The Chicago Bears and Houston Texans will face off in the 2024 Pro Football Hall of Fame Game at 8 p.m. ET on Thursday, Aug. 1, and it will be televised on ESPN, ABC and ESPN Deportes.

The game kicks off Enshrinement Week in Canton, Ohio, where seven players will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Read more about each Hall of Fame inductee below.

Dwight Freeney, defensive end

Indianapolis Colts, 2002-12; San Diego Chargers, 2013-14; Arizona Cardinals, 2015; Atlanta Falcons, 2016; Detroit Lions, 2017; Seattle Seahawks, 2017

Though some initially questioned whether Freeney was too short (6-foot-1) to play defensive end, he was a seven-time Pro Bowl selection as well as a three-time first-team All Pro during his 11 years with the Colts. Freeney was the No. 11 pick of the 2002 draft and made an immediate impact for the Colts (13 sacks as a rookie and a second-place finish in Defensive Rookie of the Year voting) on the way to being one of the most consistent, impactful pass rushers of the Super Bowl era.

Freeney, an all-decade selection for the 2000s, finished 18th in career sacks (it officially became a statistic in 1982) with 125.5. His spin move was routinely cited by opposing linemen as one of the most difficult pass-rush moves to deal with against any player. He had 47 forced fumbles, including a staggering league-leading nine as a rookie. Freeney had seven seasons with at least 10 sacks, and he forced at least four fumbles in eight seasons.


Randy Gradishar, linebacker

Denver Broncos, 1974-83

Gradishar is the first player from the fabled Orange Crush defense who will have a bust in Canton. In an era featuring Pittsburgh’s Steel Curtain, Dallas’ Doomsday and Minnesota’s Purple People Eaters, Gradishar anchored the Broncos’ storied group. Over the course of Gradishar’s career, the Broncos were in the top 10 in rushing defense, pass defense, total defense, scoring defense and interceptions. From 1977 to 1981, the Broncos were first in fewest yards allowed as well as fewest passing touchdowns allowed.

Gradishar, credited with a franchise-record 2,049 tackles, may have been the most decorated player in the Hall’s seniors pool. He never missed a game and was named to seven Pro Bowls and was a first- or second-team All Pro selection four times. He was the first inside linebacker in a 3-4 defense to finish in the top three in voting for Defensive Player of the Year (1977) and the first to win DPOY (1978).


Devin Hester, wide receiver, kick returner, punt returner

Chicago Bears, 2006-13; Atlanta Falcons, 2014-15; Baltimore Ravens, 2016; Seattle Seahawks, 2016

Hester’s 19 career regular-season touchdown returns (14 punt, five kickoff) are a league record, and he returned the opening kickoff of Super Bowl XLI for a touchdown. That was despite the fact that most opponents tried to keep the ball away from him after he brought three punts and two kickoffs back for touchdowns in his rookie season. Hester was a rare selection to two all-decade teams (the 2000s and 2010s) and was selected as one of the returners for the NFL’s all-century team as part of the league’s 100th anniversary.

Many personnel executives, former opponents and teammates consider him the best returner to have ever played. Before kickoffs were made from the 35-yard line, teams often elected to send kickoffs out of bounds — giving the Bears the ball at the 40-yard line — rather than put it in Hester’s hands. He once returned a kickoff for a touchdown when Chicago had the hands team on the field instead of the usual allotment of blockers. He is the only player in history with at least five special teams touchdowns in a season — and he did it twice. He is also the only returner to ever lead the league in both kickoff and punt return yards twice. At age 34, in the final game of his career, he had a career high in postseason kickoff return yards (194).


Andre Johnson, wide receiver

Houston Texans, 2003-14; Indianapolis Colts, 2015; Tennessee Titans, 2016

Johnson’s combination of size, strength, speed and fearlessness made him the rarest of receivers. Before the 2003 draft, a 6-foot-2, 230-pound Johnson ran a 4.41 40-yard dash at the University of Miami’s pro day, with a 41-inch vertical jump. It was just a preview of the seven-time Pro Bowler’s career, which included 14,185 receiving yards and 70 receiving touchdowns. He played 12 of his 14 NFL seasons with the expansion Texans, who drafted him at No. 3.

Johnson led the league twice both in receptions and receiving yards. He had 21 games in his career with at least 10 receptions and at least 100 yards receiving — the most all time — and his eight career games with at least 10 receptions, 150 yards receiving and one touchdown are also a league record. Johnson and Hall of Famer Jerry Rice are also the only players to have multiple 1,400-yard seasons after age 30.


Steve McMichael, defensive tackle

New England Patriots, 1980; Chicago Bears, 1981-93; Green Bay Packers, 1994

McMichael, who has ALS, didn’t break out onto the NFL scene as some do on their way to Canton. He was released by the Patriots after a back injury that limited him to six games as a rookie. He didn’t play all 16 games in a season until his fourth year while with the Bears. But that’s where he carved out a gold-jacket career as part of one of the best defenses in league history. From 1983 to 1993, McMichael was a foundational player who became one of the best interior pass rushers, with 95 career sacks.

McMichael had seven seasons with at least eight sacks. There are just four defensive tackles (since sacks became an official statistic) to have more seasons with at least eight: Hall of Famers John Randle, Alan Page and Alex Karras, along with recently retired Rams defensive tackle Aaron Donald. In the 11-year span McMichael was a starting defensive tackle for the Bears, Chicago allowed the second-fewest rushing yards and led the league in sacks. He had 53 sacks in a six-season span (1983-1988) when the Bears’ defense was at its peak. He was named first-team All Pro twice and second-team once, and he was selected to two Pro Bowls in those six years.


Julius Peppers, defensive end

Carolina Panthers, 2002-09, 2017-18; Chicago Bears, 2010-13; Green Bay Packers, 2014-16

At 6-foot-6¼ and 283 pounds at the 2002 NFL scouting combine, Peppers intrigued talent evaluators as a potential pass rusher given his résumé at North Carolina. But he also had played 56 games over two seasons for the Tar Heels’ basketball team, averaging 5.7 points and 3.7 rebounds per game. That propelled Peppers to a career as one of the league’s best all-time pass rushers. He is fourth on the official sack list with 159.5, one of four players on the list who finished his career with more than 155. He also scored six career touchdowns: four interception returns and two fumble returns.

Only Jim Marshall and Hall of Famer Bruce Smith played more games at defensive end than Peppers’ 266. Though he never led the league in sacks in a season, he finished with at least 10 sacks 10 times in 17 seasons and had at least 12 sacks three times. He also had 11 career interceptions, forced 52 fumbles and knocked down 82 passes. At age 38, he finished the 2018 season with five sacks and knocked down six passes. He was a nine-time Pro Bowl selection, a three-time first-team All Pro and named to the all-decade team for the 2000s.


Patrick Willis, linebacker

San Francisco 49ers, 2007-14

Willis packed more quality into an eight-year career than almost any player could have. He retired, much like Hall of Famer Jack Lambert, because of a painful toe injury that wouldn’t heal and severely hampered his mobility. He played in six games his final season, had surgery and retired the following spring. But seven Pro Bowl selections as well as five first-team All Pro selections give him the rarest of résumés. He was also selected to the all-decade team of the 2010s despite playing in only half of the decade considered.

Willis was elite as soon as he set foot on an NFL field. He led the league in tackles his rookie season with 174 and was the Defensive Rookie of the Year, a first-team All Pro and a Pro Bowl selection. He was the first rookie inside linebacker named first-team All Pro since Dick Butkus. He led the league in tackles again in 2009, had six 100-tackle seasons and five 120-tackle seasons in the middle of the 49ers’ defense. In his eight seasons, he led the league in solo tackles over that period, as well as tying for the league lead in forced fumbles and finishing second in passes knocked down.

Source: www.espn.com