The Heisman Trophy is awarded annually by the Downtown Athletic Club to the top player in college football’s highest division. While many of those who have hoisted the trophy named for football coach and pioneer John Heisman initially pursued careers in the NFL, the lives of these seven winners took much different paths:
1935: First Heisman Trophy Winner Jay Berwanger Passes on NFL Career
Weeks after becoming the first recipient of the Downtown Athletic Club Trophy—as the Heisman Trophy was originally known—Berwanger again made football history when the Philadelphia Eagles selected him as the NFL’s first draft pick. Professional football had yet to become a lucrative enterprise, and while the University of Chicago senior reportedly demanded to be paid $1,000 per game, Philadelphia offered no more than $150.
Chicago Bears coach and owner George Halas traded for Berwanger’s rights but ultimately refused the college star’s demands of $25,000 for a two-year, no-cut contract. Spurning the NFL, Berwanger went to work instead for a Chicago rubber company. “I thought I’d have a better future by using my education rather than my football skills,” Berwanger later said.
After a knee injury derailed his attempt to make the 1936 U.S. Olympic decathlon team, Berwanger coached the freshman football team at his alma mater, wrote a Chicago Daily News sports column and refereed college football games. After serving as a U.S. Navy flight instructor in World War II, Berwanger launched his own company that manufactured plastic and sponge-rubber strips for automobiles.
1939: Iowa Star Nile Kinnick Dies in WWII Training Flight
Months after World War II ignited in the fall of 1939, Kinnick—a University of Iowa senior—delivered one of the more memorable acceptance speeches in Heisman Trophy history. “I thank God I was warring on the gridirons of the Midwest and not on the battlefields of Europe,” he said. “I can speak confidently and positively that the players of this country would much more, much rather struggle and fight to win the Heisman award than the Croix de Guerre [a French military honor].”
The war, however, would ultimately take the life of the “Cornbelt Comet.”
Born and reared in Iowa, Kinnick bypassed the NFL to attend law school and serve as assistant football coach at his alma mater. Three days before the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, he reported for induction with the U.S. Naval Air Corps Reserve.
When his plane developed an oil leak while on a routine training flight off the USS Lexington aircraft carrier on June 2, 1943, the 24-year-old died in an attempted water landing off the coast of Venezuela. The University of Iowa renamed its football stadium in Kinnick’s honor in 1972.
1940: Michigan Star Tom Harmon Plays Himself in Movie
Although selected first in the 1941 NFL draft, Harmon—a tailback at Michigan—had more interest in becoming a professional sports broadcaster than a professional football player. The Heisman winner, the father of actor Mark Harmon, went to Hollywood after his graduation and starred in the 1941 film “Harmon of Michigan," which was loosely based on his collegiate career.
Harmon served four years as a fighter pilot with the U.S. Army Air Corps during World War II. He earned the Silver Star and Purple Heart for surviving two plane crashes in 1943.
Six months after being the sole survivor when a plane he piloted crashed in the South American jungle, Harmon parachuted to safety when his aircraft was struck in a dogfight with Japanese Zeros over China. When he wed actress Elyse Knox, material for her wedding dress came from the silk parachute that saved his life.
After the war, Harmon played two seasons with the Los Angeles Rams before fulfilling his dream of becoming a successful radio and television broadcaster.