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- Duration: 7:10
- Published: 2008-10-17
- Uploaded: 2011-02-16
- Author: redskins111
Name | Ernest (Ernie) Davis |
---|---|
Width | 200px |
Caption | Davis holding up the Heisman Trophy. |
Dateofbirth | December 14, 1939 |
Birthplace | New Salem, Fayette County, Pennsylvania |
Dateofdeath | May 18, 1963 |
Placeofdeath | Cleveland, Ohio |
Position | Running back |
College | Syracuse |
Height ft | 6 |
Height in | 2 |
Weight lbs | 212 |
Draftedyear | 1962 |
Draftedround | 1 / Pick 1 (By the Washington Redskins traded to the Cleveland Browns) |
Career highlights | Y |
Honors | College Football HOF |
Awards | 1961 Heisman Trophy 1961 Liberty Bowl MVP 1960 Cotton Bowl Classic MVP |
Retired #s | Cleveland Browns #45 Syracuse Orange #44 (along with Jim Brown & Floyd Little) |
Collegehof | 60029 |
Throughout his high school years at Elmira Free Academy, Davis' talent on the football field became clear. He was named Elmira Player of the Year and high school All-American in both his junior and senior years. He also showed great athletic prowess in varsity basketball and baseball, all while excelling academically.
At a time when many universities were not offering scholarships to black athletes, colleges from around the country watched Davis' high school career closely, and more than 50 offered him scholarships.
Davis found discrimination prevalent in the American South during his Cotton Bowl Classic visit. Author Jocelyn Selim writes that at the banquet following the 1960 game, Davis was told he could only accept his award and then would be required to leave the segregated facility. Davis refused and his teammates, nearly all of them white, boycotted the banquet.
A different account of the banquet is given by John Brown. He was Davis' teammate at Syracuse and on the Cleveland Browns, his roommate and a close friend. According to an article in the Houston Chronicle, all the players from the game attended the banquet. Brown recalls that the teams sat on opposite sides of the room. After everyone ate and the trophies were handed out, the three black Syracuse players, including Brown and Davis were asked to leave and were taken to another party in Dallas by local NAACP representatives. One Syracuse player, Ger Schwedes, recommended that the whole Syracuse team leave the banquet to show solidarity with their black teammates, but the suggestion was overruled by Syracuse officials. When the Chronicle asked Brown "whether the film is a truthful portrayal of his friend, Brown said... in short, no."
Davis became the first black athlete to be awarded the Heisman Trophy, following his 1961 senior-year season at Syracuse University. President John F. Kennedy had followed Davis' career and requested to meet him while he was in New York to receive the trophy. Later in 1963, when Elmira chose February 3 to celebrate Davis' achievements, Kennedy sent a telegram, reading:
During his time at Syracuse, Davis wore the same number, 44, as legendary Orangeman Jim Brown, helping to establish a tradition at the school that was acknowledged on November 12, 2005, when the school retired the number in an on-field ceremony. Davis also played basketball at Syracuse for one season 1960-1961.
While attending Syracuse, Davis was a member of the Sigma Alpha Mu Fraternity, a nationally recognized Jewish fraternity. Davis was the first African-American to become part of the organization not only at the Syracuse chapter, but for the national fraternity as a whole.
Davis was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1979.
Ernie Davis was a member of The Pigskin Club of Washington, D.C. National Intercollegiate All-American Football Players Honor Roll.
Davis signed a three-year, $200,000 contract with the Browns in late December 1961 while he was in San Francisco, California practicing for the East-West Shrine Game. Originally reported at $80,000, the contract, according to Davis' attorney, A. William (Tony) DeFilippo, consisted of $80,000 for playing football, including a $15,000 signing bonus; $60,000 for ancillary rights, such as image marketing; and $60,000 for off-season employment.
Category:1939 births Category:1963 deaths Category:Players of American football from Pennsylvania Category:American football running backs Category:Cleveland Browns players Category:College Football Hall of Fame inductees Category:Deaths from leukemia Category:Heisman Trophy winners Category:National Football League first overall draft picks Category:Syracuse University alumni Category:Syracuse Orange football players Category:Syracuse Orange men's basketball players Category:Cancer deaths in Ohio
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