Bears News: Should Charles 'Peanut' Tillman make the Hall of Fame?
Tillman was a standout for the Bears defense (Andrew Weber - USA Today Sports)

Bears News: Should Charles 'Peanut' Tillman make the Hall of Fame?


by - Senior Writer -

Not only are the Chicago Bears a storied franchise, but they are one of the oldest franchises in the NFL. They have a plethora of NFL Championships earned pre-1960, to go with their lone Lombardi trophy in 1985. Chicago has the most wins of any NFL franchise.

Along with those team accolades, the Bears have a long list of Famers' NFL and team hall, and there could be another one set to join the ranks. Former Bears cornerback Charles "Peanut" Tillman could be the next one of the Bears greats to find himself enshrined in Canton.

As the NFL released their 2021 first-time hall of fame eligible players, Tillman found his name as one of those 14 names. His 12 seasons with the Bears will be remembered as some of the greatest ever for a defensive back. Across his career, Tillman played in 156 games and recorded 36 career interceptions. Tillman was also responsible for nine defensive touchdowns, both rank among the best in Bears history.

Tillman has the nickname peanut mainly because he perfected the peanut punch during his time in Chicago. That punch was an effective way for him to produce turnovers, which ultimately led to 42 career forced fumbles. Even after his playing days have finished, the peanut punch still lives on as teams continue to use that method for causing turnovers.

Tillman will be enshrined in the Bears hall of fame eventually, but the numbers that he put up on defense certainly deserve NFL Hall of Fame recognition also. As good as it is to see Tillman be on the ballot for the first time this season, it may be an instance of being on it at the wrong time. This year's class is loaded, an understatement as Peyton Manning, Charles Woodson, and Calvin Johnson join him on the ballet.

All three of them had great careers, and it wouldn't be a stretch to say each of them are the first-ballot Hall of Famers or, at the very worst, two of the three. Other notable names on this year's ballot include Wes Welker, D'Brickashaw Ferguson, and Jarad Allen. Those are some great names, but what about other names that will be returning to the ballot.

Former Bears Lance Briggs and Olin Kreutz return to the ballot as neither has received enough push to garner a deep run in the ballot process. Kreutz is a six-time pro bowler, while Briggs is often lost in the shuffle mainly due to Brian Urlacher. However, Briggs made the pro bowl seven times himself, so the numbers he put up were strong in his own right.

The 2021 ballot has 130 eligible members, with 14 of them being first time members. Here is a position by position breakdown of this year's eligible class.

Quarterback: Manning, Drew Bledsoe, Randall Cunningham, Jake Delhomme, Jeff Garcia, Dave Krieg, Donovan McNabb, and Steve McNair (RIP)

Running Backs: Shaun Alexander, Tiki Barber, Mike Alstott (FB), Earnest Byner, Larry Centers, Corey Dillon, Warrick Dunn, Eddie George, Priest Holmes, Steven Jackson (1st time), Jamal Lewis, Eric Metcalf, Glyn Milburn, Lorenzo Neal, Fred Taylor, Herschel Walker, and Ricky Watters.

Wide Receivers: Donald Driver, Henry Ellard, Torry Holt (2020 finalist), Calvin Johnson (1st time), Chad Johnson, Derrick Mason, Muhsin Muhammad, Jimmy Smith, Rod Smith, Hines Ward, Wes Welker, Roddy White, and Reggie Wayne (2020 finalist)

Tight Ends: Dallas Clark, Ben Coates, Keith Jackson, Brent Jones, Heath Miller (1st time), Jeremy Shockey, Wesley Walls.

Offensive Lineman: (20): Willie Anderson (T), Matt Birk (C), Tony Boselli (2020 finalist), Lomas Brown (T), Ruben Brown (G), Alan Faneca (2020 finalist) (G), D'Brickashaw Ferguson (1st time) (T), Kevin Glover (C/G), Jordan Gross (T), Kent Hull (C), Olin Kreutz (C), Logan Mankins (1st time), Tom Nalen (C), Chris Samuels (T), Jeff Saturday (C), Chris Snee (G), Brian Waters (G), Richmond Webb (T), Erik Williams (T), Steve Wisniewski.

Defensive Line: John Abraham (DE also LB), Jared Allen (1st time), Ray Childress (DT/DE), La'Roi Glover (DT/NT), Casey Hampton (DT/NT), Leslie O'Neal (DE), Michael Dean Perry (DT/DE), Simeon Rice (DE), *Richard Seymour (2020 finalist), Justin Smith (DE), Neil Smith (DE), Greg Townsend (DE/LB/DT/NT), Justin Tuck (1st time), Kevin Williams (1st time), *Bryant Young (2020 finalist).

Linebackers: Cornelius Bennett, Lance Briggs, Tedy Bruschi, London Fletcher, Seth Joyner, Clay Matthews Jr., Jerod Mayo (1st time), Willie McGinest (also DE), Sam Mills (2020 finalist), Joey Porter, Chris Spielman, Takeo Spikes, Pat Swilling (also DE), Darryl Talley, Zach Thomas (2020 finalist), and Patrick Willis.

Cornerbacks: Eric Allen (CB), Ronde Barber (CB/S), LeRoy Butler (2020 finalist), Nick Collins (S), Merton Hanks (S), Rodney Harrison (S), James Hasty (DB), Albert Lewis (CB), John Lynch (2020 finalist), Tim McDonald (S), Allen Rossum (DB), Asante Samuel (DB), Bob Sanders (S), Charles Tillman (1st time), Troy Vincent (CB), Adrian Wilson (S), Charles Woodson (1st time), Darren Woodson.

Punters/Kickers: David Akers (K), Gary Anderson (K), Jason Elam (K), Jeff Feagles (P), Jason Hanson (K), John Kasay (K), Sean Landeta (P), Ryan Longwell (K), Nick Lowery (K), Reggie Roby (P), Rohn Stark (P), Matt Turk (P).

Special Teams: Josh Cribbs (KR/PR also WR), Mel Gray (PR/KR also WR), Brian Mitchell (KR/PR also RB), Steve Tasker (ST also WR).

This list of 130 players will be cut down to 18 as there will be 18 finalists selected by February 6, 2021. Once the finalists are chosen, the selection committee will discuss who is hall of fame worthy. While there is no set limit on how many of the 18 finalists they can pick, the general rule has always been between four and eight per class.

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