Ken Willard

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Ken Willard
Date of birth July 14, 1943
Place of birth Richmond, VA
Position(s) FB
College North Carolina
NFL Draft 1965 / Round 1
Statistics
Team(s)
1965-1973
1974
San Francisco 49ers
St. Louis Cardinals

Kenneth Henderson Willard (born July 14, 1943 in Richmond, Virginia) is a former American football running back/fullback in the NFL. Willard was drafted with the second pick of the 1965 NFL Draft, by the San Francisco 49ers ahead of future hall-of-famers Dick Butkus and Gale Sayers. He played nine seasons with the San Francisco 49ers and one with the St. Louis Cardinals after opting to pass on his eleventh season after two consecutive years of knee injuries in St. Louis. He attended the University of North Carolina where he also played baseball and is unofficially credited with the longest homerun in Tar Heel history at 525 feet. Willard was a two-time first round pick in the Major League baseball draft - first as a 16 letter winning high school athlete by the Boston Red Sox, and then by the Pittsburgh Pirates while at a student athlete at UNC. He was the first UNC athlete to be named to the first-team Academic All-America team .

Willard was a four-time Pro Bowler, selected in 1965, 1966, 1968 and 1969. His best year was 1968 when he ran for 967 yards and 7 touchdowns.

He was a member of the 49ers when the team won the NFC West Title in 1970, 1971 and 1972 and with the Cardinals when the won the division title in 1974.