Some players were just built differently. They showed up in an era that didn’t quite know what to do with them—too athletic, too creative, too advanced for the schemes and systems they played in.
These NFL stars made people say, “Wait, how is that possible?” They’d be absolute megastars if they played in today’s game with modern offenses, rule changes, and social media hype.
20. Randall Cunningham

Before dual-threat quarterbacks were a thing, Randall Cunningham was doing things that looked like they were straight out of a video game. He was the modern mobile quarterback prototype, but played a decade too early.
19. Billy “White Shoes” Johnson

Billy White Shoes brought swagger and agility at a time when the league didn’t know what to make of that combo. He was juking defenders and dancing in the end zone before it was even remotely cool.
18. Kellen Winslow Sr.

Tight ends weren’t supposed to play like wide receivers, but Winslow didn’t care. He helped redefine the position, stretching the field and forcing teams to rethink how to cover a guy his size.
17. Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch

With a nickname like that, you know he was different. Hirsch was flying around the field when most offenses were still figuring out how to throw the ball consistently.
16. Jim Marshall

Yes, he ran the wrong way once, but Marshall was a relentless pass-rusher in a run-first era. His motor and athleticism would’ve earned him a monster contract in today’s league.
15. Joe Kapp

He played QB like a linebacker and treated every down like a bar fight. Kapp’s rugged, do-it-all style would be perfect for today’s era of physical, fearless quarterbacks.
14. Don Hutson

Hutson did route combinations in the 1930s that wouldn’t become common until decades later. He invented modern wide receiver play, but defenders had no idea what hit them.
13. Greg Pruitt

It is too small for the old-school mindset but quick for most defenders to touch. Pruitt would be a nightmare matchup in today’s pass-heavy, speed-obsessed NFL.
12. Lester Hayes

Lester Hayes was glue on wheels before the league cracked down on stickum. He was locking down receivers long before “shutdown corner” was even a phrase.
11. Mercury Morris

Fast, flashy, and bold, Mercury Morris played with a modern flair in a buttoned-up football world. His burst would light up highlight reels in today’s game.
10. Roman Gabriel

With a cannon arm and a towering frame, Gabriel was built like a 2020s quarterback. He just happened to be launching missiles in the ’60s without the benefit of modern passing schemes.
9. Larry Centers

A fullback who caught passes like a receiver? Centers would thrive today as a versatile offensive weapon, but he was considered weirdly adequate back then.
8. Cliff Branch

Speed for days and a deep-ball specialist before “air it out” was fashionable. If Branch played in the current wide-open NFL, he’d be a fantasy football legend.
7. Chuck Foreman

With his smooth cuts and receiving ability out of the backfield, Foreman was a do-it-all back before that became a requirement. Think of him as an early blueprint for guys like Alvin Kamara.
6. Steve Smith Sr.

He wasn’t too small—everyone else just thought that way. Smith’s toughness, explosiveness, and trash talk would make him a social media superstar today.
5. Fran Tarkenton

Scrambling around like he was allergic to the pocket, Tarkenton played backyard football in an era full of statues. Today, he’d be a YouTube algorithm’s favorite quarterback.
4. Bo Jackson

Bo wasn’t just ahead of his time—he was ahead of all time. If modern sports science had existed back then, Bo might’ve gone down as the most outstanding athlete ever.
3. Ken Anderson

He was accurate, innovative, and ahead of the West Coast curve. Anderson ran an offense that looked suspiciously like something you’d see on Sundays now, just 20 years too early.
Read More: 20 Former NFL QBs Who’d Be Stars in Today’s Pass-Heavy League
2. Eric Dickerson

His upright style, breakaway speed, and receiving chops make him the running back NFL teams dream of today. Dickerson would cook in a Shanahan-style system.
Read More: The Best Fourth-Round NFL Draft Picks of All Time
1. Barry Sanders

No one ever moved like Barry Sanders—not then, not now. He was doing things on a football field that still don’t make sense, and today’s game would’ve amplified that magic tenfold.