Former Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Buddy Parker is one of the nine coaching candidate semifinalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026.
Parker was the Steelers’ head coach from 1957-1964, compiling a 51-47-6 record, but failing to reach the postseason in his eight seasons. He had greater success earlier in his career, as both a player and a coach.
The others coaching candidates that are finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026 are Bill Belichick, Tom Coughlin, Mike Holmgren, Chuck Knox, Buddy Parker, Dan Reeves, Marty Schottenheimer, George Seifert and Mike Shanahan.
Born Raymond Parker on Dec. 16, 1913 in Slaton, Texas near Lubbock, Parker grew up in Kemp, Texas, southeast of Dallas. After graduating from Kemp High School, Parker matriculated to North Texas State, where he spent one season in 1931, and then to Centenary College of Louisiana in Shreveport for three seasons.
He won an NFL title as a fullback, linebacker and defensive back with the Detroit Lions as a rookie in 1935. His playing career ended in 1943, and he got started in coaching in 1949 with a one-year stint as co-coach of the Chicago Cardinals.
Parker had his greatest coach success back with the Lions from 1951-56, when he went 47-23-2 in six seasons, wining two NFL titles and playing in a third championship game. Parker is one of two former NFL coaches to win multiple championships and not be enshrined in Canton, Ohio. Parker retired from football after being fired by the Steelers in 1964 and work in real estate later in life. Parker in 1982 after following complications from surgery.
Parker is one of five former head coaches with multiple NFL titles that are eligible for Hall of Fame selection that have not been chosen, along with Lou Saban, George Seifert, Tom Coughlin and Mike Shanahan. He is one of 43 NFL coaches to win 100 games.
This is the seventh straight year that he’s been nominated for selection as a coaching finalist or semifinalist.
The blue ribbon committee will select one of the nine semifinalists as the coaching finalist this year when they meet on Nov. 18. The Hall of Fame Class of 2026 will contain between four and eight enshrinees, with one coach, one contributor, three seniors and five modern-era players eligible for selection as finalists.
Chirs Ward contributed reporting for this story.
This article originally appeared on Steelers Now: Former Steelers Coach Advances in Hall of Fame Voting