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Craig "Ironhead" Heyward dies at 39

BuckNutty

Hear The Drummer Get Wicked
Bookie
Former RB 'Ironhead' Heyward dies at 39

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

70492.61OBIT-HEYWARD-FOOTBALL.sff.jpg


Atlanta Falcons' Craig Heyward (34) celebrates a second half Falcons touchdown against the Detroit Lions at the Georgia Dome Sunday, Nov. 5, 1995, in Atlanta. Former NFL fullback Heyward died Saturday, May 27, 2006, after a 7 1/2-year fight with a recurring brain tumor, his son's high school football coach said. He was 39. (AP Photo/John Bazemore,file)
ATLANTA -- Former NFL fullback Craig "Ironhead" Heyward died Saturday after a 7 1/2-year fight with a recurring brain tumor, his son's high school football coach said. He was 39.

Heyward spent 11 seasons in the NFL with New Orleans, Chicago, Atlanta, St. Louis and Indianapolis. The former University of Pittsburgh All-American rushed for a career-high 1,083 yards for the Falcons in 1995.

"I got a call at 4:30 or 5 that he had passed away," said Blair Armstrong, who coached Heyward's son, Cameron, at Peachtree Ridge High School. "He was in a hospice when he died, but I don't know which one."

Armstrong said he often talked to Heyward when he came to see his son play.

"He wasn't real mobile, but he'd been rehabbing. He thought he might walk again. But once he lost his hearing and his sight, his organs started shutting down. Other problems were just developing."

Born in Passaic, N.J., in 1966, the 5-foot-11 fullback ran for 4,301 yards in his NFL career and had 1,559 yards receiving.

Heyward was one of the biggest running backs in NCAA Division I-A history, with a weight estimated at 260 to 285 pounds, but finished third in Pitt career rushing with 3,086 yards. He trailed only Tony Dorsett (6,526 yards) and Curvin Richards' 3,192 yards. Heyward's 1,791 yards in 1987, counting a bowl game, rank second only to Dorsett's 2,150 yards in 1976 for a Pitt single season.

Heyward was a first-team AP All-America pick that season, but chose to pass up his senior season and was a first-round draft pick by New Orleans.

"Craig Heyward truly ranks among the all-time greats in Pitt football history," Pittsburgh coach Dave Wannstedt said in a statement released with the school.

"I will always remember him as a tremendous player who had an irrepressible attitude on and off the field. The thoughts and prayers of the entire Pitt family are with Craig's loved ones during this time of sorrow."

Heyward's son, the 6-7, 280-pound Cameron, visited Pitt on a recruiting trip last month and is considered one of the nation's top defensive line recruits.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/football/2020AP_FBN_Obit_Heyward.html
 
I remember Ironhead well...5th in the Heisman balloting I think. Cancer certainly strikes way too many families, including mine...prayers and sympathy for his family.

Good memory, BL. Here's the voting from 1987.

<TABLE borderColor=#623d1c cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=2 border=1><TBODY><TR><TD id=content colSpan=5> </TD><TD id=content align=middle colSpan=3>Points </TD><TD id=content> </TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>Place</TD><TD id=content>Name</TD><TD id=content>School</TD><TD id=content>Class</TD><TD id=content>Pos.</TD><TD id=content>1</TD><TD id=content>2</TD><TD id=content>3</TD><TD id=content>Total</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>1st</TD><TD id=content>Tim Brown</TD><TD id=content>Notre Dame</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>WR</TD><TD id=content>324</TD><TD id=content>173</TD><TD id=content>124</TD><TD id=content>1,442</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>2nd</TD><TD id=content>Don McPherson</TD><TD id=content>Syracuse</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>QB</TD><TD id=content>167</TD><TD id=content>135</TD><TD id=content>60</TD><TD id=content>831</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>3rd</TD><TD id=content>Gordon Lockbaum</TD><TD id=content>Holy Cross</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>TB-DB</TD><TD id=content>108</TD><TD id=content>103</TD><TD id=content>127</TD><TD id=content>657</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>4th</TD><TD id=content>Lorenzo White</TD><TD id=content>Michigan State</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>TB</TD><TD id=content>89 </TD><TD id=content>121</TD><TD id=content>123</TD><TD id=content>632</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>5th</TD><TD id=content>Craig Heyward</TD><TD id=content>Pittsburgh</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>RB</TD><TD id=content>17</TD><TD id=content>44</TD><TD id=content>31</TD><TD id=content>170</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>6th</TD><TD id=content>Chris Spielman</TD><TD id=content>Ohio State</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>LB</TD><TD id=content>15</TD><TD id=content>20</TD><TD id=content>25</TD><TD id=content>110</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>7th </TD><TD id=content>Thurman Thomas</TD><TD id=content>Oklahoma State</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>TB</TD><TD id=content>11</TD><TD id=content>23</TD><TD id=content>20</TD><TD id=content>99</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>8th</TD><TD id=content>Gaston Green</TD><TD id=content>UCLA</TD><TD id=content>Sr.</TD><TD id=content>TB</TD><TD id=content>4</TD><TD id=content>13</TD><TD id=content>35</TD><TD id=content>73</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>9th</TD><TD id=content>Emmitt Smith</TD><TD id=content>Florida</TD><TD id=content>Fr.</TD><TD id=content>RB</TD><TD id=content>2</TD><TD id=content>11</TD><TD id=content>42</TD><TD id=content>70</TD></TR><TR><TD id=content>10th</TD><TD id=content>Bobby Humphrey</TD><TD id=content>Alabama</TD><TD id=content>Jr.</TD><TD id=content>RB</TD><TD id=content>5</TD><TD id=content>17</TD><TD id=content>14</TD><TD id=content>63</TD></TR>

</TABLE>
 
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