Al Conway
Alfred Joseph Conway | |
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Conway on a 1953 Bowman football card | |
Born | March 16, 1930 |
Died | August 3, 2012 82)[1] | (aged
Alfred Joseph Conway (March 16, 1930 in North Kansas City, Missouri - August 3, 2012) was an American Professional Football on-field official for 28 seasons. He was in the American Football League in its last year, 1969, and in the NFL from 1970 to 1996. Over the course of his career in Professional Football, Conway officiated 31 playoff games, including four Super Bowls—Super Bowl IX in 1975, Super Bowl XIV in 1980, Super Bowl XVI in 1982, and Super Bowl XXII in 1988. On the field, he wore uniform number 27.
As a student at North Kansas City High School, Conway excelled in football, track and field, basketball, and baseball. Upon graduating, Conway was considered by many to be the best running back in football in the Kansas City metropolitan area and perhaps in the entire state as a senior and one of the best athletes of all time to hail from Missouri. After high school, Conway was recruited to play for coach Colonel Red Blaik at the United States Military Academy to play football and participated in track and field as well, but finished his final year of college at William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri.
After finishing college, Conway was a number one selection by the Philadelphia Eagles in the 1953 NFL Draft, but had his career ended early due to a string of injuries. Staying close to the sport he enjoyed the most, Conway took up officiating and joined the American Football League in 1969 as an umpire. Later, where he worked several seasons in the NFL on the crew of highly regarded referee Pat Haggerty. After retiring as an official following the 1996 NFL season, Conway became involved in training newly hired umpires and also serves as an observer for the NFL.
He and his wife, Bev, resided in Branson, Missouri and had five children, Mike, Susie, Jim, Patty, and David.[1]
See also
- American Football League
- American Football League Officials
- List of American Football League players, coaches and contributors
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "ALFRED JOSEPH CONWAY Obituary: View ALFRED CONWAY's Obituary by Kansas City Star". Legacy.com. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
External links
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