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Bill Dudley

 
Artist: Bill Dudley

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Biography

Forming an acoustic swing group with guitarist/vocalist Chris Griffin and bassist Paul Hormick to play a wedding in April 1994, Bill Dudley has remained a fixture in San Diego. His violin/fiddle playing can be heard playing 1930s jazz, swing, blues, and Irish and Celtic fiddle tunes throughout southern California. A native of Minnesota, Dudley moved to San Diego as a youngster. A former violin student of Chris Vitas and Elisabeth Matesky, he performed with several youth and community symphony orchestras, including the University of San Diego Symphony. He has been the recipient of numerous awards from the Julian Banjo and Fiddle Contest and Bluegrass Festival in San Diego. ~ Craig Harris, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bill Dudley
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Bill Dudley
Position(s)
Halfback / Defensive back / Punter / Kicker
Jersey #(s)
35
Born December 24, 1921 (1921-12-24) (age 87)
Bluefield, Virginia
Career information
Year(s) 19421953
NFL Draft 1942 / Round: 1 / Pick: 1
College Virginia
Professional teams
Career stats
Rushing yards 3,057
Average 4.0
Touchdowns 18
Stats at NFL.com
Career highlights and awards

William McGarvey "Bullet Bill" Dudley (born December 24, 1921 in Bluefield, Virginia) is a former professional American football player in the National Football League for the Pittsburgh Steelers, Detroit Lions, and Washington Redskins. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966.

Contents

Early life

Dudley was born in Bluefield, Virginia and attended Graham High School.[1] He made the football team his junior year, and in 1938 he kicked a 35-yard field goal in the season's finale and helped Graham beat favored Princeton High School, 10-7.[2]

College career

At the age of 16, Dudley was awarded an athletic scholarship by the University of Virginia football team by coach Frank Murray.[1] As a result, He received a $500 grant, out of which he paid for room, board, and books.[2] Although he was originally slated as a punter and placekicker, Dudley eventually came to play the halfback position.[1] In his sophomore year, he began as the fifth back on the depth chart but, due to a teammate's injury, played several games.[2]

By his third year, Dudley started every game and was the Southern Conference's leader in total offensive yards. He was also successful in his senior year, particularly during a game against the University of North Carolina. In that game, Dudley scored all three tochdowns for Virginia and kicked four extra points.[1] That season, he became the first Virginia player to earn All-America honors and was awarded the Maxwell Award for best college football player of the year.[1] He was also named the best college player of the year by the Washington D.C. Touchdown Club.[2] Dudley also led the nation in four categories: touchdowns with 18; points scored with 134; rushing average with 6.2 yards a play; and touchdowns responsible for with 29.[3] After the season, he played in the East-West Shrine Game, where he intercepted four passes and threw for his team's touchdown in a 6-6 tie.[2] He also played in the College All-Star Game in Chicago.[2]

NFL rookie season (1942)

Dudley was drafted in the 1942 NFL Draft with the first overall pick by the Pittsburgh Steelers. During the 1942, he led the league in rushing with 696 yards on 162 carries and was then named to the All-Pro team.[1] He also completed 35 of 94 passes for 438 yards and two touchdowns, punted 18 times for a 32.0 average, returned 20 punts for 271 yards (14.0 avg), and ran back 11 kickoffs for 298 yards (27.0 avg), scoring once.[2] In the first game of his professional career, Dudley ran for a 55-yard touchdown and in his second game scored on a kickoff return.[4]

Military service (1943–45)

In 1942, the U. S. armed services began drafting all eligible young men to fight in World War II. Dudley originally enlisted and was sworn into the Naval Air Corps, however they found out he needed to have his parents' consent, since he wasn't twenty-one.[2] Dudley then enlisted in U. S. Army Air Corps in September 1942, but there was an influx of recruits and Dudley was told he would have to wait three months before he began training.[1] This delay made it possible for him to finish his rookie season with the Steelers.

Dudley went through basic training in Florida and then attended flight school in Texas.[1] He then joined the Army's football team. In 1944, Dudley helped his team to a 12-0 record and was named the Most Valuable Player.[1] At the end of the war, Dudley was shipped to the Pacific and flew two supply missions.[2] He was then sent to Hawaii where the Army selected him to play in three more football games against All-Star teams.[1]

Return to the NFL (1945–53)

Dudley returned to Pittsburgh that fall and rejoined the Steelers's team for the last four games of the 1945 season.[1] In a game against the Chicago Cardinals, he ran for two touchdowns and kicked for two additional points and became the Steelers' leading scorer for that season. He also rushed for 204 yards and returned three kickoffs for 65 yards.[1]

In 1946, the Steelers hired a new coach Jock Sutherland and Dudley scored 48 points, which contributed to the Steelers' 5-5-1 record.[1] During that season, he became the league leader in rushing (604 yards), interceptions (10 total which he returned for 242 yards) and punt returns (27 total for 385 yards). In doing this, Dudley became the only NFL player to lead in four unique statistical categories.[1] He was named All-Pro and was awarded the NFL's Most Valuable Player Award. Dudley became the first (and as of 2007, only) person to win MVP awards in college, service, and professional levels.[1]

"Despite his lack of breakaway speed, Bill was the most
feared kickoff returner in the game. He passed sidearm,
like a kid, yet he had a fine completion average. He was
'too small,' but he was hardly ever hurt too badly to play.
He was the league's top ground gainer, yet he was also one
of the fiercest defensive tacklers and the best in the game at
interceptions. As one of the men who faced him ruefully admitted,
Bill could not throw a pass correctly and 'ran as if he was
staggering,' yet he could always find a way to beat you."
—Journalist Robert Smith, on Dudley's ability.[2]

Dudley was traded to the Detroit Lions after 1946, where he was offered three-year contract and $20,000 a season. He was elected captain of his team all three years, 1947-1949.[1] During his first year with the Lion's, the team finished last. On October 19, 1947 against the Chicago Bears, Dudley returned a punt for an 84-yard touchdown, which is still the fourth longest in NFL history.[1] During 1947, he scored 13 touchdowns; seven on pass receptions, four on runs from scrimmage, one on a punt return, one on kickoff return and throwing two. In his last season with the Lions, he led Detroit in scoring for the third year in a row.[1]

At the end of the 1949 season, Lions coach Bo McMillin traded Dudley to the Washington Redskins, where he played for three seasons, during which he led the team in scoring every year.[1] On December 3, 1950 Dudley intercepted a 60 yard punt kicked by Steelers' player Joe Geri. He ran over 30 yards before he reached his hands out of bounds, while keeping both feet in bounds, and intercepted the punt at the Redskin’s four-yard line, and then ran it for a 96-yard touchdown.[1] Dudley took a break during the 1952 season but returned in 1953. He retired at the end of the season due to knee injuries and an overall physical deterioration.[1]

Dudley was named first- or second-team All-NFL six times in his career and was named to three Pro Bowls.[4] During his nine pro seasons, Dudley gained 3,057 yards on 765 rushing attempts, a 4.0 average, and scored 20 touchdowns; caught 123 passes for 1,383 yards and 18 touchdowns; returned 124 punts for 1,515 yards and three touchdowns; ran back 78 kickoffs for 1,743 yards and one touchdown; intercepted 23 passes and returned them for 459 yards and two touchdowns; and punted 191 times for a 38.2-yard average. He added 121 extra points and 33 field goals to his 44 touchdowns for a total of 484 points.[5] Dudley led his team in scoring during every one of his nine NFL seasons.[2]

After football

After retiring, Dudley was a scout for the Steelers and the Lions. He then entered the insurance business in Lynchburg, Virginia with his brother Jim in 1951 and has been doing it ever since.[1]

Honors

Dudley was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1956, the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966, and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 1972.[1] The Downtown Club of Richmond, Virginia has sponsored the Bill Dudley Award since 1990, awarded each year to the state's top college football player.[1] Dudley is an unlockable free agent running back in the videogame Madden NFL 08. Since 1990, the Downtown Club of Richmond has sponsored the Bill Dudley Award, which is given each year to the top college football player in Virginia.[2]

Politics

Dudley served four terms in the Virginia House of Representatives. [3]

References

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Bob Waterfield
NFL Most Valuable Player
1946 season
Succeeded by
Jim Brown1
Notes and references
1. There was no major Most Valuable Player award from 1947 to 1956. The Associated Press Award has been given out since 1957.
Preceded by
Boyd Brumbaugh
Pittsburgh Steelers Starting Quarterbacks
1942
Succeeded by
Roy Zimmerman

 
 

 

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