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Joe Krol

Joe "King" Krol
No. 55
Joe Krol.jpg
Date of birth (1919-02-20)February 20, 1919
Place of birth Hamilton, Ontario
Date of death December 16, 2008(2008-12-16) (aged 89)
Place of death Toronto, Ontario
Career information
CFL status National
Position(s) QB/RB/P/K/DB
Height 6 ft 0 in (183 cm)
Weight 200 lb (91 kg)
University Western Ontario
High school Kennedy Collegiate Institute
Career history
As player
1942–1944 Hamilton Flying Wildcats
1945 Detroit Lions
1945–1952, 1955 Toronto Argonauts
Career highlights and awards
Grey Cup champion (1943, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1950, 1952)
Awards Imperial Oil Trophy (ORFU) (1944)
Lou Marsh Trophy (1946)
Jeff Russel Trophy (1946)
Canadian Male Athlete of the Year (1946, 1947)
Honours All-Eastern RB (1945, 1946, 1947, 1948)
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame (1975)
Retired #s 55 (Toronto Argonauts)
Career stats

Joe "King" Krol (February 20, 1919 – December 16, 2008) was a Canadian football quarterback, running back, defensive back, and placekicker/punter from 1942 to 1953 and 1955. Considered as possibly the most versatile player in Canadian football history as a triple-threat to pass, run, and kick, he was one of Canada's greatest athletes and also famously known as a "Gold Dust Twin" for his teamwork with Royal Copeland. Joe Krol was inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in 1996. After suffering from a fall in his apartment, Krol died in a Toronto hospital on December 16, 2008.

Krol was born on February 20, 1919, in Hamilton, Ontario. He was commonly nicknamed "King". He said in 1999, "My parents are Polish and the name was actually Krul. I guess in Polish, means king. It also means rabbit, but I think I prefer king."

Krol began playing Canadian football in high school at Kennedy Collegiate Institute in Windsor, Ontario in 1932, with which he won several secondary school championships. He went to the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario and played Intercollegiate Football for the Western Ontario Mustangs from 1938 to 1942 including the Intercollegiate championship in 1939.

Krol joined the Hamilton Flying Wildcats, an Ontario Rugby Football Union precursor to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, following university in 1942. In the 1943 season, he led the Flying Wildcats to a surprise victory to win his first of six Grey Cups. His performance, with a 30-yard pass for a touchdown, a field goal, and a rouge, made him the star of the game. The Wildcats returned to the Grey Cup final in the 1944 season but lost. In that game, Krol fumbled the ball to the St. Hyacinthe-Donnacona Navy team after a hard hit on a run in the second quarter. Krol went on to play two games with the Detroit Lions in 1945 before joining the Toronto Argonauts for the remainder of the 1945 Canadian football season. The Canadian Press voted him Canada's male athlete of the year in 1946 and 1947.


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Wikipedia

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