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View Full Version : Chiefs Football star Bobby Bell to get Minnesota degree at age 74


thabear04
05-11-2015, 08:29 PM
http://sports.yahoo.com/news/football-star-bobby-bell-minnesota-degree-age-74-230546799--nfl.html

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Most people in the University of Minnesota's college of education and human development class of 2015 will be pondering their futures.

Bobby Bell's lifelong goal will be reached by walking across the stage.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame linebacker will graduate Thursday from Minnesota, 52 years after his college career was done. The 74-year-old Bell recently returned to the school he left 13 credits short of a degree in recreation, park and leisure studies. The university guided him toward fulfillment of the promise he once made to his late father in North Carolina.

Bell helped lead the Gophers to the 1960 national championship and a 1962 Rose Bowl victory, before a 12-year career with the Kansas City Chiefs that included a Super Bowl title and six All-Pro selections.

srvy
05-11-2015, 09:07 PM
Great Great football player but even better man.

In58men
05-11-2015, 09:12 PM
Why? He's gonna die within weeks. Too soon?

J Diddy
05-11-2015, 09:14 PM
Why? He's gonna die within weeks. Too soon?

:grr:

TribalElder
05-11-2015, 09:15 PM
Majored in COBOL programming

Rain Man
05-11-2015, 09:18 PM
It's good to have a backup plan in case the Hall of Fame thing doesn't work out.

big nasty kcnut
05-11-2015, 09:19 PM
Bass ass mother fucker there congrats bobby enjoy that degree!

J Diddy
05-11-2015, 09:20 PM
It's good to have a backup plan in case the Hall of Fame thing doesn't work out.

Considering how they payed players back then I'm guessing he's trying to increase his earning potential.

stevieray
05-11-2015, 09:22 PM
Why? He's gonna die within weeks. Too soon?
Good Lord, why do you have to be a Chiefs fan?

J Diddy
05-11-2015, 09:57 PM
Good Lord, why do you have to be a Chiefs fan?

Does he really fit into that category?

Titty Meat
05-11-2015, 10:00 PM
He's such a nice guy. He will talk for hours.

In58men
05-11-2015, 10:31 PM
Good Lord, why do you have to be a Chiefs fan?

Because I have a sick fetish for suffering

stonedstooge
05-12-2015, 06:21 AM
Bobby made me a Chiefs fan back in 1969. THANKS BOBBY

InChiefsHeaven
05-12-2015, 06:42 AM
Met him at a tailgate party before we played the Broncos back in the 90's. Really nice guy, congrats to him.

Dave Lane
05-12-2015, 06:55 AM
One of the really really good guys out there.

Sweet Daddy Hate
05-12-2015, 07:01 AM
My first employer, and probably the reason outside of DT that I even give two shits about the Chiefs.

Great man.

And Inmem; go sit your ass in the corner.

milkman
05-12-2015, 07:06 AM
I still contend that he might be the best OLB to ever play the game.

Sweet Daddy Hate
05-12-2015, 07:07 AM
I still contend that he might be the best OLB to ever play the game.

He and Lanier wrote the book and set the prototypes, that's for sure.

ChiTown
05-12-2015, 07:13 AM
I still contend that he might be the best OLB to ever play the game.

With my jaundiced eye, I have no doubt that he was. You would be hard pressed to find a player that was more athletic and as intelligent at his position, even in today's Modern Game.

Reerun_KC
05-12-2015, 08:04 AM
Majored in COBOL programming

Smart, there are a shit ton of COBOL jobs on the market right now. So many major banks and most of the banking/financial industry still use COBOL.

I just met with a massive KC company about COBOL resources....

stevieray
05-12-2015, 08:37 AM
He and Lanier wrote the book and set the prototypes, that's for sure.

Don't forget Jim lynch..that trio was monstrous on the field.

Mr. Bell is one of the nicest people I've met in the organization.

Helluva man and role model.

stevieray
05-12-2015, 08:38 AM
Because I have a sick fetish for causing suffering

there ya go!

gblowfish
05-12-2015, 09:01 AM
I just saw Bobby a couple months ago. He came into Red Lobster in Independence for some carry out, and we talked while he was waiting for his order. He's a really good guy. And he was every bit a Hall of Famer. His son went to Mizzou and later played for the NY Jets.

SeeingRed
05-12-2015, 10:17 AM
very cool

Sweet Daddy Hate
05-12-2015, 05:37 PM
Don't forget Jim lynch..that trio was monstrous on the field.

Mr. Bell is one of the nicest people I've met in the organization.

Helluva man and role model.

Nothing but truth here, folks. :thumb:

chefsos
05-14-2015, 10:54 AM
I know no one will admit to actually watching or reading ESPN so I figured I'd post this as sort of a community service.

:)

http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post/_/id/119054/minnesota-legend-bobby-bell-fulfills-promise-to-earn-degree

The son will walk across the stage, hearing the pride in his father's voice, feeling the warmth of his father's smile.

Pink Bell has been gone 12 years now, but his presence remains with his son, Bobby. Pink had what most would consider a good life in the segregated South: a steady job at the textile mill, a wife and kids whom he could support. But he knew there was more out there, beyond the borders of tiny Shelby, North Carolina.

So when Bobby asked about doing extraordinary, exciting, scary things -- attending the University of Minnesota, which had an enrollment twice that of Shelby's population; competing in a Rose Bowl for the Gophers; playing in championship games for the Kansas City Chiefs -- Pink would always answer in the same way. Yes, it's possible. You can do it. I know you will do it.

And Bobby did it, all of it, especially on the football field. His accomplishments include a national championship, a Rose Bowl championship, two first-team All-America selections, the 1962 Outland Trophy, two AFL championships, one Super Bowl championship, six AFL All-Star selections and three Pro Bowl selections. He's a Hall of Famer at the pro and college levels. His No. 78 is displayed at both Minnesota's TCF Bank Stadium and Kansas City's Arrowhead Stadium. After football, he opened a barbecue restaurant chain in Kansas City, then became a motivational speaker.

"I was a busy boy," Bobby said.

The downstairs room in Bell's Kansas City home could double as a sports museum. But when Bell stood in there last year, surrounded by awards, something was missing.

"My dad always said, 'You're going to finish up there and get your diploma?'" said Bell, who left Minnesota several credits shy of graduating to pursue his professional career. "I kept saying, 'Yeah, I'm going to do it.' But I just kept putting it off.

"Last year, I said, 'I've got to do it. I'm not going to put if off another minute.'"

Thursday afternoon at Minnesota's Mariucci Arena, Bobby Bell will fulfill his promise to his old man, as an old man.

Fifty-six years after he boarded an airplane for the first time and arrived on Minnesota's campus, and 52 years after he left campus for the Chiefs and a job at General Motors, Bell will graduate from Minnesota with a degree in recreation, park and leisure studies. The 74-year-old completed his coursework in December but will walk with his classmates Thursday.

"I wish I had done it a long time ago," Bell said. "A lot of time I might have been scared. It's time for me to go ahead and do this thing."

Bell's decision to return to school was the biggest step, but he faced other obstacles. His football records at Minnesota had been safeguarded and celebrated, but his academic record at the school had vanished.

After Bell told Dan O'Brien, Minnesota's senior associate athletic director for football, of his plan, O'Brien set out trying to locate Bell's transcripts. It took several calls to the records office and weeks of waiting.

"They were on some ratty piece of paper written in pencil," O'Brien said. "It's amazing that something like that wasn't archived or long trashed."

Bell's original major, recreation leadership, had changed, and Minnesota had switched from quarters to semesters, so his original course load had to be compared with the current curriculum to determine what he had left. Fortunately, Bell needed only two liberal education courses and nine credits in his major to finish his degree.

Bell wanted his return to be kept quiet. He didn't have time for distractions.

He learned he could take the liberal ed classes online. He met with Connie Magnuson, the director of Minnesota's recreation, park and leisure studies program, to map out projects he could undertake at home to complete his major requirement. Leaning on Bell's background, they determined he would write a 45-page manual on the fundamentals of youth football, and create and run a youth football clinic.

"It's a major undertaking to write a manual of that length," Magnuson said. "It wasn't something he was trying to submit to get it over with. He was very diligent about wanting to do a good job and produce a great product. The most important thing is you have to be a willing participant and Bobby was very willing."

The coursework didn't concern Bell. The method of completing his assignments, meanwhile, seemed more daunting.

He went from using a computer to check email to lugging around a laptop and an iPad everywhere, asking everyone for help.

"It was hard setting up your computer, doing PowerPoints and stuff," Bell said. "Hell, I'm 74 years old."

Bell met last spring with Minnesota coach Jerry Kill and some of Kill's assistants, picking their brains as Bell mapped out his football manual and youth clinic. Kill, a native of Cheney, Kansas, grew up watching Bell on the great Chiefs teams. He has welcomed Bell around his team as much as possible, often having Bell speak to sidetracked players.

"We talked about the lost art of football, that we're not teaching fundamentals to young kids," Kill said. "We spent quite a bit of time giving feedback."

Bell chose to hold his youth clinic in Pittsburg, Kansas, coordinating with a local Minnesota alum, Dick Coleman, and Pittsburg State University, where Kill had started his coaching career. They expected 50-60 kids to show up, but more than 100, ages 8-12, participated on a sunny September day.

Bell sent several drafts of his football manual to Magnuson during the fall before submitting the final project in December. He completed an ecology course in the summer and a social science course in the fall.

Academics didn't come easily to Bell when he started school at Minnesota in 1959 -- "I was an average student, not the smartest guy in the world," he said -- but he drove himself to finish strong.

"I got some A's," he said. "Hey, man, if you're going to win the game, you've got to go for the marbles."

For a social science project on immigrants to the U.S., Bell interviewed Michael Sharma-Crawford, an immigration attorney in Kansas City. As Bell learned about the immigrant experience, he realized his own parallel path in segregated North Carolina.

"I couldn't eat at a restaurant, I had to go to an all-black high school," Bell said. "You had a white water fountain, a black water fountain, a black bathroom, a white bathroom. I was like, 'Immigrant? I was an immigrant and I was American.'"

Despite an incredible high school athletic career, Bobby couldn't attend North Carolina, Duke or any of the major regional schools because he was black. Big Ten schools, namely Minnesota and Michigan State, had started recruiting more black players from the South, and Gophers coach Murray Warmath offered Bell the last scholarship he had, sight unseen.

He played on trailblazing Minnesota teams that featured standouts like Sandy Stephens, the first black quarterback to earn All-America honors, Carl Eller, Judge Dickson and others.

"We had to be accountable for each other," Bell said. "You couldn't mess up. A lot of people said, 'No, don't go to Minnesota. Go ahead and get you a 40-hour job here in Shelby.' When I went to Minnesota, there was no way I was going back home as a failure.

"I could not put my head down and crawl back to Shelby."

Pink Bell never discouraged his son from leaving town. When Bobby told his dad of his academic struggles and asked if he would pull through, Pink told him he would if he worked hard. Bobby remembers the first time Pink got to see him play at Minnesota: 68,000 fans in the stands, national TV cameras rolling. Pink also made it to Pasadena for the Rose Bowl.

"He talks about his dad all the time," said Coleman, who often travels with Bell to Minnesota games. "His dad always told him that if Bobby put his mind to it, and worked hard enough at it, he could do and be whatever he wanted. That's been Bobby's philosophy and credo his whole life.

"Going back to school and finishing, that was kind of on his bucket list. That's what he did. It will all come to fruition."

Coleman and Bell will fly together Thursday to Minneapolis along with several members of Bell's family, including his sons Bobby and Joshua. Some of Bell's former Gophers teammates, including Dickson, as well as Stephens' sister and brother -- Barbara Stephens Foster and Ray Stephens -- are expected to attend the ceremony.

Bell owned the stage during his football career. After 52 years, he'll walk across one as a college graduate.

"It's going to be awesome," he said. "I know one thing: I'm going to be looking up for my dad. I can see the big smile on his face. I can see him now saying, 'Yeah, boy, you can do it.'"

srvy
05-14-2015, 05:39 PM
Nice article thanks.

Tombstone RJ
05-14-2015, 06:01 PM
Great story, and good for Bobby Bell!

Demonpenz
05-14-2015, 09:05 PM
one of my favorite players rip

PunkinDrublic
05-14-2015, 10:02 PM
Makes me feel less self conscious about getting my degree at 30.

Rain Man
05-14-2015, 10:18 PM
Makes me feel less self conscious about getting my degree at 30.

That's young. You're still probably several years from even being eligible for the Hall of Fame.

gblowfish
05-15-2015, 03:14 PM
Chiefs posted a nice video:
http://www.kcchiefs.com/news/article-2/Chiefs-Legend-Bobby-Bell-Earns-Degree-from-the-University-of-Minnesota/40f59beb-97e3-4adf-bca3-9d1a620173ec