Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we will examine how each team honors its past players, coaches, and executives. As such, it is important to us that Corey Dillon and Tim Krumrie have been chosen for the Cincinnati Bengals Ring of Honor.
The Bengals were late to the dance in the creation of a Ring of Honor, but have made up for lost time with the past announcements of Ken Anderson, Paul Brown, Isaac Curtis, Boomer Esiason, Chad Johnson, Anthony Munoz and Ken Riley to their Ring.
Corey Dillon, Running Back, 1997-2003. The dynamic Running Back rushed for 8,061 Yards and 45 Touchdowns for the Bengals, while adding 1,482 Yards and 5 TDs from the air. Dillon was a three-time Pro Bowl Selection. He still holds the three top single-game rushing games in franchise history
Tim Krumrie, Nose Tackle-Defensive Tackle, 1983-94. Krumrie played his entire career with the Bengals where the Nose Tackle was a two-time Pro Bowl and one-time First Team All-Pro. He had 1,017 Tackles and 34.5 Sacks in the Jungle.
Dillon and Krumrie will be officially inducted at Cincinnati’s home game against the Washington Commanders on September 23rd.
We here at Notinhalloffame.com would like to congratulate the impending members of the Cincinnati Bengals Ring of Honor.
Regular visitors of Notinhalloffame.com know that we are slowly working on the top 50 of every major team in the NHL, NBA, NFL, and MLB. Once that is done, we will look at how each team honors its past players, coaches, and executives. As such, it is important to us that the Cincinnati Bengals have announced the nominees for their Ring of Honor.
Here are the nominees:
Jim Breech, Place Kicker: 1980-92.
Breech is the all-time leading scorer in franchise history and was the first kicker to have two 40-yard Field Goals in the Super Bowl.
James Brooks, Running Back: 1984-91.
In the years Brooks played for the Bengals, only Marcus Allen, Eric Dickerson, and Roger Craig had more Yards from Scrimmage (9,459). He was a four-time Pro Bowl Selection and had 64 Touchdowns for the club.
Cris Collinsworth, Wide Receiver: 1981-88.
Collinsworth was the runner-up for the Offensive Rookie of the Year in 1981 and was a Pro Bowl and Second Team All-Pro in his first three seasons. He exceeded 1,000 Yards four times and had 6,698 Receiving Yards and 26 TDs.
Corey Dillon, Running Back, 1997-2003.
Dillon was a three-time Pro Bowl Selection who rushed for over 1,000 yards in his first six seasons, 8,061 in total for the Bengals. He is Cincinnati’s all-time leading rusher and also had 89 Touchdowns (82 rushing, 7 receiving) for the Bengals.
David Fulcher, Safety, 1986-92.
Fulcher went to three straight Pro Bowls (1988-90) and was a First-Team All-Pro in 1989. Over his career, he recorded 31 Interceptions and 8.5 Sacks.
Tim Krumrie, Nose Tackle, 1983-94.
Krumrie was twice named to the Pro Bowl. In 1988, he was a First-Team All-Pro and was seventh in Defensive Player of the Year voting. Playing his 12-year career in Cincinnati, Krumrie accumulated 1,017 Tackles and 34.5 Sacks.
Dave Lapham, Offensive Guard, 1974-83.
Lapham started 105 of his 140 Games and, following his playing career, would join the Bengals broadcasting team.
Max Montoya, Offensive Guard, 1979-92.
Montoya was a member of the Bengals’ first two AFC Championship teams, and three of his four Pro Bowls were in Cincinnati.
Bob Trumpy, Tight End, 1968-77.
Trumpy is the only player in team history to be named an AFL All-Star and to the Pro Bowl. A First Team All-Pro in 1969 when he had a career-high 835 Yards and 9 Touchdowns, he tallied 4,600 Yards and 35 TDs.
Reggie Williams, Linebacker, 1976-89.
Williams played all of his 206 NFL Games with the Bengals where he had 63.5 Sacks. He also won the Alan Page Community Award in 1984 and the Walter Payton Man of the Year in 1988.
You can vote for who you think should enter the Cincinnati Bengals Ring of Honor here.
A Cincinnati Bengal for his entire pro career, Tim Krumrie came from the University of Wisconsin as a Tenth Round Pick in 1983, and in terms of value, is hard to beat.