armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

Sam Huff

Upload-an-image-profile.gif

(upload a new image)

Full Name: Robert Lee Huff Primary Position: LB/MG
Height/Weight: 6' 1"/230 College: West Virginia University
Birthdate: October 4, 1934 High School: Farmington (WV)
Birthplace: Edna Gas, West Virginia
Pro Experience: 13 years
Hall of Fame
Rate this Player
2.53
(17 votes)

Contents

  • 1 Biography
  • 2 Scouting Report
  • 3 Statistics
    • 3.1 Interception Stats
  • 4 Trivia
  • 5 Video Gallery
  • 6 Picture Gallery
  • 7 See Also
  • 8 Awards
  • 9 Categories

[edit] Biography

Robert Lee Huff (born October 4, 1934, Morgantown, West Virginia) is a former football linebacker who played for the New York Giants and the Washington Redskins after earning All-America honors at West Virginia University. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1982.

Long considered one of the most physical defensive players in the annals of NFL history, Huff ended his professional career with 30 interceptions, hauling in at least one interception during each season he played.

One of six children, Huff was born in a West Virginia mining camp called Edna Gap, near Pittsburgh and watched his family struggle through the depths of the Depression. Motivated by these hurdles, Huff took up football at Farmington High School and earned a scholarship to West Virginia University.

Huff majored in physical education in college, expecting to use his degree in a teaching capacity. However, his skills on the football field helped lead the Mountaineers to a 31-7 record during his collegiate career. On an individual level, Huff garnered not only a berth on the 1955 All-America squad, but a third round draft selection by the New York Giants as well.

When Giants head coach Jim Lee Howell couldn't decide where to play him, Sam almost left the team before he was stopped by assistant coach Vince Lombardi. When middle linebacker Ray Beck was injured in the season's third game, Huff stepped in and excelled, a factor that led to Beck's retirement soon afterwards. Huff's work on defense played a major role in helping the Giants win their first NFL Championship since 1938.

After being dethroned by the Detroit Lions the following year, the Giants would return to the Championship Game in five of the next six seasons, but come up short on each occasion.

Those disappointments failed to limit Huff's image in the national spotlight. Playing in the media capital of the world, Huff would be featured on the November 30, 1959 edition of Time Magazine, and was also the subject of an October 31, 1960 CBS special, "The Violent World of Sam Huff." At one point, Huff was making more for his off-the-field duties than on the gridiron. (New York-based comedian Alan King talked about the CBS program in one of his books, in mock wonderment about how the sound in his set was good enough to hear bones crunching).

Huff earned a host of honors during his time with the Giants, including being named Top NFL Linebacker in 1959, four consecutive Pro Bowl selections (1958-1961), and winning a spot on the All-NFL team three times. During his 13-year career, Huff's most memorable on-field duels came against a pair of running backs, Cleveland's Jim Brown, and Green Bay's Jim Taylor

Allie Sherman, who had taken over as Giants head coach for Howell in 1961, traded Huff to the Washington Redskins on April 10, 1964 as part of a five-player deal, one of a series of moves that sent the once-proud Giants into a tailspin. In 1964, Huff went to his fifth, and final, Pro Bowl.

When Huff arrived, the Redskin defense had given up the most points in the NFL in 1963, and had been a perennial also-ran in that category since 1958. After his first season, the Redskins improved to seventh, but after four seasons with the team, he retired from football, primarily due to differences with Washington head coach Otto Graham. When Vince Lombardi returned to coach football in 1969, Huff returned to the Redskins as a player-coach for two seasons.

Upon his final retirement as a player, Huff entered the broadcast booth, spending one season as part of the Giants radio team. He then went on to the Redskins, having spent the last three decades working in the same capacity.

On November 24, 2005, Huff's uniform number 75 was retired by West Virginia University.

[edit] Scouting Report

[edit] Statistics

[edit] Interception Stats

year team league games INT YDS LNG TD
1956 NYG NFL 12 3 49 27 0
1957 NYG NFL 12 1 6 6 0
1958 NYG NFL 12 2 23 15 0
1959 NYG NFL 12 1 21 21 0
1960 NYG NFL 12 3 45 17 0
1961 NYG NFL 14 3 13 13 0
1962 NYG NFL 14 1 4 4 0
1963 NYG NFL 14 4 47 36t 1
1964 WAS NFL 14 4 34 14 0
1965 WAS NFL 14 2 49 29 0
1966 WAS NFL 14 1 17 17 0
1967 WAS NFL 10 2 8 5 0
1969 WAS NFL 14 3 65 32 1
13 year NFL career 168 30 381 0 2

[edit] Trivia

[edit] Video Gallery

Add Videos

[edit] Picture Gallery

Add Pictures

[edit] See Also

[edit] Awards

  • Won the Pro Bowl MVP in 1960

[edit] Categories

Retrieved from "http://www.armchairgm.com/Sam_Huff"

This page was last modified 00:32, 12 December 2007. Content is available under the GFDL.

Categories: Athletes | Football Players | NFL Players | New York Giants Players | Washington Redskins Players | 1956 New York Giants Players | 1957 New York Giants Players | 1958 New York Giants Players | 1959 New York Giants Players | 1960 New York Giants Players | 1961 New York Giants Players | 1962 New York Giants Players | 1963 New York Giants Players | 1964 Washington Redskins Players | 1965 Washington Redskins Players | 1966 Washington Redskins Players | 1967 Washington Redskins Players | 1969 Washington Redskins Players | Athletes Who Attended Farmington (WV) | Football Players Who Attended Farmington (WV) | NFL Players Who Attended Farmington (WV) | Athletes Who Attended West Virginia University | Football Players Who Attended West Virginia University | NFL Players Who Attended West Virginia University | Pro Bowl MVP | Football Players Who Have Won The Pro Bowl MVP At Least 1 Time | Retired Athletes | Retired Football Players | Athletes in the Hall of Fame | Football Players in the Hall of Fame | Athletes with the Last Name Huff | Football Players with the Last Name Huff | Athletes with the First Name Sam | Football Players with the First Name Sam | Athletes Born in October | Football Players Born in October | Athletes Born on October 4 | Football Players Born on October 4 | Athletes Born in 1934 | Football Players Born in 1934 | Athletes Born in October 1934 | Football Players Born in October 1934 | Athletes Born on October 4, 1934 | Football Players Born on October 4, 1934 | Athletes Born in Edna Gas, West Virginia | Football Players Born in Edna Gas, West Virginia | Athletes Born in West Virginia | Football Players Born in West Virginia | Football Players Who Debuted with the New York Giants | Players with 5 years experience in Professional Football | Football Players with 5 years experience in the Pros | Players with 10 years experience in Professional Football | Football Players with 10 years experience in the Pros | NFL Players with at least 10 Interceptions | NFL Players with at least 25 Interceptions | NFL Players with at least 1 Opponent Fumble Recoveries | NFL Players with at least 5 Opponent Fumble Recoveries | NFL Players with at least 10 Opponent Fumble Recoveries | NFL Players with at least 15 Opponent Fumble Recoveries | NFL Players with at least 1 Fumble Returns for Touchdowns

Contribute

ArmchairGM's pages can be edited.
Is this page incomplete? Is there anything wrong?
Change it!

Edit this page Discuss this page Page history

Recent contributors to this page

The following people recently contributed to this article.

Embed this on your site

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise