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Former Panther Luke Kuechly has made the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Scott Fowler, The Charlotte Observer on

Published in Football

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Carolina Panthers legend Luke Kuechly earned the highest honor of his starry NFL career Thursday night, making the Pro Football Hall of Fame as part of the Class of 2026.

The announcement came Thursday night at the NFL Honors show in San Francisco. Kuechly, elected on his second attempt, will be joined in the five-man class by quarterback Drew Brees, wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald, kicker Adam Vinatieri and running back Roger Craig. Kuechly becomes the first Hall of Famer to have played his entire career with the Panthers, where he was a linebacker from 2012-19.

Kuechly’s career was cut short at age 28, due to injury complications. Now 34, he did so much in such a relatively short time on the field that he will become the second-youngest football player ever inducted into the Hall of Fame. Only former Chicago Bears running back Gale Sayers was younger.

The Charlotte Observer spoke with Kuechly about the possibility of this honor earlier this week, and he was quick to credit his teammates and coaches.

“It’s an individual accomplishment, yes,” Kuechly said of the idea of making the Hall of Fame. “But football is the ultimate team game. And I think it would just really highlight that group of guys from that period when we had a ton of success. That, to me, is the coolest part.”

Kuechly went on to mention the people who drafted him No. 9 overall out of Boston College in 2012 — coach Ron Rivera, general manager Marty Hurney and team founder Jerry Richardson among them — as well as defensive coordinator Sean McDermott for building a defense that “really highlighted linebackers.”

“I had so much fun playing for the Panthers,” said Kuechly, who now broadcasts Carolina games as an analyst on the team’s radio network. “I grew so much as a person…. I hope this will also highlight the team that gave me the opportunity to go do it.”

Dave Tepper, the Panthers’ current owner, was in the crowd at the event. Several of Kuechly’s former Carolina teammates also planned to celebrate with him later in the evening.

 

While Kuechly will get a gold jacket signifying his induction, former N.C. State star Torry Holt was once again a finalist who didn’t make the cut. Holt, a wide receiver whose NFL statistics are comparable to several men already in the Hall of Fame, has been eligible for 12 years and a top-15 modern-era finalist seven times.

Also notably missing in the Class of 2026 was Bill Belichick, the current UNC coach who was thought by many to be a sure first-ballot Hall of Famer due to his six Super Bowl wins as a head coach in New England. Instead, Belichick will have to wait at least another year after falling short in voting as previously reported by ESPN (coaches, along with other senior players and contributors, are voted on in a separate category). Quarterback Eli Manning also was a top-15 finalist who lost in the voting, which is conducted by a panel of 50 voters — most of them media members who have covered the NFL for many years.

Kuechly’s honor came only a few minutes after Tetairoa McMillan was named the AP’s Offensive Rookie of the Year at the same NFL Honors award show.

In eight NFL seasons, Kuechly was named All-Pro seven times, AP Defensive Rookie of the Year once, AP Defensive Player of the Year once and won the league’s best sportsmanship award once. You could argue that he was the best inside linebacker in the NFL every single year he played. Even today, his pre-snap diagnoses of what the opposing quarterback was trying to do are cited around the NFL as the gold standard in preparation.

Kuechly never won a Super Bowl — coming closest in 2015, when the Panthers made the big game but lost, 24-10, to Denver. In retirement, Kuechly has continued to live in Charlotte and each year helps former teammates Greg Olsen and Jonathan Stewart coach the Charlotte Christian middle-school football team.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026 will be inducted in early August in Canton, Ohio, which is where the hall is located.


©2026 The Charlotte Observer. Visit charlotteobserver.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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