CLEVELAND — Randy Moss and Larry Fitzgerald were among 19 players and three coaches in the College Football Hall of Fame class announced Monday.
Warrick Dunn of Florida State, Toby Gerhart of Stanford, Julius Peppers of North Carolina and Danny Woodhead of Chadron State also were elected to the Atlanta-based hall by the National Football Foundation.
Coaches elected were Frank Solich of Nebraska and Ohio, Mark Dantonio of Cincinnati and Michigan State and Danny Hale of Division II West Chester and Bloomsburg.
Solich grew up in Greater Cleveland and went to Holy Name High School in Parma Heights, earning All-America honors while playing football for the Green Wave. He replaced the legendary Tom Osborne as head coach at his alma mater Nebraska, but was fired in 2003 despite an impressive 58-19 record and three top 10 finishes over six seasons. The Cornhuskers program has not returned to elite status since.
Two years after leaving Lincoln, Solich arrived in Athens and stayed from 2005-2020, guiding the Bobcats to a 115-82 clip along with four appearances in the Mid-American Conference Championship game. While he never won a MAC title, his win total is the most for any coach in league history, giving him a career mark of 173-101 with an overall winning percentage of .631.
Moss, inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2018, highlights the class and was one of college football's most electric performers in his two seasons at Marshall. He was an All-American as both a receiver and return man. He caught 174 passes for 3,529 yards and 54 touchdowns in his career and was the 1997 Biletnikoff Award winner. His 26 touchdown receptions that season were a Bowl Subdivision record. He played for five teams over 14 NFL seasons and was the league's leading receiver five times.
Fitzgerald was the 2003 Heisman Trophy runner-up and Biletnikoff Award winner while playing for Pittsburgh, where he totaled 161 catches for 2,677 yards and a school-record 34 touchdowns over his two seasons. He caught a touchdown in 18 consecutive games to set an NCAA record. He was the third overall pick in the 2004 NFL draft and 11-time Pro Bowl selection in 17 years with the Arizona Cardinals.
Dunn, who led Florida State to the 1993 national title, became the first Seminoles player to rush for 1,000 yards in three straight seasons. He finished his career in 1995 as the school's all-time leader in career touchdowns, all-purpose yards and rushing yards.
The hard-running Gerhart won the 2009 Doak Walker Award at Stanford and was the Heisman Trophy runner-up. Gerhart ran for 1,871 yards and 28 touchdowns to lead the nation in his senior year.
Peppers, who played at UNC, won the 2001 Bednarik and Lombardi awards. In 2000, he led the nation with 15 sacks and a school-record 24 tackles for loss. He was the second overall pick in the 2002 NFL draft and was a first-team All-Pro and nine-time Pro Bowl pick over 17 seasons with three teams.
Woodhead played at Division II Chadron State in Nebraska from 2004-07 and finished his career as college football's all-time rushing leader for all divisions with 7,962 yards. He twice won the Harlon Hill Trophy as the top DII player. Woodhead signed with the New York Jets as an undrafted free agent in 2008 and spent 10 years in the NFL with four teams.
The rest of the 2024 class includes Justin Blackmon of Oklahoma State, Paul Cameron of UCLA, Tim Couch of Kentucky, Armanti Edwards of Appalachian State, Deon Figures of Colorado, Dan Hampton of Arkansas, Steve Hutchinson of Michigan, Antonio Langham of Alabama, Paul Posluszny of Penn State, Dewey Selmon of Oklahoma, Alex Smith of Utah, Kevin Smith of Texas A&M and Chris Ward of Ohio State.
Ward was a three-year starter at OSU under Woody Hayes and earned All-Big Ten honors each of those years from 1975-77, including first-team All-America selections as a junior and senior. The offensive tackle blocked for Buckeye stars like Archie Griffin, Jeff Logan, and Ron Springs before enjoying a seven-year career in the NFL, and was also the son-in-law of late Cleveland Browns icon Jim Brown.
Speaking of the Browns, Langham played cornerback for Cleveland from 1994-95 prior to the team's move to Baltimore, helping Bill Belichick's No. 1 scoring defense to a playoff victory as a rookie. Additionally, Couch was the team's No. 1 overall draft pick upon its return to the league in 1999 and started the bulk of the next five seasons at quarterback, while Edwards was a record-setting QB for App State before becoming a kick returner in the pros, including two games for the Browns in 2013.
The class will be inducted during the NFF's awards dinner in Las Vegas in December.