gold star for USAHOF
Site Admin

Site Admin

16. Herman Moore

A great offensive weapon for the Lions in the 1990s, Herman Moore would twice lead the National Football League in Receptions.  Moore may have been overshadowed by Barry Sanders, but Moore was a four-time Pro Bowl selection who had over 1,000 Yards in each of those campaigns.  He held all of the major franchise receiving records until they were broken by Calvin Johnson.

Moore entered the Pride of the Lions in 2018.
While the legendary Dick “Night Train” Lane did not arrive in Detroit until he was 32, the future Hall of Famer still had a lot left in the tank.  The man who set a sixty-year record for single-season Interceptions was known for a ferocious hitting style that would have had him permanently suspended today.  Lane may have debuted as a Lion late in his career, but he was a First Team All-Pro twice and a three-time Pro Bowler in the Motor City.  He would enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1974, and was part of the first class of the Pride of the Lions in 2009.

9. Lou Creekmur

An integral part of the Lions three NFL Championships in the 1950s, Offensive Lineman, Lou Creekmur was one of the most durable and versatile players in the history of the National Football League.  Creekmur was an eight-time Pro Bowler who was also a six-time First Team All-Pro.  He would enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1996.  Thirteen years later, Creekmur was chosen for the Pride of the Lions in the first class.

12. Dick LeBeau

Considered one of the greatest defensive minds in NFL coaching history, Dick LeBeau was quite the player in his own right and was a three-time Pro Bowler in the 1960s.  Spending his entire playing career with the Detroit Lions, LeBeau would pick off 62 balls, which as of this writing puts him tenth all-time.  LeBeau was elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2010, the same year he entered the Pride of the Lions.