And now, for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2016.
Brett Favre (QB)
Orlando Pace (OL)
Marvin Harrison (WR)
Kevin Greene (LB)
Tony Dungy (Head Coach)
Dick Stanfel (OL) (Senior committee finalist)
Ken Stabler (QB) (Senior committee finalist)
Eddie DeBartolo (Owner) (Contributor committee finalist)
Finalists missing the cut include Morten Andersen (K), Steve Atwater (S), Don Coryell (Coach), Terrell Davis (RB), Alan Faneca (OL), Joe Jacoby (OL), Edgerrin James (RB), John Lynch (S), Terrell Owens (WR), and Kurt Warner (QB).
Notable facts about this class.
At the time of his retirement, Brett Favre was the all-time leader in passing yards, passing touchdowns, attempts, completions, and wins by a starting quarterback (his yards and touchdown records have since been broken by Peyton Manning, while Manning tied his wins record). He holds the record for most consecutive games started in NFL history, and led the Green Bay Packers to victory in Super Bowl XXXI. He was the first player in the Super Bowl Era to win 3 MVP awards. A 2nd round pick by the Atlanta Falcons in 1991, Favre spent his rookie season as a backup quarterback and prior to his second season, was traded to the Packers for a 1st round pick. A serious leg injury to then-Packers starter Don Majkowski in the 3rd game of the 1992 season vs the Cincinnati Bengals led to Favre entering the game and engineering a come-from-behind victory with a touchdown pass to Kitrick Taylor. Favre became the permanent starter from that point on and did not relinquish his starting job until a 2008 retirement/unretirement controversy led to him being traded to the New York Jets for a conditional 3rd round draft pick, and current Green Bay starter Aaron Rodgers took over. After one year with the Jets, he spent his final 2 years with the Minnesota Vikings, and became the first quarterback in NFL history to win a game against all 32 current NFL franchises (a feat since repeated by Peyton Manning).
Orlando Pace was drafted 1st overall in 1997 by the St. Louis Rams, and is notable for protecting the blindside of Kurt Warner and blocking for Marshall Faulk during the Rams' Greatest Show On Turf years, winning Super Bowl XXXIV.
Kevin Greene is 3rd all time in sacks (an official NFL statistic since 1982), and 1st all time among Linebackers in that same statistic. Having played for the Los Angeles Rams, Pittsburgh Steelers, Carolina Panthers, and San Francisco 49ers, the closest he ever got to a Super Bowl ring was an appearance in Super Bowl XXX; his lack of a Super Bowl ring is largely blamed on Neil O'Donnell's 2 costly interceptions thrown to Cowboys CB Larry Brown (who was named Super Bowl MVP as a result of those 2 interceptions).
Marvin Harrison is the all-time leading receiver in Colts franchise history, holds the single-season record in catches, and his touchdown catches from Peyton Manning are most all-time for a QB and WR tandem. Harrison is 3rd all time in receptions, 7th all time in receiving yards, and 5th all time in receiving touchdowns, and won Super Bowl XLI. And speaking of Super Bowl XLI, his head coach from that Super Bowl is none other than...
Tony Dungy. Dungy became the head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 1996. A perennial doormat at the time of his hiring, Dungy transformed the Bucs into winners with his Tampa 2 defense spearheaded by Warren Sapp, Derrick Brooks, and John Lynch. The Buccaneers eventually did win a Super Bowl with the team Dungy built, however, Dungy wasn't around to get a ring for it. Lack of playoff success combined with offensive deficiency during his tenure in Tampa led to his controversial firing, and the Bucs traded 2 first round picks and 2 2nd round picks to the Raiders for his successor, Jon Gruden (who actually did win a Super Bowl as Bucs head coach). Dungy wasn't unemployed for long, as he was immediately hired by the Indianapolis Colts, this time having the benefit of coaching a potent offense he lacked in Tampa (led by Peyton Manning, the aforementioned Marvin Harrison, Reggie Wayne, and Dallas Clark), and by winning Super Bowl XLI, Dungy made history by becoming the first African American head coach to win a Super Bowl. Dungy currently works as a studio analyst for NBC's Sunday Night Football.
Dick Stanfel played on the offensive line of a very successful Detroit Lions team during the 1950s, winning NFL Championships in 1952 and 1953. After his playing career ended, he had a career as an assistant coach. His most noteworthy accomplishment as an assistant coach was winning Super Bowl XX as the Offensive Line Coach of the legendary 85 Bears (a team that rivals the 72 Dolphins as one of the best teams in NFL history, even to this day). Sadly, Stanfel is a posthumous inductee, having died on June 22, 2015.
Nicknamed "the Snake", Ken Stabler emerged as the franchise quarterback of the Oakland Raiders during the 1970s, and had notable success in games with names (such as the Sea of Hands, Ghost to the Post, the Holy Roller, and even scored the go-ahead touchdown that set the stage for the Immaculate Reception, known to Raiders fans and Steelers detractors as the Immaculate Deception). He was named MVP in 1974, and led the Raiders to victory in Super Bowl XI. Stabler is the first starting quarterback in Raiders history to be inducted to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. As is the case with Stanfel, Ken Stabler is a posthumous inductee as well, having lost his battle with colon cancer just over 2 weeks after Stanfel's passing. And for all you wrestling fans out there, the legendary WWE star Jake "The Snake" Roberts adopted his ring name, and the character that went with it, from Stabler's Snake nickname.
Eddie DeBartolo bought the San Francisco 49ers in the mid-70s, and under his watch, the 49ers enjoyed the greatest success of their franchise's history, winning 5 Super Bowls from 1981 to 1994 with stars such as Joe Montana, Dwight Clark, Freddie Solomon, Ronnie Lott, Roger Craig, Russ Francis, Fred Dean, Jerry Rice, Charles Haley, Steve Young, John Taylor, and Ricky Watters, with Head Coaches Bill Walsh and George Seifert at the helm. However, Salary Cap violations and his involvement in a Louisiana bribery scandal in the late 90s led to the end of his ownership of the 49ers, and the franchise lost their only Super Bowl appearance since then (they had not lost a Super Bowl prior to that). The controversies that ended his career as an owner are believed to have kept him out of the Hall of Fame for 15 years. DeBartolo's strongest claim to Hall of Fame candidacy, however, is the fact that to this day, he is the only owner with 5 Super Bowl rings.
This year's Hall of Fame class is also noteworthy for being the first class in 10 years to induct a quarterback. The last time a player at that position was inducted, it was former Cowboys QB Troy Aikman and former Houston Oilers QB Warren Moon in the same class.