The greatest Bears player since their iconic Super Bowl XX team more than three decades ago received the highest NFL honor Saturday when Brian Urlacher was selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Urlacher and the Ravens’ Ray Lewis were the players in the conversation for the best middle linebacker of their era and it is fitting both were voted in on their first ballot and will be enshrined together on Aug. 4 in Canton, Ohio. It’s the first time two middle linebackers will be inducted in the same class.

Wide receivers Randy Moss and Terrell Owens and safety Brian Dawkins were the other three modern-era players elected. Senior committee players Jerry Kramer and Robert Brazile and contributor Bobby Beathard, a longtime Redskins and Chargers general manager, also were selected.

“I didn’t feel any stress up until today,” Urlacher said. “I knew we had two guys getting in for sure — Randy and Ray. It was a long process. You just don’t know what to expect until you go through it I guess. Hearing guys tell stories of what they went through and didn’t get in, that’s what I was thinking about. To get over the hump the first time, it’s pretty awesome. This is a great class.”

Urlacher, 39, becomes the 28th Hall of Famer to represent the Bears for all or the primary portion of their careers, the most in the NFL, and the first since defensive end Richard Dent was inducted in 2011. Urlacher and Lewis bring to 28 the number of modern-era linebackers in the Hall. Five of those 28 were Bears, a nod to the history of the position for the franchise from George Connor to Bill George, Dick Butkus, Mike Singletary and now Urlacher.

“It’s unreal,” Urlacher said. “It’s a great tradition.”

Selected ninth in the first round of the 2000 draft, Urlacher becomes the first Hall of Fame playerfrom the University of New Mexico. He was named NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year and was an established star before coach Lovie Smith arrived in 2004 with a scheme that accentuated Urlacher’s freakish athletic ability for a player with such a large frame — 6-foot-4, 258 pounds. The next year he was named the league’s Defensive Player of the Year, becoming the fifth player to win both awards. The next season, in 2006, Urlacher helped lead the Bears to Super Bowl XLI.

Named to the NFL’s All-Decade Team of the 2000s, Urlacher was selected to the Pro Bowl eight times and was first team All-Pro five times. In 13 seasons, according to pro-football-reference.com, he amassed 1,354 tackles, 41½ sacks, 22 interceptions, two touchdowns, 90 passes defensed, 11 forced fumbles and 15 fumble recoveries.

Personnel boss Mark Hatley made the decision to draft Urlacher, who had played safety in college. The Bears knew they were getting a player who could transform their defense but initially weren’t sure how to deploy him.

“We knew we would like to play him at the mike (middle) linebacker, but the problem was he had been a safety, and we didn’t want to stick him there right away and beat him up and lose him and ruin an excellent prospect,” defensive coordinator Greg Blache said. “We started him off at the sam (strong-side) linebacker position, where everything is coming at you from one direction in the traffic, and we played him at the mike in the nickel situation, where 95 percent of it was passing. So he was getting a feel for it but he wasn’t getting in the heavy traffic with the guards coming on him and combination blocks … because it’s a whole different beast when you’re playing 12 to 15 yards deep as a safety and you move up to 5 yards from the line of scrimmage with the 300-pounders.

“We knew we had something special and we knew he would be a guy who would be a hell of a player for a long, long time if we had some patience and were just judicious in how we approached it. Having (linebackers coach) Dale Lindsey there was a huge help because Dale had developed so many linebackers and he was a great voice in saying he had seen rush jobs when guys were put in situations they weren’t quite ready to handle. It ended up working out really well just because we got him eased into it to the point where he was comfortable seeing it all happen.”

In a career that spanned 13 seasons and 182 regular-season games with the Bears, Brian Urlacher made reels of highlights that could fill a series of specials for NFL Films. (Brad Biggs) (Brad Biggs)

It happened faster than anyone would have imagined, which in retrospect isn’t surprising to anyone who was involved. Lindsey marveled at the amount of information Urlacher could process and then apply on the field. A lot of players, even really good ones, can lose the fine details when they move from the meeting room to the practice field and then into games, but Urlacher absorbed it all.

When middle linebacker Barry Minter was sidelined with a back injury in the third week of the 2000 season, the Bears moved Urlacher. They never again discussed where he was best suited to play or what he could handle.

“(Head coach) Dick Jauron said, ‘Put him at the middle,’ ” Lindsey said. “Dick could see the big picture. Luckily for us, Brian was more than willing to learn the new position. It’s nice when you have rare talent and a guy who wants to do it. That’s the difference between the real great players — they want to do it and they’ll do anything to be successful. He was like a sponge. You just kept giving him information and he absorbed it and would want more. The thing about the guys with the rare talent: They can do any damn thing you ask them. You can ask them the impossible and they can get it done. And Brian did it for us as a great middle linebacker.”

When the Bears signed massive defensive tackles Ted Washington and Keith Traylor in 2001, Urlacher raised his game to a new level as the duo kept offensive linemen off of him and allowed him to make plays with his remarkable speed.

“There are a lot of guys who can run fast in a straight line, but the athleticism he showed for a guy that size, off the charts,” Blache said.