The Minnesota Vikings announced on Tuesday that former defensive lineman Jim Marshall died at 87 following a lengthy hospitalization.
The #Vikings family mourns the loss of Legend Jim Marshall.
— Minnesota Vikings (@Vikings) June 3, 2025
Marshall set the standard for what it meant to be a Minnesota Viking, starting 270 consecutive games, appearing in 4 Super Bowls and serving as team captain for 14 consecutive seasons. https://t.co/o2avKghyWG pic.twitter.com/XOU4etfuWI
On the list of all-time great Vikings players, Marshall should always be near the top of the list.
He was one of the leading players on their famed "Purple People Eaters" defense of the 1970s and was a constant disruptive force throughout his 20-year career (19 with the Vikings).
Marshall's career was so impressive that it's surprising he has not yet been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Just a few of his notable accomplishments include:
Of the top-50 players in PFR's Approximate Value, 37 of them are already in the Hall of Fame. Of the 13 players in that group who are not in, five of them are active in the NFL, and five more are retired but not yet eligible for induction.
The only eligible players out of that group that are not currently inducted are Marshall, former New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning and former Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Ken Anderson.
Along with all of those numbers, his 30 career fumble recoveries are the second-most among defensive players in NFL history, trailing only Rod Woodson.
Those 30 fumble recoveries also happen to include the one player that has unfairly defined Marshall's legacy — A 1964 play against the San Francisco 49ers when he recovered a fumble and ran 66 yards the wrong direction, and then threw the football away after thinking he had scored a touchdown. The play resulted in a safety and two points for the 49ers.
In 1964, Jim Marshall of the Vikings recovered a @49ers fumble, and literally ran 60 yards the wrong way. ♂️#SFvsMIN pic.twitter.com/gvOB3Y8KFa
— NFL Legacy (@NFLLegacy) September 7, 2018
For fans who did not follow the Vikings, that was the play for which Marshall was most commonly known.
Not the 130 sacks.
Not the 270 consecutive games or the unmatched durability.
Not the fact that his overall career stacks up with the NFL's all-time greats.
Not even the fact that the Vikings still won that game against the 49ers, due in large part to a fumble later in the game that Marshall himself had forced.
His wrong-way run is a part of his story, and it is one of the more unforgettable and noteworthy plays in NFL history. It should be talked about.
However, it shouldn't be discussed merely as a random blooper or mental gaffe.
It should be talked about in the context of how professional sports are, largely, games of mistakes.
It should be taught that those mistakes do not define players, but rather how they respond to and learn from them.
In Marshall's case, he bounced back by helping to win the game and putting together a Hall of Fame-worthy career, regardless of whether the Hall of Fame voting committee agrees with that assessment or not.
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