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9. Las Vegas Raiders WR Davante Adams: He’s just five touchdown catches away from becoming the 11th member of the 100 club in that category. Every HOF-eligible wide receiver in that club is in the Hall. Next offseason, he should be a lock.
10. Tampa Bay Buccaneers WR Mike Evans: The 30-year-old is just one touchdown back of Adams and has more yards in the same number of seasons (10 each). He’s never been a first-team All-Pro but is a Super Bowl champ. These two guys are quite comparable.
11. Los Angeles Chargers edge Khalil Mack: Eight Pro Bowls, three first-team All-Pro honors and a Defensive Player of the Year award move him very close after a 17-sack season, but some team success would clinch it.
12. Miami Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill: He might merely need a couple more seasons to pad the cumulative stats, because five first-team All-Pro honors already put him in company with just four receivers—three of whom (Jerry Rice, Terrell Owens and Lance Alworth) are Hall of Famers, while the other (Del Shofner) wasn’t nearly as productive as Hill in other areas.
13. Cleveland Browns edge Myles Garrett: The 28-year-old is now a DPOY and a three-time first-team All-Pro. A few more high-sack campaigns and he’s in.
14. Kansas City Chiefs DL Chris Jones: A key part of three Super Bowl seasons for the Chiefs, Jones is already a five-time Pro Bowler and a frequent DPOY candidate. A couple more solid years should do it for the 30-year-old.
15. Baltimore Ravens K Justin Tucker: He’s the only kicker ever to be a five-time first-team All-Pro and is the most accurate in league history. If Morten Anderson is in, so should Tucker. But you just never know with special teamers.
16. Pittsburgh Steelers QB Russell Wilson: He’s never been a first-team All-Pro, but he’s been an incredibly unique talent with nine Pro Bowl campaigns and two Super Bowl runs in Seattle. The competition at quarterback is strong, and he could manage to pad his stats a bit in Pittsburgh, but it’s already a toss-up regardless.
17. Free Agent WR Julio Jones: A lack of big moments (touchdowns, playoff wins) might cost Jones dearly, even if he is/was a seven-time Pro Bowler with more than 13,000 career yards. Did he run out of gas too quickly?
18. Tennessee Titans WR DeAndre Hopkins: Comparable to Jones but with a shorter prime to date, the 32-year-old still has room to build cumulative stats late in his career. Three first-team All-Pro nods and more than 12,000 yards get him within reaching distance.
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