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Bobby Clell Burnett

Bobby Clell Burnett

Male 1943 - 2016  (73 years)

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  • Name Bobby Clell Burnett  [1
    Birth 4 Jan 1943  Clinton, Van Buren, Arkansas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Death 1 Oct 2016  Marion, Williamson, Illinois, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    • Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) - Wednesday, October 5, 2016

      CASTLE ROCK, Colo. - Bobby Clell Burnett passed away on Saturday, October 1, 2016. He was born January 4, 1943 in Clinton, Ark., to Clell and Frances Burnett. He was the oldest of three children, with two brothers, Tommy and Billy. Bobby married Dorothy Letsch on July 12, 1965 and were happily married for 51 years. They raised four children together: Chad, Deana, Randy, and Shane. They also had 12 grandchildren. Bobby was an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and had a strong testimony of his Savior, Jesus Christ. Bobby Burnett graduated from Smackover High School in Smackover, Ark.

      He played tailback for the Arkansas Razorbacks from 1963-65. In 1965, he was selected as All-SWC, led the conference in touchdowns, set a Razorback single season record of 16 touchdowns, received the Charles T. Myers award as his team's Most Valuable Player, led the SWC in rushing, carrying the ball 232 times for 947 yards and 16 touchdown's without a fumble, and ranked in the top 5 nationally in a number of categories. He scored the winning touchdown in the 1965 Cotton Bowl against Nebraska that gave Arkansas its only national championship; with that feat being named by Sports Illustrated a few years ago as the most memorable moment in Arkansas' Sport history. Bobby scored 2 touchdowns in the Senior Bowl before being drafted by the Dallas Cowboys and the Buffalo Bills. He signed with the Bills, with Jack Kemp at quarterback, and Marty Schotenheimer at linebacker. Bobby was selected as the AFL's "Rookie of the Year" in 1966. He was also selected as All-Pro and scored twice in the Pro Bowl, while being selected as the Bills' Most Valuable Player for 1966.

      After his career with the Buffalo Bills and Denver Broncos, he completed his Master's degree in Education and became co-owner of the largest single-office real estate business in the state of Colorado, employing over 500 agents. He has been inducted into the State of Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame twice; as an individual in 1997, and as a member of the 1964 Razorback National Champion Team in 2010. He will be forever remembered as an amazing athlete, father, grandfather, husband, friend, and inspiration to all who knew him.

      Arkansas Democrat-Gazette (Little Rock, AR) - Wednesday, October 5, 2016

      CITE THIS RECORD
      Arkansas Democrat-Gazette () , obit for Bobby Clell Burnett, GenealogyBank.com (https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/obituaries/obit/15FD8D97E7209A00-15FD8D97E7209A00 : accessed 9 August 2019)
    Burial 6 Oct 2016  Cedar Hill Cemetery, Castle Rock, Castle Rock, Douglas, Colorado, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Person ID I31585  tng Genealogy

    Family Living 
    Children 
     1. Living
     2. Living
     3. Living
     4. Living
    Family ID F10984  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 4 Jan 1943 - Clinton, Van Buren, Arkansas, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 1 Oct 2016 - Marion, Williamson, Illinois, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    default/Bobby Clell Burnett photo.jpg
    default/Bobby Clell Burnett photo.jpg

  • Notes 
    • Bobby Burnett, star Hog, dies at 73

      Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Web Edition Articles (Little Rock, AR) - Monday, October 3, 2016

      FAYETTEVILLE -- Bobby Burnett scored arguably the most significant touchdown ever for an Arkansas football team.

      Burnett's 3-yard run with 4:41 left in the 1965 Cotton Bowl lifted Arkansas to a 10-7 victory over Nebraska and completed an 11-0 season for the 1964 Razorbacks.

      The touchdown run capped an 80-yard drive for the Razorbacks after Nebraska had taken a 7-3 lead.

      "It was on an option play," Arkansas quarterback Fred Marshall said. "I took the ball and sprinted to the right, and then I flipped it back to Bobby and he went airborne and just got over all the defensive guys there.

      "He only touched the ball the one time on the drive, but it was an important one time."

      Marshall recalled the touchdown Sunday after learning of Burnett's death.

      Burnett, who lived in Castle Rock, Colo., died Saturday in a hospital in Marion, Ill., at 73 from pancreatic cancer. He had been traveling from Michigan to Georgia to visit his children and grandchildren according to his younger brother, Tommy Burnett.

      Arkansas' Cotton Bowl victory allowed the Razorbacks to share the 1964 national championship with Alabama, which was awarded the title by The Associated Press and United Press International polls before losing to Texas in the Orange Bowl to finish 10-1.

      The Football Writers Association of America and Helms Foundation named Arkansas the No. 1 team in the country after the bowls.

      "Bobby was one heck of a running back for us," Marshall said. "He was a man playing a boys' game."

      Burnett, originally from Smackover, was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame and UA Sports Hall of Honor in 2000.

      A fourth-round draft pick by the Buffalo Bills in the 1966 American Football League Draft, Burnett became the AFL Rookie of Year when he rushed 187 times for 766 yards and caught 34 passes for 319 yards.

      Burnett led Arkansas in rushing touchdowns as a junior and senior with 8 in 1964 and 16 in 1965 when the Razorbacks were a combined 21-1.

      "Inside the 10-yard line, he was just unstoppable," said Tommy Burnett, who played receiver for the Razorbacks in 1965-1966. "If he didn't think he could get through a crease, he's just go up and over."

      Jim Williams, a defensive tackle for the Razorbacks in 1964-1965, said that before the 1964 season Bobby Burnett used to be plagued by fumbles and injuries in practice.

      "Nobody thought Bobby could play tailback for us, because he would always fumble or get hurt," Williams said. "But the coaches had the savvy to put him in there and to teach him better and he turned out to be the best thing that happened to us in the backfield, especially at tailback.

      "After he started playing, he made everything work. He never got hurt and he never fumbled."

      Burnett combined for 368 carries and receptions in 1964-1965 without a fumble.

      "Bobby was a miracle man as far as I was concerned," Williams said. "He became an absolute supreme tailback for us.

      "When we got down to the goal line, you knew the ball wasn't going to anybody but Burnett. He was Mr. Consistency.

      "Bobby was also a great gentleman and friend. We're sorry to lose him."

      Frank Broyles was Arkansas' coach from 1958-1976.

      "He was a winner and a team player and a leader for the Razorbacks," Broyles said Sunday. "He did everything he was supposed to do and took pride in it."

      Burnett suffered a knee injury after his rookie season in 1966 and played in only 11 more games. He missed the 1968 season recovering, then played briefly for the Denver Broncos in 1969 before retiring.

      Burnett stayed in the Denver area and eventually became an executive for a real estate company.

      "I saw Bobby do things in the real estate business that are virtually unheard of," said Tommy Burnett, who lives in Springfield, Mo. "I was visiting him one time when he tore up a contract for a couple that thought they'd gotten in over their head with the house they'd bought.

      "It was a pretty expensive house with a nice commission and Bobby asked them what he could do to help. They felt they'd overspent and he reached into his desk drawer and pulled out the contract and tore it in half.

      "He said, 'Go home and think about it and if you want to get another house, let me know and we'll help you.'

      "I said, 'Boy, you just cost yourself a lot of money.' He said, 'You've got to be honest with people. They made a mistake, and I had the ability to correct it.' "

      Bobby Burnett's youngest brother, Bill, also played running back for the Razorbacks and as a senior in 1969 rushed for 20 touchdowns.

      "Bobby was a great all-round athlete, but the one word describing him is 'perseverance,' " said Bill Burnett, who lives in Fayetteville. "You talk about a guy hanging in there. He had been redshirted and didn't start until three-quarters of the way through his junior year."

      Tommy Burnett said he visited his brother in Colorado a few weeks ago after he had been diagnosed with cancer.

      "We had a lot of laughs and good times telling stories," Tommy Burnett said. "He was a neat guy with a great laugh. He had an adult man giggle.

      "We had a lot of fun, but we pretty much knew that was it for us. We weren't going to get to see each other again."

      Sports on 10/03/2016

      Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Web Edition Articles (Little Rock, AR) - Monday, October 3, 2016

      CITE THIS RECORD
      Arkansas Democrat-Gazette: Web Edition Articles () , obit for Bobby Burnett, star Hog, dies at 73, GenealogyBank.com (https://www.genealogybank.com/doc/obituaries/obit/15FC93512696CCA8-15FC93512696CCA8 : accessed 9 August 2019)

  • Sources 
    1. [S541] Ancestry.com, U.S., Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2012;), https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/170819365.
      Record for Bobby Burnett
      http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=60525&h=136771731&indiv=try
      http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=60525&h=136771731&indiv=try