2025 Hall of Fame: Packers legend Sterling Sharpe's induction was long overdue
Sharpe retired after the 1994 season and it wasn't his choice. Sharpe suffered a stinger late in the season on what looked like a routine block on a run. It was his second stinger in two weeks. Sharpe played the next week against the Buccaneers despite the injury. He had 132 yards and three touchdowns. Then he was gone.
Doctors found Sharpe had a looseness between the top two vertebrae in his neck and would need surgery. After seven seasons for the Green Bay Packers, Sharpe's career was over. It was only seven seasons, but the excellence Sharpe displayed in that relatively short time was undoubtedly worthy of induction.
[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season]
And yet, for 31 years, Sharpe waited for his call to the Hall of Fame. It's hard to make it with only seven seasons, but not many players have a dominant stretch like Sharpe did. Three decades after Sharpe was done playing, the Hall's gatekeepers recognized that.
Sterling Sharpe was dominant
Sharpe was the seventh overall pick of the 1988 NFL Draft, selected by what was, at the time, a horrible Packers team. While Sharpe wasn't still playing when the Packers finally won a Super Bowl, he was a big part of their rise in the 1990s.
Sharpe had a reasonable 791 yards as a rookie, and then took off in 1989. He led the NFL with 90 catches, 12 of which went for touchdowns. He made the Pro Bowl, the first of five times he'd get that honor. He also was first-team All-Pro for the first time. He'd be an All-Pro two more times before he retired.
Sharpe was already one of the NFL's best receivers when the Packers traded for a new quarterback in 1992. Brett Favre took over as the team's starter early that season and quickly found that the best way to succeed was find No. 84 and throw it to him, over and over.
Sharpe won the NFL's receiving triple crown in 1992, leading the NFL with 108 catches, 1,461 yards and 13 touchdowns. The 108 receptions set an NFL single-season record. He broke that record the following season with 112 catches. In his final season, he caught a league-best 18 touchdowns.
Jerry Rice was the gold standard among receivers in that era, but Sharpe wasn't that far behind. He led the NFL in receptions three times, in receiving yards once and receiving touchdowns twice. He was unquestionably one of the best receivers of his era. And isn't that what the Hall of Fame is supposed to be about?
Sharpe finally gets the call
Sharpe played in only two playoff games, though that was hardly his fault. He had 229 yards and four touchdowns in those two postseason games, and his first playoff game was probably the highlight of his great career.
At the end of the 1993 season, with the Packers back in the playoffs for just the second time since 1972, Sharpe scored three touchdowns in a thrilling wild-card game against the Lions. His final touchdown was in the final minute, when he got behind the Lions defense and Favre hit him with an amazing pass to the end zone for a 40-yard score. It was the Packers' second playoff win since Super Bowl II 26 years earlier.
Despite undeniable greatness on the field, Sharpe waited for the Hall of Fame to let him in. Sharpe wasn't always warm and fuzzy with the media like his brother Shannon, and maybe that worked against him too. Shannon Sharpe made the Hall of Fame in 2011. His brother finally made it 14 years later. They're the first brothers to both be enshrined in Canton.
Sharpe said after he was voted in that he didn't worry about whether he'd get into the Hall of Fame. But others wanted to see him get his rightful spot among the game's legends.
"I don't care how long or short his career was," former Packers general manager Ron Wolf, also a Hall of Famer, said via Packers.com. "He was a dominant player in his era. Period. He's as good a football player that ever wore the green and gold."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
New York Giants' Malik Nabers makes debut on NFL Top 100 Players of 2025 list
There aren't many players the New York Giants can hang their hats on these days. Defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence, linebacker Brian Burns, and left tackle Andrew Thomas, the team's three highest players, are among the best at their positions in the league, but there's not a lot to pick from after that -- yet. Enter second-year wide receiver Malik Nabers, who set an NFL record for receptions by a rookie wideout last season. Nabers is one of the league's biggest rising stars and was recently named to NFL Network's Top 100 Players of 2025 list. No. 67 - Malik Nabers, WR, New York Giants 15 games | 109 rec | 1,204 rec yds | 11.0 ypr | 7 rec TDs | 2 rush yds | 1 rush TD An emerging star in New York, Nabers was a highlight reel every week for the Giants. Regardless of who was under center for the Giants, the No. 6 overall pick in the 2024 draft filled the stat sheet. Nabers was a bright spot in New York's underwhelming season with his receptions tally briefly holding the rookie record, and finishes his debut campaign with a Top 100 accolade to his résumé. NFL Pro Insight for : Malik Nabers was targeted on 36.5% of his routes run when facing single-high safety coverage last season, second-highest in the NFL among wide receivers with at least 150 such routes run. Nabers earned 103 targets against single-high coverages last season, nine more than any other receiver. However, he gained just 649 yards on those targets, ranking 13th overall. The Giants feel they have several other possible rising stars, such as safety Tyler Nubin, tight end Theo Johnson, running back Tyrone Tracy Jr., and linebacker Abdul Carter. This article originally appeared on Giants Wire: Giants' Malik Nabers makes debut on NFL Top 100 Players of 2025 list
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Raiders have locked in LT Kolton Miller with a long term extension
Another big piece to this Raiders team is now among those who will be under contract for a good long time. The team announced they have signed T Kolton Miller to an extension. It is a reported three-year, $66 million deal with $42.5 million guaranteed according to Ian Rapoport. The deal keeps Miller under contract through the 2028 season at which point he will be 33 years old. So, essentially, this deal could keep Miller a Raider for his entire career. The former first round pick out of UCLA is the longest tenured Raider and among four players who are vying to be the last Oakland Raider along with Maxx Crosby, AJ Cole, and Daniel Carlson. Crosby and Cole already got extensions this offseason. This article originally appeared on Raiders Wire: Raiders lock in LT Kolton Miller with long term extension


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Bay Area sports calendar, July 31-August 1
BASEBALL BASKETBALL GOLF HORSE RACING MOTOR SPORTS NFL PRESEASON 5:05p Hall of Fame Game: Detroit vs. L.A. Chargers Channel 11 Channel 3 Channel 8 SOCCER 7:30p Leagues Cup: Cruz Azul vs. Seattle Sounders FS1 SWIMMING AND DIVING TENNIS 8a ATP/WTA Tennis Canada Tennis Ch. WNBA FRIDAY BASEBALL GOLF 4a Women's British Open USA Noon PGA: Wyndham Championship GOLF MOTOR SPORTS SOCCER World Aquatics Championships 4a Swimming finals, day 6 Peacock 7p Swimming prelims, day 7 Peacock TENNIS 8a ATP/WTA Tennis Canada Tennis Ch. 4p ATP/WTA Tennis Canada Tennis Ch. VOLLEYBALL 6p AVP Beach Volleyball: Austin CBSSN WNBA