Jim Tyrer, who played for the Chiefs franchise from 1961-73, fell short of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in a vote on Thursday, Feb. 6, 2025. As a consensus six-time first-team All-Pro, the left ...
When pro football historians John Turney and Frank Cooney applied a point system based on honors won to rank 60 senior nominees for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2025, former Chiefs left ...
One of the saddest chapters in Kansas City Chiefs history can now be closed, thanks to newly discovered evidence about the 1980 murder-suicide of Jim and Martha Tyrer. Whether Hall of Fame voters will ...
Jim Tyrer had the strongest on-field résumé among 2025 senior candidates. Investigations and experts link Tyrer’s late behavior and death to probable CTE. Author urges Hall of Fame committees to allow ...
Ed Podolak, of the Kansas City Chiefs breaks through the Denver line, cuts to his right and streaks for 65 yards and a touchdown on the second play of the game with the Denver Broncos in Kansas City, ...
Jim Tyrer retired as one of the best offensive linemen in NFL history in 1974. He was on the line as tackle for 14 years, almost all of them but the great Kansas City Chiefs of the 1960s and '70s. He ...
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