Date of birth: | April 24, 1933 |
Place of birth: | Fairport Harbor, Ohio |
Date of death: | December 25, 2009 Tustin, California |
Career information | |
---|---|
Position(s): | Tackle |
College: | Notre Dame |
NFL Draft: | 1954 / Round: 1 / Pick: 3 |
Organizations | |
As player: | |
1954-1955 1956-1959 1960-1964 1965 |
Green Bay Packers Cleveland Browns Los Angeles Rams Pittsburgh Steelers |
Career highlights and awards | |
Pro Bowls: | 1 |
Playing stats at DatabaseFootball.com |
Arthur Hunter (born April 24, 1933 in Fairport Harbor, Ohio) is a former American football tackle who played twelve seasons in the National Football League, mainly for the Los Angeles Rams.
NFL career[]
Listed at 6'-4" and 245 lbs, Hunter first played for the Green Bay Packers as their number one draft choice (Number 3 overall).
After not playing the 1955 season, Arthur, then went on to play under head coach Paul Brown, with Jim Brown and the rest of the Cleveland Browns for four seasons as Center.
He then played Center for five years with the slumping Rams, and finally one year with the Steelers.[1]
Over Hunter's twelve seasons with the NFL he recovered four fumbles.
In 1960 he was AP second-team All-NFL.
Notre Dame Years[]
At Notre Dame he played under head coach Frank Leahy who was the former line coach for the Seven Blocks of Granite and played shoulder-to-shoulder with Guard Menil Mavraides, Center Jim Schrader, and Fullback Neil Worden as the main blockers for Heisman Trophy winning running back Johnny Lattner.
His Senior year, the 1953 Notre Dame finished the season 9-1, and had an unprecedented 12 players drafted to 1954 NFL.
In the September 13, 1954 Sports Illustrated article, writer Herman Hickman describes the 1953 Notre Dame team by writing:
Frankly, it's hard to see how any squad could lose such men as Halfback Johnny Lattner, Fullback Neil Worden, Tackle Art Hunter, Center Jim Schrader and Guard Menil Mavraides and still be a top-ranked team. Each was on some All-American or other. Lattner, Worden and Hunter were first-round Pro draft choices. Schrader was a second-round choice. Mavraides a third. But Notre Dame is not an ordinary football team, it's Notre Dame. . . . Notre Dame doesn't lose too often.
References[]
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This biographical article relating to an American football offensive lineman born in the 1930s is a stub. You can help The American Football Database by expanding it. |