The Pro Football Hall of Fame Snubs Patrick Willis for the Fourth Time

This is Patrick Freaking Willis we're talking about, the best linebacker of his generation.
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Here's a head scratcher.

Former 49ers linebacker Patrick Willis did not get elected into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this year. And it's his fourth year on the ballot. Which means the voters have snubbed him four years in a row.

This is Patrick Freaking Willis we're talking about, the best linebacker of his generation. No one played the position better than he did when he was in the NFL. He was the Willie Mays of middle linebackers -- he did everything at an elite level. He was a five-tool linebacker. He could run sideline to sideline, make tackles in the backfield, cover, blitz and take the ball away.

Here are the players who made it into the Hall of Fame instead of Willis: cornerback Ronde Barber, cornerback Darrelle Revis, offensive tackle Joe Thomas, linebacker Zach Thomas and linebacker DeMarcus Ware.

Those are five great players, but Willis was as good or better than all of them, particularly Zach Thomas. He and Willis played the same position, and Willis was flat out better. There's no comparison. Thomas was a solid athlete who played hard and had a long career. Willis arguably was the greatest athlete ever at inside linebacker.

I can't help but notice that none of the 10 Hall of Fame finalists who played most of their careers on the West Coast didn't make it this year. It almost seems like the voters don't watch the West Coast teams as closely as they watch the East Coast teams.

How else would you explain what's happening to Willis?


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Grant Cohn
GRANT COHN

Grant Cohn has covered the San Francisco 49ers daily since 2011. He spent the first nine years of his career with the Santa Rosa Press Democrat where he wrote the Inside the 49ers blog and covered famous coaches and athletes such as Jim Harbaugh, Colin Kaepernick and Patrick Willis. In 2012, Inside the 49ers won Sports Blog of the Year from the Peninsula Press Club. In 2020, Cohn joined FanNation and began writing All49ers. In addition, he created a YouTube channel which has become the go-to place on YouTube to consume 49ers content. Cohn's channel typically generates roughly 3.5 million viewers per month, while the 49ers' official YouTube channel generates roughly 1.5 million viewers per month. Cohn live streams almost every day and posts videos hourly during the football season. Cohn is committed to asking the questions that 49ers fans want answered, and providing the most honest and interactive coverage in the country. His loyalty is to the reader and the viewer, not the team or any player or coach. Cohn is a new-age multimedia journalist with an old-school mentality, because his father is Lowell Cohn, the legendary sports columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle from 1979 to 1993. The two have a live podcast every Tuesday. Grant Cohn grew up in Oakland and studied English Literature at UCLA from 2006 to 2010. He currently lives in Oakland with his wife.