- George Ratterman
NFL player
DateOfBirth=November 12 ,1926
Birthplace=Cincinnati, Ohio ,United States
DateOfDeath=November 3 ,2007 (aged 80)
Deathplace=Centennial, Colorado , United States
Position=Quarterback
College=Notre Dame
ProBowls=
DraftedYear=
DraftedRound=
Stats=Y
PFR=RattGe00
DatabaseFootball=RATTEGEO01
years=1947-1949
1950-1951
1951
1952-1956
teams=Buffalo Bills (AAFC) New York Yanks Montreal Alouettes Cleveland Browns George William Ratterman (
November 12 ,1926 –November 3 ,2007 ) was anAmerican Football player in theAll-America Football Conference and theNational Football League .Early life
He was born in Cincinnati,
Ohio and attended St. Xavier High School, Cincinnati, Ohio. He playedcollege football at theUniversity of Notre Dame from 1944 through 1946, primarily as a backup toquarterbacks Frank Dancewicz andJohnny Lujack . He was the last of only four students in Notre Dame history to earn letters in four different sports (football, basketball, baseball, tennis). Legendary football coachFrank Leahy called him "the greatest all-around athlete in the history of Notre Dame."Professional football career
He played professional football with the Buffalo Bills of the AAFC from 1947 to 1949, when the league merged with the NFL. In his first year, 1947, at the age of 20, Ratterman threw 22 touchdown passes, setting a professional football rookie record that stood for more than twenty years. He continued his career with the
New York Yanks of the NFL in 1950 and 1951, theMontreal Alouettes of theCanadian Football League in 1951 and finished with theCleveland Browns of the NFL from 1952 through 1956. He led the NFL in TD passes in 1950 while playing for New York. In 1956, he became the Browns' starting quarterback, succeedingOtto Graham , and was first player in the history of football to wear a radio receiver in his helmet, which allowed Cleveland CoachPaul Brown to call plays using a microphone instead of sending in messenger players for each play. Ratterman was featured on the cover of "Sports Illustrated ",October 8 ,1956 . A leg injury onOctober 21 , 1956, ended his football career.Post-playing career activities
General counsel for the American Football League Players Association
He earned his law degree in 1956 and was admitted to practice in
Ohio andKentucky . He acted as general counsel for the American Football League Players Association in the mid-1960s, whenJack Kemp was the president of the union.Campaign for sheriff of Campbell County, Kentucky
On
May 9 ,1961 , while campaigning as a candidate for sheriff ofCampbell County, Kentucky , he was drugged withchloral hydrate and put in bed withstripper April Flowers in an attempt to blackmail him and force him to drop from the race. The plot was uncovered, and publicity from the botched frame-up attempt catapulted him and his party to victory in the election. While sheriff, with cooperation from federal agents and personal interest of then-U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy , he was able to rid the county, and particularly the city of Newport, of gambling, prostitution and vice businesses that had dominated the area since the Civil War."Confessions of a Gypsy Quarterback"
He is the author of a book, "Confessions of a Gypsy Quarterback", Coward-McCann, 1962, containing hilarious anecdotes of his experiences and hi-jinks in professional football. In the foreword,
Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterbackOtto Graham says Ratterman was the "best natural clown and comic I ever saw in professional football." In one story, during a game while Ratterman was in a game for the Browns and stern Coach Brown was sending in the plays from the bench using his messenger guard system, Ratterman told the guard who came in with the play call to "go back and get another one" because Ratterman "didn't like that play." The guard, a rookie named Joe Skibinski, obediently turned to run back to the bench and Coach Brown before Ratterman and other players stopped him.He was an unsuccessful candidate for county judge and
United States Congress in the 1960s.Broadcasting career
He worked as a color commentator on TV and radio broadcasts of AFL and NFL football games for ABC-TV (1960-1964) and NBC-TV (1965-1973). He was frequently paired with
Jack Buck and Charlie Jones on broadcast teams.Death
Ratterman died in Centennial,
Colorado , onNovember 3 ,2007 , from complications ofAlzheimer's Disease . He was the father of ten children and was married to his wife, Anne, for 59 years.External links
* "databaseFootball:" [http://databasefootball.com/players/playerpage.htm?ilkid=RATTEGEO01 George Ratterman]
* "Professional Football Researchers Association:" [http://www.footballresearch.com/articles/frpage.cfm?topic=ratt-man Mini-Bio: George Ratterman] The Great Kentucky Scandalby Bill DavidsonLook Magazine, October 24, 1961, [http://www.nkyviews.com/campbell/text/txt_newport_look.htm]
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