Bill Belichick will have to wait at least another year for Hall of Fame induction after falling short in first-ballot voting, ESPN reported. As a finalist for the Class of 2026 in the coaching category, Belichick needed at least 40 of 50 votes to earn induction; the exact number he received has not been released.
At 73, Belichick is one of the most accomplished coaches in NFL history — he has more Super Bowl victories as a head coach (six) than anyone else and ranks second all-time in combined regular-season and playoff wins (333). Still, his long run in New England was shadowed by controversy: Belichick was fined $500,000 in 2007 over the Spygate sign-stealing scandal, and both Spygate and Deflategate reportedly came up during Hall of Fame voters’ deliberations.
Belichick had advanced to the final round of voting in December as the coaching nominee and was among 20 finalists overall, a group that also included Patriots owner Robert Kraft as a contributor candidate. Kraft and Belichick were among five names sent by the Appellate Body to the final ballot; fifteen modern-era players were also finalists. The Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026 will be announced during NFL Honors on Thursday, Feb. 5.
The result prompted strong reactions across the sports world. Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes expressed disbelief on social media, while former defensive star J.J. Watt and ex-Coach Jimmy Johnson criticized the decision as unreasonable and disrespectful to Belichick’s on-field record. FOX Sports analyst Bucky Brooks and others also argued that the vote reflects the voters’ opinions more than the coach’s accomplishments. Even non-football stars like LeBron James weighed in, calling the omission hard to accept.
Belichick left the Patriots after a 4-13 season in 2023. His résumé also includes a five-year stint as the Cleveland Browns’ head coach (1991–95), a 2025 season at North Carolina that ended 4-8, and two Super Bowl titles earned as the New York Giants’ defensive coordinator (1986, 1990).
Fan take: This matters because Belichick is a defining figure of the Super Bowl era, so voters passing on him immediately fuels debate about how off-field controversies should factor into Hall decisions. The outcome could shift future Hall voting standards and stoke long-running discussions among fans about legacy, accountability, and what achievements truly merit induction.

