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After 30 Years of Waiting, 49ers Legend Roger Craig Is Closer Than Ever to the Gold Jacket

Canton just called Roger Craig’s name again, and this time he’s only one vote away from immortality.

The San Francisco 49ers’ legendary running back has officially advanced to the final five Seniors candidates for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2026, alongside Ken Anderson, L.C. Greenwood, Bill Belichick, and Robert Kraft. A 50-person committee will vote before Super Bowl LX: a candidate needs at least 80% approval, with a maximum of three inductees allowed. In other words, Craig doesn’t just need to be liked; he needs to be one of the three most beloved names on the list.

Craig literally rewrote what a modern running back could be. In 1985 he became the first player in NFL history to record 1,000 yards rushing and 1,000 yards receiving in the same season (1,050 rushing + 1,016 receiving). Three years later he one-upped himself: 1,502 rushing yards and 2,036 total yards from scrimmage, a number that still ranks top-10 all-time for a running back. He delivered three Super Bowl rings (XIX, XXIII, XXIV), four Pro Bowls, one First-Team All-Pro nod, and remains the only RB to score a touchdown in all three Super Bowls he played in.

His playoff résumé is jaw-dropping: 18 games, 841 rushing yards, 606 receiving yards, nearly 80 yards from scrimmage per postseason contest. Yet ever since he hung up his cleats in 1993, the gold jacket has quietly passed him by.

Now everything has changed. One more vote and Roger Craig will stand alongside Montana, Rice, Lott, and Young in Canton forever. For the millions of Faithful who have waited three decades, this isn’t just individual recognition; it’s correcting a 30-year injustice.

Thirty years is too long for the man who rewrote the record book.  
But if justice finally prevails, summer 2026 will echo with the words every 49ers fan has waited a lifetime to hear:

“From the San Francisco 49ers… Number 33… Roger… Craig!”

And this time, the entire football world will stand and applaud as the original Thousand-Thousand Man finally comes home.

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Americans Were Pissed Off After Uncovering Shocking Information About 49ers vs. Seahawks National Anthem Singer
Santa Clara, California – January 4, 2026.Just moments before the highly anticipated matchup between the San Francisco 49ers and the Seattle Seahawks kicked off at Levi’s Stadium, an unexpected wave of backlash erupted — not over strategy, not over players, but over who sang the national anthem. Ahead of kickoff, singer and songwriter Cassandra DiFruscio took the field to perform The Star-Spangled Banner. Her rendition was widely viewed as polished and respectful. There were no technical issues. No visible mistakes. But within minutes, the reaction online shifted dramatically. The controversy stemmed from fans learning that Cassandra DiFruscio is not American. Public information revealed that she was born in Niagara on the Lake, Ontario, Canada, though she currently resides in Nashville. That detail quickly spread across social media and became the focal point of growing outrage. Online, numerous comments expressing frustration appeared almost immediately. Some fans questioned whether it was “strange” for an American national anthem to be performed by someone born in Canada at an NFL game. Others argued that the league’s decision was “inappropriate for the setting.” A handful of responses escalated further, accusing the NFL of drifting away from “traditional values,” despite there being no indication that DiFruscio showed any disrespect toward the anthem or the pregame ceremony. The backlash intensified as fans compared the situation to other games played the same day, where the anthem was performed by American singers with direct personal ties to the teams involved. Although the situations were unrelated, the contrast fueled additional criticism. However, according to DiFruscio’s professional background and official website, she is an experienced anthem vocalist who has performed The Star-Spangled Banner at more than 100 major sporting events across the United States. There is no NFL rule requiring the national anthem to be sung exclusively by U.S. citizens. Despite the negative reaction from a segment of fans, the facts indicate that Cassandra DiFruscio was simply doing the job she has performed for years — with preparation, professionalism, and respect for the anthem. Ultimately, the episode highlights how sensitive the national anthem remains within American sports culture, where even a small personal detail can turn a routine pregame tradition into a nationwide controversy — just hours before one of the most significant games of the season.