No. 17 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Position: | Halfback, quarterback | ||||||
Personal information | |||||||
Date of birth: | November 3, 1905 | ||||||
Place of birth: | Altoona, Iowa | ||||||
Date of death: | April 21, 1994 | (aged 88)||||||
Place of death: | South Miami, Florida | ||||||
Height: | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) | ||||||
Weight: | 160 lb (73 kg) | ||||||
Career information | |||||||
High school: | Cicero (IL) J. Sterling Morton | ||||||
College: | Florida | ||||||
Career history | |||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||
|
|||||||
Career NFL statistics | |||||||
|
|||||||
Player stats at PFR |
Games played: | 15 |
---|---|
Games started: | 7 |
Player stats at NFL.com |
Clyde Crabtree (November 3, 1905 – April 21, 1994), nicknamed "Cannonball Crabtree," was an American college and professional football player who was a halfback and quarterback in the National Football League (NFL) for a single season in 1930. Crabtree played college football for the University of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Frankford Yellow Jackets and Minneapolis Red Jackets of the NFL.
Crabtree was born in Altoona, Iowa in 1905. He attended J. Sterling Morton High School in Cicero, Illinois, and played for the Morton Mustangs high school football team even though he was relatively short and slight of build.
Crabtree first attended Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, but dropped out after deciding that he did not like the social atmosphere of Northwestern. After his mother and stepfather moved to Florida, his parents convinced him to enroll in the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida, where he played for coach Tom Sebring and coach Charlie Bachman's Florida Gators football teams from 1927 to 1929. He was a gifted athlete, and had the ambidextrous ability to punt or dropkick the ball off either foot while on the run, or throw a forward pass with either arm.
As a collegian, Crabtree was a key backfield contributor for three Gators squads in 1927, 1928 and 1929 which finished 7–3, 8–1 and 8–2, respectively. All three squads ranked among the very best teams produced by the University of Florida through that time, including the great Gator eleven of 1928 whose achievements remained unsurpassed by future Gators football teams through the 1960s, and arguably, through the early 1990s. In 1928, Crabtree was fortunate to have two of the best offensive ends in the country as his primary passing targets, Dutch Stanley and All-American Dale Van Sickel, and was supported by the other three talented and speedy backs of the Gators' "Phantom Four" offensive backfield—Carl Brumbaugh, Rainey Cawthon and Royce Goodbread. By the second week, in less than three quarters of play, Crabtree had directed 8 touchdowns. In an era before national polling, the 1928 Gators attracted national newspaper coverage as they outscored their opponents 336–44, leading the nation in scoring during the 1928 season; they finished 8–1, losing their final game to coach Robert Neyland's Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxville by a single point, 13–12. In that game, Buddy Hackman intercepted a lateral from Crabtree to Brumbaugh, who was in the clear had it been executed correctly.