The Pro Football Hall of Fame senior committee selected Seattle safety Kenny Easley as its nominee for

Courtesy of the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Courtesy of the Pro Football Hall of Fame

enshrinement in the class of 2017.

Easley was a ferocious hitter and among the best defensive players to not make the Hall so far – potentially even better than Ronnie Lott, according to some, including former Raiders TE Todd Christensen.

(Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue have also been named finalists as contributors.)

He amassed five Pro Bowls and three AP First-Team All Pro awards, according to Pro Football Reference, and he was first-team on the All-1980s team. He was the AFC Defensive Rookie of the Year in 1981, AFC Defensive Player of the Year in 1983 and NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1984.

The problems? The biggest is that his career was cut short after seven seasons due to a damaged kidney. He also plays safety, where voters have created a logjam by enshrining them nearly as infrequently as they do punters and kickers.

In a vacuum, I love this pick – though it dates me, a bit. He’s the first likely senior enshrine I vividly remember watching in person. I was a young fan and I didn’t have the eye to make such judgments or comparisons at the time, but his name was constantly coming up. He was really, really good. He, as much as Terrell Davis, Sterling Sharpe and perhaps a handful of other players whose careers were shortened by injury, has a strong case for at least being considered for the Hall.

I’ve looked at Easley’s career a couple of times and not been able to believe that, despite his short career, his name never even really came up for discussion.

My only quibble with this pick is the continued neglect toward some of the older seniors who are eligible: the Chuck Howleys, Johnny Robinsons, Maxie Baughans, etc. who we discuss regularly on this site. But, while there are other guys I would have preferred to see right now, the Senior committee did do its job by finding a nominee who did not get a hearing during their 15 years of modern era enshrinement eligibility.

I am, at first glance, in favor of Easley making the Hall. He was the best of the best during his short tenure. And that is what the Hall is supposed to recognize.

 

The Senior Committee for the Hall of Fame nominated Kenny Easley for induction in 2017. That's ...

  • Good. He deserves it, but older retired players deserve it more. (71%, 10 Votes)
  • Fabulous. Great player who should have been in long ago. (14%, 2 Votes)
  • Terrible. He didn't play long enough to warrant the Hall. (14%, 2 Votes)

Total Voters: 14

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