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Ken Beck (American football)

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College
  
Texas A&M University

Positions
  
Tackle

Education
  
Texas A&M University

Role
  
American football player

Name
  
Ken Beck


Ken Beck (American football)

Date of birth
  
(1935-09-03)September 3, 1935

Place of birth
  
Minden, Webster ParishLouisiana, USA

Date of death
  
March 5, 2006(2006-03-05) (aged 70)

Place of death
  
Shreveport, Caddo ParishLouisiana

NFL draft
  
1959 / Round: 4 / Pick: 38(by the Chicago Cardinals)

Died
  
March 5, 2006, Shreveport, Louisiana, United States

Kenneth Lee Beck, known as Ken Beck (September 3, 1935 – March 5, 2006), was a defensive tackle in the National Football League. Beck played two seasons with the Green Bay Packers. He was a member of the Western Division Champion Packers in 1960. Beck was chosen by the Minnesota Vikings in the 1961 Expansion Draft, but was released by team at the end of training camp. He played for the Canadian Football League Toronto Argos from 1961 to 1962 under Coach Lou Agassi. Beck was one of only two men to have played for both Bear Bryant and Vince Lombardi.

Ken Beck (American football) Ken Beck Men Pinterest Male hair and Haircuts

Beck was born at the Beck Family Farm near Minden, the parish seat of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana. The farm had been established in 1880 by his grandfather, Elias William Beck.

Ken Beck (American football) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb2

After a knee injury cut short his pro-football career, Beck received a teaching degree from Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia, Arkansas. Thereafter, he taught and coached for many years for the Webster Parish School Board at Cotton Valley High School in Cotton Valley, Louisiana.

Beck met his wife, the former Sally Roberts (1943–2007), a native of Hot Springs, Arkansas, at Southern Arkansas University. She also taught school in Cotton Valley. The couple had two children, Emily Ruth Beck Hendricks and husband, Troyce, of Minden, and Donald Robert Beck and wife, Sheree, of Cotton Valley. The Becks were affiliated with the First Pentecostal Church of Cotton Valley. They are interred at Cotton Valley Cemetery.

References

Ken Beck (American football) Wikipedia