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Waddy Young

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Date of birth
  
September 14, 1916

Name
  
Waddy Young

1939-1940
  
Brooklyn Dodgers

Positions
  
End

College
  
Oklahoma

Education
  
University of Oklahoma

Place of death
  
Tokyo, Japan

Role
  
Football player


Waddy Young image2findagravecomphotos201318856136237137

Place of birth
  
Ponca City, Oklahoma, United States

Date of death
  
January 9, 1945(1945-01-09) (aged 28)

Died
  
January 9, 1945, Tokyo, Japan

NFL draft
  
1939 (Round: 3 / Pick: 20)

Battles and wars
  
European theatre of World War II

Allegiance
  
United States of America

Walter Roland Young (September 14, 1916 – January 9, 1945) was a professional football player who later served in World War II.

Contents

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Football and war

Young was the first consensus All-American football player out of the University of Oklahoma. He led the team to its first conference championship ever as well as its first bowl berth ever, in the 1939 Orange Bowl. He also starred as a heavyweight wrestler for the Sooners. After college, he played professionally for the Brooklyn Dodgers of the National Football League, where he played in the league's first televised game. He voluntarily gave up his NFL career to become a member of the elite flying club who piloted America’s B-24 Liberator bombers over the European Theatre, flying 9,000 hours against mighty German Luftwaffe. Afterwards he volunteered to go back into combat in the Pacific Theatre against the Empire of Japan, where he flew a B-29 Super Fortresses. He was killed on January 9, 1945, in a plane crash during a B-29 raid over Tokyo as he attempted to assist a comrade whose plane had one engine on fire.

Young was inducted posthumously into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1986 and named the recipient of the Robert Kalsu Freedom Award, presented by the Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame, in 2007. The University of Oklahoma Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps Arnold Air Society squadron and Silver Wings chapter is named in honor of Waddy Young.

Personal life

While living in New York City and playing professional football prior to America’s entry into World War II, he met Maggie Moody, a well-known blonde model who attended Oklahoma A&M, and the two fell in love. During halftime of a Brooklyn-New York Giants game in which he was playing, Young had the public address announcer voice his proposal to Maggie, who was sitting in the stands, and the two were later married.

References

Waddy Young Wikipedia