Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Tony McGee

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Position:
  
High school:
  
Battle Creek (MI)

Weight:
  
250 lb (113 kg)


Height:
  
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)

Name
  
Tony McGee

Tony McGee wwwfootballcardgallerycom1976Topps224TonyMc

Date of birth:
  
(1949-01-18) January 18, 1949 (age 66)

Place of birth:
  

Tony mcgee 71 78 football highlights from 1971 to 1983


Anthony Eugene McGee (born January 18, 1949) is a former professional American football player who played fourteen seasons in the National Football League (NFL). He played in two Super Bowls for the Washington Redskins. After being dismissed from the University of Wyoming football team as part of the Black 14 in 1969, McGee continued his college football career at Bishop College and was drafted in the third round of the 1971 NFL Draft.

Contents

Tony Mcgee


College career

Tony McGee began his career at the University of Wyoming. In 1969, the team was off to a 4-0 start, ranked #10 in the nation and appeared headed for a fourth straight WAC Conference title. But on October 17, 1969, the day before the game against the BYU Cougars, McGee and 13 other African American players went to coach Lloyd Eaton's office to discuss how they might participate in a protest called by the UW Black Students Alliance against The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints tenet which prohibited black men from becoming priests. As soon as Eaton saw them wearing black arm bands, he took them into the Memorial Fieldhouse bleachers and immediately informed them they were all off the team because they violated the coach's rule against participating in demonstrations. The rule, obviously unconstitutional, was withdrawn the next week, but the players were not reinstated. After this, the Wyoming football program was not the same. Although the suddenly all-white Cowboys defeated BYU and San Jose State in their last two home games, they lost their last four on the road. In 1970, the Cowboys went 1-9 and Eaton "retired" from coaching. The Cowboys posted only one winning season in the 1970s.

McGee finished his college career at Bishop College in Dallas, Texas. He was projected to be a first round pick in the 1971 NFL Draft but fell to the third round because word passed around that he was a troublemaker due to his dismissal from Wyoming and his involvement in the Black 14.

Professional career

McGee played 14 years as a defensive lineman in the National Football League. He was with the Chicago Bears (1971-73), the New England Patriots (1974-81), and the Washington Redskins (1982-85). Known as "Mac the Sack" because of his ability to get to the quarterback, McGee had a career total of 96.5 sacks. A durable defensive lineman, McGee played in 203 games, missing only one game during his entire NFL career. Tony was a nominee for the National Football League Hall of Fame in 1994. While with the Redskins, McGee played in Super Bowls XVII (1983) and XVIII (1984), winning in 1983.

TV career

McGee is the founder and host of the longest running minority-owned sports talk show in the Washington, D.C. region. His "Pro Football Plus" television show is celebrating twenty-nine seasons of broadcasting excellence.

References

Tony McGee Wikipedia