J. I. Albrecht

J. I. Albrecht

Infobox Gridiron football person
Name=J. I. Albrecht


Position=
DateOfBirth=Birth date|1931|02|15
Birthplace=St. James, New York
DateOfDeath=Death date and age|2008|03|11|1931|02|15
Deathplace=Toronto, Ontario
administrating_years=1960-1963
1970-1973
1984
1994
2000
administrating_teams=Montreal Alouettes
Montreal Alouettes Atlantic Schooners
Shreveport Pirates
Toronto Argonauts
Expand list|date=August 2008
career_highlights=
Honors=1993: named all-time general manager of the Alouettes by CFL Alumni Association

J. I. Albrecht (February 15, 1931 – March 11, 2008) worked in college and professional sports for 53 years. He worked in the CFL, NFL and NCAA, and NASL.

Background

He father was wealthy New York Businessman Herman Albrecht. Born in St. James, New York, Albrecht grew up in Long Island and Brooklyn and attended Arazmus High School in Brooklyn. He went on to attend Georgia Military College where he lost his eye in an accident. Because of the loss of his eye he decided to pursue the closest thing to war and to him at the time was football.

Name

He has claimed over the years that his initials have stood for nothing. However, in an interview with the "Ottawa Sun" he revealed that they stand for Just Incredible. When he was born, he said, there were complications which led the delivering doctor to fear that he or his mother would die at his birth, and asked his father who he wanted to live, the baby or the mother. His father said "both." Both mother and son survived, and in commemoration the parents selected the unusual name. However, they were not allowed to use it on his birth certificate, and thus he went by his initials all his life. [cite news | url=http://ottsun.canoe.ca/News/Columnists/McRae_Earl/2007/06/02/4228445.html | title=This isn't how a legend should end | publisher=Ottawa Sun | first=Earl | last=McRae | date=June 2, 2007 | accessdate=2007-06-20]

Early career

He then went on to work under General Robert Neyland whom he named his second son, Hunter Joseph Neyland after. At Tennessee he won his first national championship. He then went on to recruit for several other NCAA teams and served for one season as the General Manager of the Harlem Globetrotters. Albrecht then worked for Denver Broncos, San Francisco 49ers, Oakland Raiders, and the New England Patriots of the NFL. In Canada he worked for the Montreal Alouettes as the General Manager where he won his first Grey Cup. He was fired by Sam Berger in Montreal and went to work for the New England Patriots of the NFL. After a few years with the Patriots during the Grogan - Plunkett years he was hired by Bill Hodgson, owner of the Old Mill in Toronto and the Toronto Argonauts to serve as the team's General Manager. After the Argos he went on to be the General Manager of the Toronto Metros Croatia where he developed a true love and respect for the game of soccer and the Croatian people.

His next move was to attempt to get a new franchise in the CFL and place it in the Maritimes and the team that was his dream was to be called the Atlantic Schooners. After his main investor, RB Cameron pulled out after being unable to secure government financing for the stadium. Albrecht had sunk several years into the project and fell in love with the city of Halifax. He lived there with his beloved dog Higgins, the English Bulldog who actually had his own article in the paper titled, "The World as Seen Through the Eyes of Higgins". He wrote in the paper, had a radio show, managed a radio station, and generally enjoyed life. It was in Halifax that he met his second wife Kathryn who died of cancer a year after they separated. They moved together to Cape Breton where Albrecht took over the Athletic Directors job at the University College of Cape Breton where he launched the football program. He played with just 21 players where almost everyone played both ways. He had his lifelong friend George Brancato come and coach the team. While at Cape Breton he brought in players to play who went on to play pro such as George Nimako, Mark Pearce, and several others. It was a magical year where the team, although shelved after one year, won their last game of the season.

After Cape Breton he went on to consult to the Gliebermans in Ottawa, work under them again in Shreveport and then he worked as a director with the Toronto Argonauts.

Montreal Alouettes

He served as the General Manager of the Montreal Alouettes during the 1970s and hired Marv Levy as head coach of the team. He guided the Alouettes to the Grey Cup championship in 1970, 1974, and 1977. He had a special love for the city of Montreal and his best friend, the late Herb Trawick played for the Alouettes. Albrecht was named as the Montreal Alouettes all time general manager for the 20th century by the fans. He brought and signed many outstanding players to Montreal. Many who were successful on the field and then as coaches and others in business. Almost 40 years after being in Montreal, many players still kept in touch with Albrecht. Players whom he recruited and signed include Wally Buono, Larry Smith, Junior Ah You, Gordon Judges, Steve Smear, The Ordinary Superstar and Heisman Trophy winner Johnny Rodgers, Dan Yochum, & Ed George.

Toronto Argonauts (first stint)

He was hired as general manager and director of player personnel of the Toronto Argonauts in 1976 after serving as assistant director of player personnel under his close long time friend Bucko Kilroy at the New England Patriots in Foxboro, Mass. While with the Argos he signed players such as Anthony Davis, Matthew Reed, Wonderful Monds, Peter Grabriel, and many other outstanding players.

Atlantic Schooners

In 1984 Albrecht was granted a conditional expansion team to play out of Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Schooners folded before they played a single game because Albrecht's ownership group could not secure the financing for a new stadium.

Ottawa Rough Riders and Shreveport Pirates

Albrecht was a consultant/personnel director to the Ottawa Rough Riders during the 1992 and 1993 seasons.

He later became the Executive Vice President of Football Operations for the Shreveport Pirates. John Huard, one of Albrecht's best friends, and former 2nd round draft pick at Denver, was hired by him as the head coach for the Pirates' inaugural season in 1994 CFL season. However Huard was fired by team President Lonie Glieberman before coaching a single game. Huard and Albrecht later sued the Pirates. [cite court
litigants = John HUARD, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SHREVEPORT PIRATES, INC. and Bernard Glieberman, Defendants-Appellees.J.I. ALBRECHT, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SHREVEPORT PIRATES, INC. and Bernard Glieberman, Defendants-Appellees.
vol = 147 F.3d 406, No. 97-30889
court = United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
date = 1998-07-20
url= http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/F3/147/147.F3d.406.97-30889.html
] Quarterback Billy Joe Tolliver and the City of Shreveport also brought legal action against the team in separate suits.

Toronto Argonauts (second stint)

Albrecht came back to the team in 2000 when he was hired to be managing director of the Argo's by new owner Sherwood Schwarz, his first cousin. It was a disastrous year full of controversies on and off the field. Huard, who had been fired by the Shreveport Pirates six years earlier, became Albrecht's hand-picked first choice as the new head coach of the Toronto Argonauts. His quirky, abrasive style did not endear himself to many, and he resigned from his post after a 1-6-1 record culminating with a 51-4 loss to the B.C. Lions. Despite all the disasters, the one positive that came out of it all was the hiring of player Michael Clemons as head coach. The decision came after several hours of discussion with Schwarz and his son, Dean Albrecht, where the two decided that they should have a young insider to take over the team as head coach. His son tabled the names Paul Masotti and Pinball Clemons. J. I. was emphatic about hiring Clemons and the decision was made.

After one year, Schwarz fired Albrecht, who proclaimed he had a guaranteed 10-year contract, but never collected a dime.

Post Football

He suffered a stroke in 2002 and spent the last year and a half of his life at a Toronto nursing home. After an article was written in both the Ottawa paper and Montreal paper many of his old players have surfaced and written him outstanding letters of appreciation for what he had done for them in the past. He was working on his autobiography, entitled "Just J.I: A Fisher Of Men" and was seeking a publisher. Unfortunately, files he had been keeping for his autobiography were lost.

On March 8, 2008, Albrecht died at a Toronto nursing home at the age of 77. [cite news|last = Gross|first = David|title = CFL legend J.I. Albrecht passes away|work = National Post|publisher = Canwest News Service|date = 2008-03-11|url = http://www.nationalpost.com/sports/story.html?id=368359|accessdate = 2008-03-11]

References

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