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Born: | (1890-01-11)January 11, 1890 Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. |
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Died: | February 1, 1980(1980-02-01) (aged 90) |
Career information | |
Position(s) | Quarterback,Fullback,Halfback,Head Coach |
Height | 5 ft 9 in (175 cm) |
Weight | 172 lb (78 kg) |
College | None |
Career history | |
As coach | |
1912, 1917, 1921 | Minneapolis Marines |
1919-1920, 1925 | Rock Island Independents |
As player | |
1907–1917, 1921, 1927–1928 | Minneapolis Marines/Red Jackets |
1916 | West Duluth |
1917, 1919–1920, 1924–1925 | Rock Island Independents |
1918 | 604th Engineering Regiment |
1922–1923 | Hibbing All-Stars |
1923 | Tollefson's All-Stars |
1926 | Tampa Cardinals |
1926 | Akron Indians |
1926 | Hammond Pros |
Reuben John (“Rube” or “Ruby”) Ursella (January 11, 1890 – February 1, 1980) was a professionalfootballplayer-coach who played during the early years of theNational Football League (NFL). During his NFL career, Rube played for the Minneapolis Marines/Red Jackets,Akron Indians,Hammond Pros, andRock Island Independents. Outside of the NFL, Ursella played for the Hibbing All-Stars in 1922 and 1923 and Tollefson's All-Stars in 1923, and in January 1926, he also played exhibition games withJim Thorpe and his independent team, theTampa Cardinals.
Before World War I, Reuben Ursella played eleven years (1907–1917) mainly at quarterback for theMinneapolis Marines sandlot, semi-professional, and independent professional football teams. During that stint, he played as a ringer for West Duluth in 1916 and for theRock Island Independents in 1917.[1]
During World War I, Ursella served in the 604th Engineering Regiment and he played football for the unit's service team in France.[2]
When he returned home, Ursella chose to coach and play for Rock Island and he led the team to a self-proclaimed national championship in 1919. He stayed to coach and play again in 1920 when the Independents joined the American Professional Football Association, later renamed the National Football League.[3]
In 1921, Ursella returned to the Marines to play during the team's inaugural season in theNational Football League. He then traveled north to play for the Hibbing All-Stars in 1922 and 1923 and he played for the Tollefson's All-Stars exhibition team in 1923. Ursella then returned to Rock Island to play the 1924 and 1925 seasons in the NFL. When Rock Island joined the American Football League in 1926, Ursella chose instead to play for theAkron Indians and for one game with theHammond Pros. He holds the distinction of having played in the final game for three separate NFL franchises, for the Rock Island Independents in 1925 and for the Hammond Pros and Akron Indians in 1926.[4]
In January 1926, Rube joined theTampa Cardinals a team put together byJim Thorpe for the purpose of playing exhibition games inFlorida. The team lost aNew Year's Day game toRed Grange and theChicago Bears and afterward played a series of games against theMillville Big Blue, playing under the banner of theHaven-Villa of Winter Haven.
In 1927 and 1928, Ursella played with the Minneapolis Marines exhibition team against NFL opponents. In 1929, he played his final season for the Minneapolis Red Jackets in the NFL.[5]
During his 22 seasons as a quarterback, captain, and coach, Reuben Ursella stood out as a strategist, field general, and dominating athlete despite the fact he never played high school or college football.[6] Before the Minneapolis Marines turned professional in 1913, many colleges sought out his services but Ursella could not afford to attend university.[7]
Ursella was the mastermind behind successful Minneapolis Marines, Rock Island Independents, and Hibbing All-Stars offenses, and on all three teams, he installed his version of theMinnesota Shift, an offense developed byUniversity of Minnesota coach Dr.Henry L. Williams. “Rube knows the Minnesota Shift about as well as Coach Williams of Minnesota university, its originator,” wrote sportswriter J. L. Hughes in theRock Island Argus.[8][9]
Across seven seasons, with Ursella at the helm, from 1911 to 1917, the Marines would use the Minnesota Shift to outscore opponents 1,539 to 156, nearly a 10:1 ratio. Ursella then used the Minnesota Shift with the Rock Island Independents in 1919 to outscore opponents 309–12, a 25:1 ratio.[10]
On the field, Ursella was "the guiding spirit of the [Minneapolis] Marines offense," observed theSt. Paul Pioneer Press. TheHibbing Daily News, impressed by Ursella’s performance, said Ursella “ran the team brilliantly” and "is in a class by himself as a quarterback."[11]
As an athlete, Ursella stood out for his kicking ability, in punting, drop-kicking, and place-kicking, and he once made a 54-yard drop-kick field goal in 1913.Ossie Solem, who had played for the Gophers under Williams and then later coached the Marines and atLuther College (Iowa),Drake University,Syracuse University, andSpringfield College, told theMinneapolis Star Tribune in 1960 that Ursella was “the best kicker football has ever had,"[12] an echo of the sentiment shared byHalsey Hall in theMinneapolis Star in 1954 when he said Ursella was “the greatest kicker of local and possibly national history."[13] Ursella’s former teammate and manager, John Dunn, who served as NFL vice president from 1922–1928, in later years told theMinneapolis Star that he felt Ursella andPaddy Driscoll were the best professional players he had ever seen play, and that “Rube was the better all-around player, could do more.”[14] Ursella often ran with the ball around the ends, and he returned kicks. In 1925, theNews-Record in Neenah, Wisconsin, observed that Ursella "has all the qualities of an ideal football player, brains, speed, and is a fighter to the last whistle.”[15][16]
Ursella was the leading scorer for the 1912, 1913, and 1917 Marines and for the 1919 Rock Island Independents. He scored at least 101 points on 12 touchdowns, either through the air or on the ground, plus five field goals and 14 extra points with the Minneapolis Marines in 1913. In 1919, he scored at least 106 points on 11 touchdowns, four field goal attempts, and 28 extra points. On defense, he played safety and stopped wayward opposing runners from reaching the end zone.[17]
Reuben Ursella pitched for theSuperior Red Sox (1912) in theCentral International League, theVirginia Ore Diggers (1913-14) andGrand Forks Flickertails (1915) in theNorthern League, pitched in spring training with theMilwaukee Brewers of the American Association (1916), and pitched for the Butte, Montana, Amalgamated Copper Mining Company (1922) in the Mines League (1922).[18]