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 intend to look at how each team honor their past players, coaches and executives. As such, it is news to us that there will be three new members inducted into the New York Jets Ring of Honor in 2022.
The team announced that Derrell Revis, Nick Mangold and D’Brickashaw Ferguson will be inducted this upcoming season.
Revis is arguably the biggest name of the three. Playing at Cornerback, Revis was taken in the First Round in 2007 (14thOverall) from Pittsburgh, and he rapidly became one of the most explosive Defensive Backs in the NFL. “Revis Island” became synonymous with elite coverage, and while he was with New York, he was chosen for four Pro Bowls and three First Team All-Pros.
Mangold played at Center for the entirety of his 11-year career, and would start all of his 164 Games for the team. The product of Ohio State went to seven Pro Bowls and was a two-time First Team All-Pro.
Ferguson played his entire 10-year pro career with New York after the Jets after they chose the Tackle with the Fourth Overall Pick in 2006. He started all of his 160 games with the Jets.
The honors will take place for Mangold (Sept 25), Ferguson (Oct 30) and Revis (Nov 27).
These are the first entrants since Kevin Mawae in 2017. They will also join Weeb Ewbank, Winston Hill, Curtis Martin, Don Maynard, Joe Namath, Larry Grantham, Freeman McNeil, Gerry Philbin, Al Toon, Wesley Walker, Joe Klecko, Mark Gastineau and Marty Lyons.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the newest members to the New York Jets Ring of Honor
We have lost another football legend today.
Former New York Jets Wide Receiver, Don Maynard, passed away today at the age of 86.
A college star at Texas Western (the future UTEP), Maynard was taken by the New York Giants in the draft, playing for them sparingly as a rookie, to the point where he left the team for Hamilton of the Canadian Football League the season after. In his third professional year, Maynard returned to New York City, but this time with the Titans of the upstart American Football League.
Maynard would become the team’s top Wide Receiver, exceeding 1,000 Yards five times, and winning the AFL Receiving Title in 1967. A four-time Pro Bowl and All-AFL Team Selection, Maynard helped lead the Jets to win at Super Bowl III, as the primary target for Joe Namath.
Retiring after a final season with the St. Louis Cardinals, Maynard left the game with an exceptional 11,834 Receiving Yards (a record at the time) and 88 Touchdowns.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to offer our condolences to the fans, friends and family of Don Maynard.
Brandon Marshall was a really good Wide Receiver, but was he a Hall of Fame wide out?
Art Powell played in the Canadian Football League for two seasons before he was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1959. As an NFL rookie, Powell was used as a returner and defensive back but would join the New York Titans (later to be renamed the Jets) of the American Football League. With the Titans, Powell would lead the AFL in Receiving Touchdowns (14) in the league's first year of existence, and in 1962 he would finish first in Receiving Yards (1,130).
From the University of Mississippi, Larry Grantham was a second round pick by the New York Titans in 1960 (he was a 15th rounder in the NFL) and a member of the original team.
It is not a stretch by any means to state that Nick Mangold was the greatest New York Jet Center ever. We could easily go a step further and state that he is one of the best Offensive Lineman in franchise history.