Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Manning, Woodson expected to get call from Hall

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More than two decades ago, Charles Woodson beat out Peyton Manning for the Heisman Trophy.

Today, they likely will share an even more impressive football honor: entry into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Manning and Woodson, two of the most dominant players at their positions in the NFL from 1998 until their retirement­s in early 2016, are among four first-year-eligible finalists. The announceme­nts will come today.

Both made the NFL’s All-Decade Team for the 2000s, and they carried their prolific production into the next decade. The only fivetime league MVP, Manning quarterbac­ked Indianapol­is to two Super Bowls, winning one, and then took Denver to two more, winning one.

“Peyton was someone I always admired as a quarterbac­k, as a leader of the team,” said Tom Brady, who someday will have his own bust in the Hall of Fame. “Peyton and I are right around the same age. I always looked up to Peyton, he always was doing things the right way. An amazing player, he took so much on.”

Woodson was a cornerback for his first 14 pro seasons before reinventin­g himself as a safety. He lost a Super Bowl with the Raiders and won one with the Packers. He was the 1998 Defensive Rookie of the Year, then the 2009 Defensive Player of the Year.

“That would mean job well done,” Woodson told SiriusXM NFL Radio about making the hall. “Going out and playing the game I loved for so many years and giving it everything I had, you have to go through a lot. But each time I went out and gave it everything I had no matter what the outcome. If I hear that, it will mean job well done and that is all I need.

“I just wanted to be a great football player. I wanted to win championsh­ips, and I was able to accomplish a lot and had a lot of fun along the way.

The game of football is like life and how do you bounce back and I feel like I bounced back every time.”

The other first-year eligible players under considerat­ion for the August enshrineme­nts are former Lions receiver Calvin Johnson, and sack master Jared Allen, who played for four teams.

In recent years, first-timers have gotten strong considerat­ion for the Canton, Ohio, shrine. Only five modern-day players can be inducted per class, and in 2013, 2018 and 2019, three of them were new to eligibilit­y. Some were slam dunks in those years: Jonathan Ogden in 2013, Ray Lewis and Randy Moss in 2018, Tony Gonzalez and Ed Reed in 2019.

Since 2005, there have been at least two first-year eligibles elected 11 times.

Johnson, with the memorable nickname of “Megatron,” also made the 2010 All-Decade Team. Allen finished his career with 136 career sacks and led the league in 2011 with 22, just a half-sack short of Michael Strahan’s NFL mark.

Consider the other finalists:

■ Three more defensive backs, including current 49ers General Manager John Lynch. This is Lynch’s eighth time as a finalist. It’s the first for Ronde Barber and the second appearance in the finals for Leroy Butler.

■ Along with Johnson are wideouts Torry Holt and Reggie Wayne, who was one of Manning’s top targets for the Colts.

■ Another dependable defensive linemen, Richard Seymour, is in the finals for the third time.

■ Zach Thomas, who also excelled on special teams, is one of three linebacker­s making the finals, joining the late Sam Mills — a star in the USFL and then the NFL — and Clay Matthews, who led some strong Cleveland defenses from 1978-93 before playing three season in Atlanta.

■ Two offensive linemen who have been frequent finalists round out the potential Class of 2021: Alan Faneca and Tony Boselli. Faneca, who played guard and tackle and starred for three franchises (Steelers, Jets, Cardinals) has made his sixth final in as many years of eligibilit­y while tackle Boselli, a standout for Jacksonvil­le, reached the finals for a fifth time.

Three previously announced candidates are coach Tom Flores, contributo­r Bill Nunn and senior Drew Pearson.

Inductions are scheduled for August when the 2020 class and a special centennial class also will be enshrined after the pandemic forced postponeme­nt of those ceremonies last summer.

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