CANTON, Ohio -- Quarterbacks Dan Marino and Steve Young and wide
receiver Michael Irvin are among nine first-time nominees for the Pro
Football Hall of Fame.
Commissioner Paul Tagliabue also is among the 89 nominees on the
preliminary ballot.
Marino, who holds the career records for yards passing, completions and
touchdown passes, spent his entire 16-season career with the Miami
Dolphins. Young, who began his career in the USFL, played first in the
NFL for Tampa Bay, then starred with San Francisco, setting a record for
touchdown passes in a Super Bowl with six in the 1995 game.
Irvin starred for the Dallas teams that won three Super Bowls in four
seasons in the 1990s.
Other first-time nominees include Dan Reeves, who coached Denver to
three Super Bowls and Atlanta to another; guard Nate Newton, who played
with Irvin on the Dallas Super Bowl teams; defensive lineman Charles
Haley, who was on Super Bowl winners with both San Francisco and Dallas;
the late Derrick Thomas, who starred at linebacker for Kansas City;
Kevin Greene, a pass-rushing star with several teams; and safety Steve
Atwater, who starred for Denver in the '80s and 90s.
The list of 89 will be narrowed first to 25 semifinalists and then to 13
finalists. The 13 finalists will be joined by Bennie Friedman and Fritz
Pollard, who were chosen last summer as the nominees of the old-timers
committee.
A maximum of six can be elected in final voting on Feb. 5. Inductions
are next summer.
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