Dick Butkus

Career Achievements

Richard Marvin "Dick" Butkus (born December 9, 1942) is a former American football player, widely regarded as one of the best linebackers of his generation. Butkus starred as a football player for the University of Illinois and the Chicago Bears. He became a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1979. He played 9 seasons in the NFL for the Chicago Bears.

The youngest of seven children, the Lithuanian-American Butkus grew up in the Roseland neighborhood on Chicago's south side. He played high school football for Coach Bernie O'Brien at Chicago Vocational School. There he met his three lifelong friends, Patrick O'Neill, Tyler Volk, and Eric Parker, all of whom played linebacker with Butkus in high school. The group was infamously known around the conference as the "Ferocious Quartet."

Despite growing up in Chicago, Butkus wasn't much of a Bears fan at the time, preferring to attend some Chicago Cardinals games at Comiskey Park and watching Thanksgiving games between the Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers.[1]

At Illinois, Butkus played center and linebacker from 1962 through 1964. Butkus was twice a unanimous All-American, in 1963 and 1964. Butkus won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football in 1963 as the Big Ten's Most Valuable Player, and was named the American Football Coaches Association Player of the Year in 1964. Butkus also finished sixth in Heisman Trophy balloting in 1963 and third in 1964, a remarkable achievement given his position, as Heisman voters are notorious for their strong bias toward offensive players.

Butkus is a member of The Pigskin Club of Washington, D.C., which recognizes National Intercollegiate All-American football players.

After his collegiate career, Butkus continued to receive recognition for his play. Butkus was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1983, and is one of only two players to have a uniform number (#51) retired by the University of Illinois football program (the other being the #77 of Harold "Red" Grange). Butkus was also named to the Walter Camp All-Century team in 1990, and was named as the sixth-best college football player ever by College Football News in 2000. In 2007, Butkus was ranked #19 on ESPN's Top 25 Players In College Football History list.

In 1985, the Downtown Athletic Club of Orlando, Florida created an award in his name: the Dick Butkus Award is given annually to the most outstanding linebacker at the high school, college, and professional levels as selected by a national team of 51 coaches and sportswriters. In 2008, control of the award was relinquished to the Butkus Foundation, headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.

The Butkus Foundation - Dick Butkus has supported many charitable causes following his NFL career. The Butkus Foundation, Inc. 501(c)(3) was formed to manage the receipt and disbursement of funds for his charitable causes.[2] I Play Clean Campaign – Butkus addresses the issue of steroids among high school athletes through this national grassroots campaign. The campaign educates and encourages high school students to make the right choice of playing clean – that is, training hard, eating well, and playing with attitude, instead of resorting to illegal and dangerous steroids and performance enhancing products.[3] Butkus Award - Instituted in 1985, the Butkus Award is one of the elite individual honors in college football. The Butkus Foundation takes stewardship of the award and comes home to Chicago to fully realize the original purpose of honoring athletic achievement and service to the community while honoring the nation’s best high school, college, and professional linebackers. An independent Butkus Award Selection Committee, headed by Pro Football Weekly’s Hub Arkush, is composed of 51 experts, including professional, college, and high school scouts, and prominent sports journalists. This committee conducts the selection process.

The Dick Butkus Center for Cardiovascular Wellness - This 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization in Orange County, California is a signature cardiac screening program that uses specialized testing to help identify those at risk of heart disease and sudden cardiac death. Screening tests are fast, painless, and potentially lifesaving. Thanks to the generosity of donors, the Center is able to offer testing at reasonable rates.

Legends 51 Cabernet Sauvignon Charity Wine – 100% of proceeds from purchase of Legends 51 wine benefit the Butkus Foundation in funding the "I Play Clean" program. The wine was released in November of 2009.

Charity Fight Night - This annual event began in 2002 and is now in its ninth year. This celebrity boxing event features a reception followed by eight Olympic-caliber bouts, courtesy of Windy City Boxing. All proceeds support the Butkus Foundation. The event is hosted by Sparta Asset Management of Chicago. The annual event includes a live/silent auction featuring sports memorabilia, unique experiences, and original sports artwork, along with performances by magicians. Past attendees include Butkus, Bears' greats Mike Ditka, Gale Sayers, and Dan Hampton, and other Chicago sports legends.

Since his career as a player, Butkus has become a well known celebrity endorser, broadcaster, and actor. He has appeared in films such as Gus, Cracking Up, Necessary Roughness, Any Given Sunday, and Johnny Dangerously, and as a regular character on TV shows such as Blue Thunder, My Two Dads, and Hang Time. In the critically acclaimed TV movie Brian's Song (1971), he portrayed himself. He made one television appearance on the first episode of the 1976 ABC hit, Rich Man, Poor Man (TV miniseries), where he played 'Al Fanducci', a World War II army soldier who gets into a street brawl with 'Tom Jordache' (played by Nick Nolte). He made two appearances each on the TV shows Coach, Growing Pains, and three on MacGyver. In an oft-rerun episode of Murder, She Wrote, Butkus appeared in a locker-room scene wearing nothing but a towel wrapped around his waist.[citation needed] Butkus had a cameo appearance in the second season episode "The No-Cut Contract" of the television show The Rockford Files. Butkus also appeared on an episode of Magnum, P.I. as the coach of the fictional football team, the "New Jersey Blazers".

Butkus was hired as the replacement for Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder on CBS' pregame show The NFL Today in 1988, serving as an analyst through 1989. On August 17, 2007, Butkus attended and made the first broadcast at the first Barrow Whalers game in Barrow, Alaska.

Butkus promoted the "Qwik-Cook Grill," a grill utilizing newspaper as its main fuel, on TV infomercials in the '90s. In 2006 Butkus promoted his own line of Butkus Boots. Butkus starred in a 2009 FedEx commercial entitled "I'm Sorry Dick Butkus," developed by BBDO New York. In this commercial, Butkus is brought in to help a small business go global.

Butkus' son, Matthew, was part of University of Southern California's 1990 Rose Bowl winning team as a defensive lineman, and joins his father in philanthropic activities such as the "I Play Clean" campaign. Butkus' nephew, Luke Butkus, was hired on February 19, 2007, as the Bears' offensive line coach, and in 2010 joined the Seattle Seahawks staff in a similar position.

From Wikipedia