Glenn Doughty

Glenn Martin "Shake & Bake" Doughty (born January 30, 1951) is a former American football player. He played professional football as a wide receiver for the Baltimore Colts from 1972 to 1979 and college football as a tailback and wingback for the University of Michigan from 1969 to 1971. He later developed the Shake and Bake Family Fun Center in Baltimore's inner city. Doughty later co-founded Takeoff Video Educational Excellence, a company that produced videos designed to show positive multicultural role models for use in schools.

Early Years
Glenn was born to Otis and Bessie Doughty natives of Spring City and Nashville Tennessee respectively. Following his military service in the US Army as a Master Sargent, Otis moved his family to Detroit securing employment with the US Postal Service as a Chief Draftsman. Otis made history in 1958 by designing the Star that appears on all US Mail boxes today. Bessie worked for the US Department of Defense as a secretary. Doughty was born in Detroit, Michigan, in 1951.

1963 At 12 years of age Doughty was a member of the first undefeated East Detroit Shamrocks Little League football team. His teammate and friend was Ron Banks who became the founder and lead singer of the World Famous Dramatics R&B group. Doughty and Banks played in the backfield together and became the first blacks allowed to play for the Shamrocks.

1964 Doughty was a member of the undefeated West Side Recreation Football Champions the Westside Cubs.

He attended Pershing High School.

1968 Michigan Football High School All State Team -Doughty was selected All State End and was the youngest player on the team at 16. Doughty started for the “Doughboys” for three years beginning at age 13.

1966-1968 As an all around athlete Doughty also played basketball for Will Robinson, who was the 1st African American to Coach a Division I College at Illinois State University: The lineup of the 1967 Pershing State Championship team featured five players who would go on to play professional sports: Spencer Haywood NBA perennial All Pro, Ralph Simpson (ABA and NBA), Paul Seal (NFL) and Marvin Lane (baseball). This team is considered by the Detroit Free Press as the #1 Michigan High School Basketball team of all time. To harden these talented players for the high school schedule Robinson invited several Detroit Pistons to practice against this team during the summer.

Doughty played baseball as a center fielder and helped lead the Doughboys Baseball team to the 1968 Eastside Baseball Championship with a 427 batting average.

University of Michigan
1968 As a freshman Doughty was awarded the John Maulbetsch Award as Michigan's outstanding freshman football player. Doughty started as wide receiver on offense and defensive back. He was also a member of the Michigan Intramural All-Star Basketball team averaging 30 points per game. He made the Deans list with a 3.5 scholastic average in the School of Education.

Doughty played tailback and wingback for the University of Michigan from 1969 to 1971. He gained 2,347 all-purpose yards for the Wolverines, including 1,464 rushing yards, 518 receiving yards, and 365 yards on kickoff returns. Doughty made his debut for Michigan under first-year head coach Bo Schembechler in 1969. In Doughty's first two games for Michigan (also Schembechler's first two games as Michigan's head coach), he rushed for 138 yards (including an 80-yard touchdown run on his first carry) in a 42–14 win against Vanderbilt and 191 yards in a 45–7 win against Washington. Doughty sustained injuries early in the season that slowed him down and allowed Billy Taylor to move from backup to starting tailback. Doughty did rush for 100 yards one more time during the 1969 season, in a 51–6 win against Iowa. He totaled 732 yards for the 1969 Michigan Wolverines football team, that beat the #1 Ohio State Buckeyes in what ABC's Bill Fleming play-by-play announcer called the "The Upset of the Century." This victory was the catalyst for Bo Scembechler's teams rise to national promanance over the next three decades. Doughty sustained an injury on Christmas Day while practicing for the 1970 Rose Bowl. Doughty was moved to the wingback position and started all 12 games at that position for the 1971 Michigan Wolverines football team. He scored three touchdowns in a 35–6 victory over Illinois in October 1971.

1970 Doughty and Billy Taylor were named to the NCAA and the US State Department’s All-American Team to visit our troops in Vietnam for three weeks. Upon returning Doughty and Taylor joined teammates and most of the country in protesting the war in a halftime demonstration at Michigan stadium.

After the 1971 season, Doughty was selected to play on the College Football All-Star Team.

1971 Bo Schembeckler named Doughty the most Versatile member of the 11-0 Big Ten Championship Team.

1972 Doughty was named to the College All American Team's game in Lubbock Texas and to the College All Stars to play against the 1971 Super Bowl Champion Dallas Cowboys in Chicago. The All Stars lost to the Cowboys 24-14. Doughty was a starter at wide receiver in both games. The house which Doughty lived in proved to be a record setter. "Den of The Mellow Men Steal NFL Draft Show," Detroit Free Press. Doughty and 5 of 7 of his "Mellow Men" housemates were selected by the NFL early in the draft. This draft set the record for Michigan Players selected by the NFL in one year at 11.

Doughty was a key member of this extroadinary class that achieved a three-year record of 28-5. Missing a National Title and a perfect season in 1971 due to a field goal in the final 15 seconds and losing to Standford 13-12.

The 2012 Bleacher Report listed Doughty as a member of the second greatest Recruited Class in Michigan school history 1968.

Doughty graduated from Michigan in 1972 with a bachelor of science degree in education.

Professional Football
Doughty played professional football as wide receiver for the Baltimore Colts from 1972 to 1979. He appeared in 103 games for the Colts, totaling 219 receptions for 3,547 yards and 24 touchdowns.

1972 Doughty caught his first three passes from Hall of Fame quarterback Johnny Unitas before leg injuries sidelined him for the year.

1973 Doughty was awarded the Colts Offensive Player of the year. Doughty led the AFC with a 23.5. average yards per catch.

He earned the nickname "Shake and Bake" during his years with the Colts, and the nickname was also extended to the 1975 Baltimore Colts offense.

The Colts Record of 10-4 reversed the prior year's 2-12 record to set the greatest one year turn-a-round season in NFL History. The Colts won the Eastern Division Championship. Doughty played a key role in leading the Colts to three straight Eastern Division Championships for the first time in Colts history

In 1979, Doughty left the team for two days claiming that he was being subtly downgraded by Colts' coach Ted Marchibroda. The Baltimore Afro-American referred to the Colts' treatment of Doughty as "business as usual at Memorial Stadium," noting that Raymond Chester had complained the prior year that "an attitude of racism" on the Colts caused quarterback Bert Jones to "look away" from him. Doughty was cut by the Colts in August 1980 after struggling during the pre-season with a hamstring pull. He was the sixth leading receiver in Colts' history when his NFL career ended.

Shake and Bake Family Fun Center
After retiring from the Colts, Doughty announced plans to build the Shake and Bake Family Recreation Center in an African-American neighborhood of Baltimore. The project was supported by a $3.5 million loan from the City of Baltimore. Disputes over financing jeopardized the project in 1982, and disputes with construction workers also drew press coverage. The project was ultimately built with $4.7 million in development loans from the City of Baltimore, $150,000 invested by Doughty, and $1.2 million invested by four limited partners.

When the project, renamed the Shake and Bake Family Fun Center, opened in October 1982, Doughty called it a dream come true. The $5.2 million project was described by the Baltimore Afro-American as "Doughty's gift to the inner city." The 70,000 sqft structure included a 40-lane bowling alley, a 22,000 sqft roller-skating rink, a sporting goods store, an "electronic game arcade," and two fast-food restaurants. In February 1984, Black Enterprise magazine wrote a story on the center, noting that the center had grossed $1 million in its first year and received 10,000 visits per week. The article concluded: "The complex is such a success that mayors from large cities around the U.S., studying inner city revitalization programs, have visited it."

Glenn Doughty tells the AFRO the complete story of the Shake and Bake dream, which hasn't ended yet. The Shake & Bake Family Fun Center will celebrate 30 years of continuous operation October 2012.

Later Years
In 1987 Doughty’s Limited Partnership sold the Shake and Bake Fun Center to the Baltimore City Trustees. In 1985 Doughty moved with his family to St. Louis, Missouri.[2] In 1986 Doughty began working at KMOX Radio producing the NFL Player of the Week and also at KSDK TV producing the St. Louis high school Player of the week. The same year he co-founded a company called Takeoff Video Educational Excellence. The company produced videos designed to show positive multicultural career role models for use in schools.[35][36] In 1987 Congressmen William Clay of St. Louis and the Congressional Black Caucus introduced the company’s videos into the Congressional Record as a “groundbreaking” method of delivering career information to America’s students. In 1988 Ford Motor Company provided several grants to help launch the series of videos to students in Detroit, Chicago and Cleveland.

In 1993 Glenn Doughty and Karen Fulbright of St. Louis, left Takeoff to form Career Information Training Network. Doughty the company's CEO and Ms. Fulbright VP worked together to create the award winning Career Lane Network, a customized system of online videos and websites for K-12 schools, colleges and businesses.

In 1994-2005 with the support of Missouri Governor Mel Carnahan CITN received major funding from state and local School-to-Career grants. The First African American Role Model series was created at this time. The series features videos of African Americans in various high-tech careers. Career Lane Network seamlessly links students to career and employment opportunities. In 1994 the Career Lane Network’s uniqueness earned the prestigious “Sole Source” designation from the US Department of Education and Labor’s School to Work program.

By 2010 the Career Lane Network contained over 400 career video segments and was being used in 25 state’s classrooms and was upgraded to become available in Spanish formats As Executive Producer, in 2010 Doughty began working with Steve Sabol President of NFL Films, the Emmy Award winning story teller of the NFL, on a CITN copyrighted concept co-produced with Shake & Bake HD Productions called NFL Neighborhood Gridiron Warriors. Steve says “This is the first time in NFL Films’ history we’re producing a series that shows NFL players uplifting America’s Communities 24/7!” The 13 week, 30 minute series highlights the good work that current and former NFL Players, Coaches and Franchise Owners are doing in their communities through their Foundations. Each Foundation highlighted has qualified and competed to receive a NFL Charities Grant. Award Winning Sports anchor James Brown will be the host of the series. Neighborhood Gridiron Warriors is scheduled for broadcast on national TV the fall 2012.[2] Doughty expanded on this multimedia partnership by linking the Career Lane Network's career focus to feature NFL Players who have made the transition from the gridiron to careers in the NFL for students. The Career Lane Network’s Sports Related Career videos will be used by each NFL Franchise and their education and non profit partners for online career exploration activities.

Family: Glenn married Janice Woods from Du Quoin Illinois on September 25, 1972 in Toledo Ohio. Glenn met Janice while recovering from the knee injury he sustained on Christmas Day prior to the 1970 Rose Bowl Game. Janice moved to Detroit from Alton Illinois and worked in the nursing office at Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak Michigan in April 1970. Glenn had just began working as a patient escort at the same time while rehabilitating his knee in the hospital's physical therapy department. Glenn says "I was totally rehabilitated when I first met my JFoxx!" They were married for 33 years. Janice died after a courageous 13 year fight with lung cancer on December 9th 2005. Their two children are Derek and Nikedra. Glenn lives in Creve Coeur, Missouri.