- Mel Hein
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Mel Hein Date of birth: August 22, 1909 Place of birth: Redding, California Date of death: January 31, 1992 (aged 82)Career information Position(s): Center, Linebacker College: Washington State Organizations As player: 1931-1945 New York Giants Career highlights and awards Awards: 1938 Joe F. Carr MVP Honors: NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time
Team
NFL 1930s All-Decade TeamRetired #s: New York Giants #7 Playing stats at NFL.com College Football Hall of Fame Pro Football Hall of Fame, 1963 Melvin Jack Hein (August 22, 1909 – January 31, 1992) was an American Professional Football player for the New York Giants. Hein played fifteen seasons for the Giants (1931-45) and never missed a down due to injury. He is the first player and only offensive lineman to win the NFL MVP award (1938) and he helped the Giants win the championship that season.
Mel was part of the first inductee class into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963. In 1969, he was named the center on the NFL 50th Anniversary Team, and was named to the 75th Anniversary Team in 1994. In 1999, despite 55 years having passed since his last game, he was ranked number 74 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players.
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Early life
Hein played prep football for the Burlington High School Tigers (now Burlington-Edison High School) in Burlington, Washington, where he played center and defensive line positions. His senior year Hein earned the Skagit County Football MVP, the highest award for a prep player in the Skagit Valley in those days. He was also named to the First Team All-State football team as a senior. It has been said he is the first professional athlete to hail from the state of Washington. Hein is known for wearing jersey number 7, but it is not known what jersey number he wore during his high school years as prep teams might not have worn numbers in those days. Hein is also a charter member of the Washington Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA). He also excelled as a basketball player in his prep days with the Tigers, playing center on the court, as well.
College career
A consensus pick as the greatest center in football, Hein was the first player to have his famous No. 7 retired at Washington State University. An All-American pick following the 1930 season, Hein helped lead the Cougars to an undefeated record that year and into the 1931 Rose Bowl game against Alabama. WSU lost that game 24-0, but WSU's record in Hein's three varsity seasons was 26-6. Hein was an All-America selection as a senior (1930) and was an All-West Coast pick after having been named to the All-Coast second team as a junior. At WSU, he also played center during his junior year on the Cougar basketball team.
Pro career
He signed a contract with the New York Giants, married his college sweetheart, and packed all of their belongings into a broken down car and drove from Pullman to New York.[1] He played for 15 years as a center and a defensive lineman. Hein was an All-NFL Center 1933-1940. He was inducted as a charter member into the National Football League Hall of Fame in Canton, OH, in the summer of 1963. He was also inducted as a charter member into the Washington State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1978, and was the first alumni athlete inducted into the new Burlington-Edison High School Athletic Hall of Fame in 2006. Add to all of these, his membership into the Washington State Sports Hall of Fame and the Inland Empire Sports Hall of Fame. His jersey number 7 retired by both his college team, the WSU Cougars of the Pac-10 Conference and by the New York Giants.
Eight times an All-Pro center, Hein was the NFL's MVP in 1938 - as a center in his eighth year in the league. The Giants' great No. 7 was the center of two NFL Championship teams - in 1934 (NYG 30, Chicago 13) and again in 1938 (NYG 23, Green Bay 17). Hein was a member of five losing teams in the NFL Championship, — 1933, 1935, 1939, 1941, and 1944.
After his retirement
Beyond his playing days, Hein coached for four years, both as a head coach and as an assistant. He coached at the University of Southern California during the 1950s.
From 1966-67, he was the supervisor of officials for the American Football League.
In 1969, Hein was voted one of the 11 all-time best professional and collegiate football players in a vote conducted in conjunction with professional football's Centennial celebration.
The Washington State University Board of Regents honored Hein May 14, 1983, with its Distinguished Alumnus Award, the highest award bestowed a Cougar alum. Hein is also a charter member of The College Hall of Fame, one of two WSU Cougars honored by the National Football Foundation.
In 1999, he was one of three centers named to The Sporting News All-Century team for college players.
See also
- History of the New York Giants (1925–1978)
- List of American Football League officials
Notes
- ^ Gottehrer. pg. 86
References
- Gottehrer, Barry. The Giants of New York, the history of professional football's most fabulous dynasty. New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1963 OCLC 1356301
External links
- Pro Football Hall of Fame: Member profile
- New York Times Obit
Union Dutchmen head football coaches No coach (1886–1887) • C. W. Culver (1888) • No coach (1889) • William Hyland (1890) • L. Van Valkenburg (1891) • F. W. Allen (1892–1893) • T. McN. Thompson (1894) • E. M. Church (1895) • "Father" Brown (1896) • Professor Pollard (1897–1899) • W. Smith (1900–1901) • George S. Whitney (1902) • W. Smith (1903–1904) • W. Cronkite (1905) • No team (1906) • Harold Tenney (1907) • W. Murray (1908–1909) • H. E. Regnier (1910) • O. Kuolt (1911) • F. T. Dawson (1912–1916) • P. E. Murray (1917) • Shanklin (1918) • Sol Metzger (1919) • P. E. Leary (1920–1930) • G. Elliott Hartfield (1931–1935) • Nelson Nitchman (1936–1940) • Arthur C. Lawrence (1941–1942) • No team (1943) • Mel Hein (1944) • No team (1945) • Mel Hein (1946) • John McLaughry (1947–1949) • Sammuel C. Hammerstrom (1950–1957) • Keith Doyle (1958–1959) • Joseph T. Maras (1960–1963) • George Flood (1964–1970) • Gerald Everling (1971–1974) • Earl Rogers (1975) • Tom Cahill (1976–1979) • Joe Wirth (1980–1981) • Al Bagnoli (1982–1991) • John Audino (1992– )
New York Giants 1934 NFL Champions Red Badgro · Bob Bellinger · Knuckles Boyle · Dale Burnett · John Cannella · Stu Clancy · Ed Danowski · Johnny Dell Isola · Ray Flaherty · Ike Frankian · Butch Gibson · Len Grant · Mel Hein · Tex Irvin · Potsy Jones · Max Krause · Jack McBride · Bo Molenda · Bill Morgan · Harry Newman · John Norby · Bill Owen · Henry Reese · Kink Richards · Babe Scheuer · Wee Willie Smith · Harry Stafford · Ken Strong
Head Coach Steve OwenNew York Giants 1938 NFL Champions Charles Barnard | Len Barnum | Dale Burnett | Pete Cole | Frank Cope | Ward Cuff | Ed Danowski | Johnny Dell Isola | Nello Falaschi | Stan Galazin | Chuck Gelatka | Johnny Gildea | Jack Haden | Ray Hanken | Mel Hein | Jim Lee Howell | Larry Johnson | Bull Karcis | Tuffy Leemans | Kayo Lunday | Tilly Manton | John Mellus | Ox Parry | Jim Poole | Kink Richards | Leland Shaffer | Hank Soar | Orville Tuttle | Will Walls | Tarzan White | Ed Widseth | Red Wolfe
Head Coach Steve OwenNational Football League 75th Anniversary All-Time Team Sammy Baugh | Otto Graham | Joe Montana | Johnny Unitas | Jim Brown | Marion Motley | Bronko Nagurski | Walter Payton | Gale Sayers | O.J. Simpson | Steve Van Buren | Lance Alworth | Raymond Berry | Don Hutson | Jerry Rice | Mike Ditka | Kellen Winslow | Roosevelt Brown | Forrest Gregg | Anthony Muñoz | John Hannah | Jim Parker | Gene Upshaw | Mel Hein | Mike Webster | Deacon Jones | Gino Marchetti | Reggie White | Joe Greene | Bob Lilly | Merlin Olsen | Dick Butkus | Jack Ham | Ted Hendricks | Jack Lambert | Willie Lanier | Ray Nitschke | Lawrence Taylor | Mel Blount | Mike Haynes | Dick Lane | Rod Woodson | Ken Houston | Ronnie Lott | Larry Wilson | Ray Guy | Jan Stenerud | Billy Johnson
Joe F. Carr Trophy New York Giants Retired Numbers #1 Ray Flaherty • #4 Tuffy Leemans • #7 Mel Hein • #11 Phil Simms • #14 Y. A. Tittle • #16 Frank Gifford • #32 Al Blozis • #40 Joe Morrison • #42 Charlie Conerly • #50 Ken Strong • #56 Lawrence TaylorNew York Giants Ring of Honor Jessie Armstead | Tiki Barber | Al Blozis | Rosey Brown | Harry Carson | Charlie Conerly | Frank Gifford | Pete Gogolak | Mel Hein | Jim Lee Howell | Sam Huff | Tuffy Leemans | Dick Lynch | Jack Mara | Tim Mara | Wellington Mara | George Martin | Joe Morrison | Steve Owen | Bill Parcells | Andy Robustelli | Phil Simms | Michael Strahan | Ken Strong | Lawrence Taylor | Bob Tisch | Y. A. Tittle | Amani Toomer | Emlen Tunnell | George Young
USC Trojans Football 1962 Consensus National Champions Pete Beathard | Craig Fertig | Bill Fisk | Fred Hill | Marv Marinovich | Bob Svihus | Ben Wilson
Head Coach John McKay
Coaches Raymond George | Mel HeinPro Football Hall of Fame Class of 1963 Sammy Baugh • Bert Bell • Joseph Carr • Dutch Clark • Red Grange • George Halas • Mel Hein • Pete Henry • Cal Hubbard • Don Hutson • Curly Lambeau • Tim Mara • George Preston Marshall • John McNally • Bronko Nagurski • Ernie Nevers • Jim ThorpeCategories:- 1909 births
- 1992 deaths
- American football centers
- New York Giants players
- Union Dutchmen football coaches
- USC Trojans football coaches
- Washington State Cougars football players
- College Football Hall of Fame inductees
- National Football League players with retired numbers
- NFL 75th Anniversary All-Time Team
- Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees
- People from Redding, California
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