Robert Brazile was a new name that many of those odd ducks who follow Canton's proceedings were surprised to hear. The do-everything outside linebacker on Bum Phillips' Oilers teams seemingly came out of nowhere to be nominated -- well, unless you followed his career. The first eight years of Brazile's NFL tenure were special. He made seven Pro Bowls, and despite not being known as just a pass rusher, posted 6.5 sacks in the strike-shortened 1982 campaign that featured all of nine games. Between him, Elvin Bethea and Curley Culp, those "Luv Ya Blue" teams had a helluva front seven. Kinda like what the Lombardi Packers had on the offensive side of the trenches, with Jerry Kramer anchoring the interior portion from right guard. As the author of the most famous block in NFL history, Kramer's name has been screamed from the mouths of every Packers fan over age 50 for the last two decades. No player has been mentioned as a Hall oversight more than the man who wrote "Instant Replay." There is no way Kramer will miss the cut, as voters have been inundated with enough Kramer chatter (Packer Backers complaining) to last a lifetime. Not to mention, he was a fantastic player on pro football's greatest team of all time, the 1962 Green Bay squad.