*** Welcome to piglix ***

Clayton Tonnemaker

Clayton Tonnemaker
refer to caption
Tonnemaker while playing at Minnesota, c. 1940s
No. 15
Position: Center, Linebacker
Personal information
Date of birth: (1928-06-08)June 8, 1928
Place of birth: Ogilvie, Minnesota
Date of death: December 25, 1996(1996-12-25) (aged 68)
Place of death: St. Paul, Minnesota
Height: 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Weight: 237 lb (108 kg)
Career information
High school: Minneapolis (MN) Edison
College: Minnesota
NFL Draft: 1950 / Round: 1 / Pick: 4
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • Consensus All-American (1949)
Career NFL statistics
Player stats at NFL.com
Player stats at PFR
Player stats at NFL.com

Frank Clayton "Clayt" Tonnemaker (June 8, 1928 – December 25, 1996) was an American football player who played center and linebacker for the Green Bay Packers from 1950 to 1954. Tonnemaker was an All-American at the University of Minnesota, where he played center linebacker. In 1980, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.

Tonnemaker, weighing in at 11 pounds, was born on June 8, 1928 on a farm near Ogilvie, MN, to Anna Nelson and Frank Clayton Tonnemaker. After his father died when Clayton was 7, he and his mother and sister, Lucille, sold their farm at auction and moved to the town of Rush City, MN. The family later moved to Northeast Minneapolis, and Clayton attended Edison High School.

Tonnemaker lettered in football at Rush City High School as an 8th grader. After moving to Minneapolis, Tonnemaker played center for the Edison football team, serving as captain and winning All-City Honors. He unofficially played for the Minnesota Gophers while in high school, even scoring a touchdown during a 1946 spring season scrimmage. It was not legal for a high schooler to train with a college team at the time, so the Gophers didn’t acknowledge this.

Tonnemaker officially began playing center linebacker for the Gophers during his freshman year, 1946, when a World War II-era ruling made it legal for freshman to play in the Big Ten. Before the war this was not allowed. He became part of a group of Gopher players known as the '49ers, their year of graduation. He was a regular from mid-freshman year, with the Gophers winning 23 out of 30 games, and a “win-loss edge over every Big Ten rival except Michigan”. Along with Leo Nomellini, Tonnemaker was part of a defensive line that allowed “an average of less than nine points a game in the '49ers’ final season”.


...
Wikipedia

...