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The Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project: 1947 FINAL VOTE

The Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Project: 1947 FINAL VOTE
19 Aug
2023
Not in Hall of Fame

Here we are! Again!!

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

After soliciting and obtaining a passionate group of football fans and historians, we sent out a ballot for a Preliminary Vote, which we asked each voter to give us 25 names as their semi-finalists, and 5 in the Senior Pool. Following that, we 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 5 Modern Era inductees and 1 Senior inductee.

This is the result of the second official class;

Below, are the final results of this project based on 30 votes:

This is for the “Modern Era”

*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1946:

Player

Year of Eligibility

Vote Total

Ernie Nevers FB

11

25

Cal Hubbard T-E-DE-G

6

19

Dutch Clark TB

4

14

Ed Healey T-G-E

16

12

Paddy Driscoll HB-QB-TB-BB

13

12

Pete Henry T

14

11

George Trafton C

11

10

Johnny Blood TB-HB-WB-BB-DB

4

10

Guy Chamberlin E-WB

15

9

Benny Friedman TB-DB

8

9

Duke Slater T

11

7

Lavvie Dilweg E

8

6

Clark Hinkle FB-LB-HB-DB

1

6

Joe Guyon WB-TB-BB-FB

15

4

Link Lyman T

8

1

This is for the “Senior Era”

*Bold indicates they have been elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame Revisited Class of 1946:

John Brallier

                        N/A

                     14

Charles Follis

                        N/A

                     12

Blondy Wallace

                        N/A

                     5

About the 1947 Inductees:

Ernie Nevers FB, DUL 1926-27, CRD 1929-31: Inducted in 1947 on the 2nd Ballot (technically his 11th year of eligibility). Was inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963.

Stanford Head Coach, Pop Warner, called Ernie Nevers a “player without a fault” and if that does not say it all, we don’t know what does. Following his career at Stanford, Nevers first played professional football for a team in Jacksonville, Florida, which he left to play professional baseball for the St. Louis Browns. When the Browns season ended, the dual-sport star returned to the gridiron for the Duluth Eskimos, where the team played 29 Games (14 official in the NFL) and Nevers allegedly played every minute of every game. Following Duluth’s poor 1927 Season (though Nevers was outstanding), Nevers did not play football in 1928, but re-emerged in 1929 with the Chicago Cardinals. With the Cardinals, Nevers set a record by scoring all 40 Points in Chicago’s 40-6 win over the cross-town Bears. The game before, he scored all 19 of his team’s Points! Nevers was the ultimate Fullback for his day, and in all five seasons he played, was named a First Team All-Pro, and he was also a 1920s All-Decade Selection.

Cal Hubbard T-E-DE-G, NYG 1927-28 & 1936, GNB 1929-33 & 1935 & PIT 1936: Inducted in 1947 on the 2nd Ballot (technically his 6th year of eligibility). Was inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963.

Weighing in at 250 Pounds, Cal Hubbard was a large man for the 1920s and 1930s, and was also incredibly fast and strong. Considered one of the best Linemen of his day, Hubbard won four NFL Championships (one with New York and three with Green Bay). A First Team All-Pro on four occasions, he was named the NFL’s All-Time Offensive Tackle in 1969.

Dutch Clark TB, PRT 1931-32 & DET 1934-38: Inducted in 1946 on the 2nd Ballot (technically his 4th year of eligibility). Was inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963.

Dutch Clark had an unusual trip to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, one that reflects the unique nature of the game in the 1930s. Clark was an All-American at Colorado College, and while he graduated in 1929, he didn’t play professional until 1931, playing two years with the Portsmouth Spartans as their offensive leader. Throwing, rushing and kicking, Clark was an automatic leader, but he opted out, taking the Head Coaching job at the Colorado School of Mines. That lasted a year, and Clark returned to the Spartans, who were now the Detroit Lions. Clark led Detroit to the 1935 NFL Championship, and was a six-time First Team All-Pro. A greater gridiron leader, the Lions could not have found in the 30s.

Ed Healey T-G-E, RII 1920-22 & CHI 1922-27: Inducted in 1947 on the 2nd Ballot (technically his 16th year of eligibility). Was inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1964.

From Dartmouth, Ed Healey began his pro career for the Rock Island Independents. In a 1922 game against the Chicago Bears, the Tackle was so good, that Bears Player/Coach/Owner, George Halas, bought the contract of Healey, marking the first time a player was sold in the NFL. Healey was a First Team All-Pro for Chicago in his first four years as a Bear, and was considered the most versatile Tackle in the game.

Paddy Driscoll HB-QB-TB-BB, CHI 1920 & 1926-29, & CRD 1921-25: Inducted in 1947 on the 1st Ballot (technically his 13th year of eligibility). Was inducted into the actual Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005.

John “Paddy” Driscoll was a “Mr. Everything” of sorts for the Chicago Cardinals, the team that bid for, and won his services when they became a charter member of the NFL in 1920. Driscoll was a small man (5’ 11” and 160) but did it all on both sides of the ball, and as their kicker. An expert rusher and passer (for his era), Driscoll once dropkicked four Field Goals in a game and had a 27 Point Game in 1923. A three-time First Team All-Pro with the Cardinals, he led them to a Championship in 1925. Driscoll then joined the rival, Chicago Bears, in 1926, where he was named to two more First Team All-Pros.

John Brallier: Inducted in 1947 on the 2nd Senior Ballot. Was never inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

A valid criticism of the PFHOF is that it has taken little account to those who laid professional football’s groundwork. This was rectified last week with the induction of Pudge Heffelfinger and now this “year” with John Brallier. The first openly paid football player when he was given $10 in 1895 to play for the Latrobe Athletic Association at age 17, Brallier played for many other teams before he went to college.   He returned to Latrobe in 1902 as a player/coach and led his squad to four undefeated seasons.

Last modified on Saturday, 26 August 2023 00:45
Committee Chairman

Kirk Buchner, "The Committee Chairman", is the owner and operator of the site.  Kirk can be contacted at [email protected] . Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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