CANTON, Ohio — The 2026 Pro Football Hall of Fame class left two massive shadows hanging over Canton. Six-time Super Bowl champion head coach Bill Belichick and two-time Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning both missed the cut, sending shockwaves through the NFL. Former New York Giants safety Antrel Rolle didn’t mince words about the committee’s decision, calling the exclusions an outright failure of the process.
Baffled by the Ballot
Rolle, who won Super Bowl XLVI alongside Manning, spoke to Hard Rock Bet and unloaded on the voters. The Eli Manning Hall of Fame snub is dominating the offseason conversation, especially since 2026 marks the quarterback’s second year of eligibility. Missing the cut twice strikes Rolle as completely indefensible.
Manning finished his career with 57,023 passing yards and 366 touchdowns, but his legacy is defined by his postseason heroics. He led the Giants to two improbable Lombardi Trophies, slaying a historic New England Patriots dynasty both times. Anyone who spent a Sunday evening inside a freezing, raucous stadium during the late 2000s understands the sheer gravity Manning commanded in the fourth quarter. He dictated the emotional heartbeat of New York.
“When you talk about Eli Manning, you’re talking about a guy who beat the greatest quarterback ever, Tom Brady, twice in the Super Bowl. That speaks volumes. He had a great career. He can lead his team, and he doesn’t fold under pressure. How did he get snubbed twice? It baffles me.”
— Antrel Rolle, Former NFL Safety
The Greatest to Ever Wear the Headset
The frustration didn’t stop with his former quarterback. Rolle turned his attention to Belichick, who shockingly failed to secure the required 80% of votes in his first year on the ballot. Many expected the architect of the Patriots’ two-decade dynasty to walk into the Hall untouched.
Rolle declared Belichick the absolute best to ever coach in the league. He firmly dismissed the idea that Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid or anyone else will surpass Belichick’s ring count anytime soon. Belichick owns eight total Super Bowl rings—six as a head coach and two as a defensive coordinator. Voters passing on that resume on the first ballot left former players and analysts demanding answers.
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
The voting committee tightened its standards over the last two cycles, but keeping these two icons out creates a massive logistical nightmare for the 2027 ballot. With Drew Brees rightfully headlining the 2026 class, the upcoming ballots will introduce a fresh wave of newly eligible talent, including Ben Roethlisberger and Philip Rivers.
If the committee delays Manning for a third year, they risk a severe bottleneck of 2000s-era quarterbacks. As for Belichick, the refusal to make him a first-ballot lock forces a complete re-evaluation of how coaches are judged. Voters must decide if they are strictly holding out to prevent first-ballot entries, or if they genuinely believe unparalleled Super Bowl mastery requires a waiting period. The subjective nature of the voting process ensures this fierce debate will rage on until the committee finally knocks on their doors.

