Bill Belichick won six Super Bowls as a head coach, two more as an assistant and is considered by some to be the greatest coach in football history. Even those who disagree cannot in good faith contend that he’s not the most accomplished coach in the history of the game.
On Tuesday, news broke that that résumé is not good enough to earn Belichick induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame on his first ballot.
This is according to ESPN, which reported that Belichick fell short of the 40-vote threshold (out of a possible 50) required for induction to the Hall. Per the report, Belichick received the bad news directly from the Hall on Friday.
‘Don’t even understand how this could be possible’
Belichick has not responded to the news in public, but proclaimed “Six Super Bowls isn’t enough?” when he heard of the news, according to the report. And he had plenty of high-profile support in his corner on Tuesday with reactions from peers and rivals ranging from dismay, outrage and shock that Belichick didn’t make the Hall of his first ballot.
Patrick Mahomes, whose Kansas City Chiefs were Belichick’s biggest rival at the end of his New England Patriots tenure, called the news “insane.”
Insane… don’t even understand how this could be possible https://t.co/EiKUeRPffn
— Patrick Mahomes II (@PatrickMahomes) January 27, 2026
Retired 3-time Defensive Player of the Year and future Hall of Famer JJ Watt couldn’t believe his eyes.
I can’t be reading this right.
This has to be some knock-off Hall of Fame or something, it can’t be the actual NFL Hall of Fame.
There is not a single world whatsoever in which Bill Belichick should not be a First-Ballot Hall of Famer. https://t.co/OXhL1Sd4FM
— JJ Watt (@JJWatt) January 27, 2026
Ryan Clark, who played for New England’s rival Pittsburgh Steelers during Belichick’s reign, wrote that the decision disqualifies any future coach from entering the Hall on his first ballot.
Bill Belichick not being a first ballot Hall of Famer means that no coach should ever be. It means that the voters have decided there isn’t a coaching resume that warrants First Ballot consideration!
He is the GREATEST, most ACCOMPLISHED coach of all time! This is egregious!
— Ryan Clark (@Realrclark25) January 27, 2026
Other players, NFL executives and a longtime Hall of Fame voter were among the others to express their dismay at the news.
Sometimes I scratch my head when a candidate gets in the HOF, this time I’m scratching my head on how an HOF candidate didn get in… https://t.co/KKqDlDvtXz
— Cam Jordan (@camjordan94) January 27, 2026
Text from an NFL executive: “The 10+ people that didn’t vote for BB should be exposed. WTF. This is crazy.” https://t.co/aJDBvaNSGF
— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) January 27, 2026
An appropriate fraction from my pal @peter_king, tbh https://t.co/4AVZUL5YMHpic.twitter.com/kqOU6BGGXD
— Myles Simmons (@MylesASimmons) January 27, 2026
In case you have trouble reading the above tweet, that’s venerated NFL reporter and 32-year Hall of Fame voter Peter King responding to the ESPN report:
“Holy f***! … I’m very, very surprised,” King said, per ESPN.
Hall of Fame voter Mike Sando wrote that he considered Belichick to be a “slam-dunk” candidate, but offered an explanation of newly enacted voting rules that may or may not have impacted Belichick’s first-ballot candidacy.
I’m a HOF voter who saw Belichick as slam-dunk. I don’t know anything about voting results, but if this is true, and we’ll find out officially next week, the question is, how could this happen?
Before I list possibilities, understand this:
Belichick, Kraft, Craig, Anderson &… https://t.co/V8okBDsReH
— Mike Sando (@SandoNFL) January 27, 2026
Regardless, people wanted to know as soon as the news broke who didn’t vote for Belichick. And why? Who did and didn’t vote for Belichick was not clear from the report.
As for the why? It’s not like coaches don’t make it on the their first ballot. It’s rare, but Tom Landry, Don Shula and Chuck Noll all made it on their first ballot in classes that weren’t the Hall’s inaugural. Belichick certainly stands alongside and arguably above those coaches in the annals of NFL history.
Did scandals cost Belichick?
During and since his tenure with the Patriots, Belichick has generated his share of unflattering headlines. His name is tied to a pair of scandals — Spygate and Deflategate — whose respective egregiousness depends on the eyes of the beholder.
Per ESPN, this was enough to compel former rival executive Bill Polian (Indianapolis Colts, Buffalo Bills) to launch a campaign among voters that Belichick should “wait a year.” Polian is a Hall of Fame voter.
Belichick’s post-Patriots tenure as the head coach of North Carolina can be aptly described as embarrassing on multiple levels. But again, the guy won eight total Super Bowls, and this is the Pro Football Hall of Fame. His UNC tenure is not relevant here.
Until and unless voters explain themselves, the reason for Belichick’s snub will remain a mystery.