Date of birth: | April 14, 1940 |
Place of birth: | Chicago, Illinois |
Career information | |
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Position(s): | Running back |
College: | University of Iowa |
NFL Draft: | 1963 / Round: 8 |
Organizations | |
As player: | |
1963-1964 1965 |
San Diego Chargers Houston Oilers |
Keith John Kinderman was a professional American football player who played running back for three seasons for the San Diego Chargers and Houston Oilers.[1]
Keith Kinderman was widely considered to be the last of the great white running backs. Also, known for his studies of sublimation and the innate and perverse nature of inanimate objects. [2]
Also noted for his development of the peccatum pro publica legal defense. Kinderman successfully argued that the owner of an infamous Tallahassee saloon should receive a lenient sentence so that patrons of her saloon would have some place to go. Thus sparing the City of Tallahassee from having to deal with the patrons. [3]
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References[]
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