Arnie Weinmeister
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Arnie Weinmeister | |
---|---|
Date of birth | March 23, 1923 |
Place of birth | Rhein, Saskatchewan |
Date of death | June 29, 2000 |
Position(s) | DT |
College | Washington |
NFL Draft | 1945 / Round 17/ Pick 166 |
Pro Bowls | 4 |
Statistics | |
Team(s) | |
1948-1949 1950-1953 |
New York Yankees (AAFC) New York Giants |
Pro Football Hall of Fame, 1984 |
Arnold George Weinmeister (March 23, 1923 - June 29, 2000) was an American football player. He went to 4 Pro Bowls, but with only a six-year tenure in the AAFC and NFL, his career is one of the shortest of any Pro Football Hall of Fame member.
Despite being 6-4 tall and weighing 235 pounds, he had a reputation for being a fast lineman and pass rusher.
[edit] Early Years
Weinmeister was a two-time All-City tackle in high school, and played end, fullback, and tackle during a 4-year tenure at The University of Washington which was interrupted by 4 years army service.
He was scouted by New York Yankee (AAFC football) head coach Ray Flaherty while playing fullback.
[edit] Professional Career
Weinmeister turned professional in 1948 played defensive tackle for the New York Yankees (AAFC) in the All-America Football Conference until 1949, and for the New York Giants from 1950 to 1953
During his final season in New York, he served as the team captain.
In 1949 Weinmeister won second-team ALL-AAFC as a rookie followed by first-team ALL-AAFC honors, was voted ALL-NFL Choice for four consecutive years (1950-1953), and was selected to play in the NFL's Pro Bowl every year from 1948 to 1951.
He is one of only three Saskatchewan natives to make it to the NFL (the other two being Jon Ryan and Rueben Mayes).
[edit] External links
- Pro Football Hall of Fame: member biography
- Professional Football Researchers Association article
Categories: Defensive lineman stubs | 1923 births | 2000 deaths | Pro Football Hall of Fame | American football defensive linemen | American football defensive tackles | Washington Huskies football players | American Conference Pro Bowl players | Eastern Conference Pro Bowl players | New York Giants players | New York Yankees (AAFC) players | American military personnel of World War II | Canadian players of American football | Canadian Americans | Saskatchewan sportspeople