Bills Exclude O.J. Simpson From New Stadium Legends Display Despite 2,003-Yard Season
Updated
Updated · ESPN · Jun 27
Bills Exclude O.J. Simpson From New Stadium Legends Display Despite 2,003-Yard Season
3 articles · Updated · ESPN · Jun 27
Summary
Buffalo Bills said O.J. Simpson will not be honored in the family-circle legends area at new Highmark Stadium, making him likely the only Wall of Fame member left out.
Pete Guelli, the team's business operations president, said the club decided Simpson was "not a fit" for a year-round display meant to celebrate team and Western New York history.
The decision ends months of internal debate; as recently as spring, designers were preparing versions of the space both with and without Simpson.
Simpson's football legacy with Buffalo includes being the No. 1 pick in 1969 and the NFL's first 2,000-yard rusher with 2,003 yards in 1973, but his public image was defined by the 1994 killings case and a later $33.5 million civil judgment.
The move extends the Bills' distancing from Simpson after his 2024 death at 76, when the team did not issue a statement acknowledging his passing.