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Bobby Bell

Bobby Bell
Personal Information

Full Name : Robert Lee Bell, Jr.
Public : Bobby Bell
Nickname :
Country : United States (USA) 
DOB : June 17, 1940  (Age 69)
Place : Shelby, North Carolina
Height : 6' 4"
Weight : 228 lbs.
Sport : Football - NFL
Team : Retired
Level : Professional
Status : Hall of Fame
   
 Quick Facts
Kansas City Chiefs
Linebacker
Jersey # 78


NFL Team :
Kansas City Chiefs (1963 - 1974)

College : Minnesota

Drafted :
NFL - 16th pick by the Minnesota Vikings
AFL - 65th pick by the Kansas City Chiefs


Achievements :
Super Bowl IV champion
9× Pro Bowl (1964 - 1972)
6× All-Pro Team (1964 - 1971)


Post Career Honors :
Pro Football Hall of Fame, inducted in 1983
College Football Hall of Fame, inducted in 1991
Kansas City Chiefs retired #78
#66 on TSN Football's 100 Greatest Players
NFL 1970s All-Decade Team


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 Mini Biography

Robert Lee Bell, Jr is a retired professional football player known for his 12-year career with the Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). He was born on June 17, 1940 in Shelby, North Carolina.

After a spectacular college football career at the University of Minnesota, Bell was drafted  by two teams in 1963 - by the Minnesota Vikings in the National Football League (NFL) and by the Kansas City Chiefs in the American Football League (AFL). He ultimately chose to join the Kansas City Chiefs, where he played in the AFL from 1963 through 1969, and then in the NFL from 1970 through 1974.

Bell played his entire professional career with the Chiefs, bringing the team to the championships in 1970, where they defeated the Minnesota Vikings (the NFL team that drafted him) in Super Bowl IV, the franchise's only post season triumph. He retired in 1974 after being named to the Pro Bowl nine times and eight times to the All-Pro team.


 Early Life

He excelled in several sports at a then-segregated Cleveland High School where his first two years he played six-man football at halfback. During his junior year, his school converted to playing an eleven-man team where Bell served as quarterback. He won All-State honors.

 Career (Pro, College, HS, Olympic, International, Contracts, Earnings)

College Career

At the University of Minnesota, he was a 2 time All-American (1961 & 1962), winner of the 1962 Outland Trophy as the nation's outstanding interior lineman, and finished third in the Heisman Trophy voting. The Gophers with Bell were the 1960 National Champions and played in the 1961 Rose Bowl and won the 1962 Rose Bowl Championship. Bell was also inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame for the years 1960-62.

He joined Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for African Americans, via the Mu Chapter while at the University of Minnesota.


Professional Football Career

He played for the Kansas City Chiefs, first in the American Football League from 1963 through 1969, and then in the NFL from 1970 through 1974. Bell was an AFL All-Star for six consecutive years, 1964 through 1969, and then an NFL Pro Bowler for three straight years (1970-1972).

He was on two AFL Championship teams and a World Championship team. He was named to the All-Time All-AFL Team in 1970. He was inducted into the Chiefs Hall of Fame in 1980, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983. The Chiefs retired his uniform number 78. In 1999, he was ranked number 66 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players.

One of Bell's finest moments came in the 1969 AFL divisional playoff game against the New York Jets. In a critical goal line stand, his key coverage on Jets running back Matt Snell stopped the drive and forced New York to kick a field goal. The 13-6 victory over the Jets propelled Kansas City to its only Super Bowl triumph.

Bell was noted for his one-of-a-kind athleticism at 6' 4" and 230 pounds and was reported to have run a 4.5 40-yard dash. Bell was possibly the most physically gifted linebacker in professional football history, for his speed at such a size made him ideal at outside linebacker. He was noted as one of the finest open-field tacklers in pro football history, and if he missed, he had the speed to make up for it.

He was also a great blitzer from the linebacker position. Chiefs records show Bell had 40 career quarterback sacks and he might have had more if he had played right linebacker, not the left linebacker. In that era, more often than not the right-side linebacker got the call to "dog" or blitz since more often than not the tight end would be lined up on the right side (the defense's left). Since Bell was on the left, he usually covered more than he blitzed. He scored 9 touchdowns in his career: 6 off interceptions (26 in his career), 2 more touchdowns off fumble recoveries, and one off an onside kickoff return. Coach Hank Stram said that, "He could play all 22 positions on the field, and play them well."

 Stats
 Recognition (Records, Awards, Achievements, Highlights, Milestones)
 Endorsements
 Personal Life

After his retirement, he opened Bobby Bell's Bar-b-que in Kansas City.

 Trivia & Notes
 Equipment
 Health & Fitness (Injuries & Illnesses, Diet & Nutrition, Training Schedule)
 Off the Field (Charity, Pop Culture, Controversy)
 Legacy
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