Brian Mitchell is going to retire from the NFL this week.
That means in five years he'll be eligible for election into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Memo to voters: Let him in.
Mitchell, the former Louisiana Ragin' Cajun who led UL to four straight winning seasons from 1986-89, deserves to make history as the first NFL player to ever be enshrined in Canton by virtue of his special teams play.
We're not talking about kickers here. We're talking about players who get hit on every play, and on special teams that means often getting slammed at high speeds.
Mitchell did that for 14 years in the NFL and never sustained a serious injury.
He did it for four different teams, earning a Super Bowl ring in the second of his 10 years with the Washington Redskins before moving on to tours of duty with the Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants.
The Plaquemine product spent last season waiting for a phone call from a team that needed a special teams spark, and when that call never came Mitchell decided he'd done enough.
Make that much more than enough.
In his 14 years, Mitchell set career records for kick return yards (19,013), combined kick returns (1,070), combined kick return touchdowns (13), kickoff return yards (14,014) and returns (607), punt return yards (4,999) and returns (463) and fair catches (231).
Throw in rushing and receiving and Mitchell piled up 23,330 all-purpose yards as a smallish, durable, elusive and tough performer.
He even found time to play some emergency quarterback and to try a halfback option or two.