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Of the original 17 individuals inducted in 1963, three spent a majority of their careers with the Chicago Bears. This includes the founder, long time owner, and head coach George Halas, [7] long time halfback and two-way player Bronko Nagurski, [8] and the "Galloping Ghost" Red Grange. [9] [10] The first few years of the Hall of Fame's ...
Top 100 greatest Bears of all-time [ edit ] In honor of the team centennial anniversary, on May 20, 2019, the Chicago Bears have unveiled the Top 100 players in franchise history, as voted on by Hall of Fame writers Don Pierson and Dan Pompei, two of the most famous journalists that have ever covered the club in their long history. [ 32 ]
NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team; Chicago Bears No. 51 retired; 100 greatest Bears of All-Time; SN Player of the Year (1964) UPI Lineman of the Year (1964) Unanimous All-American ; Consensus All-American ; Chicago Tribune Silver Football (1963) 2× First-team All-Big Ten (1963–1964) Second-team All-Big Ten ; Illinois Fighting Illini No. 50 ...
He was listed at No. 62 on the Bears' 100 all-time greatest players list in 2019. He is their all-time leading scorer with 1,207 points. After a year with the New York Giants, Gould played six ...
The Chicago Bears all-time roster is split by name into the following two lists: Chicago Bears all-time roster (A–Kla) Chicago Bears all-time roster (Kle–Z)
Among the 100 Greatest, four active players made the list, including safety Eddie Jackson (96), defensive lineman Akiem Hicks (75), offensive lineman Kyle Long (74) and Khalil Mack (60), who had only played only one season with the team at the time of the unveiling of the list. Long would retire the following year.
Justin Fields (2021–2023) Mitchell Trubisky (2017–2020) Jay Cutler, who holds multiple Bears franchise passing records [1] (2009–2016) Kyle Orton started 15 games in 2008 Rex Grossman, who played for the Bears in Super Bowl XLI in 2006 (2003–2008) Jim McMahon, who won the Bears' only Super Bowl in 1985 (1982–1988)
Upon retiring as a player, Luckman remained with the Bears as a vice president. [23] In 1954, he became the team's quarterbacks coach on a part-time basis, a position he held through the 1960s. [24] [25] After departing the NFL, he went to work for Cel-U-Craft, a Chicago-based manufacturer of cellophane products, eventually becoming its ...