Ralph C. Wilson Jr.

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Ralph C. Wilson Jr.
Date of birth October 17, 1918 (age 88)
Place of birth Flag of United States Columbus, OH
Position(s) Owner
College Virginia
Career Highlights
Honors Buffalo Bills Wall of Fame
Championships
      Won
1964 AFL Championship
1965 AFL Championship
1993 AFC Championship
1992 AFC Championship
1991 AFC Championship
1990 AFC Championship
Team(s) as a coach/administrator
1959-Present Buffalo Bills

Ralph C. Wilson, Jr. (born October 17, 1918, in Columbus, Ohio) is the founder, owner and president of the NFL's Buffalo Bills. He was one of the founding owners of the American Football League, which merged with the NFL in 1970.

Wilson grew up in Detroit, Michigan and is a World War II veteran. After the war ended, he took over the successful insurance business of his father and invested in Michigan area mines and factories. He eventually purchased several manufacturing outlets, construction firms, and radio stations, and founded Ralph Wilson Industries.

A minority owner of the Detroit Lions, Wilson got wind of Lamar Hunt's plans for a new league to challenge the AFL. He tried to put together a team in Miami, but was turned down. His next choice was Buffalo. In September of 1959, Wilson sent Hunt a telegram with the words, "Count me in with Buffalo." He named his new team the Bills, after a previous team that played in the All-America Football Conference from 1946 to 1949. On October 28, the Buffalo Bills officially became the seventh franchise of the AFL.

Wilson was a pillar of the league, fielding the only AFL team that went to postseason play for four consecutive years, 1963-1966. The Buffalo Bills won the league championship in 1964 and 1965. Wilson made professional football a resounding success in a "small market", signing such stars as Cookie Gilchrist, Jack Kemp, and Tom Sestak and Hall of Famer Billy Shaw.

He was a guiding force in AFL policies that ensured success, such as gate and television revenue sharing; in 1961, with the rival Oakland Raiders in financial difficulty, Wilson loaned the club $400,000 and also would be willing to loan money to Billy Sullivan of the Patriots. Wilson helped keep those franchises afloat, likely saving the entire league from folding. In November 1963, Wilson lobbied successfully to have American Football League games postponed the Sunday after JFK's assassination, while National Football League games went on.

After the original naming rights deal on the Bills' current stadium expired in 1998, the facility's name was changed from Rich Stadium to Ralph Wilson Stadium.

Wilson maintains a permanent residence in Grosse Pointe Shores, Michigan with his wife, Mary. He has three daughters, two of whom are involved in team business. Linda Bogdan, the NFL's first female scout, is the franchise's Corporate Vice President, while another daughter, Christy Wilson Hofmann, serves as a consultant in the area of merchandising.

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