The NFL community was stunned Tuesday after reports confirmed that Bill Belichick failed to secure enough votes for first-ballot induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. CBS Sports’ Jonathan Jones reported that Belichick, who hasn’t coached in the NFL since 2023, was eligible for the Hall for the first time this year but did not reach the 50-vote threshold.
Belichick’s résumé is substantial: he’s won eight Super Bowls (two as a Giants assistant and six as New England’s head coach) and ranks second all-time among NFL coaches with 333 victories, trailing only Hall of Famer Don Shula’s 347 wins.
The reaction from players and public figures was immediate and emphatic. Kansas City quarterback Patrick Mahomes called the outcome “insane,” saying he couldn’t fathom how it happened; Mahomes notably played New England in the 2019 AFC Championship Game, which New England won in overtime en route to Belichick’s sixth title. LeBron James labeled the decision “disrespectful,” while Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor — who won two Super Bowls with Belichick in New York — blasted the omission as “absolute bullshit.” Former Patriots defensive back Darius Butler asked rhetorically if Belichick isn’t a first-ballot Hall of Famer, then who would be?
Several current and former players echoed that sentiment: JJ Watt said there shouldn’t be any scenario where Belichick isn’t first-ballot, Ryan Clark argued that if Belichick doesn’t get in on the first try “no coach should be in the Hall of Fame,” and Gerald McCoy urged that Hall of Fame voters be publicly identified after Belichick fell short. Robert Griffin III said Belichick had unquestionably “earned” first-ballot status.
One Hall voting committee member is former GM Bill Polian; an anonymous voter told ESPN that Polian suggested some voters consider waiting a year because of the Patriots’ 2007 “Spygate” scandal, which cost New England a first-round pick and led to a $250,000 fine for Belichick. Other notable reactions came from Terrell Owens, Dez Bryant (who said he was “speechless”), Saints star Cameron Jordan (who noted that fans are usually surprised about who does get in, not who doesn’t), and former Patriots players including Julian Edelman and Jason McCourty.
Fan Take: This outcome matters because Belichick’s exclusion on the first ballot provokes a broader debate about how off-field controversies and individual voter judgments shape Hall of Fame legacies—something every NFL fan cares about. The controversy could prompt calls for more transparency in the voting process and spark renewed discussion on what criteria truly define a Hall of Famer.

