Gene Knutson

Eugene Peter "Gene" Knutson (November 10, 1932  February 9, 2008) was an American football player. He played college football as an offensive and defensive end for the University of Michigan (1951–1953) and professional football as a defensive end for the Green Bay Packers (1954–1956). As a senior at Michigan, Knutson was selected to play in the Hula Bowl College All-Star Game.

Gene Knutson
Gene Knutson at Michigan, 1952
No. 81
Position:Defensive end
Personal information
Born:(1932-11-10)November 10, 1932
Beloit, Wisconsin
Died:February 9, 2008(2008-02-09) (aged 75)
Cassopolis, Michigan
Career information
College:Michigan
NFL Draft:1954 / Round: 10 / Pick: 111
Career history
Career highlights and awards
Career NFL statistics
Games played:18
Games started:0
Fumble recoveries:1
Player stats at NFL.com

Early years in Beloit

Knutson was born in Beloit, Wisconsin in 1932. He was the son of Florence and Peter Knutson. He began playing football at Lincoln High School in Beloit. At Beloit Memorial High School, he played football, basketball and track and field. He earned seven varsity letters and won all-state honors in both football and basketball and was a hurdler on Beloit's state championship track team as a junior.[1][2] Knutson graduated from Beloit High School in 1950.[2] One of his teammates later recalled, "Gene was probably one of the best all-around athletes Beloit High School ever had."[1]

University of Michigan

Knutson enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1950. After his freshman season, Michigan head coach Bennie Oosterbaan said that Knutson was "unquestionably Michigan's outstanding freshman prospect."[3] He sustained a broken leg in April 1951 while stepping off a curb, but he recovered in time for the 1951 football season.[3] Knutson played for the Michigan Wolverines football team from 1951 to 1953. He played at the offensive and defensive end position for Michigan. By his senior year, he was 6 feet, 5 inches tall and weighed 230 pounds.[1] In October 1953, he caught a 29-yard touchdown pass on fourth down in the fourth quarter to help Michigan to a 14-13 victory over Iowa.[4] He was selected as an All-Midwest player and played in the college all-star Hula Bowl.[1]

Knutson later recalled the first time he ran out of the tunnel into Michigan Stadium in front of 100,000 fans: "That was such a thrill to me, so exciting. How could I ever explain that to someone? Unless you experience sitting in that locker room, getting dressed, warming up and then going out to that crowd and playing in that ballgame, you'll never know. It was exhilarating."[1]

Green Bay Packers

Knutson was drafted by the Green Bay Packers in the 10th round (111th overall pick) of the 1954 NFL Draft. He played as a defensive end for the Packers, appearing in 18 games during the 1954 and 1956 NFL seasons. Knutson did not play for the Packers in 1955 after suffering an injury in an exhibition game against the Washington Redskins.[5] His highest annual salary as a professional athlete was $8,000.[6] Knutson later recalled his days in the NFL as follows: "It was more of a business - dog eat dog. When I played there were only 12 teams and the (roster) limit was 33. It was a lot harder to get on a pro roster than it is now. I would love to be coming out of college now."[1]

Later years

After the 1956 season, Knutson retired from football due to chronic knee problems. He taught and coached at St. Joseph's High School in South Bend, Indiana, before entering the insurance business.[7] He also worked as an executive vice president for Ara Parseghian Enterprises.[1] In his later years, he lived in Cassopolis, Michigan.[6][8]

Family and death

In 1953, Knutson married the former Carol Buschbaum of South Bend, Indiana. His first wife died in 1982, and in 1995, Knutson married Vicki Futterknecht of Cassopolis. Knutson died of cancer in February 2008 at Cassopolis.[1] He was survived by his second wife, three children, Sherry Sprouls, Bruce Knutson and Janie Taylor, and eight grandchildren.

gollark: I mean, to be fair, it's likely quite hard to self-teach 3 years of full time stuff.
gollark: The additional spending of the top ones apparently goes on research quite a lot. That doesn't impact teaching quality much in *most* areas, since I don't think that much of your education is going to be in state of the art research. Maybe the last year.
gollark: Prestigious is the more accurate word I guess.
gollark: I expect there are significant diminishing returns with actual teaching quality in the trendier universities.
gollark: Increasingly, if you want to learn a thing for learningous purposes, you can just get free/cheap material on it off the internet.

References

  1. Jim Franz (February 13, 2008). "Knutson ranks among Beloit's best". Beloit Daily News. Retrieved 2010-07-24.
  2. "Packers Flashback". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. 2006-09-30.
  3. "Gene Knutson Out With Broken Leg". Racine Journal Times. 1951-04-19.
  4. "Michigan Edges Iowa, 14-13: Sub Tosses Payoff Pass to Knutson". Wisconsin State Journal. 1953-10-11.
  5. "Zatkoff May Be Defensive End for Packers in Exhibition Here". The Milwaukee Journal. 1955-09-15.
  6. Lou Mumford (2001-01-19). "Gridirons and Hot Stoves: Ex-Green Bay Packer shares stories with Cass County seniors". South Bend Tribune.
  7. Bill Moor (2008-02-15). "His bark was worse than his bite". South Bend Tribune. p. B.1.
  8. Bill Moor (2003-11-21). "This old Wolverine still can't wait for Ohio State". South Bend Tribune.
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