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Hines Ward - 1st ballot Hall of Famer? (2 Viewers)

1st ballot Hall of Famer?

  • Yes

    Votes: 14 9.5%
  • No, but he eventually gets in

    Votes: 37 25.0%
  • Sorry, please sit over there with Art Monk

    Votes: 97 65.5%

  • Total voters
    148
'Just Win Baby said:
'Frenchy Fuqua said:
Haven't seen it mentioned but these are Hines most revealing stats.

Postseason Stats

Hines Ward

17 games

88 receptions

1,181 yards

10 TD

1 SB MVP

For comparison's sake,

Marvin Harrison

16 games

65 receptions

883 yards

2 TD
Simple questions:1. Do you think Ward is more deserving of the HOF than Harrison?

2. Do you think HOF voters will believe Ward is more deserving of the HOF than Harrison?

If your answer to #1 is no, why are you bothering to post this?
Simple answer: Both belong.HOF debate on these boards has become all about regular season numbers. It's a fantasy football board so I guess that's to be expected. My point, if the debate is entirely based on numbers let's at least look at the most important numbers. Postseason performance has already paved the road to the HOF for two Steelers WR, I think it's likely to do the same for Hines Ward.

 
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'Evilgrin 72 said:
Yardage-wise, he doesn't, because he's a 12.1 career YPC guy. Unlike just about everyone else on this list, he was never a team's primary deep threat. In # of catches and in TDs, he compares favorably to many of the guys on the list, which is basically a bonus, since his career should (will) be measured by voters in terms of his contribution to his team, the intangibles you mention. 2 rings, a Super Bowl MVP award, his leadership, the fact that he's considered by most to be the best blocking WR ever, etc... Voters will recognize his contributions to winning 2 titles for one of the league's marquee franchises and his reputation will enhance his candidacy. Playing as the possession receiver on the league's most run-heavy team for most of his career may dampen his yardage numbers, but I think that fact will be far less important to HOF voters than it is on a FF message board.
That is most certainly not a fact. It is merely an opinion, one Steelers fans have spun so much that they all think it is fact.
Who is better (I'm asking a legitimate question; I don't know)?
Unless you are someone who has been breaking down NFL footage on a weekly basis for decades, it is impossible to say. That is why it is funny when Steelers talk like Ward is the best ever, when in reality it is impossible to know something like that.Also, if Ward's intangibles like blocking, leadership, etc. will work in his favor, but then his reputation as one of the NFL's dirtiest players of the last decade will work against him. How many times has he been voted by his peers as the league's dirtiest players (or just in the top 5)? Have any of the WRs from his era who he will have to outdo to get into the Hall been looked at as being even close to as dirty as Ward?
You are at footballguys.com, you should act like you belong. We discuss pro football here -- as deep as anywhere in the world. No need to act coy... and all of a sudden not have an opinion around these parts. Laughable.

 
When did a team ever go into a game saying, "Guys, we really need to watch and stop Hines Ward...at all costs."

He has compiled a really nice career, but he is just that... a compiler.

 
'Evilgrin 72 said:
For both players, I divided career #s by games started and then multiplied by 16. Ward has averaged more catches and more TDs per 16 starts over his career than Irvin did. So, if averaging 6.5 TDs a season over 13 years (counting all games, not just starts) is not Hall-worthy, than Irvin's 5.9 TDs per season over 11 seasons DEFINITELY isn't. You also have to take into account that Ward was never a deep threat, which almost all of these other guys mentioned were/are. That was never his game, he's a possession receiver and his job his whole career has been to aid the run game, and make big catches when needed (3rd downs, red zone, etc.) It's not as sexy, but you have to consider how well a player has done what is asked of him rather than just look at raw numbers.

Besides, I don't buy into the notion that a player's prime is all that is to be considered. Performing over a great length of time is also something to be valued, IMO. People use the term "compiler" all the time, as if playing for a long time is something that devalues a player's stats, but the bottom line is that if you're still out there and starting/producing at an advanced age, then you're probably a pretty damned good player. A guy like Terrell Davis, who had a super-high peak but nothing else (unfortunately) does not belong in the HOF over a guy like Bettis, who was an often solid, sometimes elite performer for well over a decade. That's just my opinion, and just to compare a Bronco to a Steeler because, well, why not? :)

And P.S. - I love Rod Smith and wouldn't cry if he was inducted either. Guy was great for a long time, but he's just a (slightly) lesser version of Ward, career-wise. 3 Pro Bowls to Ward's 4, 1 2nd team All-Pro to Ward's 2, no SB MVP. Had a better peak, but didn't contribute for quite as long.
First off, if we are gonna put guys in the Hall because they simply did well what was asked of them, are we gonna put Darren Sproles in the Hall when he retires because he does an awesome job at what has been asked of him in San Diego and New Orleans? The obvious answer is no. Second, longevity is a good thing, yes, but when you were never really one of the top guys at your position (which Ward never really was, except for maybe a year or two, same with Bettis), it is hard to see that player as a Hall of Famer. Ward and Bettis would both be locks in the Hall of Very Good. I will give them both that.

'Evilgrin 72 said:
Yardage-wise, he doesn't, because he's a 12.1 career YPC guy. Unlike just about everyone else on this list, he was never a team's primary deep threat. In # of catches and in TDs, he compares favorably to many of the guys on the list, which is basically a bonus, since his career should (will) be measured by voters in terms of his contribution to his team, the intangibles you mention. 2 rings, a Super Bowl MVP award, his leadership, the fact that he's considered by most to be the best blocking WR ever, etc... Voters will recognize his contributions to winning 2 titles for one of the league's marquee franchises and his reputation will enhance his candidacy. Playing as the possession receiver on the league's most run-heavy team for most of his career may dampen his yardage numbers, but I think that fact will be far less important to HOF voters than it is on a FF message board.
That is most certainly not a fact. It is merely an opinion, one Steelers fans have spun so much that they all think it is fact.
It's actually NFL commentators that have said it so frequently that most people accept it. He's the best I've seen, and that's all I'll say on the matter, but the bottom line is that if you polled 100 random Hall voters on the issue, Ward would likely get the most support to that end of any WR. That's going to factor into his candidacy, so whether or not it's a "fact" is irrelevant. Perception is reality.
 
Also, if Ward's intangibles like blocking, leadership, etc. will work in his favor, but then his reputation as one of the NFL's dirtiest players of the last decade will work against him. How many times has he been voted by his peers as the league's dirtiest players (or just in the top 5)? Have any of the WRs from his era who he will have to outdo to get into the Hall been looked at as being even close to as dirty as Ward?
No chance. If anything, it will help him. WRs have a(n often deserved) reputation as being a bunch of primadonnas, being considered "dirty" will only aid him in getting in.
 
Ward was a better football player than WR. He was tough. He did the work every play to help his team win. He does not belong in the HOF though. The HOF is reserved for the special players.

 
I can't remember at any time that I ever thought that Hines Ward was the best WR in the league. I can't even remember thinking that he was ever a top 5.

Hines Ward was never named to a single All-Pro team.

I guess twice he was top 5 in receptions, once in yards, and three times in TD's. His best year was 2002: second most receptions, fourth most yards, and second TD's. That's pretty good, but certainly not HoF.

There are going to be lots of great WR's eligible soon, I think it will be really tough for Ward to beat out Harrison, Owens, Moss, Holt, etc...not to mention Fitzgerald, Andre Johnson, Steve Smith, Calvin Johnson, Wes Welker, Reggie Wayne, etc.

 
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Since apparently today is as good as any to beat a dead horse . . .

Ward was named to 4 Pro Bowls. That's a feat he shares in common with Joe Horn, Herman Moore, Wes Chandler, John Jeferson, Stanley Morgan, Isaac Curtis, Ahmad Rashard, Cliff Branch, Mel Gray, Harold Carmichael, Gene Washington, John Gilliam, and Gary Garrison.

But the following can say they were picked to more Pro Bowls than Ward was:

Andre Johnson, Reggie Wayne, Steve Smith, Jimmy Smith, Andre Rison, Sterling Sharpe, Anthony Miller, Irving Fryar, Mark Clayton, Mike Quick, and Harold Jackson . . . who all were on 5 Pro Bowl teams.

That also means Ward has fewer Pro Bowl selections than Larry Fitzgerald (6), Chad Ochocinco (6), Torry Holt (7), Randy Moss (6), Marvin Harrison (8), Terrell Owens (6), Tim Brown (9), and Andre Reed (9).

I know, I know, it's all the other non measurable, non statistcal things that make Ward a HOFer.

 
Since apparently today is as good as any to beat a dead horse . . .Ward was named to 4 Pro Bowls. That's a feat he shares in common with Joe Horn, Herman Moore, Wes Chandler, John Jeferson, Stanley Morgan, Isaac Curtis, Ahmad Rashard, Cliff Branch, Mel Gray, Harold Carmichael, Gene Washington, John Gilliam, and Gary Garrison.But the following can say they were picked to more Pro Bowls than Ward was:Andre Johnson, Reggie Wayne, Steve Smith, Jimmy Smith, Andre Rison, Sterling Sharpe, Anthony Miller, Irving Fryar, Mark Clayton, Mike Quick, and Harold Jackson . . . who all were on 5 Pro Bowl teams.That also means Ward has fewer Pro Bowl selections than Larry Fitzgerald (6), Chad Ochocinco (6), Torry Holt (7), Randy Moss (6), Marvin Harrison (8), Terrell Owens (6), Tim Brown (9), and Andre Reed (9).I know, I know, it's all the other non measurable, non statistcal things that make Ward a HOFer.
David I know you are a stats guy, can you dial up the postseason resumes of the WR you mentioned above?
 
David I know you are a stats guy, can you dial up the postseason resumes of the WR you mentioned above?
Terrell Davis probably has the best post season resume of anyone . . . and that hasn't helped him much as o yet.I get that Ward is hard to put in a specific box. He won't rank high on some traditional lists or accolades and his best attributes are a bit outside-of-the-box compared to several others. Ward has averaged 5.2 catches, 69 yards, and 0.6 TD per game in the post season. I would have to crunch some numbers to see how that stacks up to some other receivers.
 
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I saw where Hines is in the new Batman movie.

Hines Ward is the greatest new Batman movie actor that has EVER played the game!!1!!!

That's not the type of thing that shows up on a stat sheet, but that is something I look for in a HOF wide receiver...right after his abilty to punt, fill a Gatorade cup, and block.

Hines should be first ballot HOF on his new Batman movie acting skills alone!!!

 
Hines Ward was never even one of the best receivers in a given season, he's certainly not one of the best of all time! He may be a great football player but that is inadequate.

Cris Carter was superior to Ward and won't be in the HoF either. See also Tim Brown. There are too many WRs with monster stats, Ward doesn't cut it. If Carter and Brown have to wait to get in, imagine the stats that some other people will have after Ward waits to get in. No way. Of course, stats aren't everything, and yes Ward has some great accomplishments, but let's be real. This is like thinking Donald Driver can be in the HoF.

 
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Since apparently today is as good as any to beat a dead horse . . .

Ward was named to 4 Pro Bowls. That's a feat he shares in common with Joe Horn, Herman Moore, Wes Chandler, John Jeferson, Stanley Morgan, Isaac Curtis, Ahmad Rashard, Cliff Branch, Mel Gray, Harold Carmichael, Gene Washington, John Gilliam, and Gary Garrison.

But the following can say they were picked to more Pro Bowls than Ward was:

Andre Johnson, Reggie Wayne, Steve Smith, Jimmy Smith, Andre Rison, Sterling Sharpe, Anthony Miller, Irving Fryar, Mark Clayton, Mike Quick, and Harold Jackson . . . who all were on 5 Pro Bowl teams.

That also means Ward has fewer Pro Bowl selections than Larry Fitzgerald (6), Chad Ochocinco (6), Torry Holt (7), Randy Moss (6), Marvin Harrison (8), Terrell Owens (6), Tim Brown (9), and Andre Reed (9).

I know, I know, it's all the other non measurable, non statistcal things that make Ward a HOFer.
Just referencing guys from your list above...Postseason Leaders in receptions

WR Games Rec

Hines Ward 17 88

Andre Reed 19 85

Reggie Wayne 17 83

Cliff Branch 19 73

Marvin Harrison 16 65

Terrell Owens 11 54

Randy Moss 12 47

Torry Holt 10 47

Steve Smith 8 47

Tim Brown 12 45

Larry Fitz 6 42

Jimmy Smith 9 40

Mark Clayton 11 32

Irving Fryar 10 30

Andre Rison 8 29

Har Carmichael 7 29

Herman Moore 7 27

Harold Jackson 10 24

John Jefferson 5 23

Wes Chandler 4 23

Ahmad Rashad 8 21

Stanley Morgan 7 19

Gene Washington 5 16

John Gilliam 7 14

Isaac Curtis 6 13

Sterling Sharpe 2 11

Anthony Miller 3 9

Mel Gray 2 8

Chad Ochocinco 2 6

Mike Quick 1 5

Joe Horn 1 1

Andre Johnson 0 0

Gary Garrison 0 0

Postseason Leaders in receiving yards

WR Yards

Cliff Branch 1289

Andre Reed 1229

Hines Ward 1181

Reggie Wayne 1128

Marvin Harrison 883

Randy Moss 865

Steve Smith 782

Terrell Owens 751

Larry Fitz 705

Jimmy Smith 647

Torry Holt 630

Tim Brown 581

Harold Jackson 548

Mark Clayton 507

Herman Moore 474

Har Carmichael 465

John Jefferson 431

Andre Rison 415

Gene Washington 375

Irving Fryar 361

Wes Chandler 347

Stanley Morgan 321

Ahmad Rashad 303

John Gilliam 261

Sterling Sharpe 229

Isaac Curtis 184

Anthony Miller 137

Mel Gray 129

Chad Ochocinco 87

Mike Quick 82

Joe Horn 50

Andre Johnson 0

Gary Garrison 0

Postseason Leaders in TD receptions

WR TD

Hines Ward 10

Randy Moss 10

Andre Reed 9

Reggie Wayne 9

Larry Fitz 9

Steve Smith 7

Jimmy Smith 7

Har Carmichael 6

Cliff Branch 5

Terrell Owens 5

Harold Jackson 5

John Gilliam 5

Torry Holt 4

Sterling Sharpe 4

Tim Brown 3

Mark Clayton 3

Andre Rison 3

Stanley Morgan 3

Marvin Harrison 2

Herman Moore 2

John Jefferson 2

Irving Fryar 2

Wes Chandler 2

Isaac Curtis 2

Gene Washington 1

Ahmad Rashad 1

Mel Gray 1

Anthony Miller 0

Chad Ochocinco 0

Mike Quick 0

Joe Horn 0

Andre Johnson 0

Gary Garrison 0

Postseason Leaders -Games with 100+ yards Receiving

WR 100+

Hines Ward 5

Andre Reed 5

Larry Fitz 4

Randy Moss 3

Steve Smith 3

Cliff Branch 3

Terrell Owens 3

Reggie Wayne 2

Jimmy Smith 2

Harold Jackson 2

Torry Holt 2

Sterling Sharpe 2

John Jefferson 2

Wes Chandler 2

Har Carmichael 1

Tim Brown 1

Andre Rison 1

Stanley Morgan 1

Marvin Harrison 1

Herman Moore 1

John Gilliam 0

Mark Clayton 0

Irving Fryar 0

Isaac Curtis 0

Gene Washington 0

Ahmad Rashad 0

Mel Gray 0

Anthony Miller 0

Chad Ochocinco 0

Mike Quick 0

Joe Horn 0

Andre Johnson 0

Gary Garrison 0

 
I don't want to quote it, but Frenchy is dead on. If you think those post-season #s won't weigh heavily in the voting, you belong in a scrotum, because you're nuts.

 
Of course Ward is going to rank high on career post season lists. He's played in way more games than most players. That's why so many Yankees rank high on similar lists. Bernie Williams is at or near the top of career postseason records.

Are we to penalize other players that played on teams that weren't as good (and therefore could not amass better career playoff numbers)? Is Ward that much better because he played on a team that predominently has advanced in the postseason based more on its defense?

Using some twisted logic, a case could be made that Matt Light of the Patriots should be a HOFer. He's won 3 rings in 4 Super Bowls and has protected Brady's blind side the entire time he's been a Patriot. He's been a multi-time Pro Bowler (and was an All Pro to boot). One could argue that without him the Pats would not have been able to have the success they did. Does anyone really think that Light is a HOFer?

 
Of course Ward is going to rank high on career post season lists. He's played in way more games than most players. That's why so many Yankees rank high on similar lists. Bernie Williams is at or near the top of career postseason records.Are we to penalize other players that played on teams that weren't as good (and therefore could not amass better career playoff numbers)? Is Ward that much better because he played on a team that predominently has advanced in the postseason based more on its defense?Using some twisted logic, a case could be made that Matt Light of the Patriots should be a HOFer. He's won 3 rings in 4 Super Bowls and has protected Brady's blind side the entire time he's been a Patriot. He's been a multi-time Pro Bowler (and was an All Pro to boot). One could argue that without him the Pats would not have been able to have the success they did. Does anyone really think that Light is a HOFer?
Even if you only look at the guys who have played in a comparable number of playoff games (Harrison, Wayne, Reed for example), he still looks pretty good by comparison. If you look at per game #s, he fares pretty well against many of the guys who have played in fewer games, despite the larger sample size. Also, bear in mind that of his 17 playoff games, he was a virtual non-factor in two of them because of the injury suffered in the '09 AFCC that limited him tremendously in that game and the SB against Arizona, so those aggregate numbers look even better considering they were achieved basically in 15 games, not 17.
 
Of course Ward is going to rank high on career post season lists. He's played in way more games than most players. That's why so many Yankees rank high on similar lists. Bernie Williams is at or near the top of career postseason records.Are we to penalize other players that played on teams that weren't as good (and therefore could not amass better career playoff numbers)? Is Ward that much better because he played on a team that predominently has advanced in the postseason based more on its defense?Using some twisted logic, a case could be made that Matt Light of the Patriots should be a HOFer. He's won 3 rings in 4 Super Bowls and has protected Brady's blind side the entire time he's been a Patriot. He's been a multi-time Pro Bowler (and was an All Pro to boot). One could argue that without him the Pats would not have been able to have the success they did. Does anyone really think that Light is a HOFer?
Ha! You wanted statistical evidence of Hines Ward's HOF legitimacy, there it is. What is more important than the postseason? Hines leads your elite list of WR in three of four postseason stat categories.My point is that Hines Ward will eventually get into the HOF for the same reasons Steelers WR before him were selected. Postseason dominance.
 
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Ha! You wanted statistical evidence of Hines Ward's HOF legitimacy, there it is. What is more important than the postseason? Hines leads your elite list of WR in three of four postseason stat categories.My point is that Hines Ward will eventually get into the HOF for the same reasons Steelers WR before him were selected. Postseason dominance.
It's easy to post better numbers when you play 3-4 times the games than other players.You are right, though, if Ward makes it in it will be because voters have a bias for otherwise good but not elite PIT wide receivers.
 
It's easy to post better numbers when you play 3-4 times the games than other players.
Ward stacks up very favorably on a post season per-game basis with all of the WRs of his generation that people in this thread are suggesting are a lock while Ward should stay out. Larry Fitz is heads and shoulders above him (and everyone) in pergame avgs, but besides that Ward is at or very near the top in per-game and career postseason totals. Postseason #s onlyPlayer Rec / Yards / TDs (per game)R Moss 3.92 / 72.1 /.83 M Harrison 4.06 / 55.2 / .13T Owens 4.9 / 68.2 / .45Torry Holt 4.7 / 63 / .40Isaac Bruce 4.9 / 84 / .44Larry Fitz 7 / 117.5 / 1.5Reggie Wayne 4.88 / 66.4 / .53Tim Brown 3.75 / 48.4 / .25Hines Ward 5.17 / 69.4 / .59
 
So what weight should people use on post season numbers compared to regular season ones? I'm asking because I don't have an answer. Are post season games twice as valuable? Five times as valuable?

Ward has played in 217 regular season games and 17 post season ones (so far). That's roughly a 93% to 7% split. Should we look at players and count the regular season numbers 50% and their post season numbers 50% (which seems really off base proportionally)?

And I would think that Ward's per game post season numbers are about to dip some (but who knows, maybe he plays a bigger role in the post season this year than he did in the regular season).

 
So what weight should people use on post season numbers compared to regular season ones? I'm asking because I don't have an answer. Are post season games twice as valuable? Five times as valuable?

Ward has played in 217 regular season games and 17 post season ones (so far). That's roughly a 93% to 7% split. Should we look at players and count the regular season numbers 50% and their post season numbers 50% (which seems really off base proportionally)?

And I would think that Ward's per game post season numbers are about to dip some (but who knows, maybe he plays a bigger role in the post season this year than he did in the regular season).
The question really isn't so much what we should look at, but what they do look at. Judging by a lot of the players that are/aren't in, I would say the Hall places a tremendous (IMO, too much so) premium on postseason success/excellence. And as illustrated above, Ward stacks up very well against his peers in that category. Not even just statistically, but he has a Super Bowl MVP award. That counts for an awful lot in the eyes of the voters.Add to this the intangibles, and the career milestones, and it adds up to a guy who's likely to draw a lot of support. It seems like a lot of people in this thread are arguing that he SHOULDN'T be a HOFer, whereas I'm simply trying to illustrate why I think he WILL be.

 
It's actually NFL commentators that have said it so frequently that most people accept it. He's the best I've seen, and that's all I'll say on the matter, but the bottom line is that if you polled 100 random Hall voters on the issue, Ward would likely get the most support to that end of any WR. That's going to factor into his candidacy, so whether or not it's a "fact" is irrelevant. Perception is reality.
Not always. Just because NFL commentators say something a lot doesn't mean that voters are dumb enough to swallow it. Ray Lewis is often called the best leader in sports. Does that perception also equal reality?
Also, if Ward's intangibles like blocking, leadership, etc. will work in his favor, but then his reputation as one of the NFL's dirtiest players of the last decade will work against him. How many times has he been voted by his peers as the league's dirtiest players (or just in the top 5)? Have any of the WRs from his era who he will have to outdo to get into the Hall been looked at as being even close to as dirty as Ward?
No chance. If anything, it will help him. WRs have a(n often deserved) reputation as being a bunch of primadonnas, being considered "dirty" will only aid him in getting in.
I disagree.
What is more important than the postseason? Hines leads your elite list of WR in three of four postseason stat categories.My point is that Hines Ward will eventually get into the HOF for the same reasons Steelers WR before him were selected. Postseason dominance.
Are you also ready then to put David Givens in the Hall? He won two rings with the Patriots, and was a key playoff contributor (he caught a TD pass in 7 straight NE playoff games, including two straight Super Bowls!).
 
'Frenchy Fuqua said:
Haven't seen it mentioned but these are Hines most revealing stats.

Postseason Stats

Hines Ward

17 games

88 receptions

1,181 yards

10 TD

1 SB MVP

For comparison's sake,

Marvin Harrison

16 games

65 receptions

883 yards

2 TD
Not really revealing at all.
 
'Evilgrin 72 said:
It all just depends on how long he plays. His game isn't built on skills that typically erode over time (top end speed, mind-boggling elusiveness.) He's a good route runner with good hands and an iron will, and if he chooses to play until he's 35-36, he's going to end up with 1000 receptions, about 12-13,000 yards and close to/over 100 TDs, which will make him a shoo-in. It's all up to him at this point.
6 years later...1000/12083/85
:patsselfonback:Says he will play out the last two years of his contract too, which even at minimal production will likely land him on about 1050-12700-90. This is the first year he really didn't put up solid stats, and a lot of that has to do more with the fact that the Steelers have younger, more dynamic options at WR rather than the fact that he can't play. They really only use him on short routes where they need to pick up a first down or kill clock these days, but he's still a fairly effective option.
I don't think back then you appreciated how unimpressive 1000 receptions will be in 2017. You may still not, but you didn't then.Plus, can someone tell me why Hines Ward supporters act like he's the only WR on the planet that ever threw a block?
 
'Frenchy Fuqua said:
Haven't seen it mentioned but these are Hines most revealing stats.

Postseason Stats

Hines Ward

17 games

88 receptions

1,181 yards

10 TD

1 SB MVP

For comparison's sake,

Marvin Harrison

16 games

65 receptions

883 yards

2 TD
Not really revealing at all.
Sure it is...Pitt, Indy, and NE ruled the AFC for much of the first decade in the 21st Century...it shows a guy that plays in a run heavy offense much of his career doing amazing things in the playoffs vs arguably the best WR in the league during that time...why would it not be revealing AM? Honestly you don't have to answer but I think FF makes a lot of sense and I found the stats pretty telling.

 
So what weight should people use on post season numbers compared to regular season ones? I'm asking because I don't have an answer. Are post season games twice as valuable? Five times as valuable?

Ward has played in 217 regular season games and 17 post season ones (so far). That's roughly a 93% to 7% split. Should we look at players and count the regular season numbers 50% and their post season numbers 50% (which seems really off base proportionally)?

And I would think that Ward's per game post season numbers are about to dip some (but who knows, maybe he plays a bigger role in the post season this year than he did in the regular season).
The question really isn't so much what we should look at, but what they do look at. Judging by a lot of the players that are/aren't in, I would say the Hall places a tremendous (IMO, too much so) premium on postseason success/excellence. And as illustrated above, Ward stacks up very well against his peers in that category. Not even just statistically, but he has a Super Bowl MVP award. That counts for an awful lot in the eyes of the voters.Add to this the intangibles, and the career milestones, and it adds up to a guy who's likely to draw a lot of support. It seems like a lot of people in this thread are arguing that he SHOULDN'T be a HOFer, whereas I'm simply trying to illustrate why I think he WILL be.
Excellent points EG
 
Not a chance Ward makes it. There are too many receivers of his vintage that are going to be higher on the list.

The post season stats are impressive, but I would say having 50+ more TDs in the regular season is going to be a bigger deal.

Hines will be a card carrying member on the hall of very good.

 
It's actually NFL commentators that have said it so frequently that most people accept it. He's the best I've seen, and that's all I'll say on the matter, but the bottom line is that if you polled 100 random Hall voters on the issue, Ward would likely get the most support to that end of any WR. That's going to factor into his candidacy, so whether or not it's a "fact" is irrelevant. Perception is reality.
Not always. Just because NFL commentators say something a lot doesn't mean that voters are dumb enough to swallow it. Ray Lewis is often called the best leader in sports. Does that perception also equal reality?
Also, if Ward's intangibles like blocking, leadership, etc. will work in his favor, but then his reputation as one of the NFL's dirtiest players of the last decade will work against him. How many times has he been voted by his peers as the league's dirtiest players (or just in the top 5)? Have any of the WRs from his era who he will have to outdo to get into the Hall been looked at as being even close to as dirty as Ward?
No chance. If anything, it will help him. WRs have a(n often deserved) reputation as being a bunch of primadonnas, being considered "dirty" will only aid him in getting in.
I disagree.
What is more important than the postseason? Hines leads your elite list of WR in three of four postseason stat categories.

My point is that Hines Ward will eventually get into the HOF for the same reasons Steelers WR before him were selected. Postseason dominance.
Are you also ready then to put David Givens in the Hall? He won two rings with the Patriots, and was a key playoff contributor (he caught a TD pass in 7 straight NE playoff games, including two straight Super Bowls!).
Postseason ReceivingHines 88-1,181-10

Givens 35-324-7

 
Haven't seen it mentioned but these are Hines most revealing stats.

Postseason Stats

Hines Ward

17 games

88 receptions

1,181 yards

10 TD

1 SB MVP

For comparison's sake,

Marvin Harrison

16 games

65 receptions

883 yards

2 TD
Simple questions:1. Do you think Ward is more deserving of the HOF than Harrison?

2. Do you think HOF voters will believe Ward is more deserving of the HOF than Harrison?

If your answer to #1 is no, why are you bothering to post this?
Simple answer: Both belong.HOF debate on these boards has become all about regular season numbers. It's a fantasy football board so I guess that's to be expected. My point, if the debate is entirely based on numbers let's at least look at the most important numbers. Postseason performance has already paved the road to the HOF for two Steelers WR, I think it's likely to do the same for Hines Ward.
The debate isn't all about numbers. These are the main components (not necessarily in this order, and all for both regular season and postseason):1. Statistics (for those positions with meaningful statistics)

2. Honors/awards

3. Winning (mostly for QBs and key players on Super Bowl winners)

All of these require context and judgment to properly assess, which is why the process utilizes computers rather than a BCS-like formula.

Intangibles such as those that have been discussed in this thread (leadership, toughness, secondary skills like blocking for a WR) may be considered, but typically they are given very little weight in comparison to the factors named above. And signature moments (e.g., Swann's Super Bowl catches) can occasionally help a player who is very close to get in.

 
So what weight should people use on post season numbers compared to regular season ones? I'm asking because I don't have an answer. Are post season games twice as valuable? Five times as valuable?Ward has played in 217 regular season games and 17 post season ones (so far). That's roughly a 93% to 7% split. Should we look at players and count the regular season numbers 50% and their post season numbers 50% (which seems really off base proportionally)?
There is no formulaic answer. The answer is, it depends. Context must be applied. A player with lesser numbers could be judged to have had more meaningful playoff performances if he made crucial, memorable, and/or clutch plays that led to Super Bowl wins. Lynn Swann comes to mind. Or a player who performed well despite having a serious injury.
 
Sorry - card carrying Steeler fan and yes I know this board is full of them. So sorry.

I would wager the following.

Ward gets in and pretty easily. In front of some guys with much better numbers. And he deserves it.

He impacted the games he played in at an extremely high level and redefined his position to a point that has not yet been duplicated.

He has great stats, great stats when it matters, and he put the fear in the opposing defense such that they put a bounty on his head. And at the end he stood down like a man as well.

If that is not HOF worthy than I don't know what is.

This thread is full of reasons - mostly statistical - of why he should not go.

First- Moss and Owens should go. Although both short-changed themselves overall. Smoking weed, running over parking attendants, posturing for the camera are not helping but they were good enough to overcome that.

Carter and Brown - how much stats on bad teams where it didn't matter? Neither won ANYTHING so how much did their HOF efforts benefit their teams? Both are great players but I only sometimes saw CC as a game changer and that was when Moss was onboard.

Irvin - I think he deserves it over Carter and Brown. Such an idiot though.

Fitz - maybe.

Ward will get in - and half of us will cheer while the other half will lament.

-Ken

 
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It seems like a lot of people in this thread are arguing that he SHOULDN'T be a HOFer, whereas I'm simply trying to illustrate why I think he WILL be.
Do you think he SHOULD be in the HOF?
Yes, but I'm admittedly biased, so take that with a grain of salt. I think he stands out at his position as a leader and a real football player in an era when so many WRs were/are "gimme gimme" attention whores. I mean, how many teams have Terrell Owens and Randy Moss played on between them, when they're maybe the two most talented receivers not named Jerry Rice to ever set foot on a field? How many teams has Ward played for? Do you think that's a coincidence?
 
This is a fantasy football board, so I'm not surprised that many people are blinded by stats. But while people are rolling out the red carpet for Owens and Moss, stop and think about how many teams have simply told those guys to GET LOST. They had so much talent, and put up such great numbers, that multiple teams simply jettisoned them because their presence on a team was so deleterious that even their otherworldly production wasn't worth the headaches. Meanwhile, an injured Ward is standing on the sidelines, unable to really contribute, exhorting a malcontent like Santonio Holmes "not to be afraid to be great." Holmes goes out and makes the catch that wins him the MVP award and says afterward that he wouldn't have made that play or been the player he is if not for Hines. Meanwhile, TO is doing sit-ups in his driveway and reality TV.

None of this shows up on pro-football-reference.com, but voters are aware of it. There are myriad contributions a player can make to his team, positive or negative, that don't appear on a stat sheet. If that weren't the case, we could just craft a tidy mathematical formula to plug stats into and it would spit out a number we could cross-reference against a table that simply says "HOF" or "Not HOF." Hall voters are voting on a PLAYER, not a set of digits.

99% of GMs, given perfect hindsight, would draft Hines Ward over Owens and Moss, knowing the latter two had vastly superior talent. What do you want on your team, a player who's going to give you 5-6 years (tops) of world-class performance, but be a locker room cancer and eventually leave town laying mushroom clouds, or a guy who's going to give you far above average performance, along with leadership and a winning attitude, for 15 years? If you're choosing the former, you know FF, but have never played football.

 
This is a fantasy football board, so I'm not surprised that many people are blinded by stats...
I think it is a convenient stance to take that the reason most in this forum and thread have said Ward doesn't deserve it is because it is a fantasy football message board, and thus everyone is biased to one way of thinking. Taking this stance allows you to simply dismiss other opinions as being invalid. There has been plenty of intelligent discussion of factors other than statistics in this thread, and I see few, if any, posters who are "blinded" by statistics in this discussion.The simple fact is that statistics are the best proxy of greatness for players in many sports, including pro football at some positions, including WR. It is a proxy, so it isn't perfect and it isn't wholly inclusive of all relevant factors. But it is easily the closest proxy to greatness. Honors and awards are helpful, but typically are similar to the statistics. While winning is an important factor, is not a good proxy by itself... most of the players on all the playoff and Super Bowl teams in NFL history were not great players.That is why numbers are discussed so much in HOF discussions. You'd see the exact same thing reflected in a discussion of Ward's HOF chances in any other forum that isn't Steelers based (or maybe Georgia based).
If you're choosing the former, you know FF, but have never played football.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "I know what I'm talking about and you don't". How arrogant.
 
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If you're choosing the former, you know FF, but have never played football.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "I know what I'm talking about and you don't". How arrogant.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "You and I disagree, but instead of discussing why we disagree I'll attempt to attach a negative label to you so others think my opinion is better than yours".That's only fair, no?

Maybe I need to reread the thread, but I find your assertion that there are "few, if any, posters who are "blinded" by statistics in this discussion" a bit absurd. There seem to have been a number of posts/posters who have brought nothing but a numbers assessment to the discussion. Stating that "Ward has these numbers and players X, Y and Z have those numbers, therefore he has no shot" is being blinded by the statistics.

And I'll second what EG said (as I've basically said before), that Ward's legacy to the history of pro football can't be completely understood by just perusing his p-f-r page. He's a contemporary player. If you've been following the NFL for the past 10-15 years it shouldn't be all that hard to understand why he at least will be considered for the HoF. The HoF isn't a mathematical or statistical excercise. It's a history lesson. And if that means I have to wear the "arrogant" label, so be it.

 
Sorry Steelers fans, but there are just too many better players that will be chosen ahead of him. He definitely isn't first ballot and his chances to get in willreduce every year as his stats become increasingly mundane.

Keep in mind he's competing against players at all positions for a slot, not just receivers.

I won't say never, but he faces an uphill battle.

 
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This is a fantasy football board, so I'm not surprised that many people are blinded by stats...
I think it is a convenient stance to take that the reason most in this forum and thread have said Ward doesn't deserve it is because it is a fantasy football message board, and thus everyone is biased to one way of thinking. Taking this stance allows you to simply dismiss other opinions as being invalid. There has been plenty of intelligent discussion of factors other than statistics in this thread, and I see few, if any, posters who are "blinded" by statistics in this discussion.The simple fact is that statistics are the best proxy of greatness for players in many sports, including pro football at some positions, including WR. It is a proxy, so it isn't perfect and it isn't wholly inclusive of all relevant factors. But it is easily the closest proxy to greatness. Honors and awards are helpful, but typically are similar to the statistics. While winning is an important factor, is not a good proxy by itself... most of the players on all the playoff and Super Bowl teams in NFL history were not great players.That is why numbers are discussed so much in HOF discussions. You'd see the exact same thing reflected in a discussion of Ward's HOF chances in any other forum that isn't Steelers based (or maybe Georgia based).
If you're choosing the former, you know FF, but have never played football.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "I know what I'm talking about and you don't". How arrogant.
It's not arrogant, it's a byproduct of having played the game and understanding that a player with tremendous talent and a horrible attitude is often more trouble than he's worth. I'm not referring to anyone in particular, but if you were an NFL GM and could see into those player's futures, you would draft Moss or Owens over Ward, knowing you'd get a few years out of the guy at best before he burned his bridges on the way out of town? I notice that while discussing "greatness", you haven't addressed the fact that Moss and Owens were cast from team to team while Ward has stayed with one. You honestly don't think the fact that something like 7 NFL teams flat-out cut or traded those two guys illustrates that simply posting big numbers REALLY doesn't capture what value a player brings to a team, and that it will be a major factor when determining Hall votes?
 
If you're choosing the former, you know FF, but have never played football.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "I know what I'm talking about and you don't". How arrogant.
Here's another classic deflection argument, which amounts to "You and I disagree, but instead of discussing why we disagree I'll attempt to attach a negative label to you so others think my opinion is better than yours".That's only fair, no?

Maybe I need to reread the thread
Yes, you need to reread the thread. I've been discussing the disagreement in this thread since its inception almost six years ago.And I didn't attach a "negative label" to EG's post, I called it what it was. To say that if anyone else doesn't agree with his post, they don't know football is arrogant.

 
If you've been following the NFL for the past 10-15 years it shouldn't be all that hard to understand why he at least will be considered for the HoF. The HoF isn't a mathematical or statistical excercise. It's a history lesson. And if that means I have to wear the "arrogant" label, so be it.
I have never said he won't be considered. The question isn't whether he will be considered, it's whether he will get in. Do you see the difference?I've been following the NFL for longer than 15 years. And I've never said it's a mathematical or statistical exercise. In fact, I've posted numerous times that it requires consideration of multiple factors, with the application of judgment and context. Like I said, maybe you should reread the thread.
 
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I'm not referring to anyone in particular, but if you were an NFL GM and could see into those player's futures, you would draft Moss or Owens over Ward, knowing you'd get a few years out of the guy at best before he burned his bridges on the way out of town? I notice that while discussing "greatness", you haven't addressed the fact that Moss and Owens were cast from team to team while Ward has stayed with one. You honestly don't think the fact that something like 7 NFL teams flat-out cut or traded those two guys illustrates that simply posting big numbers REALLY doesn't capture what value a player brings to a team, and that it will be a major factor when determining Hall votes?
I never commented on this hypothetical, because it's irrelevant to this discussion. Unless you think Owens and/or Moss will not make the HOF.Do you think Owens will be inducted into the HOF? Do you think Moss will be inducted into the HOF? If you think either of them will not be inducted, I think you're wrong and you are on an island there. If you think they will be inducted, why is this relevant?I do think players who spend their careers with one team, particularly one of the league's leading franchises like Pittsburgh, get a small boost, due to the fact that it means that player is likely more well known (more games on TV, more media coverage, etc.). That said, I doubt that has ever made the difference in a player making the HOF who otherwise would not have made it.And I think bad behavior/character shown by players can be a negative, but it's a minimal factor. I am not aware of any player who likely would have made it if not for bad behavior/character.If you have examples of players who fit either profile (getting in based on intangibles or due to staying on one team and/or not getting in due to bad behavior/character despite having elite level statistics, honors, and awards), I'm interested in seeing them.
 
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I'm not referring to anyone in particular, but if you were an NFL GM and could see into those player's futures, you would draft Moss or Owens over Ward, knowing you'd get a few years out of the guy at best before he burned his bridges on the way out of town? I notice that while discussing "greatness", you haven't addressed the fact that Moss and Owens were cast from team to team while Ward has stayed with one. You honestly don't think the fact that something like 7 NFL teams flat-out cut or traded those two guys illustrates that simply posting big numbers REALLY doesn't capture what value a player brings to a team, and that it will be a major factor when determining Hall votes?
I never commented on this hypothetical, because it's irrelevant to this discussion. Unless you think Owens and/or Moss will not make the HOF.Do you think Owens will be inducted into the HOF? Do you think Moss will be inducted into the HOF? If you think either of them will not be inducted, I think you're wrong and you are on an island there. If you think they will be inducted, why is this relevant?

I do think players who spend their careers with one team, particularly one of the league's leading franchises like Pittsburgh, get a small boost, due to the fact that it means that player is likely more well known (more games on TV, more media coverage, etc.). That said, I doubt that has ever made the difference in a player making the HOF who otherwise would not have made it.

And I think bad behavior/character shown by players can be a negative, but it's a minimal factor. I am not aware of any player who likely would have made it if not for bad behavior/character.

If you have examples of players who fit either profile (getting in based on intangibles or due to staying on one team and/or not getting in due to bad behavior/character despite having elite level statistics, honors, and awards), I'm interested in seeing them.
Because a great number of people in this thread, yourself among them, I believe, have contended that Ward will not make the Hall because he is surpassed by too many of his contemporaries. I'm asserting that perhaps these contemporaries have not surpassed him at all, or if they have, by much less than mere statistics would illustrate.If you really think it's irrelevant to a player's HOF candidacy to say "as an NFL GM, I'd have much rather drafted Ward than Moss", for example, then I guess we're just looking at it in two entirely different ways. I don't know that I could look at a player's entire career and say something to the effect of : "Well, I'd have much rather had Ward on my team than Moss, all things considered, but damn it, Moss did score a lot of TDs, I'm voting for him instead." The stat hounds will gape at that and think it unfathomable to vote in a guy with 85 TDs over a guy with 150, but I personally tend to look more at the player's overall value to his team than I do raw #s. I think that's the difference between being an ex-player and being a stat geek. I'm both, while I think most here are just the latter. That's all I was saying earlier in the comment that you found arrogant (perhaps it was not phrased gently.)

 

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