Skip to content
O.J. Simpson sits at his arraignment in Superior Court on July 22, 1994, in Los Angeles. (Lois Bernstein/AP/Pool)
O.J. Simpson sits at his arraignment in Superior Court on July 22, 1994, in Los Angeles. (Lois Bernstein/AP/Pool)
Author
PUBLISHED:
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — The Buffalo Bills are leaving O.J. Simpson and his tarnished legacy behind in making the move to their new stadium this season, chief operating officer Pete Guelli said Saturday.

After the late Hall of Fame running back’s name remained on display on the Wall of Fame inside their now-former home, Guelli said there will be no mention of Simpson at their new stadium across the street.

“We have made an organizational decision that he is not a fit to display inside our new stadium and Family Circle,” Guelli said in team statement.

Rather than duplicate their Wall of Fame, the Bills plan to honor their past by having franchise greats featured in a display in a large gathering area, called the “Family Circle,” in front of their new stadium.

Simpson’s name will not be included.

Though he set numerous team rushing records and became the NFL’s first player to top 2,000 yards in a season during his nine-year career with the Bills in the 1970s, Simpson’s reputation became forever stained by charges that he killed his former wife and her male friend in 1994.

Though acquitted of murder, Simpson later was found liable for the deaths in a separate civil case. Later, Simpson served nine years in prison after being convicted on unrelated charges.

Simpson was 76 when he died of prostate cancer in April 2024.

The Bills, under late-owner Ralph Wilson, had long ago distanced themselves from Simpson as a result of the murder charges. And the same applied after Terry and Kim Pegula purchased the franchise in 2014.

While Simpson still would occasionally attend Bills home games through personal connections, the team would not acknowledge his presence.

The Bills’ former stadium, called Highmark Stadium, is in the process of being demolished. The team this past week held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to open its new $2.1 billion facility, also called Highmark Stadium.