In the world of Pro Football, retirements often trickle through many months, sometimes years after a player last appears in an NFL game. This means that we are constantly adding players, even potential first ballot Hall of Famers to our futures.
Today, we are adding new names for you to vote on in the 2025 and 2026 Football Sections.
Added to 2025 are:
Clay Matthews III: The third generation of the Matthews clan, was an excellent Linebacker who played most of his career with Green Bay. A six-time Linebacker, Matthews won the PFWA Defensive Player of the Year in 2010, and owns a Super Bowl Ring.
Delanie Walker: Walker blossomed late in his career as a Tight End when he was with the Tennessee Titans, where he went to three Pro Bowls.
Earl Thomas: Thomas had a great run with the Seattle Seahawks where he won a Super Bowl while earning seven Pro Bowls at Safety. A three-time First Team All-Pro and two-time Second Team All-Pro, Thomas’ career imploded with the Baltimore Ravens, and his stature within the football community took a pounding that could cost him a Hall of Fame bust.
Eric Reid: Reid is best known for his solidarity in kneeling with Colin Kaepernick, but the Safety was a Pro Bowl Selection in 2013.
Marcell Dareus: Dareus won a National Championship in Alabama, and the Defensive Tackle would later go to Pro Bowls when he played for the Bills.
Reshad Jones: Jones played his entire career with Miami where he went to two Pro Bowls. The Safety also had three 100 Tackle seasons.
Terrell Suggs: Suggs was a member of Baltimore’s two Super Bowl winning teams, and he was also named the Defensive Player of the Year in 2011. A seven-time Pro Bowl and one-time First Team All-Pro, Suggs had 139 Sacks and is the current all-time leader in Tackles for Loss with 202.
Vontaze Burfict: Burfict was a controversial figure over his career, which was largely spent in Cincinnati. The Linebacker went to the Pro Bowl in 2013.
They join Adam Vinatieri, Antoine Bethea, Aqib Talib, Brynden Trawick, Cameron Wake, C.J. Anderson, Darren Sproles, DeMaryius Thomas, Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie, Donald Penn, Eli Manning, James Develin, Joe Staley, Jon Condo, Kyle Long, Luke Kuechly, Marshal Yanda, Matt Byant, Michael Bennett, Mike Pouncey, Patrick DiMarco, Patrick Chung, Roosevelt Nix, Ryan Kalil, Travis Frederick, Vernon Davis, Zach Brown and Zak DeOssie.
The entire 2025 list can be found here.
Added to 2026 are:
Dontari Poe: Poe had a nice career as a Defensive Tackle/Nose Tackle in the NFL, where he went to two Pro Bowls as a Kansas City Chief.
Frank Gore: The five-time Pro Bowl Running Back compiled 16,000 Rushing Yards, which places him third all-time. Gore is also currently four in Yards from Scrimmage (19,985), fifth in All-Purpose Yards19,992) and twenty-third in Touchdowns (100).
Golden Tate: Tate was a Pro Bowler in 2014, with the Wide Receiver also winning a Super Bowl as a Seahawk.
L.P. Ladoucer: Ladoucer went to the 2014 Pro Bowl, and the Long Snapper was a career Dallas Cowboy.
Larry Fitzgerald: Fitzgerald was an Arizona Cardinal for his entire pro career, and is second all-time in Receptions (1,432) and Receiving Yards (17,492). A Pro Bowl Selection three times, the Wide Receiver had 121 Touchdowns, sixth most ever.
Mitchell Schwartz: A Right Guard who had his best years with Kansas City, Schwartz was a one-time First Team and three-time Second Team All-Pro. He has a Super Bowl Ring with the Chiefs.
Richie Incognito: Incognito has a controversial career, but the Offensive Lineman was still a four-time Pro Bowler.
Stephen Gostkowski: The Place Kicker who replaced Adam Vinatieri in New England had a great career himself, as he won three Super Bowls and was an All-Decade player.
Todd Gurley: At one time, Gurley was considered one of the best Running Backs, and he was named the 2017 AP Offensive Player of the Year. He had three Pro Bowls over his career.
They join Alex Smith, Anthony Costanzo, Anthony Sherman, Dez Bryant, Don Mulbach, Drew Brees, Greg Olsen, Jason Witten, Johnathan Joseph, Jordan Reed, Julian Edelman, Jurrell Casey, LeSean McCoy, Malcolm Butler, Marshawn Lynch, Matt Schaub, Maurkice Pouncey, Mike Iupati, Phillip Rivers, Sean Lee, Thomas Davis and Tramon Williams
The entire 2026 list can be found here.
We will be presenting the 2027 Football Futures shortly.
As always, we here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to thank you for your support.
Drafted in the Second Round from California in 2012 by the Cleveland Browns, Schwartz won the starting Right Tackle job as a rookie, and started every game for Cleveland for his four years as an NFL player. Schwartz signed with Kansas City in 2016 as a Free Agent, and it quietly became one of the best signing in franchise history.
Schwartz took his play to the next level with the Chiefs, earning four consecutive All-Pros (three Second Team and one First Team), and was instrumental in the protection of Quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, who led Kansas City to a Super Bowl win in LIV. Kansas City’s running game was also stellar with Schwartz anchoring the line.
A back injury in 2020, put him on the shelf after six Games, and he was released after the season. After sitting out 2021, Schwartz elected to call it a career. Schwartz may never have made it to the Pro Bowl but four All-Pros certainly show that he should have. This could be one of the best players in recent memory to have never earned a “PB” beside his name.
As we approach the impending 2022 pre-season, we know that it will begin without one of the best Offensive Lineman of the 2010s, Mitchell Schwartz, who has announced that he is retiring from professional football.
Drafted in the Second Round from California in 2012 by the Cleveland Browns, Schwartz won the starting Right Tackle job as a rookie, and started every game for Cleveland for his four years as an NFL player. Schwartz signed with Kansas City in 2016 as a Free Agent, and it quietly became one of the best signing in franchise history.
Schwartz took his play to the next level with the Chiefs, earning four consecutive All-Pros (three Second Team and one First Team), and was instrumental in the protection of Quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, who led Kansas City to a Super Bowl win in LIV. Kansas City’s running game was also stellar with Schwartz anchoring the line.
A back injury in 2020, put him on the shelf after six Games, and he was released after the season. After sitting out 2021, Schwartz elected to call it a career.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to wish Mitchell Schwartz the best in his post-playing career.
Yes, we know that this is taking a while!
As many of you know, we here at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we have existing Top 50 lists out and we always consistently look to update them when we can and based on necessity. As such, we are very happy to present our pre-2021 revision of our top 50 Kansas City Chiefs of all-time.
As for all of our top 50 players in football we look at the following:
1. Advanced Statistics.
2. Traditional statistics and how they finished in the NFL.
3. Playoff accomplishments.
4. Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles not reflected in a stat sheet.
This our first revision in two years, and with the Chiefs participating in the last two Super Bowls (winning the first), there are four new additions and one significant jump.
1. Will Shields
2. Len Dawson
5. Bobby Bell
You can find the entire list here.
Again, we need to state that this is the first revision in two years, so had we gotten around to redoing it last year, the debuts would not have been so dramatic.
Our bad!
Moving on…
Tight End, Travis Kelce vaults from #34 to #19, and he is regarded as the top man in his position.
Quarterback and former MVP, Patrick Mahomes enters at #27. It would not surprise us if he becomes number one in the future.
Wide Receiver, Tyreke Hill, comes in at #42.
Offensive Linemen, Mitchell Schwartz and Eric Fisher make their debuts at #45and #48respectively. Both are no longer Chiefs.
We welcome your input and commentsand as always, we thank you for your support.
Mitchell Schwartz played his first four seasons with the Cleveland Browns, and while he did well, he was not in that upper tier of Right Tackles. This would change when he signed with the Kansas City Chiefs in 2016 and would have one of the best four-year stretches of any Offensive Tackle in franchise history, although you would not know it based on his Pro Bowl amounts.
That number, by the way, is zero.
In Schwartz's first four years in Kansas City, he had Approximate Values of 12, 16, 20 & 16, and in the year he had 20 (2018), he was second in the NFL in this metric. While the Pro Bowl voters snubbed him, he was a First Team All-Pro in 2018 and a Second Team selection in the other three years. The Chiefs won Super Bowl LIV, and Schwartz's contributions should never be discounted.
After only playing six Games in 2020 due to injury, Schwartz was released, and retired shortly after. Pro Bowl or not, the Tackle had one of the best runs in Chief history, and hopefully, this is celebrated in the future.