1951 Pro Bowl - Wikipedia
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![]() Official program | ||||||||||||||||||
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Date | January 14, 1951 | |||||||||||||||||
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Stadium | Memorial Coliseum, Los Angeles, California | |||||||||||||||||
MVP | Otto Graham (Cleveland Browns) | |||||||||||||||||
Attendance | 53,676 | |||||||||||||||||
TV in the United States | ||||||||||||||||||
Network | not televised | |||||||||||||||||
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The 1951 Pro Bowl was the National Football League's inaugural Pro Bowl which featured the league's outstanding performers from the 1950 season. The game was played on Sunday, January 14, 1951, at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California in front of 53,676 fans, with the American Conference squad defeating the National Conference by a score of 28–27.[1][2]
Players were selected by a vote of each conferences coaches along with the sports editors of the newspapers in the Los Angeles area, where the game was contested.[3]
The National team was led by the Los Angeles Rams' Joe Stydahar while Paul Brown of the Cleveland Browns coached the American stars. The same two coaches had faced each other three weeks earlier in the 1950 NFL Championship Game in which Brown's team had also defeated Stydahar's. Both coaches employed the T formation offense in the Pro Bowl.[4]
Cleveland Browns quarterback Otto Graham was named the game's outstanding player.[5]
The NFL's annual Pro-Bowl game began according to the model of the league's other annual exhibition, the Chicago Charities College All-Star Game, initiated in 1934 under the auspices of the Chicago Tribune. This game, played in the summer ahead of the league's pre-season slate of exhibition games, pitted a select team of college all-stars coming into the league against the NFL's champion of the previous year. With proceeds of the game dedicated to charity, the Chicago College All-Star Game had become an institution, drawing vast audiences and priming fans for the football season to come.
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The Pro-Bowl was initially envisioned as a comparable post-season spectacle, held in sunny Southern California in January in the capacious Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum following conclusion of the regular season and World Championship Game. With the size of the NFL boosted in 1950 from 10 teams to 13 through absorption of three teams from the All-America Football Conference, the time seemed right for an exhibition contest between the year's stars of the NFL's two newly-realigned conferences.
As with the Chicago game, newspapers were to play a prominent role in the game's organization, with the Los Angeles Newspaper Publishers' Association the chief organizing body. The Los Angeles Times had already sponsored NFL All-Star games after the 1938, 1939, and 1940 seasons,[6] with the eruption of World War II bringing an end to this first series of January games.
The decision was made to relaunch the All-Star games under the "Pro Bowl" moniker by the league's 13 owners, meeting in Philadelphia over the first weekend of June 1950.[6] Three organizations submitted bids to host the event — the Los Angeles Newspaper Publishers' Association, the Al Malaikah Shrine of Los Angeles, and promoters from Houston, Texas — with NFL Commissioner Bert Bell expressing the view that the league was "morally obligated" to return to the Los Angeles newspaper publishers over the other potential sponsors.[6]
Bell specified that provision must be made that each participating player should receive at least $500 plus traveling expenses for the game to be formally approved by the league office.[6] The door was left open by Bell to co-sponsorship of the event by the publishers and the Shriners, with a July 1 deadline for a working agreement to be hashed out.[6] Ultimately, no such joint sponsorship followed.
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Backs (L to R): Geri, Motley, Graham, and Dudley.
Linemen (L to R): Pihos, DeRogatis, Barnes, Bednarik, Fischer, Weinmeister, and Speedie.
The 31-man Pro Bowl squads consisted of the following players:[2][7]
Roster Notes:
Number of selections by team
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Note: these numbers include players selected to the team but unable to play as well as replacements for these players, so there are more than 31 players in each conference.
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- ^ "Graham paces Americans to 28–27 win in Pro Bowl". Milwaukee Sentinel. AP. January 15, 1951. p. 3 (Part 2). Retrieved January 24, 2012.
- ^ a b "Browns' Americans win Pro Bowl game, 28–27". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. AP. January 15, 1951. p. 19. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
- ^ a b "Pro Bowl names linemen". Pittsburgh Press. UPI. December 14, 1950. p. 50. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
- ^ "Pro all-stars clash on coast". Pittsburgh Press. January 14, 1951. p. 40. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
- ^ "The 1951 Pro Bowl". Bolding Sports Research. Archived from the original on May 1, 2012. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e "Pro Bowl Tilt Approved for Los Angeles," Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1950, part 2, pp. 9, 12.
- ^ "1951 Pro Bowl". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
- ^ "National loop names backs for Pro Bowl". Pittsburgh Press. UP. December 21, 1950. p. 29. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
- ^ "Bears supply six linemen for Pro Bowl". Pittsburgh Press. UP. December 19, 1950. p. 43. Retrieved January 25, 2012.