University of Oklahoma Athletics

2025 CFB Hall of Fame Ballot Graphic

Calmus, Cumby, Heupel Make 2025 College Hall of Fame Ballot

June 03, 2024 | Football

NORMAN — The National Football Foundation (NFF) and College Hall of Fame announced the 2025 ballot for induction into the College Football Hall of Fame on Monday and former University of Oklahoma standouts Rocky Calmus, George Cumby and Josh Heupel earned spots among the 77 players listed from the Football Bowl Subdivision. This marks first time for Cumby to appear on the ballot, while Calmus and Heupel are repeat honorees.
 
The ballot was emailed Monday to the more than 12,000 NFF members and current Hall of Famers whose votes will be tabulated and submitted to the NFF's Honors Court, which will deliberate and select the class. The Honors Court, chaired by NFF Board Member and College Football Hall of Famer Archie Griffin from Ohio State, includes an elite and geographically diverse pool of athletics administrators, Hall of Famers and members of the media.
 
"It's an enormous honor to just be on the College Football Hall of Fame ballot considering more than 5.7 million people have played college football and only 1,093 players have been inducted," said NFF President & CEO Steve Hatchell. "The Hall's requirement of being a first-team All-American creates a much smaller pool of about 1,500 individuals who are even eligible. Being in today's elite group means an individual is truly among the greatest to have ever played the game, and we look forward to announcing the 2025 College Football Hall of Fame Class early next year."
 
The 2025 College Football Hall of Fame Class will be officially inducted during the 67th NFF Annual Awards Dinner on Dec. 9, 2025, in Las Vegas. They will also be honored at their respective schools with an NFF Hall of Fame On-Campus Salute, presented by Fidelity Investments, during the 2025 season.
 
Former Sooners defensive lineman Dewey Selmon (1972-75) will be inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as part of the 2024 class in December. He will become OU's 24th former player in the College Hall of Fame and fifth straight defender (defensive backs Roy Williams in 2024 and Rickey Dixon in 2019, and linebackers Brian Bosworth in 2015 and Rod Shoate in 2013).

Rocky Calmus web

Rocky Calmus | Linebacker | 1998-2001

One of the nation's top defenders during the Sooners' return to prominence at the beginning of head coach Bob Stoops' tenure, Rocky Calmus defined his position.
 
The linebacker burst onto the scene in 1999, Stoops' first year, when he registered 114 tackles and 14 tackles for loss as a sophomore to help lead OU to its first bowl game since 1994. In 2000, Calmus registered career highs of 125 tackles and 17 TFLs en route to AP Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year and first-team All-America honors, as the Sooners went 13-0 and captured their seventh national title. He was also dubbed the toughest player in college football by The Sporting News that season.
 
The Tulsa native won the Butkus Award as the nation's top linebacker as a senior in 2001 and was a finalist for the Nagurski and Bednarik Awards (given to the nation's best defender) and the Lombardi Award (country's top interior player). A consensus All-American for the second consecutive year, he paced the team in tackles (117) for the third straight season and added 15 more TFLs.
 
Calmus finished his career ranked fourth in school history with 431 tackles and still holds career program records for tackles for loss (59), sacks by an inside linebacker (14.0), pass breakups by a linebacker (26; next most is 16) and fumble recoveries by a linebacker (seven). He also logged three interceptions (returned two for touchdowns), 29 quarterback hurries, five forced fumbles and three blocked kicks. His 44 career starts were consecutive and rank as the second most by a linebacker in school history.

George Cumby

George Cumby | Linebacker | 1975-1979

An all-time great Oklahoma defender, George Cumby personified the linebacker position with his speed, relentless drive and sure-fire tackling ability.

Cumby spent his first two seasons at OU as a running back (and part-time kick returner) in the Sooners' vaunted 'Wishbone' attack, rushing for a touchdown as a fullback in a 41-7 Fiesta Bowl win over Wyoming as a redshirt freshman to cap the 1976 season. In a move that proved wildly successful, he converted to linebacker ahead of the 1977 campaign. All Cumby did his final three years is earn three first-team All-Big Eight honors, be named 1977 Big Eight Defensive Newcomer of the Year and 1978 and '79 Big Eight Defensive Player of the Year. He was a 1977 first-team All-American by the Associated Press and a unanimous All-American in 1979.

A product of Tyler, Texas, he finished his career ranked second in OU history with 437 tackles despite only playing defense his final three seasons. His five interceptions in 1978 are tied for the most by an Oklahoma linebacker in a season, and his five career fumble recoveries ranked as second most by a Sooner linebacker at the time. He led OU with 160 tackles in 1979 (fourth most in program history), had 154 in 1977 and 123 in 1978. He became only the third OU linebacker to record at least 100 tackles in three separate seasons, joining Rod Shoate and Daryl Hunt. 

Cumby, who was described by then-head coach Barry Switzer as "the only person I know who could go one-on-one with (Texas running back) Earl Campbell and knock him backwards," helped OU to a 32-4 record as a starter (20-1 in the Big Eight) and to four Big Eight titles. With Cumby playing, the Sooners finished No. 5 in the AP poll in 1976, No. 7 in 1977 and No. 3 in 1978 and '79. A 1980 first-round NFL Draft pick by Green Bay, he went on to play eight years in the NFL with the Packers, Buffalo Bills and Philadelphia Eagles, earning second-team All-Pro honors in 1982.

Josh Heupel

Josh Heupel | Quarterback | 1999-2000

The runner-up for the 2000 Heisman Trophy, Josh Heupel became Oklahoma's first consensus All-America quarterback and the first Sooners signal-caller to earn All-America honors since Jack Mildren in 1971.

A junior college transfer, Heupel was one of Bob Stoops' first OU recruits and is largely credited with turning an offense that statistically ranked as one of the worst in the nation before his arrival into one of the country's most explosive.

After helping OU to a 7-5 record in his debut year, Heupel led the Sooners to a 13-0 campaign in 2000 (their first 13-win season in history) and a national championship. He was named Associated Press Player of the Year, Walter Camp Player of the Year, The Sporting News Player of the Year, CBS Sports Player of the Year and Big 12 Player of the Year that season.

Heupel, from Aberdeen, S.D., passed for 7,456 yards and 53 touchdowns in his two seasons at OU, and still ranks in the top five in school history in career passing yards (fifth), career completions (654; third) and career passing attempts (1,025; third), and ranks sixth in career touchdown passes (53) despite playing only two seasons. He threw for at least 300 yards in 14 of his 25 career contests, and left OU holding virtually every school and numerous Big 12 passing records.

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