Moss was as uncoverable as Owens, with a dash of scare-the-crap-out-of-defensive-coordinators on the side. I'm not sure any wideout before or since Moss -- and yes, that includes Megatron -- has been feared as much. Moss scored twice in his first game as a pro, then added a bundle more to set a rookie record with 17. He tallied 90 -- 90! -- during his first seven years in the league. Consider that Don Maynard, Andre Reed, Lance Alworth, Paul Warfield, Art Monk and Michael Irvin are part of a large group of Hall of Fame wide receivers who didn't have that many over their entire careers. Moss is third in receiving yards, behind only Rice and Owens, with 15,292. So why do some voters and analysts I've spoken with think Moss will wait? Being a distraction to his team, a la T.O., albeit in a different fashion. Moss' biggest infraction was a perceived lack of effort -- taking a few plays off. The issue here, and why I would vote Moss in, is that even if he was loafing a few plays per game, DC's constantly had to account for him. You might not like that reasoning, but consider how much making every defensive back nervous (seeing as how they didn't know when he was going to burn rubber or tread water) opened up opportunities for his teammates. The scariest receiver this side of Bob Hayes should join Hayes in the Hall without having to wait 30 years (like Hayes).