|
|||
Born | |||
---|---|---|---|
Died | April 18, 1945 | ||
Career information | |||
Year(s) | --–-- | ||
NFL Draft | 1944 / Round: 1 / Pick: 11 | ||
College | Illinois, Purdue | ||
Professional teams | |||
|
|||
Career stats | |||
Rushing attempts-yards | -- | ||
Receptions-yards | -- | ||
Touchdowns | -- | ||
Career highlights and awards | |||
8th in Heisman voting, 1943
|
Tony Butkovich (died April 18, 1945) was an American football fullback from the University of Illinois and spent his last year at Purdue. He was drafted by the Cleveland Rams in the first round of the 1944 NFL Draft, but never played professional football. Instead he enlisted in the US Marines and fought in World War II.
He led the nation in rushing in 1943; 833 yds, 142 carries (5.9 avg), scoring 16 touchdowns (still a Boilermakes single season record) and led the Boilermakers to a record of 9-0 and a share of the Big Ten Title. The Boilermakers finished the season as the #4 team in the nation. In conference play alone, he led the conference in rushing [629 yrds over 95 carries (6.6 avg)] and scoring [13 TDs, 78 points)
He was selected 'All-American' by the Associated Press (AP), International News Service, The Sporting News, United Press International (UPI) and Stars and Stripes; he was also First Team, All-Conference.
He was killed in action at Okinawa.[1]
He was a native of St. David, Illinois and graduated from Lewistown High.
|