Dick Riffle

Fred Richard "Dick" Riffle (February 2, 1915 – April 29, 1981) was a professional American football player who played running back for five seasons for the Philadelphia Eagles and the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Albright College.

Dick Riffle
No. 45, 27, 12
Position:Running back
Personal information
Born:(1915-02-02)February 2, 1915
Wellsboro, Pennsylvania
Died:April 29, 1981(1981-04-29) (aged 66)
Corning, New York
Height:6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight:200 lb (91 kg)
Career information
High school:Northside High School
College:Albright College
NFL Draft:1938 / Round: 2 / Pick: 12
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Rushing attempts-yards:388-1381
Receptions-yards:19-189
Touchdowns:12
Player stats at NFL.com
Player stats at PFR

Professional career

Riffle played for the Philadelphia Eagles for three seasons, from 1938–1940. In his rookie season, Riffle appeared in eleven games, starting four, and finished the season with 227 yards on 65 rushing attempts and one touchdown, which he scored against the Pittsburgh Steelers (then known as the Pittsburgh Pirates) in Philadelphia's 27–7 week two win.[1] Riffle would not see the end zone at all in 1939. In that season, Riffle only carried the ball 18 times for 61 yards, as Joe Bukant had the bulk of the teams carries. In 1940, Riffle scored the only touchdown in a 7–0 win over Pittsburgh in week 13.[2] The Eagles continued to be one the league's worse teams, next to the Steelers. Following a series of ownership transactions known as the "Pennsylvania Polka, Riffle found himself playing for the Eagles inter-state rival. Against the Washington Redskins in 1941, Riffle caught a touchdown pass from quarterback Al Donelli to tie the game at 7. Washington would go on to win 24–20.[3] Even as the Steelers went through three coaches en route to a 1–9 season, Riffle was selected to his first and only pro bowl. Playing in just ten games, Riffle rushed for 388 yards on 109 carries with one touchdown. In 1942, Riffle started 11 games for Pittsburgh, rushing for 467 yards on 115 carries for four touchdowns. The Steelers went 7–4, a winning record under head coach Walt Kiesling. This, however, would be Riffle's last season of pro football.[4]

Death

Riffle died on April 29th, 1981 in Corning, NY. He was 66 years old.[5]

gollark: Anyway, I figure you could probably capture *most* of systemd's nice bits - parallel execution of stuff, no shell scripts, pleasant unit files, sandboxing - without depending on a hundred horribly interlinked C binaries doing everything ever.
gollark: It would of course still contain TOML.
gollark: What do you want me to do instead, use Nim‽
gollark: It probably has linked lists in it.
gollark: I REFUSE to use C-based parsing code.

References

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