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Born | January 11, 1962 | ||
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Career information | |||
Year(s) | 1980–1983 | ||
College | Michigan | ||
Professional teams | |||
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Career stats | |||
Stats at pro-football-reference.com | |||
Career highlights and awards | |||
Gerald J. Diorio (born January 11, 1962, in Youngstown, Ohio), is a retired professional American football player who played at the guard position for the University of Michigan and in the National Football League for the Detroit Lions.
Diorio was born in Youngstown, Ohio and played football there at Cardinal Mooney High School.[1]
Diorio enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1980 and played football under head football coach Bo Schembechler from 1980 to 1983. While playing at Michigan, Diorio was 6 feet, 4 inches tall and weighed 235 pounds.[1] He started four games at right guard for the 1981 Michigan Wolverines football team and six games at the same position for the 1982 team.[2][3] Diorio started all 12 games at left guard for the 1983 Michigan Wolverines football team that finished the season with a 9-3 record and ranked No. 8 in the final AP poll and No. 9 in the final UPI poll.[4] In January 1984, Diorio played in the East-West Shrine Game at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto, California.[5] He was also selected as a second-team All-Big Ten guard by the Associated Press,[6] and a first-team member of the 1983 Big Ten All-Academic football team.[7]
After graduating from Michigan, Diorio was undrafted in the 1984 NFL Draft. He tried out with the Denver Broncos in 1984, and played professional football in the Italian Football League for the Stiassi Doves, who won "the Italian Super Bowl" in 1985.[8] In 1987, Diorio played in the NFL with the Detroit Lions.
From 2004 to 2008, Diorio was the head football coach at Wayland Union High School in Wayland, Michigan. In 2007, he was named Regional Coach of the Year by the Michigan High School Football Coaches Association.[9] In 2008, Diorio coached his Wayland Union team against his former University of Michigan line coach Elliott Uzelac, who was then coaching high school football in St. Joseph, Michigan;[10] Uzelac's team won the game, 32-31, in overtime.[11] In 2009, he became an assistant football coach at Byron Center High School in Byron Center, Michigan.[12]