sport.wikisort.org - AthleteClifford Allen Lewis (March 22, 1923 – July 24, 2002) was a professional American football player for the Cleveland Browns of the All-America Football Conference and National Football League. He was the team's first quarterback.
American football player (1923–2002)
For the linebacker, see Cliff Lewis (linebacker).
American football player
Cliff Lewis Lewis in 1946 |
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Position: | Quarterback, Defensive back |
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Born: | (1923-03-22)March 22, 1923 Cleveland, Ohio |
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Died: | July 24, 2002(2002-07-24) (aged 79) Tampa, Florida |
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Height: | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) |
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Weight: | 168 lb (76 kg) |
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High school: | Lakewood High School, Staunton Military Academy |
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College: | Duke |
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NFL Draft: | 1946 / Round: 21 / Pick: 200 |
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- Cleveland Browns (1946–1951)
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- 4× AAFC Champion (1946–1949)
- NFL Champion (1950)
- Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame (1976)
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Games: | 71 |
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Interceptions: | 30 |
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Punt Return Yards: | 710 |
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Player stats at NFL.com · PFR |
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Lewis attended Lakewood High School in Lakewood, Ohio, and Staunton Military Academy in Virginia. He went to Duke University, where he played football as a back. He was a member of the Duke Blue Devils basketball team during the 1944–45 season. Lewis joined the Browns after graduating from college and spent his entire professional career with the team, playing primarily as a defensive back. He left the game after the 1951 season to concentrate on his insurance business. Lewis died in 2002.
High school and college career
Lewis grew up in Lakewood, Ohio and attended Lakewood High School. He played football and baseball, and was on a Lakewood basketball team that reached the state high school championship game in 1941.[1] Lakewood's football team tied for the Lake Erie League championship in 1940 and 1941, when Lewis played left halfback.[2] Lewis later transferred to Staunton Military Academy in Virginia, and in 1942 set a school scoring record in football with 14 touchdowns and 282 total points.[2]
After graduating, Lewis attended Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and played as a back on the school's Blue Devils football team.[3] Lewis was Duke's second-string tailback as a sophomore in 1944, but he took over starting duties after the original first-stringer, Allen Elger, suffered a knee injury.[4] Lewis, however, broke his elbow in the team's second game of the season against the University of Pennsylvania and had to sit out.[4] He returned for a November game against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, and in a 34–0 victory on November 11 against the previously undefeated Wake Forest University he passed to receiver Clark Jones for a touchdown.[3][5] Later in November, he passed to Harold Raether for the final touchdown in a 33–0 win over the University of North Carolina that gave Duke a second consecutive Southern Conference title and a spot in the Sugar Bowl game against the University of Alabama.[6] Lewis's passing helped Duke drive the ball 64 yards in the third quarter against Alabama, leading to a touchdown by All-American Tom Davis. Duke won 29–26.[7] While football was Lewis's main sport, he also played basketball at Duke in the 1944–45 season.[8]
Professional career
Lewis entered the U.S. Navy in 1945 and was a triple threat player and alternate quarterback for the Fleet City, California Bluejackets, a military team.[9][10] The Bluejackets won the national service title that year.[11]
The Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League (NFL) selected Lewis with the 200th pick in the 1946 NFL Draft, but NFL commissioner Bert Bell ruled him ineligible under league rules. The Rams took Lewis thinking he was in the 1946 graduating class, but he had one more year of eligibility left as an athlete who entered college in 1943.[12] The decision delayed Lewis's professional career for a year; in 1946 he signed with the Cleveland Browns of the new All-America Football Conference (AAFC).[11] Lewis started at quarterback for the Browns in their first three games in his first season, sharing duties with Otto Graham. After Graham took over as the starting quarterback, he became a defensive back who also returned punts and kickoffs. Lewis had five interceptions in his first season, when the Browns won the AAFC championship. Cleveland won the league championship in each of the ensuing three years before the AAFC dissolved and the Browns were absorbed into the more established NFL.
The Browns beat the Rams to win the NFL championship in 1950, the team's first year in the league. The following year, Lewis returned a Bob Waterfield interception for 12 yards to the Cleveland 32-yard line during the Browns' 24–17 loss to the Rams in the NFL title game at the Los Angeles Coliseum.[17] After the 1951 season, Lewis retired from the Browns to devote himself full-time to his insurance business.[18]
Later life and death
In 1961–62, Lewis worked as a color commentator on Browns television broadcasts, and became vice president of insurance administration for the New York Yankees following the team's purchase by George Steinbrenner in 1973. He participated in the retired players division of the NFL players' golf tournament in Hollywood, Florida, in January 1961.[19] He was inducted into the Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame in 1976.[1] Lewis died at the age of 79 in Tampa, Florida, following an extended illness in 2002.[20]
References
- "Cliff Lewis". Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved August 25, 2012.
- "Ex-Lakewood Athlete Sets Scoring Mark". Cleveland Plain Dealer. December 3, 1942. p. 20.
- "Duke's Long Runs Stop Wake Forest". The New York Times. November 12, 1944. p. 53. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved August 4, 2012.
- "Expect Clark To Pace Duke". St. Joseph Gazette. Durham, North Carolina. Associated Press. December 30, 1944. p. 5. Retrieved August 4, 2012.
- "Lewis Returns to Duke Squad". The New York Times. November 2, 1944. p. 24.
- "Duke Overpowers No. Carolina, 33-0". The New York Times. November 26, 1944. p. 54. Archived from the original on July 23, 2018. Retrieved August 4, 2012.
- "Duke's Power Beats Ala. Air Attack 29-26". Schenectady Gazette. New Orleans. Associated Press. January 2, 1945. p. 11. Retrieved August 4, 2012.
- "Penn Easily Beats Princeton, 66 to 52". The New York Times. February 11, 1945. p. 51.
- "Triple-Threat Star". Los Angeles Times. December 4, 1945. p. A8.
- "The Hyland Fling". Los Angeles Times. December 4, 1945. p. A8.
- "Mutryn, Kolesar and Cliff Lewis Are Signed by Cleveland Browns". Cleveland Plain Dealer. February 19, 1946. p. 18.
Lewis, 22, is a product of Lakewood High, and at Duke was an outstanding back who sparked the Blue Devils' 29-to-26 victory over Alabama in the 1945 Sugar Bowl game at New Orleans. Last season, in the Navy, he was a member of the crack Fleet City (Cal.) Bluejackets who won the national service title.
- "Rams Lose Two Draftees". Los Angeles Times. May 28, 1946. p. A7.
- "Rams Whip Browns, 24-17; Win Pro Title". Los Angeles Times. December 24, 1951. p. C1.
- "Browns' Quarterback Quits". The New York Times. July 31, 1952. p. 19.
- "National Football Loop Players Keep Miller as Their Attorney". The New York Times. January 5, 1961. p. 36.
- "Lewis was first QB to play for Browns". ESPN Classic. SportsTicker. July 25, 2002. Archived from the original on October 6, 2012. Retrieved August 5, 2012.
Bibliography
- Piascik, Andy (2007). The Best Show in Football: The 1946–1955 Cleveland Browns. Lanham, Maryland: Taylor Trade Publishing. ISBN 978-1-58979-571-6.
External links
Biography portal
Los Angeles Rams 1946 NFL Draft selections |
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- Emil Sitko
- Don Samuel
- Don Paul
- Newell (Ace) Oestreich
- Fay King
- Joe Whisler
- Joe Signaigo
- Tom Phillips
- Ted Strojny
- George Strohmeyer
- Bob Palladino
- Dick Lorenz
- Larry Bouley
- Gasper Urban
- Bob Wise
- Jerry Ford
- Bob Albrecht
- Cliff Lewis
- Bob Richardson
- Deral Lebow
- BIll Lippincott
- Kay Jamison
- D.J. Campbell
- Joe Ben Dicky
- Marty Grbovaz
- Jay Perrin
- Frank Plant
- Dale Cowan
- John West
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Cleveland Browns 1946 AAFC champions (inaugural season roster) |
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- 20 Mike Scarry
- 22 Frank Gatski
- 24 Mel Maceau
- 30 Bill Willis
- 32 Lin Houston
- 34 George Cheroke
- 36 Ed Ulinski
- 38 Bob Kolesar
- 39 Alex Kapter
- 40 Jim Daniell
- 42 Chet Adams
- 44 Lou Rymkus
- 46 Lou Groza
- 48 Ernie Blandin
- 50 John Yonakor
- 52 George Young
- 54 John Rokisky
- 55 John Harrington
- 56 Dante Lavelli
- 58 Mac Speedie
- 59 Al Coppage
- 60 Otto Graham
- 62 Cliff Lewis
- 64 Bud Schwenk
- 66 Lou Saban
- 70 Gene Fekete
- 74 Gaylon Smith
- 76 Marion Motley
- 80 Al Akins
- 82 Bill Lund
- 84 Ray Terrell
- 85 Don Greenwood
- 88 Bob Steuber
- 90 Edgar Jones
- 92 Tom Colella
- 99 Fred Evans
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Cleveland Browns 1947 AAFC champions |
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- 20 Mike Scarry
- 22 Frank Gatski
- 24 Mel Maceau
- 30 Bill Willis
- 32 Lin Houston
- 34 Bob Gaudio
- 36 Ed Ulinski
- 38 Weldon Humble
- 39 Alex Kapter
- 42 Chet Adams
- 44 Lou Rymkus
- 45 Roman Piskor
- 46 Lou Groza
- 48 Ernie Blandin
- 49 Lenny Simonetti
- 50 John Yonakor
- 52 George Young
- 53 Marshall Shurnas
- 56 Dante Lavelli
- 58 Mac Speedie
- 59 Horace Gillom
- 60 Otto Graham
- 62 Cliff Lewis
- 66 Ermal Allen
- 70 Spiro Dellerba
- 72 Lou Saban
- 74 Tony Adamle
- 76 Marion Motley
- 80 Bob Cowan
- 82 Bill Lund
- 84 Ray Terrell
- 85 Don Greenwood
- 86 Lew Mayne
- 90 Edgar Jones
- 92 Tommy Colella
- 94 Jim Dewar
- 99 Bill Boedeker
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- Assistant coaches: John Brickels
- Blanton Collier
- Bill Edwards
- Dick Gallagher
- Fritz Heisler
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Cleveland Browns 1948 AAFC champions |
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- 22 Frank Gatski
- 24 Mel Maceau
- 30 Bill Willis
- 32 Lin Houston
- 34 Bob Gaudio
- 35 Alex Agase
- 36 Ed Ulinski
- 38 Weldon Humble
- 42 Chet Adams
- 44 Lou Rymkus
- 45 Ben Pucci
- 46 Lou Groza
- 48 Chubby Grigg
- 49 Lenny Simonetti
- 50 John Yonakor
- 52 George Young
- 53 Frank Kosikowski
- 56 Dante Lavelli
- 58 Mac Speedie
- 59 Horace Gillom
- 60 Otto Graham
- 62 Cliff Lewis
- 64 George Terlep
- 70 Ollie Cline
- 72 Lou Saban
- 74 Tony Adamle
- 76 Marion Motley
- 80 Bob Cowan
- 82 Tommy James
- 85 Ara Parseghian
- 90 Edgar Jones
- 92 Tommy Colella
- 94 Dean Sensanbaugher
- 96 Dub Jones
- 99 Bill Boedeker
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- Assistant coaches: John Brickels
- Blanton Collier
- Bill Edwards
- Dick Gallagher
- Fritz Heisler
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Cleveland Browns 1949 AAFC champions |
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- 22 Frank Gatski
- 23 Tommy Thompson
- 30 Bill Willis
- 32 Lin Houston
- 34 Bob Gaudio
- 35 Alex Agase
- 36 Ed Ulinski
- 38 Weldon Humble
- 42 Derrell Palmer
- 44 Lou Rymkus
- 46 Lou Groza
- 48 Chubby Grigg
- 49 Joe Spencer
- 50 John Yonakor
- 52 George Young
- 53 Bill O'Connor
- 56 Dante Lavelli
- 58 Mac Speedie
- 59 Horace Gillom
- 60 Otto Graham
- 62 Cliff Lewis
- 70 Ed Sustersic
- 72 Lou Saban
- 74 Tony Adamle
- 76 Marion Motley
- 80 Warren Lahr
- 82 Tommy James
- 85 Ara Parseghian
- 90 Edgar Jones
- 92 Les Horvath
- 96 Dub Jones
- 99 Bill Boedeker
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- Assistant coaches: Blanton Collier
- Weeb Ewbank
- Dick Gallagher
- Fritz Heisler
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Cleveland Browns 1950 NFL champions |
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- 20 Hal Herring
- 22 Frank Gatski
- 30 Bill Willis
- 32 Lin Houston
- 34 Abe Gibron
- 35 Alex Agase
- 36 Tommy Thompson
- 38 Weldon Humble
- 45 John Kissell
- 42 Derrell Palmer
- 44 Lou Rymkus
- 46 Lou Groza
- 48 Chubby Grigg
- 49 John Sandusky
- 50 Jim Martin
- 52 George Young
- 53 Len Ford
- 56 Dante Lavelli
- 58 Mac Speedie
- 59 Horace Gillom
- 60 Otto Graham
- 62 Cliff Lewis
- 70 Emerson Cole
- 74 Tony Adamle
- 76 Marion Motley
- 80 Warren Lahr
- 82 Tommy James
- 84 Ken Carpenter
- 85 Ken Gorgal
- 86 Dub Jones
- 90 Rex Bumgardner
- 92 Dom Moselle
- 94 Don Phelps
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- Assistant Coaches: Blanton Collier
- Weeb Ewbank
- Fritz Heisler
- Tim Temerario
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Cleveland Browns starting quarterbacks |
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- Cliff Lewis (1946–1947, 1949)
- Otto Graham (1946–1955)
- George Ratterman (1953–1956)
- Babe Parilli (1956)
- Tommy O'Connell (1956–1957)
- Milt Plum (1957–1961)
- Len Dawson (1961)
- Jim Ninowski (1962–1963, 1965)
- Frank Ryan (1962–1968)
- Gary Lane (1967)
- Bill Nelsen (1968–1972)
- Mike Phipps (1970–1976)
- Don Gault (1970)
- Brian Sipe (1974–1983)
- Will Cureton (1975)
- Dave Mays (1977)
- Terry Luck (1977)
- Paul McDonald (1982–1984)
- Gary Danielson (1985–1988)
- Bernie Kosar (1985–1993)
- Jeff Christensen (1987)
- Mike Pagel (1988, 1990)
- Don Strock (1988)
- Mike Tomczak (1992)
- Todd Philcox (1992–1993)
- Vinny Testaverde (1993–1995)
- Mark Rypien (1994)
- Eric Zeier (1995)
- Ty Detmer (1999)
- Tim Couch (1999–2003)
- Doug Pederson (2000)
- Spergon Wynn (2000)
- Kelly Holcomb (2002–2004)
- Jeff Garcia (2004)
- Luke McCown (2004)
- Trent Dilfer (2005)
- Charlie Frye (2005–2007)
- Derek Anderson (2006–2009)
- Brady Quinn (2008–2009)
- Ken Dorsey (2008)
- Bruce Gradkowski (2008)
- Jake Delhomme (2010)
- Seneca Wallace (2010–2011)
- Colt McCoy (2010–2011)
- Brandon Weeden (2012–2013)
- Thad Lewis (2012)
- Brian Hoyer (2013–2014)
- Jason Campbell (2013)
- Johnny Manziel (2014–2015)
- Connor Shaw (2014)
- Josh McCown (2015–2016)
- Austin Davis (2015)
- Robert Griffin III (2016)
- Cody Kessler (2016)
- DeShone Kizer (2017)
- Kevin Hogan (2017)
- Tyrod Taylor (2018)
- Baker Mayfield (2018–present)
- Case Keenum (2021)
- Nick Mullens (2021)
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NFL on Sports Network Incorporated (SNI) |
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Related programs | |
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Related articles |
- Carling Beer
- Hughes Television Network
- NFL on television (history)
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Seasons |
- 1955
- 1956
- 1957
- 1958 (The Browns' SNI arrangement from 1956 to 1958 was national in scope.)
- 1959
- 1960
- 1961 (For 1960 and 1961 seasons, the Browns-SNI network was reduced to a Midwest regional network.)
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