Charles Woodson is headed to the Hall. The decorated two-way star got deservingly inducted into Pro Football Hall of Fame on Saturday.

It seemed Woodson has always been destined for the Hall of Fame, as he showed flashes of greatness as early as his collegiate years at the University of Michigan. He received a lot of accolades along the way, but none bigger than the Heisman Trophy in his junior year, where he edged out Peyton Manning. He is the last defensive player to win the award.

That year, Woodson capped off the Wolverines' undefeated seasons with a National Championship in the Rose Bowl. He was selected fourth overall by the Oakland Raiders in the 1998 Draft.

The rest, as we now know of, is history. He was named the NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in his first season. The legendary cornerback is now considered by most fans and pundits as one of the greatest defensive players to have ever played.

After seven brilliant seasons with the Raiders, Woodson moved to the Green Bay Packers in 2006, where he eventually won his first and only title in Super Bowl XLV. Injuries have hobbled him throughout his career, but Woodson always bounced back and even won NFL Defensive Player of The Year in 2009. He also reinvented himself as a safety during that time.

In 2013, he returned where it all started and finished his career back in Oakland.

In a storied pro career that spanned eighteen years from 1998 to 2015, Charles Woodson is the only NFL player history to record at least 50 interceptions and 20 sacks.