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] .

Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we will examine how each team honors its past players, coaches, and executives. As such, it is important to us that Tulane has announced five new members and a team to their Athletic Hall of Fame.

The class comprises Sue Bower (Golf Coach), Devon Breaux (Football & Track), Tea Juric (Volleyball & Beach Volleyball), Nathan Southard (Baseball), Leslie Vorphal (Basketball), and the 2008-09 Women’s Golf Team.

The induction ceremony will take place on September 12, with the class honored the following day during Tulane’s home game against Duke.

Sue Bower: Women’s Golf Coach 1992-2005 & Administrator 2005-16.  Spending 24 years with Tulane, Bower resurrected the Women’s Golf program from the dead.  She coached the team to back-to-back Conference USA Titles (2004 and 2005) and five NCAA playoff appearances.

Devon Breaux: Men’s Track & Field/Football 2012-16.  Breaux was a three-time Regional Qualifier in the Long Jump (2012, 2014, and 2015) and finished 19th in the 2015 NCAA Outdoor Championships.  On the gridiron, Breaux caught 41 passes for 625 Yards and five Touchdowns.

Tea Juric, Volleyball/Beach Volleyball 2013-17.  From Croatia, Juric was the 2013 Conference USA Freshman of the Year and is in the top ten all-time for Tulane in six categories.  In Beach Volleyball, Juric has a career record of 103-43.

Nathan Southard, Baseball, 2003-06.  Southard was part of the last Green Wave squad to make the College World Series (2005), and had a lifetime Batting Average of .321 with 29 Home Runs.

Leslie Vopahl, Women’s Basketball, 2013-17.  Vophal scored 1,255 Points for Tulane and had 558 Assists, which is third in school history.  She also won the American Athletic Conference’s Most Improved Player Award in 2016.

2008-09 Women’s Golf Team.  The team won two tournaments, finished second in two more, and was 20th in that year’s National Championship.

We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the impending members of the Tulane Athletic Hall of Fame.

 

 

 

 

 

 

1978 Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project Class.

Here we are!  Again!!

If you have been following our Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project, you know we have asked the rhetorical question: What if the PFHOF began in January 1946?

After soliciting and obtaining a passionate group of football fans and historians, we sent out a ballot for a Preliminary Vote, in which we asked each voter to give us 25 names as their semi-finalists and 5 in the Senior Pool. We then asked the group to vote for their 15 Finalists in the Modern Era and 3 in the Senior Category. The final stage was to vote for their five Modern Era inductee and one Senior inductee.

This is the result of the 33rd official class. 

Below are the final results of this project based on 33 votes.

Remember that we have reverted back to the top five candidates entering the Hall in the Modern Era

This is for the “Modern Era”

*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1978:

 

Player

Year of Eligibility 

Vote Total

John Mackey TE

1

26

Herb Adderly DB

1

22

Lance Alworth FL-WR

1

22

Ray Nitschke LB

1

21

Mike Ditka TE

1

18

Larry Wilson DB

1

17

Pat Harder FB

20

7

Eddie Meador DB

3

7

Jimmy Patton DB

7

6

Del Shofner E-DB

6

5

Alan Ameche FB

13

2

Billy Howton E-FL

10

2

Joe Fortunato LB

7

2

Tom Sestak DT

5

2

Billy Shaw G 

4

2

 

This is for the “Senior Era”, 

*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1978.

 

Whizzer White

12

10

Buckets Goldenberg

8

8

Woody Strode

4

8

None of the Above

N/A

7

 

This is for the “Coaches/Contributors”, 

*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1978.

Buddy Parker (COACH)

9

23

Weeb Ewbank (COACH)

2

8

Charles Bidwill (OWNER)

9

2

None of the Above

N/A

0

 

About the 1978 Inductees:

John Mackey TE, BAL 1963-71 & SD 1972: Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 1st Ballot.  Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1992.

In the history of professional football, there have been multiple names that have been tagged as someone who “redefined the position”.

John Mackey is one of those guys.

Mackey was a superb athlete whose size and speed set him apart from other Tight Ends in the 1960s.  As good a blocker as he was a receiver, Mackey would become a regular target of Johnny Unitas and would collect 5,126 Yards as a Colt.  Mackey is best known in Baltimore for his 75-Yard catch in Super Bowl V, which swung the momentum of the game in the Colts’ favor.

Mackey accumulated 5,236 Receiving Yards with 38 Touchdowns, and was the second pure Tight End elected.

Herb Adderley, DB, GNB 1961-69 & DAL 1970-72: Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 1st Ballot.  Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980.

A five-time Champion with the Green Bay Packers (and a sixth with the Dallas Cowboys), Herb Adderley intercepted 39 passes and twice led the NFL in Interception Return Yards.  Adderley was a four-time First Team All-Pro and was also a star Kick Returner who produced over 3,000 Yards.  He would tally nine touchdowns overall, an incredible number for someone who didn’t play offense.

Lance Alworth, FL-WR, SD 1962-70 & DAL 1971-72.  Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 1st Ballot.  Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1978.

The San Francisco 49ers of the NFL and the Oakland Raiders of the AFL both drafted Lance Alworth, but it was the AFL where Alworth would join after his AFL rights were traded to the San Diego Chargers before his 1962 rookie season.  The Chargers gave up three players for Alworth, and it still turned out to be a robbery in favor of the Bolts.

Alworth only played four Games as a rookie due to injuries, but in 1963 he began a seven-year streak where he had at least 1,000 Receiving Yards and was a First Team All-Pro in the first six.  Alworth was the AFL's leader in Receiving Yards three times, was a three-time leader in Receiving Touchdowns, and was easily one of the most offensive skill players in the history of the AFL.  Alworth helped the Chargers win the 1963 AFL Title, and his yardage from the air was so prolific that he also was a two-time league-leader in Yards From Scrimmage.

Alworth was traded to the Dallas Cowboys for three players before the 1971 season, and he played there for two final seasons before retiring, helping them win Super Bowl VI.  With the Chargers, Alworth had 9,584 Receiving Yards, 81 Touchdowns, and an astounding 111 in Approximate Value in the same number of games. 

Ray Nitschke, LB, GNB 1958-72.  Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 1st Ballot.  Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1978.

Spending his entire professional career with the Green Bay Packers, Linebacker Ray Nitschke was the anchor for the Green Bay defense for fifteen seasons.  

Nitschke would lead Green Bay to five Championships while becoming a first-ballot Hall of Famer.  

When you think of Pro Football Hall of Famers from the defensive side of the ball, it is next to impossible to come up with a player who is held in higher regard than Ray Nitschke.   Bart Starr was the best name ever for a Quarterback, but isn’t Ray Nitschke just as appropriate for a Linebacker?

Mike Ditka, TE, CHI 1961-66, PHI 1967-68 & DAL 1969-72.  Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 1st Ballot.  Inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1979.

Mike Ditka arguably achieved greater fame as Chicago’s Head Coach, but the generation before knew him as the man who evolved the Tight End position.

Taken from Pitt Fifth Overall in 1961, Ditka was the AP Rookie of the Year, and became the first ever Tight End to have a 1,000 Yard season, redefining what a Tight End could do at the professional level.  Ditka never had a four-digit Receiving Yard year again, but Ditka remained the game’s top Tight End over the next four seasons, and he was a key component in Chicago’s 1963 NFL Championship win.

Ditka was traded to Philadelphia by the cost-conscious Bears in 1967, but his style of play caught up with him, and he never produced the same metrics he did as a Bear.  Late in his career, Ditka won a Super Bowl with Dallas in Super Bowl XI.

A five-time Pro Bowl Selection, Ditka was the first Tight End to break 5,000 Yards.

Buddy Parker, Head Coach, CRD 1949, DET 1951-56 & PIT 1957-64.  Inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project in 1978 on his 9th Coaches/Contributor Ballot.  Was never inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Buddy Parker is best known for his time as Detroit’s Head Coach, where he led the Lions to back-to-back NFL Championships in 1951 and 1952.  Parker built a potent offense in Detroit, but was best known for his defensive mind.  He popularized the 4-3 Defense and used an early version of zone and nickel defenses. 

He left Detroit for the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1957, and although he was unable to bring them a championship, he did achieve a winning record, which was better than their previous incarnations.

Parker had an overall record of 104-75-9

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we will examine how each team honors its past players, coaches, and executives. As such, it is important to us that the Tampa Bay Rays will be inducting Evan Longoria into their franchise Hall of Fame. 

The event will take place next year when the club returns to Tropicana Field. 

Longoria is arguably the best player in franchise history, playing there from 2008 to 2017.  The Third Baseman was the 2008 Rookie of the Year, a three-time All-Star, and won three Gold Gloves and a Silver Slugger for the team and is the all-time team leader in bWAR (51.7), Games Played (1,435), Runs Scored (780), Doubles (338) Runs Batted In (892) and Walks (569).  Longoria also batted .270 with 1,471 Hits for Tampa.

He will be the sixth man to be inducted into the Rays Hall of Fame.

We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate Evan Longoria for his impending honor.

Online gamers see no deposit incentives as the holy grail since they provide a risk-free entry. Getting $200 in bonus cash and 200 free spins for free sounds too good to be true. However, with the right attitude, this offer may be beneficial. This essay will help you optimize this great no deposit deal by maximizing every dollar and spin. We'll cover everything from reading the small print to choosing the best games to enhance your chances of success.

Understanding the No Deposit Bonus

Online casinos provide no deposit bonuses, a kind of promotional offer meant to draw in fresh players by allowing them to test out the platform without having to make a first payment. In this instance, you may play with $200 and 200 spins, no deposit needed that are being given. This is a fantastic chance for you to investigate the casino's offers free of financial risk, but there is a catch: usually, these bonuses come with terms and conditions such as wagering requirements, game limitations, or time limits that you have to carefully negotiate to maximize your advantage.

The principle is simple, but the casino cannot promise risk-free returns. Casinos gain additional consumers and reduce financial risk with their cooperation. Understanding the tiny print is key. Bonus money must be wagered a certain number of times before withdrawal, and game restrictions may limit the games you can play with free spins or additional money. Read the terms to prevent surprises.

Why Casinos Offer These Bonuses

To entice fresh players and provide a sample of what their platform has to offer, casinos provide no deposit bonuses. The casino hopes you will be so delighted that you will make a deposit and eventually become a devoted patron. You get to sample the games and explore the casino for free. Offering such prizes helps casinos also generate interest and involvement, therefore increasing the likelihood of players returning.

Although these bonuses are designed to safeguard the casino, recognizing the limits is vital to optimize your $200 and 200 spins. These incentives limit participant earnings and are usually paired with additional criteria to prevent abuse. Understanding these restrictions can help you avoid disappointment and fully enjoy the special bargain.

Strategies to Maximize Your Bonus

Check the fine print before playing. Terms and conditions include wagering requirements, eligible games, and withdrawal limits. A 30x wagering requirement requires you to risk $6,000 before withdrawing $200. Knowing these rules beforehand helps you prepare for games and avoid surprises.

Focus on Low-Risk Games

Not all games satisfy wagering demands. Extensions of $200 and 200 spins should prioritize games with low house edge and high RTP. Consider these top game genres, listed in order:


  1. Slots with High RTP. Look for slots with an RTP of 96% or higher, as they offer better long-term payout potential.
  2. Blackjack. This classic card game often has a house edge below 1%, making it ideal for conserving your bonus funds.
  3. Video Poker. Games like Jacks or Better have high RTPs and low variance, giving you more playtime.
  4. Roulette (European). Stick to European roulette for a lower house edge compared to the American version.

Manage Your Bankroll Wisely

Your two hundred and two spins are limited, hence controlled bankroll management is crucial. Decide on and follow a budget for every game session. To distribute your playtime and lower your danger of losing everything at once, split your $200 over ten $20 sessions. Use your spins also deliberately. Avoid blowing through all 200 in one session.

Use Your Free Spins Strategically

Though they usually relate to certain slots, your 200 free spins are a fantastic chance. Making the most of them:


  • Check the slot’s volatility
    • Low-volatility slots pay out smaller, more frequent wins, which can help you build your balance. High-volatility slots offer bigger payouts but are riskier.
  • Look for bonus features
    • Choose slots with free spin rounds, multipliers, or expanding wilds to boost your winnings.
  • Track your progress
    • Keep an eye on how your spins contribute to wagering requirements, as some casinos count spin winnings differently.
  • Play at optimal times
    • Some players believe spinning during off-peak hours increases win chances, though this is anecdotal.

Choosing the Right Casino

When thinking about a no deposit bonus, it's important to choose a casino that not only gives a decent bonus but also presents a safe, fun gaming environment. While many casinos provide such specials, not all of them are developed equally. Choose a casino with consideration for the following elements to improve your chances of success and enjoy good gaming:

Verify the Casino’s Reputation

Not every casino offering no deposit bonuses is reliable. Find out the platform's standing before registering. Look for licenses from respectable bodies such as the UK Gambling Commission or the Malta Gaming Authority. To be sure the casino has fair play and a timely payment history, check player reviews on forums or reliable review websites.

Evaluate Game Selection

A wonderful bonus is only worth what games you can access with it. Search for a casino with a large game library featuring live dealer choices, table games, and high-RTP slots. Verify that your $200 may be spent across a range of games to provide you freedom and that the 200 spins are linked to excellent slots with desirable features.

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

Although no deposit bonuses are a terrific method to visit a casino without committing money, players should be aware of several traps that might cause annoyance or loss possibilities. Making the most of these deals depends on a complete understanding of the terms and limitations. Here are some typical errors to avoid when using your no deposit bonus:

Ignoring Wagering Requirements

Ignoring wagering requirements is one of the greatest blunders players make. You cannot withdraw your earnings if you do not satisfy these requirements. Always figure out how much wagering is required overall and determine if your $200 and 200 spins will allow for it.

Chasing Losses

One might easily get caught in the thrills and attempt to recoup losses by increasing bets. This method usually results in rapidly running out of your bonus. Follow your bankroll strategy and see the bonus as a pleasant, risk-free possibility rather than a sure payoff.

Overlooking Time Limits

Usually, no deposit bonuses include an expiry date. Your $200 and 200 spins might have to be utilized within 7–30 days. Wagering conditions often have their deadlines. Put these dates in your calendar to make sure you keep your bonus.

A $200 no deposit bonus and 200 free spins is a unique way to try online gaming without risking money. Knowing the rules, choosing the right games, and managing your money can help you turn this incentive into real rewards. Avoid common blunders like disregarding wagering requirements or chasing losses and approach the bonus strategically. With discipline and a little luck, you can optimize this wonderful deal and enjoy the game. Claim your bonus and spin the reels to start earning immediately!