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Today in Patriots History
Bucko Kilroy
Ron Erhardt
Bucko Kilroy
Ron Erhardt
April 6, 1979:
Francis "Bucko" Kilroy is named General Manager
Former Patriot offensive coordinator Ron Erhardt is named Head Coach
HALL OF VERY GOOD - 2022 - PFRA | PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL RESEARCHERS ASSOCIATION
The 2022 class of the PFRA's Hall of Very Good.
profootballresearchers.com
Bucko Kilroy
Position: Tackle, Defensive Tackle, Guard, Middle Guard
Teams: Philadelphia/Pittsburgh Eagles/Steelers "Steagles" (1943), Philadelphia Eagles (1944-55)
Offensive Line Coach, Player Personnel Director: Philadelphia Eagles (1956-61)
Director of Player Personnel: Washington Redskins (1962-64)
Scout: Dallas Cowboys (1965-70)
New England Patriots Executive: Personnel Director (1971-78), General Manager (1979-82), Vice-President (1983-93), Scouting Consultant (1994-2007)
Bio: Francis “Bucko” Kilroy devoted his professional life to pro football. Born and raised in Philadelphia, he attended Temple University, then served in the Merchant Marines during World War II. Kilroy returned to Philadelphia in 1943 to play for the Steagles/Eagles for 13 seasons and was a first team all-pro four times, a second teamer three times and was selected to three Pro Bowls. He was a fundamental part of two Eagles’ championship squads in 1948 and 1949, the only teams to win back-to-back shutout Championship Games. Kilroy played middle guard on defense and when dropping back from there in the 5-2 "Eagle" defense became a part of the evolution of the middle linebacker position. On offense, he helped Steve Van Buren to three consecutive rushing titles (1947-49), the first time that feat was ever achieved.
Kilroy considered himself a "heavy hitter" but others' opinions varied, with Art Donovan calling him "dirty" and Otto Graham saying he was "the bad boy." When Life magazine published an article implying he was one of the NFL's "ornery critters," Kilroy sued and won an award of $25,000. He acted as player-coach, becoming the Eagles offensive line coach after he retired.
He was one of the first scouts in the NFL and participated in the creation of the Scouting Combine. In 1971, he began a 36 year-long association with the New England Patriots in various capacities including scout and general manager. As personnel director, Kilroy drafted Hall of Famers John Hannah and Mike Haynes. Later he was instrumental in drafting many of the players that contributed to New England's dynasty years. Bill Belichick said Kilroy was "one of the pillars of our league… a pure football man who did practically everything one person could do in the game, blazing trails every step of the way."
In the days when teams were drafting based on what they read in Street and Smith’s college football annual, Bucko Kilroy (along with Gil Brandt) was the first to put together a computer database with measureables - resulting in a long run of excellence for the Dallas Cowboys. Bucko Kilroy was a finalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2020, and semi-finalist in 2025; as a player he is also a member of the NFL's All-Decade Team of the 1940s. It is
July 11, 2007:
Legendary NFL player and executive Bucko Kilroy dies at 86 -- Patriots.com
Kilroy was a member of the New England Patriots organization for the past 36 years, serving as personnel director (1971-78), general manager (1979-82), vice president (1983-93) and scouting consultant (1994-2007). He was a contributor to 14 of the club’s 15 playoff seasons, including all five of the franchise’s trips to the Super Bowl.
As personnel director of the Patriots, Kilroy was responsible for selecting the team’s two Pro Football Hall of Fame inductees, John Hannah (1973) and Mike Haynes (1976). He is credited with building some of the best teams in Patriots’ history, drafting Julius Adams, Hannah, Sam Cunningham, Steve Nelson, Russ Francis and Steve Grogan during his first five years as personnel director (1971-75). Over the next three years (1976-78), the Patriots compiled a 31-13 record (.705), including two playoff appearances.
» Speak My Language
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New England’s offense is a member of the NFL’s third offensive family, the Erhardt-Perkins system. The offense was named after the two men, Ron Erhardt and Ray Perkins, who developed it while working for the Patriots under head coach Chuck Fairbanks in the 1970s. According to Perkins, it was assembled in the same way most such systems are developed. “I don’t look at it as us inventing it,” he explained. “I look at it as a bunch of coaches sitting in rooms late at night organizing and getting things together to help players be successful.”
The backbone of the Erhardt-Perkins system is that plays — pass plays in particular — are not organized by a route tree or by calling a single receiver’s route, but by what coaches refer to as “concepts.” Each play has a name, and that name conjures up an image for both the quarterback and the other players on offense. And, most importantly, the concept can be called from almost any formation or set. Who does what changes, but the theory and tactics driving the play do not. “In essence, you’re running the same play,” said Perkins. “You’re just giving them some window-dressing to make it look different.”
The biggest advantage of the concept-based system is that it operates from the perspective of the most critical player on offense: the quarterback. In other systems, even if the underlying principles are the exact same, the play and its name might be very different. Rather than juggling all this information in real time, an Erhardt-Perkins quarterback only has to read a given arrangement of receivers. “You can cut down on the plays and get different looks from your formations and who’s in them. It’s easier for the players to learn. It’s easier for the quarterback to learn,” former Patriots offensive coordinator. “You get different looks without changing his reads. You don’t need an open-ended number of plays.”
If you can hold your nose and get past the name of the author, below is an excellent article on Bucko Kilroy - from his aggressive, physical playing days, to time building Tom Landry's Cowboys, to all he meant for the New England Patriots.
State Your Case: Bucko Kilroy -- Talk of Fame
Kilroy was instrumental in drafting Roger Staubach, despite his naval commitment, and put together the foundation of Tom Landry’s great Dallas teams of the 1970s. In 1971 he headed off to New England, where he did it again for the Patriots during what would become a 36-year career as scouting director, general manager, vice-president and, in his later years, scouting consultant.
He drafted Hall-of-Famers John Hannah and Mike Haynes, as well as Russ Francis, despite the fact Francis had not played his senior season at Oregon. Later, he would take Stanley Morgan, Darryl Stingley, Sam Cunningham, Steve Nelson, Steve Grogan, Pete Brock and Raymond Clayborn, thus turning the long somnambulant Patriots into a playoff fixture in the mid-to-late 1970s and again in the mid-1980s, when they reached the Super Bowl for the first time.
Kilroy would help New England do it again in the late 1990s and into their present Super Bowl run, with the first three of their Super Bowl dynasty teams having been blessed by the Kilroy touch. In fact, then Patriots’ personnel director Scott Pioli, a Bill Belichick disciple, made it a requirement that each of their scouts regularly visit with Kilroy.
Considering his inability to remember anyone’s name, Kilroy’s decision to turn scouting into a numbers game grading system some 60 years ago was probably all for the best. Once intrigued by Naval Academy running back Napoleon McCallum, he said “I really like that Bonaparte kid at Navy.’’
He may have butchered the name, but he knew a player when he saw one ... and for 64 years he saw them all. If 64 years’ worth of accomplishment doesn’t make you a Hall-of-Fame contributor, it’s difficult to fathom what would.
120. Bucko Kilroy
A beast at Temple University, Francis Joseph "Bucko" Kilroy may not have been drafted but his hometown Philadelphia Eagles knew there was something special there and he made the team; albeit in a combined effort as in 1943 the Eagles merged with the Pittsburgh Steelers due to the depletion o...
www.notinhalloffame.com
IN DALLAS, SPYTALK AND A ROUT
In the week before their game with Dallas, the Rams prepared themselves so meticulously that Tex Schramm, the president of the Cowboys (and a former general
vault.si.com
Bucko Kilroy - Wikipedia
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