Bill Burrell
William Ford Burrell was an American football player at the University of Illinois.
Early life
Burrell was the third son born in Illinois. He attended Central High School in Clifton, Illinois, excelling in football and basketball.Career
A linebacker and guard, in 1959 Burrell won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football as the MVP of the Big Ten Conference. Burrell also finished fourth as a Heisman Trophy candidate that year, the first Illini to finish in the top four for the Heisman. He was a consensus All-American. He was the first black captain of the Illini football team. Jesse Jackson, a freshman on the 1959 team and future reverend, marveled at Burrell's ability to make tackles when double-teamed, calling it "marvelous". His 26 tackles against Purdue was a school record for 18 years. Burrell served in the Army ROTC program during his time at Illinois. Representative of the times, rather than doing desk work that other athletes did, Burrell and other black student-athletes were assigned to pick up trash at Memorial Stadium. Burrell is among the fabled members of the "cradle of linebackers" that played at Illinois alongside Ray Nitschke and Dick Butkus. Despite his accomplishments, Burrell has not been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame nor was he nominated for decades.Burrell was drafted by the Buffalo Bills in the 1960 American Football League draft, and by the St. Louis Cardinals in the fifth round of the 1960 NFL draft.
Rejecting the AFL and NFL due to money, he played for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League and was that team's nominee for the Schenley Award as Outstanding Lineman in 1960. He was named a CFL Western All-Star in 1960 and 1962. He became a business owner in Kankakee, Illinois after retirement, building and buying apartments and businesses. He also worked with the NAACP.