Pro Football Pioneer Bill Willis Dead at 86
November 28, 2007 by David Kindervater
Filed under Cleveland Browns, Pro Football HOF
Blogging the National Football League, Blogging the NFL
After a brief struggle with the onset of several serious illnesses, Bill Willis passed away at 86 years old last night surrounded by members of his immediate family. Bill was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 1977. A true pioneer of the game, he was one of four African Americans to permanently break professional football’s “color barrier” in 1946. Along with fellow Cleveland Browns Hall of Fame teammate Marion Motley in the All-America Football Conference and the Los Angeles Rams’ Woody Strode and Kenny Washington in the National Football League, Bill helped desegregate pro football a full year before Major League Baseball was integrated. He was the only surviving member of the pioneering foursome. Steve Perry, the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s President/Executive Director, said:
“Bill Willis is one of the true heroes in the history of pro football. The courage and leadership exemplified by him while leading the cause to break down racial barriers is a model for all of us all to live by.”
Bill Willis was a seven-time all-league choice and a two-way star who excelled as a defensive middle guard for the Browns from 1946 to 1953. His lightning quick burst off the line of scrimmage helped him earn a starting position with Cleveland after just one pro scrimmage. Bill and the Browns advanced to the championship game in each of his eight pro seasons and captured the AAFC title four times and won the 1950 NFL championship. Bill was known for a famous game-saving tackle against the New York Giants in a 1950 playoff game that preserved the Browns’ title run that season.
















