Brian Mitchell deserves Hall of Fame consideration
Posted on August 4, 2002
LOUISIANA Là - Why not Brian?
The Pro Football Hall of Fame welcomed another class of worthy inductees this weekend, headlined by Jim Kelly and John Stallworth and including Dave Casper, Dan Hampton and George Allen - all boasting solid credentials for inclusion.
Soon there will be inductions for players like John Elway, Dan Marino, Jerry Rice, Emmitt Smith, Barry Sanders and probably the two No. 8's - Troy Aikman and Steve Young.
A quick look at the all-time Hall of Fame roster reveals plenty of position players, as you would expect.
Of the current membership, the only place kicker is Jan Stenerud. George Blanda is there, too, but he was also a quarterback of some achievement. But that's it for special teams performers.
Now, if you listen to any coach in the business, he'll tell you that special teams make up one-third of the game. If that's so, then the Suicide Squad is getting short-changed in the Hall of Fame.
If there is a current player who might expand that select list, it should be Brian Mitchell of the Philadelphia Eagles.
The former Louisiana Ragin' Cajun will turn 34 this month, and yet has survived 12 seasons as a human pinball without serious injury playing for the Washington Redskins and the Eagles.
If the average lifespan of an NFL running back is 4 1/2 years, then expectations for the average special teams performer have got to be shorter than that. And yet Mitchell has played in 176 straight regular-season games in the NFL.
Two years into his career, Mitchell earned a Super Bowl ring with the 1991 Redskins. He was named a member of the Washington 70th anniversary team this year, after leaving as a salary cap casualty in 2000.
But, how can a kick returner make the Hall of Fame? Isn't there a tackle out there who should go first?
In a word, credentials.
Mitchell is one of only three players in NFL history who have ac~~~ulated more than 20,000 net yards with 20,263 by rushing, receiving, kickoff returns and punt returns. The other two? All-time rushing leader Walter Payton (21,803 total) and all-time receiving leader Rice (21,017 entering 2002).
Only Mitchell and Hall of Fame member Jim Brown have led the NFL in combined yards four times (Mitchell 1994-96, 1998), with Brown achieving the trick five times.
In 1995, Mitchell earned a Pro Bowl berth when he led the league in total yards with 2,359.
He is the league's all-time leader in eight different kick return categories.
Since 1960, only Mitchell and Hall of Famer Gale Sayers have scored touchdowns rushing, receiving, on a kickoff return and on a punt return twice in the same season.
Mitchell's 100-yard kickoff return for a touchdown at Tampa Bay in January of 2000 is an NFL playoff record.
None of this should be that much of a surprise. The first time Mitchell touched the ball in the NFL, he returned a kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown in an exhibition game against Atlanta in a game played in Chapel Hill, N.C. in 1990.
He's been heading for the goal line ever since.
As the starting quarterback for then-USL from 1986-89, Mitchell became the first player in college history to rush for over 3,000 yards (3,335) and pass for over 5,000 (5,447) in his career. He also set a quarterback record for career touchdowns with 47.
Christian Keener "Red" Cagle, who played at then-SLI in the 1920s, is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame after also starring at West Point.
With credentials and durability to spare, Brian Mitchell deserves to be the first Cajun in the Pro Football Hall of Fame as its first all-purpose suicide squad star.