ADVERTISEMENT

Hester named finalist for Pro Football Hall of Fame

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
77,442
58,937
113
Does he get in?:

Former Bears star Devin Hester on Thursday was selected as one of 15 modern-era finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Class of 2022.
"I'm just honored and blessed to make it to this round," Hester said on an NFL Network show announcing the finalists. "I thank God for everything that He's done in my life, and just hopefully we can get this done."
Hester played eight of his 11 NFL seasons with the Bears. The most prolific return specialist in league history, he holds NFL records with 19 kick-return touchdowns, 14 punt-return TDs and 20 return touchdowns, which includes punts, kickoffs, missed field goals, fumbles and interceptions.
Selected by the Bears in the second round of the 2006 draft out of Miami, Hester was voted to three Pro Bowls, won 13 special teams player of the week awards and was named to the NFL's All-Decade Team for the 2000s.
The Florida native joined the Bears after returning six kicks for touchdowns—four punts and two kickoffs—in three seasons at the University of Miami.
Hester said Thursday on NFL Network that when he entered the league, he had heard talk that it would be "pretty much impossible to do the things that I did in college in the NFL." It didn't take him long to disprove that theory, returning a punt 84 yards for a touchdown in his first pro game, helping the Bears beat the Packers 26-0 in the 2006 season opener in Green Bay.
"Once I got to the league, in my first game I took a punt back to the house," Hester said. "I was like, 'Wow, I can contribute and carry on from college to the NFL and make a big impact on the return game.'"

Hester is among three finalists in their first year of eligibility; the other two are receiver Andre Johnson and linebacker/defensive end DeMarcus Ware. The remaining 12 finalists are defensive end Jared Allen; tackles Willie Anderson and Tony Boselli; cornerback/safety Ronde Barber; safety LeRoy Butler; receivers Torry Holt and Reggie Wayne; linebackers Sam Mills, Zach Thomas and Patrick Willis; and defensive linemen Richard Seymour and Bryant Young.

The finalists were determined by a vote of the Hall of Fame's Selection Committee from a list of 123 nominees named in September that was trimmed to 26 semifinalists Nov. 24.

The Selection Committee will reduce the list to 10 and then to five. Each of the remaining five will be voted on, with an 80 percent "yes" vote required for enshrinement. In addition to the modern-era finalists will be senior finalist Cliff Branch, contributor finalist Art McNally and coach finalist Dick Vermeil.

 
Is being a good return specialist really enough to get you into the HOF??

Going to piss off a lot of Bears fans but I just don't think he should get in.
 
He isn't a first ballot HOF guy. Out of the 15 listed... he's probably 10-12th.
 
Hester changed games even when they weren't kicking to him...because they were kicking short and out of bounds. Best ever to do it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: cigaretteman
Isn't Mel Gray in? That was a lifetime achievement award, if so. Hester was way more impactful than he was.
 
Is being a good return specialist really enough to get you into the HOF??

Going to piss off a lot of Bears fans but I just don't think he should get in.

Neither should relief pitchers, kickers, penalty killers or three-point specialists cause you know reasons.

That thinking is just lame. He was asked to do a job, once that every team does. And he did it better than just about everyone ever.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT