jojatk
Helluva Engineer
- Messages
- 1,624
I think we agree that a player can't be said to be having an HoF caliber career after one great year. Two full seasons of dominance at a position would indicate to me that "if player X continued with at that level then he would be HoF caliber" but he would need to continue that level of play. We might be saying the same thing because I'm giving the caveat on the way I use the term that he needs to continue that level of play. In the end I think we're reflecting the same thing just in a bit different way. And I may be willing to use the term a bit earlier than you are and neither of us is wrong. Take Justin Jefferson, WR for the Vikings, for example. I would say that right now, if he keeps up this current level of play, he would be in the midst of an HoF caliber career. You might say that right now he's playing great football and wait two more seasons to look back and say "he's having an HoF caliber career" and in reality we are saying the same thing, just at different times and I'm caveating it with "keeps up current level of play."By that definition, any young player that has a good year or two is “HoF caliber.” While I agree on you to an extent, I wouldn’t start talking about HoF caliber on time they’ve shown HoF level play for at least 5 years. This is purely my personal barometer.