Packers Hall of Fame 2016 To Induct 3.

CaptainD

Founding Member
Lifetime Member
Founder
2024 Draft Guru
Messages
3,929
Reaction score
2,143
The Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame Inc. announced today that it will induct former Packers players Chad Clifton and Nick Collins, and former broadcaster Russ Winnie at the 46th Hall of Fame Induction Banquet, to be held Saturday, July 23, 2016, in the Lambeau Field Atrium.

Chad Clifton, selected in the second round of the 2000 NFL Draft, appeared in 165 games with 160 starts during his 12-year career in Green Bay. He ranks No. 2 in franchise history for most games played by an offensive tackle behind only Forrest Gregg (187 games). In 2004, Clifton helped limit the opposition to a franchise-low 14 sacks, as the Packers did not allow a sack in eight games, another single-season club record. Clifton was selected to the Pro Bowl twice during his career (2007 and 2010) and blocked for five of the top eight single-season rushers in franchise history (Ahman Green, 2001-03; Ryan Grant, 2008-09). He played on eight playoff teams in Green Bay, highlighted by the 2010 squad that won Super Bowl XLV.

Nick Collins, a second-round draft pick out of Bethune-Cookman in 2005, played seven seasons (2005-11) for the Packers. The talented, athletic defender became one of the top playmakers in the league at the safety position and racked up 21 interceptions among 83 passes defensed in his career. Collins was a three-time Pro Bowl selection (2008-10), and became the first Packers safety since LeRoy Butler (1996-98) to earn the honor in three consecutive seasons. His electrifying interception return for a touchdown in Super Bowl XLV staked the Packers to a 14-0 lead in the eventual 31-25 triumph.

Russ Winnie was the radio voice of the Green Bay Packers for 18 years and one of the people most responsible for building their statewide and rabid fan base. He broadcast Packers games from 1929 through 1946, in the years before television and when the team won six NFL championships under Curly Lambeau, and broadcast University of Wisconsin football for 16 of those years. When Winnie retired from announcing to concentrate on his position as station manager of WTMJ in Milwaukee, he was widely respected as one of the best sportscasters in the Midwest, if not the country. Legendary radio voice Ted Husing, the first national sportscaster hired by CBS, once called Winnie "the man who has broadcast more sports events than any other man in America." Like so many others, former Packers historian Lee Remmel became a fan of the team as a youngster in Shawano, Wis., at least partly because of Winnie. “I grew up with Russ Winnie," Remmel once said. "I liked his dramatic style. He had an excellent vocabulary and expressed himself very well." A native of Racine, Wis., Winnie died in 1956 at age 49.

Read more: http://www.packers.com/news-and-eve...d13-364b-482b-b88e-73283a367dc7#ixzz441ueAYdH
 
Back
Top