George McAfee, N.F.L. Hall of Famer, Dies at 90

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  1. Deceks7

    Deceks7 Founding Member

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    "The debate around Chicago has been as to whether
    McAfee is just as good as Jim Thorpe ever was, or
    better,” John F. Kieran, the sports columnist for
    The New York Times, wrote in 1940, the year
    McAfee was drafted in the first round by the
    Philadelphia Eagles and traded to the Bears for three veteran linemen.


    ----------------------------------------------
    March 6, 2009
    George McAfee, N.F.L. Hall of Famer, Dies at 90
    By FRANK LITSKY

    George McAfee, a Hall of Fame two-way threat who
    carried the football, passed it, kicked and
    punted it, returned kicks and punts and roamed
    the defensive backfield for the mighty Chicago
    Bears teams of the 1940s, died Wednesday in Durham, N.C. He was 90.

    St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church in Durham
    confirmed his death, The Associated Press
    reported. McAfee had attended the church.

    Red Grange, a star of earlier Bears teams, called
    McAfee “the most dangerous man with the football
    in the game.” McAfee’s coach at Duke University,
    Wallace Wade, called him “a one-man offense, and
    practically unstoppable.” And George Halas, the
    Bears’ longtime owner and coach, said, “The
    highest compliment you can pay any ball carrier
    is just compare him with McAfee.”

    For all that, McAfee had a relatively short
    career in the National Football League,
    interrupted by injury and World War II. But in
    his prime, undersize even then at 6 feet tall and
    about 177 pounds, he was an impressive player,
    passing left-handed, punting with his left foot
    and, as a former college sprinter, establishing
    himself as one of the fastest, most explosive players in the league.

    At game time, he was known to put away his
    high-top shoes — almost every player wore them —
    in favor of a new, low-cut style that made him
    faster and more elusive, he said, “almost as
    though I didn’t have any shoes at all.”

    He was colorful fodder for the sports press,
    acquiring the nickname “One-Play” because, people
    said, he was likely to score any time he handled the ball.

    “The debate around Chicago has been as to whether
    McAfee is just as good as Jim Thorpe ever was, or
    better,” John F. Kieran, the sports columnist for
    The New York Times, wrote in 1940, the year
    McAfee was drafted in the first round by the
    Philadelphia Eagles and traded to the Bears for three veteran linemen.

    In his debut with the Bears, in an exhibition
    game against the Brooklyn Dodgers, he scored the
    winning touchdown on a 75-yard punt return in the
    final minute. In his first regular-season game,
    he returned a kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown
    against Green Bay. And in the season finale, the
    Bears’ 73-0 rout of the Washington Redskins in
    the championship game, he returned a pass
    interception more than 30 yards for a touchdown.
    He also helped lead the Bears to another championship in 1946.

    Some of his potentially best years, from 1942 to
    1945, were lost to war service after he enlisted
    in the Navy. When he returned, he played only the
    last three games of 1945. The next season, he
    missed three games because of a knee injury.

    He retired after the 1950 season and went into
    the oil distribution business for 31 years.

    In all, he gained 5,313 combined yards, 1,685 of
    them rushing, and had 25 interceptions in eight
    seasons with Chicago. An all-N.F.L. selection in
    1941, he led the league in punt return average in
    1948 and holds the N.F.L. record for career punt
    return average (12.78) for those with a minimum
    of 75 returns. (Roscoe Parrish, an active player
    with the Buffalo Bills, is ahead of his pace.)

    McAfee, whose jersey number, 5, was retired by
    the Bears, was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966.

    George Anderson McAfee was born March 13, 1918,
    in Corbin, Ky. Soon afterward his family moved
    across the Ohio River to Ironton, Ohio, a town
    known for a strong football tradition. One of his
    several brothers, Wes, became an N.F.L. running back.

    At Duke, McAfee helped the Blue Devils to a
    24-4-1 record and two Southern Conference titles
    from 1937 to 1939. The team played in the Rose
    Bowl in 1938. In his senior season, he led the
    team in rushing, receiving, scoring, kickoff
    returns, punt returns, interceptions and punting
    and earned first-team all-American honors as Duke went 8-1.

    In the spring of his senior year, McAfee batted
    .353 while playing center field on Duke’s
    baseball squad, which went 16-7. He also captured
    the 100-meter title at the Southern Conference
    track and field championships. He was elected to
    the College Football Hall of Fame in 1961.

    McAfee was married and had children, but
    information about survivors was not available.

    Even by the N.F.L.’s standards of the 1940s,
    McAfee was not especially imposing physically.
    And that was a motivating influence, he said
    years later in an interview with NFL.com, recalling his first Bears camp.

    “I never saw so many big men in my life,” McAfee
    said. “I remember clearly, on one of the first
    scrimmage plays, that a rookie halfback was knocked cold.”

    He added: “Whenever I ran with the ball, I had
    that picture in my mind, of that back, there on
    the ground, cold as a stone. I would run as fast
    as I could if there was any daylight.”
     

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