13. Bob Greise
Going undefeated in 1972 was kind to the Dolphins QB, even if he split time with Earl Morrall. He had a great career, but it’s not the Hall of Great. A voter should ask, what would happen if this quarterback was put on another team, in this case one without the No-Name Defense. I doubt he’d have had a 92-56-3 record.
14. Harry Carson
Sometimes players are elected based on their contributions to historic defenses. Carson is one of those beneficiaries. His official Hall bio mentions that he recovered 14 career fumbles, which doesn’t even rank him
close to the top 300 in NFL history. Granted, many of the men ahead of him are offensive players who recovered their own fumbles, but there are plenty of defenders well above him on the list too. Like all players on this list, Carson was once a dominant player in the NFL, but not for long enough to merit induction. But, hey, putting on a security jacket and basically inventing the Gatorade dump deserves all the kudos.
15. Marcus Allen
Prepare to be blown away. Look at Allen’s career stats, courtesy pro-football-reference.com, the greatest site for football fans in the universe (besides FTW, of course):
You got that right, my friend! Allen only had over 1,000 yards in a season
three times. He averaged 55.1 YPG for his (admittedly) long career. When he retired, he was fifth on the list of rushing yards. But, again, don’t get bogged down in stats. This isn’t baseball. Allen was a college star who was spectacular in his first four NFL seasons. He rode that reputation to the Hall.