The Buffalo Bills Won’t Honor OJ Simpson In Their New Stadium, Even If He Was The First Name On Their Wall Of Fame.

Focus on Sports / Focus on Sports
By Jerome London
OJ Simpson was the first name inducted into the Bills’ Wall of Fame back in 1980, and his name remained on display there for decades through the years of debate.

That culminates in the $2.1 billion Highmark Stadium in Orchard Park, where franchise legends are honored in a family-friendly, public, park-like outdoor area with three large bison statues and illuminated plaques of Wall of Fame members. The family-oriented framework makes COO Pete Guelli’s words more difficult: Simpson “doesn’t deserve to be shown inside our new platform with the family,” he told PEOPLE. According to ESPN, his name may be the only name from the old Wall of Fame that will not be inducted, and the debate over his induction was still ongoing as recently as this spring.

He is still in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Bills are enshrining him in their honor while the National Hall of Fame keeps him in.

ESPN and Buffalo CBS affiliate WIVB broke the news on June 27, just four days after the stadium’s grand opening. Guelli’s statement to PEOPLE followed a day later.

Simpson was the first overall pick by Buffalo in the 1969 AFL-NFL Common Draft and played nine seasons with the team in 1978 before ending his career with the 49ers. He became the first player to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a single season in 1973, finished with 2,003 in a 14-game streak, and was named NFL Player of the Year three times in the ’70s. He was acquitted of the murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown and Ron Goldman in 1995 but was later convicted in a civil court, served nine years for armed robbery, and died in 2024 at the age of 76.

Highmark Stadium officially opened on June 23. The Bills play their regular season opener there against the Detroit Lions on September 17.

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