No. 42 | |||||||
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Position: | Halfback, wingback, fullback | ||||||
Personal information | |||||||
Date of birth: | August 23, 1907 | ||||||
Place of birth: | Crystal River, Florida | ||||||
Date of death: | May 19, 1991 | (aged 83)||||||
Place of death: | Dallas, Texas | ||||||
Height: | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) | ||||||
Weight: | 207 lb (94 kg) | ||||||
Career information | |||||||
High school: | St. Petersburg (FL) | ||||||
College: | Florida | ||||||
Career history | |||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||
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Career NFL statistics | |||||||
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Player stats at PFR |
Games played: | 18 |
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Games started: | 14 |
Player stats at NFL.com |
Royce Ethelbert Goodbread (August 23, 1907 – May 19, 1991) was an American college and professional football player who was a halfback and wingback in the National Football League (NFL) for two seasons during the early 1930s. Goodbread played college football for the University of Florida, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Frankford Yellow Jackets, the Minneapolis Red Jackets and the Providence Steam Roller of the NFL.
Goodbread was born in Crystal River, Florida in 1907, and attended St. Petersburg High School in St. Petersburg, Florida, and he played for the St. Petersburg Green Devils high school football team. In 1925 he accounted for 189 points, and led his team to a win over rival Hillsborough High School.
After graduating from high school, Goodbread attended 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. In Goodbread's three seasons as a member of the Gators varsity, the team posted win-loss records of 7–3, 8–1 and 8–2—a three-year peak for the Gators which they would not equal or exceed for over six decades. Goodbread was a key member of the Gators' "Phantom Four" offensive backfield that included Carl Brumbaugh, Rainey Cawthon and Clyde Crabtree, when the 1928 Gators led the country with 336 points scored and finished 8–1, losing only to the Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxville by a single point, 13–12.