QB / QB
Otto Graham
Class of 1965
Nine of ten years
All-League
Passing yards
23,584
Rushing TDs
44
Seasons
10
TDs
174
"Pro football is no game for weaklings – everyone knows that. The men are rugged, they play hard, but they play clean. When men get into big time football, they’re good enough not to have to play dirty. We love the game and we believe football competition, as well as all sports competition, makes high types of men.”
Enshrinement Speech
Career Highlights
When Paul Brown began organizing the Cleveland Browns team to play in the new All-America Football Conference (AAFC), the first player he signed was Otto Graham, a tailback from Northwestern University. Brown eyed Graham as the perfect quarterback for his new pro team.
Graham planned to concentrate on basketball at Northwestern. He was "discovered" playing intra-mural football as a freshman and although he became a fine passer in three varsity seasons, he had no experience in the T-formation. Brown never wavered in his decision. "Otto has the basic requirements of a T-quarterback – poise, ball-handling and distinct qualities of leadership."
It turned out the coach was right. Once Graham joined the Browns, he not only quickly mastered the mechanics of the T but he became the heart of a dynamic football machine. With Graham at the controls, the Browns won four straight AAFC titles and compiled an awesome 52-4-3 record.
Still, pro football "experts" theorized Otto and the Browns would get their comeuppance once they faced the NFL in 1950, but both the quarterback and the team proved more than equal to the occasion. In the Browns' 30-28 victory over the Los Angeles Rams in the 1950 NFL Championship Game, Graham threw four touchdown passes.
His finest title-game performance came four years later when he scored three touchdowns and threw for a trio of scores in a 56-10 lacing of Detroit. Graham retired after that game but responded to Paul Brown's SOS early in 1955. In the final game of his career, the NFL championship against the Los Angeles Rams, he ran for two touchdowns and passed for two more in a 38-14 victory. For the ninth time in 10 seasons, Otto was named first-team all-league quarterback.
While Graham was guiding the Browns, Cleveland played in 10 straight title games and had four AAFC and three NFL championships.
Passing
|
Rushing
|
||||||||||||
Year | Team |
G
|
Att
|
Comp
|
Pct
|
Yds
|
TD
|
Int
|
Rating
|
Att
|
Yds
|
Avg
|
TD
|
1946 | Cleveland - AAFC |
14
|
174
|
95
|
54.6
|
1834
|
17
|
5
|
112.1
|
30
|
-125
|
-4.2
|
1
|
1947 | Cleveland - AAFC |
14
|
269
|
163
|
60.6
|
2753
|
25
|
11
|
109.2
|
19
|
72
|
3.8
|
1
|
1948 | Cleveland - AAFC |
14
|
333
|
173
|
52.0
|
2713
|
25
|
15
|
85.6
|
23
|
146
|
6.3
|
6
|
1949 | Cleveland - AAFC |
12
|
285
|
161
|
56.5
|
2785
|
19
|
10
|
97.5
|
27
|
107
|
4.0
|
3
|
1950 | Cleveland |
12
|
253
|
137
|
54.2
|
1943
|
14
|
20
|
64.7
|
55
|
145
|
2.6
|
6
|
1951 | Cleveland |
12
|
265
|
147
|
55.5
|
2205
|
17
|
16
|
79.2
|
35
|
29
|
0.8
|
3
|
1952 | Cleveland |
12
|
364
|
181
|
49.7
|
2816
|
20
|
24
|
66.6
|
42
|
130
|
3.1
|
4
|
1953 | Cleveland |
12
|
258
|
167
|
64.7
|
2722
|
11
|
9
|
99.7
|
43
|
143
|
3.3
|
6
|
1954 | Cleveland |
12
|
240
|
142
|
59.2
|
2092
|
11
|
17
|
73.5
|
63
|
114
|
1.8
|
8
|
1955 | Cleveland |
12
|
185
|
98
|
53.0
|
1721
|
15
|
8
|
94.0
|
68
|
121
|
1.8
|
6
|
Career Total (AAFC) |
54
|
1061
|
592
|
55.8
|
10,085
|
86
|
41
|
99.1
|
99
|
200
|
2.0
|
11
|
|
Career Total (NFL) |
72
|
1565
|
872
|
55.7
|
13,499
|
88
|
94
|
78.2
|
306
|
682
|
2.2
|
33
|
|
Career Total |
126
|
2626
|
1464
|
55.8
|
23,584
|
174
|
135
|
86.6
|
405
|
882
|
2.2
|
44
|
|
Additional AAFC Statistics: Punt Returns: 23-262; Interceptions: 7-102, 1 TD Additional NFL Statistics: Fumble Recovery for TD: 1 |
Championship Games |
1946 AAFC - Cleveland Browns 14, New York Yankees 9
1947 AAFC - Cleveland Browns 14, New York Yankees 3
1948 AAFC - Cleveland Browns 49, Buffalo Bills 7
1949 AAFC - Cleveland Browns 21, San Francisco 49ers 7
1950 NFL - Cleveland Browns 30, Los Angeles Rams 28
1951 NFL - Los Angeles Rams 24, Cleveland Browns 17
1952 NFL - Detroit Lions 17, Cleveland Browns 7
1953 NFL - Detroit Lions 17, Cleveland Browns 16
1954 NFL - Cleveland Browns 56, Detroit Lions 10
1955 NFL - Cleveland Browns 38, Los Angeles Rams 14
All-League Teams |
All-Pro: 1947 (AP), 1948 (AP), 1949 (AP, IN)
All-Pro Second Team: 1948 (SN)
All-NFL: 1951 (AP, UPI, NY), 1952 (UPI, NY), 1953 (AP, UPI, NY) , 1954 (AP, UPI, SN, NY) , 1955 (AP, UPI, SN, NY)
All-NFL Second Team: 1950 (UPI), 1952 (AP), 1955 (NEA)
All-AAFC: 1946 (UPI, OA), 1947 (NY, OA), 1948 (UPI, OA), 1949 (UPI, NY, OA)
All-AAFC Second Team: 1946 (NY), 1948 (NY)
Pro Bowls |
(5) – 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1955
Full Name: Otto Everett Graham, Jr.
Birthdate: December 6, 1921
Died: December 17, 2003
Birthplace: Waukegan, Illinois
High School: Waukegan (IL)
Enshrined into Pro Football Hall of Fame: September 12, 1965
Presenter: Paul Brown, Hall of Fame coach
Other Members of Class of 1965: Guy Chamberlin, Paddy Driscoll, Dan Fortmann, Sid Luckman, Steve Van Buren, Bob Waterfield
Pro Career: 10 seasons, 126 games
Drafted: 1st round (4th overall) in 1944 by Detroit Lions; signed with Cleveland Browns of AAFC in 1946
Uniform Number: #14 and #60
Otto Graham Enshrinement Speech 1965
Presenter: Paul Brown
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. I making this award to Otts I'd like to say to you that I feel he's the greatest player in the history of our team. I say this because he played the most important position and he took us to many, many high honors. Over and beyond that he' s been a real credit as a person. Otto my congratulations and thank you for asking me to sponsor you.
Otto Graham
Thank you, Paul. I'll be very brief. I've had many honors in my day, but I have to admit, this has to be the tops of all of them. I want to thank the Football Hall of Fame, for the wonderful hospitality they have shown to all of us. I honestly don 't think I belong here, but I'll be darn if I'll give this bust back. The greatest honor though for me personally, is having Paul Brown come back to give this award to me. In my opinion he's the greatest football coach ever, and one of my very dearest friends. Thank you very much.