'DeBenneville (Bert) Bell' (
February 25,
1895 -
October 11,
1959) was co-founder of the
Philadelphia Eagles, co-owner and coach of the
Pittsburgh Steelers and commissioner of the
National Football League from
1946 until his death.
Early life
Bell grew up in a prominent
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania family, the son of
John Cromwell Bell,
Pennsylvania's
attorney general. Once commenting on his son's plans for college, the elder Bell said, "Bert will go to Penn (the
University of Pennsylvania) or he will go to hell." While there, Bell played quarterback for the Quakers' football team, a stretch that was interrupted by
World War I service at the Mobile Hospital Unit in
France.
After graduating, Bell served as backfield coach at his alma mater from
1920 to
1928, then held the same position for two years at
Temple University in
1930 and
1931.
Philadelphia Eagles founder, co-owner, coach, owner
In
1933, with three other former college teammates (including
Lud Wray, first head coach), he became co-owner of the Eagles for $2,500.
On
May 6,
1934, he married
Broadway actress
Frances Upton. They had three children, sons Bert, Jr. and Upton, and daughter Jane.
Taking the approach of making the overall league stronger, Bell was credited with establishing the
NFL draft in
1935. He served as Eagles head coach from 1936 to 1940. By
1937, the Eagles had lost $90,000 and were put up for public auction. Bell became sole owner with a winning bid of $4,500, but after continuing financial struggles, he became co-owner of the
Pittsburgh Steelers with his friend
Art Rooney in a bizarre transaction in which Rooney sold the Steelers to Philadelphia businessman
Alexis Thompson, who then traded franchises with Bell. By
1943, a wartime manpower shortage led the Steelers and Eagles to temporarily merge into the "
Steagles." The following year, the Steelers merged with the
Chicago Cardinals.
In 1937, Bell founded the
Maxwell Football Club, which awards the
Maxwell Award to the top college football player and the
Bert Bell Award to the top professional.
NFL commissioner
On
January 11,
1946, Bell was selected to replace
Elmer Layden as NFL commissioner and subsequently sold his ownership in the Steelers after being given a three-year contract at $25,000 per year. One year later, the contract was changed to a five-year pact at the same salary, a move that was followed in
1949 by a ten-year agreement that boosted his annual pay to $30,000.
Among his accomplishments as commissioner, Bell merged the league with the
All-America Football Conference, developed the league's relationship with the new medium of
television, and did battle with the
Canadian Football League over scheduling and player rights. He also coined the phrase, "On any given Sunday, any team can beat any other team."
One of his first major acts dealt with a gambling scandal that marred the
1946 NFL Championship game. In response, he was able to create laws in virtually every state that made it a crime for athletes not to report a bribe attempt. In addition to all these duties, he also single-handedly plotted out league schedules each season on his dining-room table by using a giant checkerboard. He created the revenue-sharing system that enables the small-market teams to make larger profits and remain competitive.
Death and legacy
Bell died of a
heart attack on
October 11,
1959 at
Philadelphia's
Franklin Field, while watching a game between the team he co-founded, the Eagles, and the Steelers, which he had co-owned from 1941 to 1946. He had been under a doctor's care for two years and had recovered from a heart attack the previous February.
The Bert Bell Benefit Bowl, informally referred to as the
Playoff Bowl and first played in
1960 (the year after his death), was named for him.
Bell was inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame in
1963 as a charter member.
Bell's older brother,
John C. Bell, Jr., served as Lieutenant Governor and briefly as Governor of Pennsylvania.
External links
★ ''Pro Football Hall of Fame:''
Member profile
★
Comcast Sportsnet article on Bell