- Rocky Bleier
NFL player
DateOfBirth=birth date and age|1946|3|5|mf=y
Birthplace=Appleton, Wisconsin
DateOfDeath=
Position= Fullback (FB)
number=20,26
College=Notre Dame
DraftedYear=1968
DraftedRound=16 / Pick 417
DatabaseFootball=BLEIEROC01
PFR=BleiRo00
Awards=
Records
years=1968; 1971-1980
teams=Pittsburgh Steelers
ProBowls=
HOF=Robert "Rocky" Bleier (born
March 5 1946 inAppleton, Wisconsin ) is a formerNational Football League fullback who played for thePittsburgh Steelers in 1968 and from 1971 to 1980.Origin of nickname
He was nicknamed "Rocky" as a baby. Bleier said "As the first born of the family, my dad was proud, as all parents are." And the guys would come into the bar and say 'Bob, how's that new kid of yours?' And my dad would go 'Aw, you should see him, guys, looks like a little rock sitting in that crib. He's got all these muscles.' I'm a little fat baby. So they'd come back in the bar and they'd say 'Hey Bob, how's that little rock of yours?' So after that, that's how I got it. It stuck."
High school years
Bleier graduated from Xavier High School in
Appleton, Wisconsin in 1964; while in high school, Bleier starred in football and basketball. In football, he was a three time All-State pick as running back, and also won All-Conference honors at both linebacker and defensive back.College career
He graduated from
University of Notre Dame in 1968 with a degree in business management, in addition to starring in football. He was a member of their 1966 National Championship team, and was teammates & friends withquarterback Terry Hanratty , who would later be his teammate with the Steelers.ervice in Vietnam
After his 1968 rookie season with the
Pittsburgh Steelers , Bleier was drafted into theU.S. Army in December 1968. He shipped out to Vietnam in May 1969 and served with the196th Light Infantry Brigade . OnAugust 20 1969 , while on patrol in Heip Duc, Bleier was wounded in the left thigh when his platoon was ambushed in a rice paddy. While down, an enemygrenade landed nearby, sending shrapnel into his right leg. He was later awarded thePurple Heart and the Bronze Star.While recovering in a hospital in
Tokyo , doctors told him that he would not play football again. Soon after, he received a postcard from Steelers ownerArt Rooney which just read "Rock - the team's not doing well. We need you.Art Rooney ". Bleier later said "When you have somebody take the time and interest to send you a postcard, something that they didn't have to do, you have a special place for those kind of people".Football career
One year after being wounded, Bleier reported to Steelers training camp. Upon his return, he couldn't walk without being in pain, and weighed only 180 pounds (82 kg). He spent two full years trying to regain a spot on the active roster, and was even waived on two occasions. But Bleier never gave up, and said that he worked hard so that "some time in the future you didn't have to ask yourself 'what if?'".
An offseason training regimen brought Bleier back to 212 pounds in the summer of 1974. From that point in time, he would be in the Steelers' starting lineup.
Since
Preston Pearson was wearing number 26 (the number Bleier wore his rookie season before he went to Vietnam), Bleier switched to number 20 when he returned to the team from Vietnam. After Pearson was traded to theDallas Cowboys in 1975, however, Bleier kept the number 20, which by this point he was more recognized with.In addition to being a great lead blocker, Bleier was the second of the Steelers' rushing weapons (
Franco Harris was the primary back), but was effective nonetheless at both blocking and rushing. In 1976, both Harris and Bleier rushed for over 1,000 yards.Bleier played in the first four Steeler
Super Bowl victories, and caught the touchdown pass fromTerry Bradshaw that gave Pittsburgh a lead it would never surrender inSuper Bowl XIII .Bleier retired after the 1980 season with 3,865 rushing yards, 136 receptions for 1,294 yards, and 25 touchdowns. At the time of his retirement, he was the Steelers fourth all-time leading rusher.
Off the field
Bleier wrote a book of his struggle to recover from his war wounds called "", and it was made into a
television movie in 1980, withRobert Urich starring as Bleier,Richard Herd as Steelers coachChuck Noll ,Art Carney as team ownerArt Rooney , and many of Bleier's teammates (includingMatt Bahr and “Mean Joe” Greene) as themselves. It also featured an early acting role by ex-football playerBubba Smith , as Jacobs.After his career, Bleier did some acting work, appearing on "SCTV" and in the film "
Backstreet Justice " as himself. He also tours the United States as amotivational speaker .Honors
The football stadium at Xavier High School was renamed Rocky Bleier Stadium on
October 12 2007 .cite news |first=Woods |last=Mike |title=Xavier teaches importance of history with Rocky Bleier |url= |work=The Post Crescent |date=2007-10-13 |accessdate=2007-10-13] Bleier tossed the coin to start the high school football game that day. Bleier spoke earlier in the day to students at an all school assembly. The entire student body woret-shirt s with his number 23, the only number retired in the school's history. On the following day, the third day of the three day event, city mayor Tim Hanna unveiled a street named in his honor. The former Oneida Court was renamed Rocky Bleier Run.ee also
References
External links
* [http://www.pittsburghsteelers.co.uk/steelers/players/rocky%20bleier.htm SI Article "A Good Soldier"]
* [http://www.rockybleier.com/ Rocky Bleier website]
* [http://www.xavier.k12.wi.us/ Xavier High School]
* [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0088195 Rocky Bleier]
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