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  1. Marion Motley (June 5, 1920 - June 27, 1999) was a professional football player, a fullback for the Cleveland Browns, and briefly for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Motley attended high school at Canton McKinley High School in Canton, Ohio, and played college football at South Carolina State and three seasons at Nevada . As a punishing fullback for the Wolf Pack, Motley played several games at San ...

  2. www.blackpast.org › african-american-history › motley-marion-1920-1999Marion Motley (1920-1999) - Blackpast

    14 de jul. de 2007 · Marion Motley was born June 5, 1920, in Leesburg, Georgia. Motley played football at Canton McKinley High School in Canton, Ohio, and went on to South Carolina State University and then to the University of Nevada, where he played football while participating in other collegiate sports such as track, throwing javelin, and boxing.

  3. www.clevelandbrowns.com › news › marion-motley-history-hofMarion Motley - Cleveland Browns

    7 de sept. de 2018 · Marion Motley – Fullback When Paul Brown signed Marion Motley in the Browns' first training camp in 1946, it was initially to give African-American Bill Willis, whom the head coach had just ...

  4. 26 de jul. de 2016 · Cleveland Brown's fullback Marion Motley comes in as the 74th best player in NFL history on NFL Film's "The Top 100: NFL's Greatest Players" list (2010).

  5. Marion Motley was an American professional football fullback and linebacker who played for the Cleveland Browns in the All-America Football Conference (AAFC) and the National Football League (NFL). He was a leading pass-blocker and rusher in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and ended his career with an average of 5.7 yards per carry, a record for running backs that still stands.

  6. U.S. athlete Marion Motley helped desegregate professional football while leading the Cleveland Browns to five league championships. ... Motley missed the 1954 season because of a knee injury. He finished his career with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1955. In all, Motley totaled 4,720 rushing yards (with an average of 5.7 yards per carry) ...

  7. In 1946, Marion Motley was one of four African American men to break pro football's color barrier when he joined the Cleveland Browns. Those men's efforts to play a physically brutal game in the face of societal racism and state-sanctioned Jim Crow laws trailblazed a path for Black athletes in the highest echelons of professional sports, including baseball's Jackie Robinson.