$Unique_ID{BAS00050} $Pretitle{} $Title{Two-Sport Stars} $Subtitle{} $Author{ Grosshandler, Stan} $Subject{Two-Sport Stars baseball football Basketball Abbaticchio Mathewson} $Log{} Total Baseball: The Players Two-Sport Stars Stan Grosshandler There was a time when the first pitch of Opening Day was in early April and the last out of the World Series occurred during the first week of October. The NFL kicked off the second week of September and finished their Championship Game shortly after Thanksgiving. Basketball was just something to occupy the time until Opening Day came again. It was relatively easy for a gifted athlete to exchange his steel baseball spikes for the long, hard rubber cleats used in football; therefore early in this century the two-sport star was not unusual, and most of these are found in the first four decades of this century. Professional baseball has always been well defined, dating back to the National Association of 1871; however, prior to the formation of the American Professional Football League in 1920, it is difficult to determine what football teams were truly professional. It is the opinion of knowledgeable sports historians that several teams that played in western Pennsylvania and central Ohio at the turn of the century were indeed professional teams. These clubs recruited the best athletes available, therefore the majority of two-sport players played for cities like Latrobe and Greensburg, Pennsylvania, and the Ohio cities of Canton and Massillon. Ed "Batty" Abbaticchio was the first and one of the most successful of the two-sport players. The husky 5'11", 170-pound native of Latrobe was a slick-fielding second sacker for Philadelphia, Boston, and Pittsburgh of the National League from 1897 through 1910 and a hard-running and -punting fullback for Latrobe from 1895 to the turn of the century. The most famous of all early two-sport athletes was Christy Mathewson, the legendary Giants pitcher who between 1900 and 1916 won 373 games. He was a member of the first group of players voted into the Cooperstown Hall of Fame. Christy had played football at Bucknell, where he was a star fullback and punter. He played the 1900 season with the Pittsburgh Stars, winning several games with his punting. In 1900 a team with the unusual name of the Homestead Library and Athletic Club did a fine job of recruiting, signing two great Brown halfbacks, Fred Crolius and John Gammons, plus David Fultz of Dartmouth. All three proved to be among the top football players of the day; but they also played major league baseball. All three were outfielders: Fred Crolius played a total of 58 games in 1901 for the Boston Braves and for the 1902 Pittsburgh Pirates. John Gammons was a teammate of Crolius on the 1901 Braves, getting into only 28 games. David Fultz, who spent one season as a player-coach with the Athletic Club, enjoyed success between 1898 and 1905 with Philadelphia and Baltimore of the NL and with Philadelphia and New York of the AL. His career average was .271. He also earned a law degree at N.Y.U. and was to become an early-day advocate for the rights of players. In 1912 he organized the Players Fraternity, challenging the treatment of players and the reserve clause. Prior to the 1916 season he threatened a strike which never materialized. Baseball was not quite ready for a union, and David eventually became president of the International League. In 1902 Philadelphia Athletic manager Connie Mack and owner Ben Shibe were convinced to organize a football team to take advantage of the many rivalries within the state. Connie put together a team and included Rube Waddell, allegedly to keep track of the eccentric southpaw pitcher during the off-season. Though Rube was supposed to have gotten into a few games briefly as a lineman, there is no real documentation that he ever played pro football. Charles Moran, who had two cups of coffee with the Cardinals, one in 1903 as a pitcher and a second in 1908 as a catcher, played halfback for the powerful 1905 Massillon Tigers. "Uncle Charley," as he came to be known, gained considerable fame as a football coach. His Centre College team was nationally known as the "Praying Colonels," as a result of Charley's asking them to have a prayer session prior to each game. Moran then went on to a second career, umpiring in the National League from 1917 through 1939. The lives of Jim Thorpe and Earle "Greasy" Neale seem to intertwine on both the diamond and gridiron. After his great triumph in the 1912 Olympic Games, Jim Thorpe joined the New York Giants as an outfielder. His great power and speed made him very attractive as a baseball player; however, pitchers soon found out that "the world's greatest athlete" could not hit a curve. Jim's lackadaisical approach to the game did not go well with the tough Giant manager John McGraw; yet Jim played for the Giants intermittently from 1913 through 1919. In April 1917 Jim was sold to the Cincinnati Reds. On May 2, 1917, he was playing right field when Fred Toney of the Reds opposed Jim "Hippo" Vaughn of the Cubs. Each pitched hitless ball until the top of the tenth, when with runners on second and third and two out Thorpe, who had struck out twice, hit the ball on the handle, resulting in a high hopper to Vaughn. The pitcher realized he could not throw the fleet Thorpe out at first, so he threw home late and the only run of the game scored. Jim was given credit for a single and the RBI that broke up the only double no-hitter ever played. In August he was sold back to the Giants and played in one game of the World Series. In his final season with both the Giants and Braves, Jim hit .327 over 62 games. Jim Thorpe was a member of the Canton Bulldogs from 1915 until they became part of the new professional league in 1920. Thorpe was actually elected president of the league, an obvious figurehead position. He went on to play for several NFL clubs, retiring in 1929 at age forty-two. Hitting ahead of Thorpe and playing center field the day of the double no-hitter was Earle "Greasy" Neale. A sharp lefthanded hitter, Greasy was a Red from 1916 through '24, had a career .259 average, with his best season in 1917 when he batted .294. Neale's zenith on the diamond came in the 1919 World Series. His .357 was the best on the club as the Reds won the Series. Greasy Neale was coaching at West Virginia Wesleyan when he played end for the 1917 Canton Bulldogs under the name of Foster. Thorpe was running the team, and he asked Greasy to play several backfield positions during the year due to many injuries. In 1917 he played backfield and coached the Dayton Triangles. It is as a coach that Greasy Neale gained his highest accolades. He took an underdog Washington and Jefferson team to the Rose Bowl in 1921 and tied a powerful California team. After several successful college coaching jobs, he took over the Philadelphia Eagles in 1941, and before he retired after the 1950 season, he had built the club into an NFL power, winning three divisional and two league titles. He is in both the college and pro Halls of Fame for his coaching ability. The star of the 1919 Rose Bowl, George Halas joined the New York Yankees that spring. A switch-hitting outfielder, Halas injured his hip sliding into third at Cleveland. After 12 games and an .091 average, his diamond career was over. George then turned his attention to pro football, organizing the Decatur Staleys, who were to become the Chicago Bears. Halas played end, coached, and owned this franchise, developing it into one of the all-time greatest sports franchises. On the 1920 Decatur Staleys were a 5'6", 145-pound quarterback and a 5'8", 155-pound halfback. The quarterback, Chuck Dressen, played third base seven years for the Reds and one for the Giants, compiling a career .272 mark. He then spent sixteen years as a manager, leading the Cincinnati Reds, Brooklyn Dodgers, Washington Senators, Milwaukee Braves, and Detroit Tigers. His Dodger teams were defeated in the 1952 and '53 World Series. The halfback, Paddy Driscoll, played in only 13 games for the 1917 Chicago Cubs. He was to have a Hall of Fame career as an NFL player and coach. On April 22, 1922, Ty Cobb injured his ankle and rookie Johnny Mohardt took his place on the bases. Mohardt had played football at Notre Dame in the same backfield as George Gipp and was now trying to win a spot in the Tiger outfield. Mohardt only played in 5 games, batted just once (he got a hit, so his career average was 1.000), and then left baseball. Mohardt played for five seasons in the NFL, financing his medical training. He eventually became a distinguished surgeon and the Assistant Medical Director of the Veterans Administration. Hinkey Haines appeared in 14 regular and 2 World Series games for the 1923 World Champion Yankees, his only season of major league baseball. He was also a member of the 1927 New York Giants, the NFL champs, making Hinkey the only man to be a member of two major league championship teams in different sports. Hinkey had played college football at Penn State, where his coach was Hugo Bezdek. "He was a tough guy," recalled Hinkey, "but we all felt he was very fair. He had emigrated from Czechoslovakia and learned his football with Stagg at Chicago. [Bezdek] is the only man to take three different schools to the Rose Bowl, manage a big league baseball team (the Pittsburgh Pirates), and coach an NFL team (the Cleveland Rams)." Charlie Berry, a Walter Camp All-American end at Lafayette College in 1924, joined the 1925 Philadelphia Athletics as a catcher. On the A's he found outfielder Walter French, who had starred at West Point, and Mickey Cochrane, a former Boston College football player. Unfortunately for Charlie, Cochrane was one of the greatest catchers the game has ever seen, so Berry only played in 10 games that year. In the fall he and French played for the Pottstown Maroons, an NFL power at the time. Exhibiting great pass-catching and field goal-kicking ability, Berry was the top scorer in the league with 72 points, while French averaged 5.4 yards per carry. Both Berry and French soon gave up the gridiron. Berry caught for eleven years with the Red Sox, White Sox, and A's, while French was a gifted pinch hitter and a career .303 batter for six seasons as an A. When Berry graduated from Lafayette, his place at end was taken by Frank Grube, who caught for seven seasons in the AL, was a teammate of Berry's on the Chisox, and also played in the NFL. After finishing his active career, Berry remained with Connie Mack as a coach until 1940. He officiated in the NFL from 1941 to 1961 and was also an American League ump from 1942 to 1962. In 1958 Charlie Berry had the unique experience of officiating the World Series and the NFL Championship Game, the sudden-death game, one of sports' all-time great events. Whether it was Connie Mack's brief football experience back in 1902 or the fact that he liked college-educated men on his teams, he seemed to have a proclivity for hiring football stars. Besides Cochrane and French, he signed All-Americans Berry, Ace Parker, Sam Chapman, and Eric Tipton (though the latter two never played pro football). Ace Parker was a highly acclaimed Duke athlete when he joined the A's in 1937. On April 30 of that year, he made his initial appearance at bat as a pinch hitter and hit a home run. This was the first time an American League rookie had ever hit a homer in his first at bat as a pinch hitter. That fall Parker wanted to join the Brooklyn Dodgers of the NFL, but Connie Mack would not grant permission; however, by November the old gentleman relented and Ace entered the NFL, where he became a Hall of Famer. His baseball career ended after his second season. Other dual-sport players on the A's were Lyle Bigbee, Jim Castiglia, Bruno Haas, Bert Kuczynski, and Ernie Orwell. Perhaps because they were always desperate for talent, the St. Louis Browns usually had a two-sport man on the team. By far the most notable was Ernie Nevers, a terrific all-round athlete from Stanford. "When I finished in college in 1926, I was offered a $25,000 bonus by the Browns and another $25,000 bonus by the Duluth Eskimos of the NFL," Ernie recalled several years before his death. "I took both." "My greatest thrill in baseball was just pitching to those famous players like Ruth [he gave up Babe's eighth and forty-first homers in 1927], Foxx, and others. My fondest recollection was one of the first times I faced Walter Johnson. I never saw his first two pitches. Johnson then called time and motioned the catcher out. When he got back, he told me Walter was going to groove it. When I uttered my disbelief, he replied that Walter always means what he says. "Well, I started swinging as he wound up and hit the ball to the wall for a double. When I got to second, he was smiling for he had let a raw rookie look good." In three years for the Browns, Nevers posted only a 6-12 record due to a sore arm. He then devoted his time to the gridiron. His biggest day in football was Thanksgiving Day of 1929. Playing for the Chicago Cardinals against the Bears, he scored 6 touchdowns and kicked 4 extra points, a total of 40 points, a record that has never been surpassed. Though he had a brief NFL career as both a player and coach, his impact was such that he is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Other Brownies who performed on the gridiron were outfielder Red Badgro, now in the Pro Football Hall of Fame; outfielder-third baseman Larry Bettencourt, now in the College Football Hall of Fame; catcher Russ Young; shortstop Jim Levey; and outfielder Pete Layden. The most prominent dual-sport stars of the 1950s were Vic Janowicz, who won the 1950 Heisman Award as a junior at Ohio State, and Carroll Hardy from Colorado. Janowicz caught for the 1953 Pirates with little success and switched to third the next season, again without success. That fall he joined the Washington Redskins and gave up the diamond sport. A terrific runner, passer, and kicker, he was the number-two scorer in the NFL the next season; however, a postseason accident finished his great sports career. Carroll Hardy had been a defensive back and punter at Colorado when he joined the '49ers in 1955. "I was picked as a defensive back and punter," Carroll recalls. "However, they had an unusual amount of injuries and I ended up playing in the offensive backfield with Y.A. Tittle, Hugh McElhenny, Joe Perry, and John Henry Johnson--all of whom made the Pro Football Hall of Fame." "I had a pretty good season, caught 12 passes for 4 TDs, one of which was a 79-yarder from Tittle. Hank Greenberg, G.M. of the Indians, convinced me to concentrate on baseball." Hardy then joined the Cleveland Indians for the 1958 season and later played until 1968 with the Boston Red Sox, Houston Astros, and Minnesota Twins. "I am probably the only man to pinch-hit for Ted Williams, Roger Maris, and Carl Yastrzemski. On September 30, 1960, Ted was hitting against Hector Brown of the Orioles in the first inning when he fouled a ball off his leg and just walked off the field. Manager Pinky Higgins yelled at me to get up there and I promptly lined into a double play. I later found out I was the only man who had ever pinch-hit for Ted Williams. "I hit for Roger while we were with the Indians as Billy Pierce, a lefty, was pitching. There were two men on in the eleventh, and I hit a ball I was positive was foul, but the ump called it fair and we won." One of the last to try both sports until the present day was Tom Brown, a lefthanded, switch-hitting first sacker. Tom opened the 1963 season with the Senators but was soon back in the minors. He then opted for football, joined the Green Bay Packers in time to enjoy their most successful period, and is the only man to play in the Super Bowl and major league baseball. It would be twenty-four years until another athlete attempted both baseball and football. Bo Jackson won the Heisman Award in 1985 and joined the Kansas City Royals. In 1987 he became a running back for the Los Angeles Raiders; however, a football injury at the end of the 1990 season finished both careers. Bo hit more homers (112) and scored more touchdowns (18) than any other two sport player. Deion Sanders and Brian Jordan were both defensive backs for the Atlanta Falcons (1989-91). In 1992 Sanders continued to play both sports while Jordan concentrated on baseball with the Cardinals. By playing for the Atlanta Braves in the 1992 World Series, Deion Sanders joins both Jim Thorpe and Greasy Neale as the only men to play in a World Series and pro football the same fall. D.J. Dozier played running back for the Minnesota Vikings 1987-91. In 1992 he played in the outfield for the New York Mets. Umpires have also been two-sport stars. Cal Hubbard, an American League arbitrator for twenty-five years, was such a fine football player that he has been elected to both the College and Professional Halls of Fame. Hank Soar is a three-sport man. An AL man in blue for twenty-four years, he was also a star halfback for the Giants and briefly coached Providence in the BAA. "My greatest baseball thrill," Hank stated, "was the day I was at first and Don Larsen pitched his perfect game. My only close call was on Jackie Robinson in the second and nobody complained. One of my best football days was the 1938 Championship Game, when I caught the winning TD pass. The basketball job was a fluke. I worked for the team and was the only one they could get to coach it that season." With Soar on the 1943 and '44 Giants was guard Frank Umont, who called balls and strikes in the AL for nineteen years. Bill Stewart is best remembered in sports as the ump who missed the Feller-Masi pickoff play in the 1948 Series, but Bill deserves better. An NL umpire for twenty-two years, he was the first American-born referee in the NHL, where he officiated for fourteen years. In 1937-38 he became coach of the Chicago Black Hawks. The team won but 14 games; however, they captured the Stanley Cup. The next season Bill was fired halfway into the schedule. Because of the length of a baseball season and the physical demands of football, it takes a very talented man with exceptional endurance to play both in the same year. One of the most unusual groups to participate in both sports are the six who hit a home run and scored a touchdown the same year. This elite club includes Pid Purdy, Red Badgro, Ace Parker, Steve Filipowicz, Bo Jackson, and Deion Sanders. Professional basketball has a history very similar to pro football. At the turn of the century several professional teams appeared, mostly on the East Coast. Eventually leagues appeared that were considered major leagues by some historians and minor leagues by others. The first professional basketball league to be considered a major league by most historians is the ABL, which existed from 1925 to 1931. As the schedules of major league baseball and basketball were somewhat compatible, it is not surprising to find diamond stars playing the court sport for extra money and to stay in condition. Perhaps the most successful of all the dual athletes was Gene Conley, who starred in both major league baseball and the NBA. The 6'8" Conley joined the 1952 Boston Braves as a pitcher and the Celtics the same year as a C-F. For the next several years Gene concentrated on baseball with the Milwaukee Braves, pitching in one World Series and three All-Star Games. In 1959 he returned to the Celtics and proved a perfect backup man for the super stars of that team as they won three straight titles. "There is no doubt my greatest thrill in sports came in the 1955 All-Star Game. I was the losing pitcher the previous year, and as this game was in Milwaukee, I really wanted to pitch. I finally got to in the twelfth inning and struck out Al Kaline, Mickey Vernon, and Al Rosen. We won on a Stan Musial home run in the bottom of the inning. "One day I was sitting in front of my locker," Gene continued, "when coach Red Auerbach walked up and asked me if I realized I was the only man to have a World Series and NBA Championship ring. Until Red mentioned it, I was unaware of the fact." The only member of the Baseball Hall of Fame who played major league basketball is shortstop Lou Boudreau. Lou joined Cleveland in late 1938 and then played guard for the Hammond Ciesar All-Americans, where his fellow guard was John Wooden, who became one of the game's greatest coaches. The next season Boudreau was briefly a nonplaying coach. A career .295 hitter, Lou hit over .300 four times in his career, leading the league in hitting in 1944 and batting a tremendous .355 in 1948, when he captured the MVP Award. The Indians realized that twenty-four-year-old Boudreau was a natural leader and appointed him as manager in 1942. He won the World Series in 1948 and managed through 1950. He then spent six seasons managing the Red Sox and one with the Cubs. Dick Groat led the nation's college basketball players in scoring as a junior at Duke. In 1952 he went directly from the campus to the Pittsburgh Pirates, becoming one of thirty-nine men to go directly to the big leagues and never play minor league ball. "The Pirates were not going anywhere," Dick said, "so they had nothing to lose by putting me at short. That fall I played with Fort Wayne. I had returned to Duke to finish my studies, and the owner of the team sent his private plane to take me to games. I then was called into the service, and when I got out, Branch Rickey of the Pirates convinced me the hard gym floor would ruin my legs for baseball, so I never returned to basketball, though it was my favorite game." A fourteen-year player in the National League, Dick was captain of the World Champion 1960 Pirates, leading the league in hitting and winning the MVP Award. Dick played in a second Series with the Cards in 1964. A career .286 hitter, he surpassed the .300 mark four times. Frank Baumholtz played the outfield for ten years in the senior circuit. In 1952 he finished second to Stan Musial in the batting race and posted a lifetime .290 mark. Frankie, a star at Ohio U., played for Youngstown of the NBL in 1946-47 and Cleveland of the BBA in 1947-48; he was a top scorer both years. Dave DeBusschere and Ron Reed were forwards on the 1965-66 Detroit Pistons, where Dave was the player-coach. Both were aspiring major league pitchers whose careers took different turns. Dave's fame was made on the basketball court, while Ron made it on the diamonds of the National League. DeBusschere's baseball career consisted of two undistinguished years on the mound for the White Sox; however, he had twelve brilliant seasons in the NBA. After six seasons with the Pistons, two as a player-coach, he joined the great Knicks of the early 1970s and enjoyed their championship seasons. He later served briefly as Commissioner of the ABA. His career scoring average was 16.1 per game. Reed spent nineteen years playing for several NL teams. As a starter for Atlanta, his best season was an 18-10 mark in 1969. When he joined the Phillies, he became a relief artist and in 1979 led the league in relief wins. Ron appeared in five World Series games for the Phillies and posted a career record of 146-140, with 103 saves and an ERA of 3.46. Steve Hamilton played for the 1958-59 Minneapolis Lakers, but, like Reed, he found his talents were more successful in baseball. A southpaw, he pitched for twelve years in both leagues and, upon joining the Yankees, became an outstanding bullpen man, appearing in three games of the 1963 and '64 World Series, recording one save. Steve's career ERA was a very respectable 3.05. Several major league players who had brief pro basketball careers were George Crowe, a top National League pinch hitter for ten years; Irv Noren, who played the outfield in both leagues for twelve seasons; and Del Rice, a longtime catcher. Howie Schultz, of whom great slugging feats were expected when he joined the Dodgers in 1943, found greater success as a scorer in the NBL and NBA. In 1950 he was a player-coach for Anderson of the NBL. Another NBL coach was Red Rolfe, the great third baseman of the Bronx Bombers of the 1930s, who led Toronto of the NBL for a single season. The only dual-sport player to pitch a no-hitter was Bill McCahan, who joined the Philadelphia Athletics after his military duty. In 1947 he threw a no-hit game against the Washington Senators. Chuck Connors, who had brief careers in both professional baseball and basketball, found his real calling in T.V. series and the movies, gaining genuine stardom in those fields. The latest man to try both sports was Danny Ainge, who after three seasons with the Toronto Blue Jays joined the Boston Celtics, where his great athletic ability became more apparent. BASEBALL--FOOTBALL Ed Abbaticchio Fullback Mt. St. Mary's 1895-1900, Latrobe. Cliff Aberson Halfback 1946, Green Bay, NFL. Red Badgro (PFH) End Southern California 1927-28, New York Yankees, NFL; 1930-35, New York Giants, NFL; 1936, Brooklyn, NFL. George Barclay Halfback Bucknell, Lafayette 1896-98, Greensburg. Norman Bass Defensive Halfback University of the Pacific 1964, Denver, AFL. Jim Bedford End Southern Methodist University 1925, Rochester, NFL; 1926, Hammond, NFL. Dutch Bergman Head Coach Notre Dame 1943, Washington, NFL. Charles Berry (CHF) End/Linesman Lafayette 1925-26, Pottsville, NFL; 1940-60, NFL head linesman. Joe Berry Halfback Pennsylvania, Muhlenberg 1921, Rochester, NFL. Larry Bettencourt (CHF) Center St. Mary's 1933, Green Bay, NFL. Hugo Bezdek (CHF) Coach Chicago 1937-38, Cleveland, NFL. Lyle Bigbee End Oregon 1922, Milwaukee. Tom Brown Defensive Halfback Maryland 1964-68, Green Bay, NFL; 1969, Washington, NFL. Garyland Buckeye Guard 1920, Chicago Tigers, NFL; 1921-24, Chicago Cardinals; 1926, Chicago, AFL. Bruce Caldwell Halfback Brown, Yale 1928, New York Giants. Ralph Capron Halfback Minnesota 1920, Chicago Tigers, NFL. Jim Castiglia Halfback Georgetown 1941, 1945-46, Philadelphia; 1947, Baltimore, AAFC; 1947-48, Washington. Chuck Corgan Halfback Arkansas 1924-26, Kansas City, NFL; 1926, Hartford; 1927, New York Giants. Fred Corlius Halfback Brown 1900-01, Homestead; 1902, Pittsburgh. D.J. Dozier Halfback, Penn State 1987-90, Minnesota. Paul Desjardien (CHF) Guard Chicago University 1920, Chicago Tigers, NFL; 1922, Minneapolis. Charles Dressen Quarterback 1920, Decatur; 1922-23, Racine. Paddy Driscoll (PHF, CHF) Quarterback Northwestern 1919, Hammond; 1920, Decatur, APFL; 1920-25, Chicago Cardinals; 1926-29, Chicago Bears; 1942-45, 1956-57, Chicago Bears, head coach. Oscar Eckhardt Halfback Texas 1928, New York Giants. Steve Filipowicz Quarterback Fordham 1945-46, New York Giants. Paul Florence End Loyola 1920, Chicago Cardinals. Walter French Halfback Army 1922, Rochester; 1925, Pottsville. David Fultz Halfback Brown 1900-01, Homestead. John Gammons Halfback Brown 1898-99, Duquesne; 1900-01, Homestead; 1902, Pittsburgh. Walter Gilbert Halfback Valparaiso 1923-26, Duluth. Norman Glockson Guard 1922, Racine. Frank Grube End Lafayette 1928, New York Yankees. Bruno Haas Halfback Worcester 1921, Cleveland; 1921, Akron; 1922, Dayton. Hinky Haines Halfback Penn State 1925-28, New York Giants; 1929, 1931, Staten Island. George Halas (PHF) End, Coach, Owner Illinois 1919, Hammond; 1920, Decatur, APFL; 1921, Chicago, APFL; 1922-83, Chicago, NFL. Carroll Hardy Halfback Colorado 1955, SF, NFL. Cal Hubbard (BHF, PHF, CHF) Tackle Centenary, Geneva 1927-28, 1936, New York Giants; 1929-33, Green Bay; 1936, Pittsburgh. Bo Jackson Halfback Auburn 1987-90, LA Raiders. Vic Janowicz (CHF) Halfback Ohio State 1954-55, Washington. Rex Johnston Halfback Southern California 1960, Pittsburgh. Brian Jordan Defensive Back, Richmond 1989-91, Atlanta. Matt Kinzer Punter Purdue 1987, Detroit. Bert Kuczynski End Pennsylvania 1943, Detroit; 1946, Philadelphia. Pete Layden Halfback Texas 1948-49, New York, AAFC; 1950, New York Yankees. Jim Levey Halfback 1934-36, Pittsburgh. Dean Look Quarterback Michigan State 1962, New York, AFL. Wally MacPhee Halfback Princeton 1926, Providence. Howard Maple Halfback Oregon State 1930, Chicago Cardinals. Walter Masters Halfback Pennsylvania 1936, Philadelphia; 1943, Cardinals; 1944, Cardinals-Pittsburgh. Christy Mathewson (BHF) Fullback Bucknell 1902, Pittsburgh Stars. Jim McKean Quarterback 1964-65, Montreal, CFL. John Mohardt Halfback Notre Dame 1922-23, Chicago Cardinals; 1924, Racine; 1925, Chicago Bears; 1926, Chicago, AFL. Charles Moran Halfback Tennessee 1905-06, Massillon. Earle Neale (PHF, CHF) Halfback West Virginia Wesleyan 1916-17, Canton; 1918, Dayton; 1941-50, Philadelphia, coach. Ernie Nevers (PHF, CHF) Fullback Stanford 1926-27, Duluth; 1929-31, Chicago Cardinals; 1939, Cardinals, head coach. Ossie Orwoll Halfback Luther 1926, Milwaukee. Ace Parker (PHF, CHF) Halfback Duke 1937-41, Brooklyn, NFL; 1945, Boston; 1946, New York, AAFC. John Perrin Halfback Michigan 1926, Hartford. Al Pierotti C/G/T Washington & Lee 1920, Akron, NFL; 1920, Cleveland; 1921, New York; 1923-24, Milwaukee; 1923, Racine; 1926, Boston, AFL; 1927, Providence; 1929, Boston. Pid Purdy Halfback Beloit 1926-27, Green Bay. Dick Reichle End Illinois 1923, Milwaukee. Deion Sanders Defensive Back Florida State 1989- , Atlanta. John Scalzi Halfback Georgetown 1931, Brooklyn. John Singleton Halfback 1929, Dayton. Red Smith Halfback Notre Dame 1927, 1929, Green Bay; 1928, 1931, New York Giants; 1928, New York Yankees; 1930, Newark. Hank Soar Halfback Providence 1936, Boston, AFL; 1937-44, 1946, New York Giants. Evar Swanson End Lombard 1924, Milwaukee; 1925, Rock Isle; 1925-27, Chicago Cardinals. Jim Thorpe (PHF, CHF) Halfback Carlisle 1915-19, Canton; 1920, Canton, APFA; 1921, Cleveland, NFL; 1922-23, Oorang; 1924, Rock Isle; 1925, New York Giants; 1926, Canton; 1928, Chicago Cardinals. Andy Tomasic Halfback Temple 1942, 1946, Pittsburgh. Frank Umont Guard 1943-45, New York Giants. Louis Urban End Boston College 1921-23, Buffalo. Joe Vance Halfback Southwest Texas 1931, Brooklyn. Ernie Vick (CHF) Center Michigan 1925, 1928, Detroit; 1927-28, Chicago Bears. Tom Whalen End/Center Georgetown, Notre Dame 1920, Canton; 1921, Cleveland. Mike Wilson End Lehigh 1923-24, Rock Isle. Hoge Workman Halfback Ohio State 1924, 1931, Cleveland; 1932, New York Giants. Ab Wright Halfback Oklahoma A&M 1930, Frank. Tom Yewcic Quarterback Michigan State 1961-66, Boston, AFL. Russ Young Halfback 1925, Dayton. BASEBALL--BASKETBALL Danny Ainge Guard Brigham Young 1981-89, Boston; 1989- , Sacramento. Ernie Andres Guard/Forward Indiana 1939-40, 1945-48, Indianapolis, NBL. Babe Barna Forward, West Virginia 1939-40, Clarksburg, WBT. Rex Barney Guard 1947-48, Omaha, PBLA. Bill Barrett Guard/Forward 1921-22, Worcester, IL. Frank Baumholtz Guard Ohio University 1945-46, Youngstown, NBL; 1946-47, Cleveland, BAA. Bozie Berger Forward, Maryland 1938-39, Washington, ABL. Hank Biasetti Guard Assumption (Canada) 1946-47, Toronto, NBL. Lou Boudreau (BHF) Guard/Forward Illinois 1938-39, Hammond, NBL; 1939-40, Hammond, coach, NBL. Art Bramhall Guard/Forward 1929-31, Chicago, ABL. Frank Bruggy Forward 1909-10, Elizabeth, EL; 1913-14, Gloversville, NYSL; 1914-15, South Philadelphia, EL, Gloversville, NYSL; 1915-16, Kingston, Elizabeth, North Hudson, IL; 1916-17, Paterson, IL; 1917-18, Ansonia, CSL, Providence-Scranton, PSL; 1919-20, Germantown, EL, Scranton, PSL (coach), Jersey City, IL; 1920-21, Scranton, PSL (coach), Germantown, EL, Easthampton-Springfield, IL; 1921-22, Brooklyn, MBL, Scranton-Wilkes-Barre, EL; 1922-23, Elizabeth, MBL (coach), Atlantic City, EL; 1924-25, Paterson, MBL. Frank Carswell Guard Rice 1947-48, Houston, PBLA, Flint, NBL. Gene Conley Forward Washington State 1952-53, 1958-61, Boston; 1962-64, New York, NBA. Chuck Connors Center/Forward Seton Hall 1945-46, Rochester, NBL; 1946-48, Boston, BAA. Jerry Conway Guard/Forward St. Anselm 1919-20, Turners Falls, IL; 1920-21, Holyoke, IL; 1921-22, Holyoke, IL, Glens Falls; 1922-23, Holyoke, IL, Albany, NYSL; 1925-26, Washington, ABL; 1927-28, Albany, MBL. Bill Crouch Forward/Guard Michigan, Eastern Michigan 1935-26, Windsor, MBC. George Crowe Forward/Center Indiana Central 1946-48, New York, WBT; 1948-49, Dayton, NBL. Snake Deal Center/Forward 1898-99, Germantown, Philadelphia, NBL; 1899-1900, Chester, Camden, NBL; 1900-01, Philadelphia, NBL; 1901-03, Camden, NBL; 1903-04, Pittsfield-Chicopee-Springfield, WMBL; 1905-06, East Falls, PBL; 1906-08, East Liverpool, CBL; 1908-10, Johnstown, CBL; 1914-15, Tamaqua, PSL. Dave DeBusschere Forward Detroit University 1962-69, Detroit; 1968-74, New York; 1975-76, commissioner, ABA. Brooks Dowd Forward Lehigh, Springfield 1916-17, Mohawk, NYSL; 1919-20, Springfield, IL, Mohawk, NYSL; 1920-21, Springfield (coach), IL, Mohawk, NYSL; 1921-22, Mohawk, NYSL, Springfield, IL; 1922-23, Springfield, IL; 1925-26, Boston, ABL; 1926-27, Baltimore, ABL. Grant Dunlap Forward College of the Pacific Occidental 1947-48, Birmingham, PBLA; 1950-51, Anderson, NBL. Joe Evers Forward 1913-14, Troy, NYSL; 1915-16, Carbondale, PSL; 1916-17, Hudson, NYSL, Nanticoke, PSL; 1919-20, Troy, NYSL; 1920-21, Cohoes, NYSL; 1921-22, Gloversville-Troy, NYSL; 1922-23, Troy-Schenectady, NYSL; 1927-28, Troy (coach), MBL. Frankie Frisch (BHF) Guard/Forward Fordham 1919-20, New York, IL. Les Fuchs Referee John Marshall 1938-46, ABL. Johnny Gee Center/Forward Michigan 1946-47, Syracuse, NBL. Tom Gorman Forward 1944-45, New York, ABL; 1945-46, Trenton, ABL. Don Grate Forward/Guard Ohio State 1947-48, Indiana, NBL; 1949-50, Sheboygan. Hank Greenberg (BHF) Center/Forward New York University 1931-32, Brooklyn Jewish Center, MBL; 1932-33, Brooklyn Jewels, MBL. Dick Groat Guard Duke 1952-53, Fort Wayne, NBA. Steve Hamilton Forward/Center Morehead State 1959-60, Minnesota, NBA. Walter Hammond Forward Colgate 1919-20, Amsterdam, NYSL; 1920-21, Westfield, IL; 1920-21, 1922-23, Amsterdam, NYSL. Bucky Harris (BHF) Guard 1915-18, Pittston, PSL; 1917-18, Bridgeport, Jersey City, CSL; 1919-20, Pittston, PSL; 1919-20, Paterson, Brooklyn, IL; 1920-21, Pittston, PSL; 1923-24, Glens Falls, NYSL. Doug Harvey Referee San Diego State 1967-69, ABA. Buddy Hassett Guard Manhattan 1933-34, Union City, ABL; 1934-35, Jersey, ABL. Rick Herrscher Guard Southern Methodist University 1961-62, Hawaii, ABL. Orel Hildebrand Forward Butler 1935-36, Indianapolis, MBC. Waite Hoyt (BHF) Forward Middlebury 1925-26, Brooklyn, ABL. Carl Husta Forward/Guard 1925-30, Cleveland; 1930-31, Cleveland, Fort Wayne, ABL. Ted Kearns Guard/Forward 1925-26, Washington; 1926-27, Baltimore-Washington; 1927-28, Philadelphia; 1928-29, Trenton; 1929-30, Syracuse, ABL. Al Kellett Center Penn State 1926-28, Philadelphia; 1928-29, Trenton-Chicago; 1929-30, Chicago; 1930-31, Brooklyn, ABL. Fritz Knothe Forward Pennsylvania 1925-26, Passaic, MBL; 1926-27, Baltimore, ABL, Kingston, MBL; 1927-28, Rochester, ABL, Kingston, MBL; 1928-29, Paterson, ABL. Pip Koehler Guard Penn State 1927-28, Fort Wayne; 1929-31, Toledo, ABL. Stan Landes Referee 1953-54, NBA Bert Lewis Forward 1925-26, Buffalo, ABL. Jerry Loeber Referee Rhode Island 1969-76, NBA. Bill McCahan Forward/Guard Duke 1928-49, Syracuse, NBL; 1943-44, 1948-49, Wilmington, ABL. Mel McGaha Guard Arkansas 1948-49, New York, NBL. Ralph Miller Guard 1925-30, Fort Wayne; 1930-31, Fort Wayne, Chicago, ABL. Cotton Nash Forward/Center Kentucky 1964-65, Los Angeles, San Francisco; 1967-68, Kentucky, ABA. Irv Noren Forward Pasadena College 1946-47, Chicago, NBL. Ron Reed Forward Notre Dame 1966-67, Detroit, NBA. Del Rice Forward 1943-44, Rochester, WBT; 1945-46, Rochester, NBL. Dick Ricketts Forward Duquesne 1955-56, St. Louis; 1955-57, Rochester; 1957-58, Cincinnati, NBA. Harry Riconda Forward 1926-27, Philadelphia; 1928-29, Paterson; 1929-30, New York, ABL. Red Rolfe Coach Dartmouth 1946-47, Toronto, NBL. Rusty Saunders Forward 1925-26, Brooklyn, Washington; 1926-27, Washington; 1927-28, Brooklyn, Fort Wayne; 1928-31, Fort Wayne, ABL; 1940-41, Detroit; 1945-46, Indianapolis, NBL. John Scalzi Referee Georgetown 1948-49, BAA; 1949-51, NBA. Howie Schultz Center/Forward Hamline 1947-49, Anderson, NBL; 1949-50, PC; 1949-50, Fort Wayne, NBA; 1952-53, Minnesota. Danny Silva Forward 1921-22, Worcester, IL. John Simmons Guard New York University 1946-47, Boston, BAA. Hank Soar Head Coach Providence 1947-48, Providence, BAA. Keith Thomas Guard/Referee Kansas State 1947-48, Kansas City, PBLA; 1961-62, referee, ABL. Bucky Walters Center 1931-32, Philadelphia Moose, EBL; 1932-33, Philadelphia Broadcasters, EBL. Ed Wineapple Forward Providence 1929-30, Syracuse, ABL. BASEBALL--HOCKEY Bill Stewart Referee/Coach 1928-37, 1940-44, NHL referee; 1937-38, Chicago, NHL, coach.