount DB

1

29

Ted Hendricks LB

1

29

Jim Langer C

3

24

Tom Mack G

6

22

Ken Houston DB

4

21

Roger Wehrli DB

2

21

Terry Bradshaw

1

21

Dan Dierdorf T-G-C

1

21

Bob Hayes SE-WR

9

19

Ron Yary T

2

19

Elvin Bethea DE

1

18

Jackie Smith TE

6

16

Bob Griese QB

4

16

Dave Wilcox LB

10

15

Randy Gradishar LB

1

5

Pete Retzlaff E-HB-TE

18

13

L.C. Greenwood DE

3

13

Bob Kuechenberg G-T-C

1

13

Joe Fortunato LB

18

12

Dick LeBeau DB

14

12

Tommy Nobis LB

8

12

George Kunz T

4

12

Dave Robinson LB

10

12

Claude Humphrey DE

3

11

Chris Hanburger LB

6

9

Drew Pearson WR

1

5

This is for the “Senior Era”

*Bold indicates they advanced to the Finals:

Player

Year of Eligibility

Vote Total

Gene Lipscomb DT

2

16

Les Richter LB-C

2

15

Marshall Goldberg G-BB

16

13

Buckets Goldenberg G-BB

19

12

Alan Ameche FB

4

10

Charlie Conerly QB

3

9

None of the Above

 

3

This is for the “Coaches/Contributors Era”

*Bold indicates they advanced to the Finals:

Player

Year of Eligibility

Vote Total

COACH: Bud Grant

2

23

COACH: Don Coryell

1

22

OWNER: Wellington Mara

3

15

OWNER: Tex Schramm

10

9

TV EXEC: Roone Arledge

3

7

 

We will post the Class of 1989 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project next Saturday.

 

Thank you to all who contributed. If you want to be part of this project, please let us know!

The International Boxing Hall of Fame has announced the 12-person Class of 2026. 

The Class of 2026 consists of:

Gennadiy Golovkin (Men’s Modern Category).  “Triple G” made his mark in the sport as one of the greatest Middleweights of all time and arguably the best athlete Kazakhstan has ever produced.  Winning Silver at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Golovkin was undefeated in his first 39 fights (38 wins and a draw against Canelo Alvarez), and he won a plethora of titles throughout his career.  His titles included the WBA, WBC, and IBF Middleweight and WBA Super Middleweight, and he had an overall record of 42-2-1 (37 KO), with both losses coming against Alvarez. 

Antonio Tarver (Men’s Modern Category).  Tarver won the Olympic Bronze (representing the United States) in the Light Heavyweight division at the 1996 Olympics and went on to have a 31-6-1-1 record with 22 KOs.  Tarver won the WBA, WBC, IBF, and Ring Magazine Light Heavyweight Titles and holds two wins over Roy Jones Jr.

Nigel Benn (Men’s Modern Category).  In England, Benn won the WBO Middleweight Championship and held the WBC Super Middleweight Championship for four years (1992-96).  He had a record of 42-5-1, with 35 KOs, and 11 successful title defences.

Naoko Fujioka (Women’s Modern Category).  Fujioka made history as the first Japanese five-division world champion (WBA Flyweight, WBC Minimumweight, WBO Junior Flyweight, WBA Super Flyweight, and WBO Bantamweight) and boasted a record of 19-3-1 with 7 KOs.

Jackie Nava (Women’s Modern Category).  Nicknamed the “Aztec Princess,” Nava was the former WBA Bantamweight Champion and was also a two-time WBA and WBC Super Bantamweight Champion.  She has a record of 40-4-4 with 16 KOs.

The Hall also selected four Non-Participants in Cut Man Russ Anber, Referee Frank Cappuccino, Trainer/Cut Man Jimmy Glenn, and Physician Dr. Edwin Homansky.  Journalist Kevin Iole and Broadcaster Alex Wallau were chosen in the Observer category, and American middleweight Jimmy Clabby in the Old Timer category.

The ceremony will take place on June 14.

We here at notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the incoming members of the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

Every NFL season has its surprises, but the 2025 campaign delivered a familiar reminder: when quarterbacks rise or fall, everything else moves with them. 

Super Bowl betting markets didn’t swing because of weather, coaching quotes, or flashy free-agent signings. They shifted because a handful of quarterbacks either vanished, emerged, or fundamentally changed how their teams were perceived.

From sudden injuries that erased months of optimism to unexpected performances that turned long shots into contenders, this season’s Super Bowl picture was written almost entirely under center. 

Looking back, the common thread is clear. The teams that inspired belief or lost it did so because of the men touching the ball on every snap.

Joe Burrow and How Injury Rewrites a Team’s Ceiling

Few examples were more jarring than Joe Burrow’s season. Cincinnati opened the year as a credible contender, buoyed by Burrow’s track record and a roster built to win immediately. That optimism lasted less than two weeks.

A toe injury in Week 2 triggered one of the season’s steepest betting drops. The Bengals’ Super Bowl odds ballooned almost overnight, reflecting the uncomfortable truth sportsbooks already knew: without Burrow at full strength, Cincinnati’s margin for error disappeared.

Losses piled up. Confidence eroded. Eventually, the team was forced to trade for a veteran quarterback, a move that quietly confirmed what the market had already priced in. 

Burrow’s situation illustrated how fragile contender status can be when it rests almost entirely on one arm.

Patrick Mahomes and the Fragility of a Dynasty

Kansas City’s season told a different story, but fans, bettors, and analysts reached a similar conclusion. With Patrick Mahomes under center, the Chiefs were chasing history and priced accordingly. Even during uneven stretches, Mahomes’ presence kept Super Bowl expectations afloat.

That stability vanished in Week 15. A torn ACL didn’t just end Mahomes’ season; it effectively ended Kansas City’s championship conversation. Super Bowl odds tumbled, and single-game point spreads shifted dramatically, underscoring how irreplaceable Mahomes is to both his team and the betting market.

Dynasties feel permanent until they aren’t. This season reminded fans and bettors alike that even the league’s most reliable quarterback can’t ensure against sudden collapse. When that foundation cracks, betting markets react instantly, stripping away assumptions that once felt untouchable.

Sam Darnold and the Power of Unexpected Momentum

Not all market movement came from bad news. Sam Darnold’s season in Seattle offered the opposite lesson. The Seahawks entered the year as long shots, hovering on the fringe of relevance. One early-season win sparked a noticeable adjustment, and the market kept moving as Darnold continued to deliver efficient, mistake-lite football.

What made the shift notable wasn’t a single breakout performance, but the absence of volatility. Darnold’s consistency reduced uncertainty, and sportsbooks responded by steadily narrowing the gap between Seattle and the conference’s established contenders.

As Seattle climbed the standings, sportsbooks recalibrated weekly. Watching futures shift alongside Darnold’s steady play showed how quickly perception changes when performance proves repeatable. 

For fans tracking how quarterback momentum reshapes championship expectations, updated listings like FanDuel NFL odds reflected those shifts in near real time, mirroring Seattle’s rise from afterthought to legitimate threat.

Jordan Love and the Value of Steady Growth

Jordan Love didn’t produce a single moment that broke the betting market. Instead, his influence came through accumulation. Green Bay entered the season with cautious optimism, betting that Love’s development would continue.

It did. Gradually. Week by week, Love looked more comfortable, more decisive, and more capable of handling pressure. The Packers didn’t surge overnight, but confidence followed consistency. By late season, Green Bay was no longer framed as a feel-good story. They were discussed as a dangerous playoff team with real upside.

Markets reward reliability. Love’s season demonstrated how sustained quarterback growth can quietly reshape expectations without dramatic swings or headlines. By December, that steady progression translated into tangible belief rather than speculative optimism.

Daniel Jones and the Speed of Collapse

The Colts’ season showed how quickly the opposite can happen. Entering Week 14, Indianapolis sat among the Super Bowl’s top contenders. Momentum was real. Confidence felt earned.

Then Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending Achilles injury. The response was immediate and unforgiving. Futures odds cratered as the team scrambled for stability. Backup struggles only reinforced the market’s skepticism, turning a promising season into a cautionary tale almost overnight.

Timing matters. Losing a quarterback late in the year leaves little room for recovery, and the Colts’ experience made that painfully clear. With postseason stakes rising, there was no runway left for the market to reconsider Indianapolis as a credible threat.

What These Quarterbacks Taught Us About Betting Markets

Taken together, these stories reveal a simple truth. Super Bowl odds are less about rosters and more about trust. Sportsbooks respond fastest to quarterback news because that’s where risk concentrates.

Several patterns stood out this season:

  • Availability mattered as much as star power, 
  • Late-season stability carried more weight than early hype, 
  • Sustained performance shifted markets more reliably than isolated peaks. 

For fans digging deeper into how individual games feed those broader expectations, resources focused on weekly context, like NFL game matchups and prop insights, help explain why quarterback play remains the lens through which everything else is evaluated.

A Season Written Under Center

The 2025 NFL season didn’t hinge on schemes or slogans. It turned on health reports, development arcs, and moments when quarterbacks either answered or failed to answer the biggest questions. Burrow, Mahomes, Darnold, Love, and Jones each left a measurable imprint on the Super Bowl picture, not through theory, but through consequence.

Quarterbacks didn’t just lead teams this season. They reshaped belief. And in the modern NFL, belief is exactly what betting markets are built on. 

When that belief shifts, everything from expectations to championship odds moves with it.

 *Content reflects information available as of 05/01/2026; subject to change

 

1989 PRELIMINARY RESULTS:

Thank you to all who participated in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project. If you are still determining what that is, we acted like the PFHOF had its first class in January 1946.

We have completed the first 42 years.

For “1989,” a Preliminary Vote with close to 100 players whose playing career ended by 1983. We also follow the structure in which players have 20 years of eligibility, and if they do not make it into the Hall, they are relegated to the Senior Pool.

Each voter was asked to select 25 names from the preliminary list, and the top 25 vote-getters were named Semi-Finalists.

A week later, the voters will be asked to select 15 names from the 25 Semi-Finalists and then choose five from the remaining 15. We will continue this process every week until we catch up to the current year.

Please note that a significant change occurred “years ago,” allowing voters to submit fewer than the allotted spots. 

31 Votes took place.

This is for the “Modern Era”

Bold indicates they advanced to the Semi-Finals:

*Indicates they have been removed from future ballots

 

Player

Year of Eligibility

Vote Total

Mel Blount DB

1

23

Ted Hendricks LB

1

23

Ron Yary T

2

21

Terry Bradshaw QB

1

20

Roger Wehrli DB

2

19

Dan Dierdorf T-G-C

1

19

Ken Houston DB

4

18

Randy Gradishar LB

1

17

Jim Langer C

3

16

Elvin Bethea DE

1

15

Tommy Nobis LB

8

14

George Kunz T

4

14

Pete Retzlaff E-HB-TE

18

13

Bob Hayes SE-WR

9

13

Jackie Smith TE

6

13

Bob Griese QB

4

13

Dick LeBeau DB

12

12

Dave Robinson LB

10

12

Dave Wilcox LB

10

12

Tom Mack G

6

12

L.C. Greenwood DE

3

12

Drew Pearson WR

1

12

Joe Fortunato LB

18

11

Chris Hanburger LB

6

11

Claude Humprhrey DE

3

11

Bob Kuechenberg G-T-C

1

11

Gino Cappelletti FL-SE-DB-WR-PK

14

10

Lynn Swann WR

2

10

Cliff Harris S

5

10

Bobby Boyd DB

16

9

Jim Marshall DE

5

9

Curley Culp DT-NT

3

9

Lemar Parrish

2

9

Roger Brown DT

15

8

Andy Russell LB

8

8

Harold Jackson WR

1

8

Walt Sweeney G

9

7

Chuck Foreman RB

4

7

Rosey Grier DT-DE

18

6

Ken Riley DB

1

6

Art Powell E

16

5

Dick Schafrath T-G-DE

13

5

Houston Antwine DT

12

5

Larry Grantham LB

12

5

Otis Taylor WR-FL

9

5

Jake Scott DB

6

5

Bill Bergey LB

4

5

Harvey Martin DE

1

5

Rick Upchurch WR/R

1

5

Jack Kemp QB

15

4

Dave Grayson DB

14

4

Rich Jackson DE

12

4

Ed Budde G

8

4

Dick Anderson DB

7

4

Winston Hill T

7

4

Jim Bakken PK

6

4

Jack Tatum DB

4

4

Cookie Gilchrist FB

17

3

Max McGee E

17

3

Jim Katcavage DE-DT

16

3

Daryle Lamonica QB

10

3

Floyd Little RB

9

3

Bubba Smith DE

8

3

Pat Fischer CB

7

3

Jerry Smith TE

7

3

Ron McDole DE-DT

6

3

Mel Gray WR

2

3

Isiah Robertson LB

2

3

*Bob Gain DT-D-MG-T

20

2

*Jim Ray Smith G-T

20

2

Earl Faison DE

18

2

Goose Gonsoulin DB

17

2

Fuzzy Thurston G

17

2

Billy Cannon TE-HB

14

2

Ben Davidson DE

13

2

Jim Nance RB-FB

11

2

Mike Stratton LB

11

2

Larry Brown RB

8

2

Ernie McMillan T

8

2

Ralph Neely T

7

2

Mike Curtis LB-FB

6

2

Dwight White DE

4

2

Rich Saul C

3

2

Bert Jones QB

2

2

John David Crow HB-TE-FB

16

1

Clem Daniels HB-DB

16

1

Don Meredith QB

16

1

Bob Talamini G

16

1

E.J. Holub LB-C

14

1

Howard Mudd G

14

1

Erich Barnes DB

13

1

Butch Byrd DB

13

1

George Andrie DE

12

1

George Saimes DB

12

1

Matt Snell RB

12

1

John Brodie QB

11

1

Cornell Green LB

10

1

Lee Roy Jordan LB

8

1

Gale Gillingham G-DT

8

1

Bill Stanfill DE

8

1

Roman Gabriel QB

7

1

Len Hauss C

7

1

George Atkinson DB

5

1

Sam Cunningham QB

4

1

Lydell Mitchell RB

4

1

Mike Wagner DB

4

1

Coy Bacon DE

3

1

Ken Burrough WR

3

1

Fred Dryer DE

3

1

Calvin Hill RB

3

1

Leon Gray T

1

1

Riley Odoms TE

1

1

Phil Villapiano LB

1

0

Abner Haynes HB

17

0

Babe Parilli QB

15

0

Boyd Dowler FL-SE-LB

13

0

Carroll Dale WR-E

11

0

Bob Jeter DB-WR

11

0

John Niland G

9

0

*Earl Morrall QB

8

0

Gene Washington WR

5

0

*Otis Armstrong RB

4

0

*Tommy Hart DE

4

0

Lawrence McCutchen RB

3

0

Terry Metcalf RB

3

0

Bob Young G

3

0

*Gary Barbaro DB

2

0

*Larry Brooks DT

2

0

*Will Buchanan DB

2

0

*Rich Caster TE-WR

2

0

*Craig Morton QB

2

0

*Ahmad Rashad WR

2

0

*Jack Rudnay C

2

0

*Jeff Siemon LB

2

0

*Pat Thomas DB

2

0

*Russ Washington 

2

0

Doug France T

1

0

Monte Jackson DB

1

0

Mike Reinfeldt DB

1

0

This is for the Senior Era

Bold indicates they advanced to the Semi-Finals:

*Indicates that they will be removed from the ballot permanently. 

Player

Year

Votes

Gene Lipscomb DT

2

16

Les Richter LB-C

2

13

Charlie Conerly QB

3

11

Alan Ameche FB

4

10

Buckets Goldenberg G-BB

19

9

Marshall Goldberg FB

16

9

Ward Cuff WB-QB-HB

17

7

Pat Harder FB

11

6

Billy Wilson FL-E

4

6

Harlon Hill E-DB

2

5

Bill Osmanski FB

17

4

Baby Ray T

16

4

Woody Strode E

15

4

Tank Younger FB-LB-HB

6

4

Les Bingaman DG-G-C

10

3

Leon Hart E-FB-DE

7

3

George Wilson E

18

2

Frank Cope WB-QB-HB

17

2

Spec Sanders TB

14

2

Bruno Banducci G

10

2

Charley Brock C-HB-FB

17

1

Paul Christman QB

14

1

Frankie Albert QB

12

1

Bill Fischer T-G-DT

11

1

Bill Forester LB-MG-DT

1

1

Buster Ramsey G

13

0

Ray Bray G

11

0

This is for the “Coaches/Contributors”

Bold indicates they advanced to the Semi-Finals:

*Indicates that they will be moved to the Senior Ballot.

**Indicates that they will be removed from the ballot permanently.

Name

Year

Votes

COACH: Don Coryell

1

21

COACH: Bud Grant

1

18

OWNER: Wellington Mara

3

11

OWNER: Tex Schramm

10

10

TV EXEC: Roone Arledge

3

8

*OWNER: Charles Bidwill

20

6

*EXEC:  Arch Ward

20

6

TV COMMENTATOR: Howard Cosell

3

6

*OWNER: Dan Reeves

20

5

OWNER: Bud Adams

8

5

OWNER: Clint Murchison

8

5

COACH: Bum Phillips

2

5

*COACH: Greasy Neale

20

4

EXEC: George Halas Jr.

10

4

COACH: Bill Arnsbarger

4

3

*OWNER: George Preston Marshall

20

2

OWNER: Art Modell

4

2

EXEC: Don Klosterman

4

1

EXEC: Jim Schaaf

1

1

**OWNER: Leon Hess

2

0

**COACH: Mike Scarry

2

0

**EXEC: Johnny Sanders

2

0

**EXEC: Jack Steadman

2

0

**OWNER: Billy Sullivan

2

0

COACH: Jim Myers

1

0

COACH: Steve Ortmayer

1

0

EXEC: Russ Thomas

1

0

Next week, we will announce the Semi-Finalists for the 1989 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project.