He was a first-team All-Pro. He made it to five Pro Bowl in 11 years (1966-76) on teams that never made the playoffs and had a combined record of 50-100-4.

He had major knee surgeries in 1969 and 1971. This came at a time when knee surgery was a relative career death sentence.

“In those days, when you got a knee injury, it wasn’t like it is today,” said Borges, who believes Nobis belongs in the Hall of Fame. “They opened you up with a chainsaw, and it was a miracle if you could ever walk again. You were not going to be the same player, and he was a speed guy. Also, he didn’t have any help.”

Former Falcons owner Taylor Smith, speaking to the Journal-Constitition's Steve Hummer, said of Nobis in 2013, "I never heard him complain one time about anything. Not about the pain. Not about the lack of recognition."

A wrong should be righted. Honor the man. Nobis co-captains the All-Snub Team for Atlanta sports with Dale Murphy.

Ex-Falcons Brett Favre and Deion Sanders are in the Hall of Fame, but they won their Super Bowls for other teams. Claude Humphrey also is in the Hall of Fame. He played nine and a half years in Atlanta, but left the team and then played on three playoff teams in Philadelphia. Kicker Morten Andersen finally made it into the Hall of Fame after a 25-year career. Eight of those seasons came in Atlanta and included an overtime field goal against Minnesota that kicked the Falcons into the Super Bowl.

Nobis never had postseason glory to fall back on and therefore the post-career talking points for others to mold narratives.

That shouldn't prevent somebody from getting into the Hall of Fame. He made the Pro Bowl each of his first three seasons and, as long-time NFL writer Rick Gosselin pointed out for the Talk Of Fame Network, which debates Hall of Fame candidates and includes Borges: "In his second season, the first official year of the AFL-NFL merger in 1967 when the All-Pro team included the talent pool of both leagues, Nobis was voted first-team middle linebacker ahead of Hall of Famers Dick Butkus, Ray Nitschke, Sam Huff, Willie Lanier and Nick Buoniconti."

Checkmate.

Nobis was an inaugural inductee into the Falcons’ Ring of Honor. He has been honored by various Halls, including the College Football Hall of Fame and the Georgia and Texas sports halls. He’s is a member of the NFL’s all-decade team for the 1960s and Sports Illustrated’s All-Century team (1869-1969).

But how many football fans today – even young Falcons’ fans – would recognize his name?

Do they know that he was a Rookie of the Year and in his first pro season he was credited with 296 tackles -- which still stands as the team’s single-season record?

But he didn’t throw passes, or make acrobatic catches, or run for touchdowns. He just leveled everybody who ran in his direction and did it at a time before the proliferation of games on television or social media. Maybe one day the voters of the Hall will recognize that.

Speaking of Hall of Fame snubs: Catch the latest "We Never Played The Game" podcast with Dale Murphy.

Subscribe to the, "We Never Played The Game" on iTunes or on the new AJC sports podcasts page.