That's why football and baseball are different in ways they let someone into the hall.
Look at McGuire, never tested positive for any drug and can't get into the hall.
Irvin stabs a teammate during training camp, plus a drug conviction and gets to go to the hall.
Merriman test positive for steroids and still gets to go to the pro-bowl.
I love football more than any other sport, but it's time to clean up there problems and not praise there problems.
Yep, Mr. Irvin has certainly earned his induction into the Hall of Shame, but not into the NFL Hall of Fame. Does this individual possess the character and leadership worthy to be a Hall of Fame inductee? I think not! This scumbag shouldn't even be on the ballot. Not surprising is his affiliation with the Miami Correctional Facility. It's time for the NFL to bring a little "professionalism" back to the game.
From Wikipedia...
Sex, drugs and injuries
In March of 1996, Irvin was arrested on charges of cocaine possession at a hotel party celebrating his 30th birthday. After numerous court appearances amid a national media circus, which featured Irvin showing up to court in a full-length mink coat, he pled no contest to the charges and was sentenced to community service, ordered to pay a $10,000 fine, and put on 4-years probation. When drug-tested for illicit drugs, he tested negative. But the NFL suspended Irvin for the first five games of the 1996 season.
Irvin was also known as a regular at the "White House", a private pleasure palace near the team's training facility, where he and some Dallas teammates, like lineman Nate Newton, allegedly enjoyed a variety of wanton activities, including drugs and illicit sex.
In Irvin's 1996 absence, the Cowboys struggled out of the gate and never recovered. Upon his return from suspension, Irvin tallied 962 receiving yards in only 11 games.
Irvin sustained further damage to his reputation when controversy reared its head again as the Cowboys played the Carolina Panthers for their NFC Divisional Playoff game. Media reports stated that Irvin and teammate Erik Williams had sexually assaulted a woman and, with a gun to her head, videotaped the interaction. Despite Williams' and Irvin's denials of the allegations, the story overshadowed the game, which the Cowboys lost. The accuser was later proven to have fabricated the entire incident and faced charges of perjury, but the damage had already been done.