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Billy Vessels

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American gridiron football player (1931–2001)

Billy Vessels
Profile
PositionsHalfback wide receiver kickoff returner
Personal information
Born(1931-03-22)March 22, 1931
Cleveland, Oklahoma, U.S.
DiedNovember 17, 2001(2001-11-17) (aged 70)
Coral Gables, Florida, U.S.
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Weight190 lb (86 kg)
Career information
CollegeOklahoma
NFL draft1953: 1st round,2nd overall pick
Career history
1953Edmonton Eskimos
1954Kitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen
1956Baltimore Colts
Awards and highlights
Stats atPro Football Reference Edit this at Wikidata

Billy Dale Vessels (March 22, 1931 – November 17, 2001) was an Americanfootball player at thehalfback position. He playedcollege football for theOklahoma Sooners, winning a national championship in 1950 and being awarded theHeisman Trophy in 1952.

Despite being drafted in the first round of the 1953 draft (second pick overall) by theBaltimore Colts of theNational Football League (NFL), Vessels signed with theEdmonton Eskimos of theWestern Interprovincial Football Union (WIFU), playing one season there and winning the inaugural award for the most outstanding player in Canada.

Vessels lost the next two years to military service, playing on the service team atFort Sill, Oklahoma, before joining the Colts for the 1956 campaign, his only NFL season. Unhappy being relegated to a reserve role under head coachWeeb Ewbank, Vessels retired after the 1956 season to take up the construction business inCoral Gables, Florida.

Biography

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College football career

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Billy Vessels gained prominence with theOklahoma Sooners as a star of what was heralded as the "Phantom Backfield" together with All-American quarterbackEddie Crowder and fellow backsBuck McPhail andBuddy Leake.[1] Vessels was instrumental in leading the team to thenational championship in 1950, scoring 15 touchdowns.

During the 1952 season he rushed for 1,072 yards including seven 100-yard performances, and 17 touchdowns en route to winning the 1952Heisman Trophy. Playing under the legendaryBud Wilkinson, he became the first of seven Sooners, followed bySteve Owens (1969),Billy Sims (1978),Jason White (2003),Sam Bradford (2008),Baker Mayfield (2017), andKyler Murray (2018) to win the award. These achievements led to his induction into theCollege Football Hall of Fame in 1974.

He was also a member of theSigma Nu fraternity at theUniversity of Oklahoma, along with being a member of theArmy Reserve Officers' Training Corps.[2]

Professional football career

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Edmonton Eskimos

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Vessels was the first pick of theBaltimore Colts in the first round of the1953 NFL draft, but did not join the Colts following the draft, electing instead to play with theEdmonton Eskimos of theWestern Interprovincial Football Union (WIFU), one of the forerunners of theCanadian Football League.

During his rookie season in 1953, Vessels led the WIFU in rushing with 926 yards gained on 129 carries (7.2 yards per carry), with eight rushing touchdowns. He also caught 20 passes for 310 yards (15.5 yards per catch) and one touchdown. Thehalfback Vessels also passed 30 times, completing 18 for 393 yards and 4 touchdowns, against only one interception. Defensively he snagged four interceptions from hisdefensive halfback position.

Vessels became the first player to win theSchenley Award as Canadian football's most outstanding player. Vessels played only one full season in Canada, seeing action for just one game with theKitchener-Waterloo Dutchmen of theOntario Rugby Football Union (ORFU) — who were acting as a farm team for Edmonton in 1954 — in an attempt to qualify as a non-import under rules governing at that time.[3]

Fort Sill

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This effort to establish residency for the Canadian professional leagues was interrupted when theROTC-trained Vessels joined the US Army for a two-year stint in 1954.[4] He spent the 1954 and 1955 fall football seasons playing for the service team atFort Sill, Oklahoma.[4]

Baltimore Colts

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In 1956, he joined the NFL'sBaltimore Colts, the team that had drafted him three years prior. Vessels was hurt for most of the preseason, suffering a muscle injury to one of his thighs in an August 6 intersquad game, an injury which he aggravated twice in subsequent weeks.[5]

Colts' Head CoachWeeb Ewbank saw Vessels as a promising addition to the team's offensive attack but was concerned about his chronic injury problems during the preseason: "We know he was a great football player in college. We know he showed he can play and likes pro football by his season in Canada. If he stays sound, I'm sure he'll help the Colts."[6]

Vessels made his eagerly anticipated NFL debut in the September 16 season opener against theWashington Redskins, joined by a rookie speedster out ofPenn State,Lenny Moore. In front of a home crowd of 28,471, the Colts defeated the Redskins by a score of 21–13, but it was Lenny Moore who particularly shone, seemingly consigning Vessels to a backup role.[7]

Owing to the crowded Colts backfield, coach Ewbank moved the halfback Vessels to theflanker back position, forerunner of the modern wide receiver.[8] Vessels finished his year with 11 receptions for 177 yards (16.1 average) and a touchdown. Late in the season, injuries to other Colts running backs opened the door for Vessels to return to the backfield, with Vessels leading the team with 76 yards on the ground in a 19–17 win over the Redskins in the season finale.[9]

He was also used as a kickoff returner, bringing back 16 kicks for 379 yards (23.7 average).

Vessels was unhappy with his role as a reserve running back under Weeb Ewbank and decided to retire from football after the 1956 season, returning home to Florida to take up the construction business.[10] Vessels was just 26 years old at the time he left the NFL.

After his retirement, Vessels reminisced: "If I had to do it over again, I never would have signed in Canada when the Colts drafted me in 1953. That was a mistake. Edmonton was a nice place, but it didn't compare to Baltimore. Getting to know [Colts owner]Carroll Rosenbloom was one of the great experiences of my life. I wish I could have contributed more to the team."[11]

Life after football

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Billy Vessels statue in Heisman Park atGaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, Norman

After his football career, Vessels was employed for many years by The Mackle Construction Company, one of Florida's leading developers.[11]

In the 1970s, he became involved in horse breeding and served on the Florida Parimutuel Commission from 1976 to 1983, becoming its executive director. He was elected president of the National Association of State Racing Commissions in 1984 and served as director of the Florida division of Parimutuel Wagering from 1987 to 1989.

Vessels did not self-aggrandize over his football career, preferring to move along with life, as he explained to Baltimore sportswriter John Steadman: "I don't like to be abrupt when I'm asked about the past, but when your football days are over, I prefer they be forgotten. That's how I felt in 1957 when I quit and went into another phase of my life, and that's how I feel now."[12]

Death and legacy

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Billy Vessels died in Coral Gables, Florida, on November 17, 2001. He was 70 years old at the time of his death.

In September 2003,Cleveland, Oklahoma renamed its high school football stadium "Billy Vessels Memorial Stadium" in honor of Vessels. In 2007, theUniversity of Oklahoma, through the state's Centennial Celebration, awarded the Vessels Heisman statue to Cleveland, Oklahoma, where it sits across from Cleveland High School in front of the school's gymnasium and event center. OU replaced its statue, and those of its other Heisman winners, the next spring.

References

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  1. ^"Coaching OU Backs Would Please Crowder,"Norman Transcript, Jan. 1, 1956; p. 8.,
  2. ^Peterson, Robert (November 26, 1952)."Oklahoma's Billy Vessels '52 Heisman Trophy Winner As Outstanding Collegiate Football Player in Nation".Austin American-Statesman. RetrievedJune 25, 2018.Free access icon
  3. ^cflapedia - Billy Vessels
  4. ^abCameron C. Snyder, "Frisky Colts Gird for Serious Title Run,"Pro Football 1956. Los Angeles: Petersen Publishing Co., 1956; p. 60.
  5. ^Associated Press,"Colts Attempting to Get Billy Vessels Into Shape,"[Hanvover, PA] Evening Star, Sept. 1, 1956; p. 8.
  6. ^Paul Menton,"Ewbank Says Colts Will Be Improved,"Baltimore Evening Sun, Sept. 14, 1956; p. 29.
  7. ^Paul Menton,"Starting Backfields of Colts is Set,"Baltimore Evening Sun, Sept. 17, 1956; p. 27.
  8. ^"Billy Vessels to Get Chance Against Rams,"[Salisbury, MD] Daily Times, Nov. 21, 1956; p. 6.
  9. ^Cameron C. Snyder, "Colts Edge Redskins, 19 to 17, on Deflected Pass in Last 25 Seconds,"Baltimore Sun, Dec. 24, 1956; p. 12.
  10. ^Paul Mention,"Vessels Had Eyed Business Opening,"Baltimore Evening Sun, March 6, 1957; p. 49.
  11. ^abJohn F. Steadman,The Baltimore Colts Story. Baltimore, MD: Press Box Publishers, 1958; p. 199.
  12. ^John Steadman,The Best (And Worst) of Steadman: A Collection of Stories by the Sports Editor of the Baltimore News American. Baltimore, MD: Press Box Publishers, 1974; pp. 37–39.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toBilly Vessels.
Links to related articles
Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy winners (1946–1972)
Prior to 1973, the Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy was awarded in the WIFU/WFC to the player considered to be the most valuable to his team.
Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy winners (1973–present)
From 1973, the Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy is awarded to theWest Division's Most Outstanding Player.
Most Outstanding Player in theWestern Interprovincial Football Union orWestern Football Conference (1946–1972)
Prior to 1973, the WIFU/WFC's Most Outstanding Player was separate from the Jeff Nicklin Memorial Trophy.
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