John Kimbrough

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John Kimbrough
Date of birth: June 14, 1918(1918-06-14)
Place of birth: Haskell, Texas
Date of death: May 8, 2006 (aged 87)
Place of death: Haskell, Texas
Career information
Position(s): FB / QB
College: Texas A&M
NFL Draft: 1941 / Round: 1 / Pick 2
Organizations
 As player:
1941
1946-1948
New York Americans (AFL)
Los Angeles Dons (AAFC)
Stats at DatabaseFootball.com
College Football Hall of Fame

John Kimbrough (1918-2006) was a college athlete, a member of the Texas Legislature, the star of two western movies and a rancher. His older brother Frank Kimbrough served as head football coach at Baylor and West Texas A&M.

Kimbrough, an alumnus of Texas A&M University, was known as the "Haskell Hurricane" when he played Texas A&M Aggies football team. He played fullback on the Aggie's undefeated 1939 national championship team. He was 6-2, 212 pounds and was a punishing runner who ran with high knee action.[citation needed] He had speed as well as size and could run the 100 yard run in about 10.0 seconds.[citation needed]

In 1940 he finished second to the University of Michigan's Tom Harmon in Heisman Trophy balloting. Kimbrough was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954.

In 1941 he started along Tom Harmon in the New York Americans backfield in the short-lived American Football League and became the team's primary running threat after Harmon left the team for military service. After the AFL folded in response to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Kimbrough parlayed his gridiron fame and athletic good looks into a Hollywood contract, though he only appeared in two western motion pictures, Sundown Jim and Lonestar Ranger, both released in 1942.

He later served as an Army pilot in the Pacific Theater of Operations during World War II. Returning from military service, Kimbrough played for the Los Angeles Dons of the All-America Football Conference; unfortunately, his second run at a professional football career was cut short by a series of heart attacks that started when he was only 30 years old. He was forced to leave the game in 1948 after three seasons with the Dons.

Kimbrough was elected to the Texas Legislature in 1953.

Kimbrough died May 8, 2006, in Haskell, Texas. The cause of death was pneumonia.

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