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Bill Dudley

American football player (1921–2010)


Summary

American football player (1921–2010)

FieldValue
nameBill Dudley
imageBill dudley bowman 1948.jpg
captionDudley displayed on a Bowman card, 1948
number3, 35, 44
positionHalfback
Safety
Return specialist
birth_date
birth_placeBluefield, Virginia, U.S.
death_date
death_placeLynchburg, Virginia, U.S.
height_ft5
height_in10
weight_lb182
high_schoolGraham
(Bluefield, Virginia)
collegeVirginia (1939–1941)
draftyear1942
draftround1
draftpick1
statlabel1Rushing yards
statvalue13,057
statlabel2Rushing touchdowns
statvalue218
statlabel3Receptions
statvalue3123
statlabel4Receiving yards
statvalue41,383
statlabel5Receiving touchdowns
statvalue518
statlabel6Return yards
statvalue63,258
statlabel7Return touchdowns
statvalue74
statlabel8Interceptions
statvalue823
embedyes
allegiance
branch[[File:Roundel of the United States (1919–1941).svg20pxUnited States Army Air Corp seal]] U.S. Army Air Corps
serviceyears1942–1945
battles
pfrDudlBi00
HOFbill-dudley
CollegeHOF1709

Safety Return specialist (Bluefield, Virginia)

  • Pittsburgh Steelers (; )
  • Detroit Lions ()
  • Washington Redskins (; )
  • NFL Most Valuable Player (1946)
  • 4× First-team All-Pro (1942, 19461948)
  • 2× Second-team All-Pro (1951, 1952)
  • 2× Pro Bowl (1950, 1951)
  • 2× NFL rushing yards leader (1942, 1946)
  • NFL interceptions leader (1946)
  • 2× NFL punt return yards leader (1942, 1946)
  • NFL 1940s All-Decade Team
  • 80 Greatest Redskins
  • Washington Commanders Ring of Fame
  • Pittsburgh Steelers Legends team
  • Pittsburgh Steelers Hall of Honor
  • Maxwell Award (1941)
  • Consensus All-American (1941)
  • Third-team All-American (1940)
  • Virginia Cavaliers No. 35 retired
  • World War II
    • Pacific Theater

William McGarvey Dudley (December 24, 1921 – February 4, 2010), nicknamed "Bullet Bill", was an American professional football halfback, safety and return specialist who played in the National Football League (NFL) for the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Detroit Lions, and the Washington Redskins. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966 and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 1972. He, along with Deion Sanders are the only players in NFL history to score touchdowns in six different ways (rushing, receiving, punt return, kickoff return, interception return, and fumble return)

Early life

Dudley was born in Bluefield, Virginia and attended Graham High School. He made the football team his junior year, and in 1938 he kicked a 35-yard field goal in the season's finale and helped Graham beat favored Princeton High School, 10–7.

College career

At the age of 16, Dudley was awarded an athletic scholarship by the University of Virginia football team by coach Frank Murray. As a result, he received a $500 grant, out of which he paid for room, board, and books. He also pledged and became a brother of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Although he was originally slated as a punter and placekicker, Dudley eventually came to play the halfback position. In his sophomore year, he began as the fifth back on the depth chart but, due to a teammate's injury, played several games.

By his third year, Dudley started every game and was the leader in total offensive yards amongst schools in the South. He was also successful in his senior year, particularly during a game against the University of North Carolina. In that game, Dudley scored all three touchdowns for Virginia and kicked four extra points. After the season, he played in the East–West Shrine Game, where he intercepted four passes and threw for his team's touchdown in a 6–6 tie. He also played in the College All-Star Game in Chicago.

NFL rookie season (1942)

Dudley was drafted in the 1942 NFL draft with the first overall pick by the Pittsburgh Steelers. During the 1942 season, he led the league in rushing with 696 yards on 162 carries and was then named to the All-Pro team.

Military service (1943–45)

In 1942, the U. S. armed services began drafting all eligible young men to fight in World War II. Dudley originally enlisted and was sworn into the Naval Air Corps; however, they found out he needed to have his parents' consent, since he was not yet 21. Dudley then enlisted in U. S. Army Air Corps in September 1942, but there was an influx of recruits and Dudley was told he would have to wait three months before he began training. This delay made it possible for him to finish his rookie season with the Steelers.

Dudley went through basic training in Florida and then attended flight school in Texas. He then joined the Army's football team. In 1944, Dudley helped his team to a 12–0 record and was named the Most Valuable Player. At the end of the season, Dudley was shipped to the Pacific and flew two supply missions. He was then sent to Hawaii where the Army selected him to play in three more football games against All-Star teams.

Return to the NFL (1945–53)

Dudley returned to Pittsburgh that fall and rejoined the Steelers's team for the last four games of the 1945 season. In a game against the Chicago Cardinals, he ran for two touchdowns and kicked for two additional points and became the Steelers' leading scorer for that season. He also rushed for 204 yards and returned three kickoffs for 65 yards.

In 1946, the Steelers hired a new coach Jock Sutherland and Dudley scored 48 points, which contributed to the Steelers' 5–5–1 record. In doing this, Dudley became the only NFL player to lead in four unique statistical categories. He was named All-Pro and was awarded the NFL's Most Valuable Player Award. Dudley became the first (and as of 2007, only) person to win MVP awards in college, service, and professional levels.

feared kickoff returner in the game. He passed sidearm, like a kid, yet he had a fine completion average. He was 'too small,' but he was hardly ever hurt too badly to play. He was the league's top ground gainer, yet he was also one of the fiercest defensive tacklers and the best in the game at interceptions. As one of the men who faced him ruefully admitted, Bill could not throw a pass correctly and 'ran as if he was staggering,' yet he could always find a way to beat you."* Dudley was traded to the Detroit Lions after 1946, where he was offered a three-year contract and $20,000 a season. He was elected captain of his team all three years, 1947–1949. During his first year with the Lions, the team finished last. On October 19, 1947, against the Chicago Bears, Dudley returned a punt for an 84-yard touchdown. During 1947, he scored 13 touchdowns; seven on pass receptions, four on runs from scrimmage, one on a punt return, one on kickoff return and throwing two. In his last season with the Lions, he led Detroit in scoring for the third year in a row.

At the end of the 1949 season, Lions coach Bo McMillin traded Dudley to the Washington Redskins, where he played for three seasons, during which he led the team in scoring every year. On December 3, 1950, Dudley fielded a 60-yard punt kicked by Steelers' player Joe Geri. He ran over 30 yards before he reached his hands out of bounds, while keeping both feet in bounds, and caught the punt at the Redskin's four-yard line, and then ran it for a 96-yard touchdown. Dudley took a break during the 1952 season but returned in 1953. He retired at the end of the season due to knee injuries and an overall physical deterioration.

Dudley was named first- or second-team All-NFL six times in his career and was named to three Pro Bowls. Dudley led his team in scoring during every one of his nine NFL seasons.

Dudley is the only player ever with a rushing touchdown, touchdown reception, punt return for touchdown, kickoff return for touchdown, interception return for touchdown, fumble return for a touchdown, and a touchdown pass. He also had a touchdown via lateral and kicked PATs and field goals.

NFL career statistics

Legend
Bold
YearTeamGamesRushingReceivingGPGSAttYdsAvgLngTDRecYdsAvgLngTD1942PIT1945PIT1946PIT1947DET1948DET1949DET1950WAS1951WAS1953WAS90717653,0574.066181231,38311.28018
11111626964.366512424.0240
44572043.6323000.000
11111466044.1412410927.3801
98803023.82822737513.9647
7433972.91102021010.5226
12101254023.2263271907.0182
1211663395.1271221727.8171
1212913984.44022230313.8401
1205153.070000.000

After football

After retiring, Dudley was a scout for the Steelers and the Lions. In 1951, he then entered the insurance business in Lynchburg, Virginia with his brother Jim.

Dudley was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1956, the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1966, and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 1972. The Downtown Club of Richmond, Virginia has sponsored the Bill Dudley Award since 1990, awarded each year to the state's top college football player. Dudley is an unlockable free agent running back in the videogame Madden NFL 08.

Dudley served four terms in the Virginia House of Delegates.

Dudley suffered a massive stroke on January 30, 2010. He died in his home in Lynchburg, Virginia on February 4, 2010.

References

References

  1. Obituary ''[[The New York Times]]'', February 5, 2010.
  2. Obituary ''[[The Washington Post]]'', February 10, 2010.
  3. Obituary ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', February 5, 2010.
  4. "Biography: You can't stop the "Bullet"". Bill Dudley official site.
  5. "The Coffin Corner: Vol. 18, No. 4 (1996) Bullet Bill Dudley". Pro Football Researchers.
  6. ["Dudley's College Football HOF profile"]({{College Football HoF/url). College Football Hall of Fame.
  7. "Dudley, "Bullet Bill" (William McG.)". HickokSports.
  8. [https://www.espn.com/nfl/news/story?id=4887025&campaign=rss&source=NFLHeadlines Former Steelers star Dudley dies at 88] [[ESPN]], [[Associated Press]] story. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  9. Heather Dinich, [https://www.espn.com/blog/acc/post/_/id/9446/virginias-bill-dudley-dies-at-88 Virginia's Bill Dudley dies at 88] [[ESPN]]. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
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