From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the American football
player. For the American soccer coach, see
Bob Lilley.
Bob
Lilly
| No. 74 |
| Defensive tackle |
|
Personal information |
| Date of
birth: July 26, 1939 (1939-07-26) (age 70) |
| Place of birth: Olney, Texas |
|
Height: 6 ft 5 in
(1.96 m) |
Weight: 260 lb (118 kg) |
| Career information |
| College:
Texas Christian |
| NFL
Draft: 1961 / Round: 1
/ Pick: 13 |
| Debuted in 1961 for the
Dallas
Cowboys |
| Last played in 1974 for
the Dallas
Cowboys |
|
|
| Career history |
As player:
|
| Career highlights and awards |
- 11× Pro Bowl selection
(1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973)
- 7× First-team All-Pro selection (1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968,
1969, 1971)
- 2× Second-team All-Pro selection (1970, 1972)
- 8× All-Conference selection (1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968,
1969, 1971, 1972)
- 2× Second-team All-Conference selection (1970, 1973)
- NFL
75th Anniversary All-Time Team
- NFL 1970s
All-Decade Team
- NFL 1960s
All-Decade Team
- Dallas Cowboys Ring of
Honor
|
| Stats at NFL.com |
| Pro Football Hall of
Fame |
| College Football Hall of
Fame |
Robert Lewis Lilly (born July 26, 1939 in Olney, Texas[1]) is a
former American football defensive
tackle in the National Football League and
photographer. He
was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in
1980.
College
career
Lilly played college football at Texas Christian University
(TCU), where he was a two-time All-Southwest Conference pick and a
consensus All-American. He was a 1961 member of the
College Football
All-America Team and was a 2006 inductee to the East-West Shrine Game Hall of
Fame. Lilly was inducted into the College Football Hall of
Fame in 1981.
Professional
career
As a first-round draft pick in the 1961 NFL Draft, and the first draft pick
in Dallas
Cowboys franchise history, Lilly went on to be All-Pro seven times, and was
selected to play in 11 Pro
Bowl games. He was also drafted in the second round (14th
overall) in the 1961 AFL Draft by
the Dallas Texans (now Kansas City Chiefs) prior to the
merger with the NFL.
Lilly began his career as a defensive end in 1961, but midway though
the 1963 (his third) season Cowboys coach Tom Landry moved him to defensive
tackle. Lilly made the adjustment becoming the main man in
Dallas's vaunted "Doomsday Defense." As a tackle, Lilly was a
first-team All-NFL choice every year from 1964 through 1969, then
again in 1971. On January 17, 1971, the Cowboys finally made the
Super Bowl, against the Baltimore Colts, only
to lose the game, 16-13, on a field goal in the final nine seconds.
However, in 1972 he and the rest of the Cowboys won the Super Bowl
against the Miami
Dolphins, 24-3. His 29-yard sack of Dolphin quarterback Bob Griese (an NFL
Record) is one of the most memorable plays in Super Bowl defensive
history. This was the signature play of his 14-year hall-of-fame
career.
Lilly's greatest assets were his furious pass-rushing skills and
his ability to slice plays open with his agility and instincts.
Lilly's agility and quickness helped him score four defensive
touchdowns in his career. His first was returning an interception
17 yards in 1964 while the other three came on fumble recoveries.
NFL Films did an eight minute feature on Lilly, and say about
Lilly: [he was the] "unblockable, unstoppable, force of The
Doomsday Defense", and this was not to discredit those
unfortunate enough to stand in his way. Lilly was regularly double
and triple teamed for the majority of his career because of his
effectiveness as a defensive tackle.
Lilly was extremely durable during his career, playing in 196
consecutive regular-season games. The only NFL game he would miss
in his career, was the 1973 NFC Championship Game loss
(10-27), December 30, against the Minnesota Vikings, due to a leg
injury. Lilly injured his hamstring in the Cowboys victory (22-10)
against the Denver
Broncos, December 2, 1973. In the first play of the 1973 NFC
Divisional playoff game, three weeks later on December 23, versus
the Los Angeles
Rams (Cowboys 27-Rams 16) he re-injured this same
hamstring.
Affectionately known as "Mr. Cowboy," his name was the first
inscribed in the "Dallas Cowboys Ring of
Honor", above Texas Stadium. The Cowboys had a Bob
Lilly Day on November 23, 1975, to honor him and make Lilly the
first inductee into The Ring of Honor. He has attended every
induction of each ring of honor inductee since.
Lilly was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in
1980, his first year of eligibility, and was the first player who
spent his entire career with the Cowboys to be elected to the Pro
Football Hall of Fame. He entered the Hall of Fame along with
former teammate Herb
Adderley (for two seasons), as well as David "Deacon" Jones and Jim Otto. The Sporting News
named him a member of the All-Century NFL Team and "the greatest
defensive tackle in NFL history". Lilly, Adderley, and Jones were
all drafted in 1961. Tom Landry said of Lilly: "As I've said
before, another Lilly won't come along in my time. We're observing
a man who will become a legend". This comment is from the 1972
Street and Smith's Pro Football Yearbook. He also said that "Nobody
is better than Lilly". He is a member of the National
Football League 1960s All-Decade Team and National
Football League 1970s All-Decade Team.
In 1999, he was ranked number 10 on The Sporting News' list of the 100
Greatest Football Players, the highest-ranking defensive lineman
and the highest-ranking Cowboy. The only two other defensive
players ahead of him were Dick Butkus and Lawrence Taylor. Sports
Illustrated named him one of the ten most revolutionary
defensive players.
Photography
When he began traveling with the Cowboys, Lilly regularly had
his camera at his side. His interest in photography began when he
was named to the College Football All-America Team in 1961, which
was sponsored by Kodak. As a part of the honor he was given
a 35-mm camera and a year's supply of film by the company.[2] Before
and after games, he spent an increasing amount of time studying and
photographing old sports stadiums. Lilly co-authored the 1983 book
Bob Lilly Reflections with sportswriter Sam Blair,
featuring scores of his black and white photographs of teammates in
candid poses.[3] He was
also a photographer for the Texas Air National Guard where
he was an Airman 2nd Class. Lilly spent two weeks in 1967 as part
of the Texas National Guard at the Rhein-Main Air Base in West Germany.
Spokesperson
As a spokesperson, Lilly has endorsed:
References
- ^
Lilly, Bob, with Kristine Setting Clark (2008). - A Cowboy's
Life. - Chicago, Illinois: Triumph Books. - p.3. - ISBN
9781600781018.
- ^
Photography. - Bob Lilly
Promo
- ^
Lilly, Bob, and Sam Blair, (1983). - Bob Lilly
Reflections. - Dallas, Texas: Taylor Publishing Company. -
ISBN 087833338X.
External
links