FOOTBALL AND AMERICA: The Vietnam War
ROCKY BLEIER, AN UNLIKELY 1,000-YARD RUSHER
In 1968, the Pittsburgh Steelers drafted Notre Dame running back Rocky Bleier. But, before he could prove himself as a rookie, he was drafted again - this time for combat duty in Vietnam as an infantryman, where he was eventually wounded in action.
On August 20, 1969, Bleier and his platoon were sent to set up a secured landing position needed for helicopters to fly out casualties from an earlier battle. The platoon, almost immediately, fell under heavy hostile fire. Rocky was first hit by enemy rifle fire and later by grenade blasts, seriously injuring both legs.
Bleier, told he'd never play football again, returned to the Steelers in 1970 determined to make the team. In 1972, after three operations and nearly two years of exhaustive rehabilitation, he fought his way back into the lineup, and in 1974, became a starter. A thousand-yard rusher in 1976, he started on all four of Pittsburgh's Super Bowl winning teams, before retiring in 1980 as the Steelers fourth all-time leading rusher.
THE NFL'S GOODWILL USO TOURS
From 1966 until the withdrawal of American forces in Vietnam in 1973, players spent up to three-and-one-half weeks visiting remote firebases, aircraft carriers, and other installations in Vietnam, Guam, Thailand, Okinawa, and Japan.
Although the tours continued through the early 1980s, among the Vietnam-era participants were future Hall of Fame players Willie Davis, Frank Gifford, Sam Huff, Johnny Unitas, Bart Starr, Bobby Bell, Joe Namath, Jim Otto, Dick Butkus, Larry Csonka, Bob Lilly, Gene Upshaw, and Kenny Houston.