Mike Hull
Encyclopedia
Michael Bruce Hull is a retired American football
fullback
that played in the National Football League
.
Mike started his football career at 14 yrs old on the bench, as a reserve offensive tackle for Clark Junior H.S., which is now Crescenta Valley High/ “CVHS”. Then, in 1960, at 15, Mike started running track too and ended that Spring winning the 100 and 220 yard dashes, the long-jump, and “Athlete of the Meet” for Clark Jr. High, at the Glendale Unified School District “Junior Olympics”. It was the first athletic competition he had ever won. Up to then he was considered too tall, skinny, nice and uncoordinated to do much of anything.
When the Clark ninth grade class became the first sophomore, tenth grade, and the oldest class at CVHS, somebody must have noticed his speed, as Mike was moved from on-the-bench, reserve tackle, to starting tight-end, and defensive end, as #82, for the Falcon’s 1960, infamous inaugural junior varsity team. He played essentially every minute of every game for that first Falcon football team, while catching a grand total of three passes, for about 100 yds, on a team of all sophomores who pretty much got their butts kicked each game playing against upperclassmen, including seniors, from other schools.
Then, in his junior year, as the Falcon team began its first year of varsity football, Mike was moved to tailback by Head Coach Gary Hess, in the Falcon’s single-wing offense, and became #14. Quite surprisingly, as the Falcons had won few games in those early years, and nothing much exciting had ever happened, other than a bunch of fine young men fighting for their lives, Mike returned the opening kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown the first time he touched the ball in a regular season game. The Falcons tied that first varsity game against powerhouse Magnolia High; Mike gained 142 yards rushing on just ten carries. We think it was the first kickoff returned for a touchdown in Falcon varsity
football history.
The Falcons started winning football games, including the first CVHS vs. Hoover game in 1961, winning the inaugural but now 47 year old “Gold Helmet” trophy, by beating Hoover 26-14. This was a huge event in the Falcons’ storied football history, indeed, as if David had once again knocked off Goliath. That win is one of Mike’s fondest football memories. He had 30 carries in that first Hoover win, for a total of 191 yds. rushing. And, in the last game of his junior year, a 2-5-1 season, our Falcons beat another venerable powerhouse and CIF playoff team, Crespi High; in that win, Mike had a total of 246 yds. rushing on 16 just carries, with five touchdowns.
By his senior year at CVHS Mike earned First Team All-League, amassing over 1000 yards total offense. In the last game beating Burbank HS, Mike had 137 yds. rushing, on 20 carries, with just 70yds passing. The single wing was not much of a passing offense in those days at CVHS. The Falcon’s first full varsity season ended with a 5-3 record, and a bunch of rough and tough players ready to take on most any challenge in life.
Mike also ran the high and low hurdles,. long jumped and ran the relays on the Falcon track team. At the close of his career at CVHS Mike was also the Student Body President, and held every Falcon varsity football rushing and total offense record. He also held school records in Track and Field, the high and low hurdles, and the long jump (those days called the broad-jump).
He was recruited by, among others, Oregon, UCLA, USC, Colorado and Washington. He decided to start locally at Glendale College and gain some experience in the T-formation, where Mike matured into a versatile fullback/halfback. He was named the offensive MVP Running Back, and All-Conference, on Glendale’s Western Conference Championship Bowl team, before heading to the University of Southern California in the spring to run track as a Trojan freshman. His father, Bruce, was a starting offensive and defensive tackle for Glendale HS, Glendale College and at USC in 1934 and 1935.
at the University of Southern California
and was one of five USC Trojans
players taken in the first round of the 1968 NFL Draft
after his senior year.
As a Trojan, #23 on Coach John McKay’s roster, Mike converted to full-time fullback, working himself into a starting role for the Trojans for three years. Mike was the starting fullback for USC, playing on two Rose Bowl teams and the 1967 USC National Championship Team. In between his sophomore year blocking for Heisman Trophy winner, Mike Garrett, and his senior year blocking for Heisman winner OJ Simpson, Mike led the USC Rose Bowl team in rushing with a 6.7 yd per carry average as the USC team’s leading rusher, winning the “Roy Bullet Baker” award as the Trojan’s Most Valuable back, and also being selected as the Most Valuable Player in the USC vs. UCLA game, while rushing for 147 yds on 14 carries against the Bruins.
and Washington Redskins
between 1968 and 1974.
Mike was then drafted in the First Round of the NFL draft by the Chicago Bears and Papa Bear George Halas, where he wore #33. Mike was the 16th player picked in the 1968 NFL draft. He played for the Bears for three years, suffering through the Brian Piccolo tragedy, though helping All Pro and future Hall of Famer Gale Sayers, as the lead blocker, earn the NFL rushing title in 1969.
In 1971 Mike was traded to the Washington Redskins and Coach George Allen’s “Over-the-Hill-Gang”, wearing #25, where he played in 86 consecutive games, over five NFL seasons, six NFL playoff games, the NFL Championship and the Super Bowl, where he was Special Teams Captain.
After seven years in the NFL Mike started his law school education at Georgetown University Law Center, in Washington D.C., earning his Juris Doctor degree in 1979. Mike was an Assistant Corporation Counsel for the District of Columbia, and then became an Assistant US Attorney for the USA, a Prosecutor for the United States. He met his wife Connie, then a lawyer representing the NFL, married and had a daughter, Michelle. After 20 years in the East as a professional football player, law student and lawyer, he moved back with Connie and Michelle to his beloved Southern California, where his son, Thomas, was born. His other son, Ernie, from a prior marriage, graduated from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, has his Masters from Pepperdine University and two boys.
Mike now resides in San Clemente, California with wife Connie. Their son, Thomas, who is a graduating senior at Harvard and three year starting punter on the Harvard University Ivy League Championship football team, winning Ivy League Titles in both 2007 and 2008, and a second in 2009; Thomas punted for over 4,700 yds. for the Crimson, often winning Ivy League Honors.
Mike is currently Vice President and General Counsel for Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Southern California.
American football
American football is a sport played between two teams of eleven with the objective of scoring points by advancing the ball into the opposing team's end zone. Known in the United States simply as football, it may also be referred to informally as gridiron football. The ball can be advanced by...
fullback
Fullback (American football)
A fullback is a position in the offensive backfield in American and Canadian football, and is one of the two running back positions along with the halfback...
that played in the National Football League
National Football League
The National Football League is the highest level of professional American football in the United States, and is considered the top professional American football league in the world. It was formed by eleven teams in 1920 as the American Professional Football Association, with the league changing...
.
Mike started his football career at 14 yrs old on the bench, as a reserve offensive tackle for Clark Junior H.S., which is now Crescenta Valley High/ “CVHS”. Then, in 1960, at 15, Mike started running track too and ended that Spring winning the 100 and 220 yard dashes, the long-jump, and “Athlete of the Meet” for Clark Jr. High, at the Glendale Unified School District “Junior Olympics”. It was the first athletic competition he had ever won. Up to then he was considered too tall, skinny, nice and uncoordinated to do much of anything.
When the Clark ninth grade class became the first sophomore, tenth grade, and the oldest class at CVHS, somebody must have noticed his speed, as Mike was moved from on-the-bench, reserve tackle, to starting tight-end, and defensive end, as #82, for the Falcon’s 1960, infamous inaugural junior varsity team. He played essentially every minute of every game for that first Falcon football team, while catching a grand total of three passes, for about 100 yds, on a team of all sophomores who pretty much got their butts kicked each game playing against upperclassmen, including seniors, from other schools.
Then, in his junior year, as the Falcon team began its first year of varsity football, Mike was moved to tailback by Head Coach Gary Hess, in the Falcon’s single-wing offense, and became #14. Quite surprisingly, as the Falcons had won few games in those early years, and nothing much exciting had ever happened, other than a bunch of fine young men fighting for their lives, Mike returned the opening kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown the first time he touched the ball in a regular season game. The Falcons tied that first varsity game against powerhouse Magnolia High; Mike gained 142 yards rushing on just ten carries. We think it was the first kickoff returned for a touchdown in Falcon varsity
football history.
The Falcons started winning football games, including the first CVHS vs. Hoover game in 1961, winning the inaugural but now 47 year old “Gold Helmet” trophy, by beating Hoover 26-14. This was a huge event in the Falcons’ storied football history, indeed, as if David had once again knocked off Goliath. That win is one of Mike’s fondest football memories. He had 30 carries in that first Hoover win, for a total of 191 yds. rushing. And, in the last game of his junior year, a 2-5-1 season, our Falcons beat another venerable powerhouse and CIF playoff team, Crespi High; in that win, Mike had a total of 246 yds. rushing on 16 just carries, with five touchdowns.
By his senior year at CVHS Mike earned First Team All-League, amassing over 1000 yards total offense. In the last game beating Burbank HS, Mike had 137 yds. rushing, on 20 carries, with just 70yds passing. The single wing was not much of a passing offense in those days at CVHS. The Falcon’s first full varsity season ended with a 5-3 record, and a bunch of rough and tough players ready to take on most any challenge in life.
Mike also ran the high and low hurdles,. long jumped and ran the relays on the Falcon track team. At the close of his career at CVHS Mike was also the Student Body President, and held every Falcon varsity football rushing and total offense record. He also held school records in Track and Field, the high and low hurdles, and the long jump (those days called the broad-jump).
He was recruited by, among others, Oregon, UCLA, USC, Colorado and Washington. He decided to start locally at Glendale College and gain some experience in the T-formation, where Mike matured into a versatile fullback/halfback. He was named the offensive MVP Running Back, and All-Conference, on Glendale’s Western Conference Championship Bowl team, before heading to the University of Southern California in the spring to run track as a Trojan freshman. His father, Bruce, was a starting offensive and defensive tackle for Glendale HS, Glendale College and at USC in 1934 and 1935.
College career
Hull played college footballCollege football
College football refers to American football played by teams of student athletes fielded by American universities, colleges, and military academies, or Canadian football played by teams of student athletes fielded by Canadian universities...
at the University of Southern California
University of Southern California
The University of Southern California is a private, not-for-profit, nonsectarian, research university located in Los Angeles, California, United States. USC was founded in 1880, making it California's oldest private research university...
and was one of five USC Trojans
USC Trojans
The USC Trojans are the athletic teams representing the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, California. While the men's teams are nicknamed the Trojans, the women's athletic teams are referred to as either the Trojans or Women of Troy...
players taken in the first round of the 1968 NFL Draft
1968 NFL Draft
The 1968 National Football League Draft was part of the Common Draft, in the second year in which the NFL and AFL held a joint draft of college players on January 30–31.-Player selections:-Round one:-Round two:-Round three:-Round four:...
after his senior year.
As a Trojan, #23 on Coach John McKay’s roster, Mike converted to full-time fullback, working himself into a starting role for the Trojans for three years. Mike was the starting fullback for USC, playing on two Rose Bowl teams and the 1967 USC National Championship Team. In between his sophomore year blocking for Heisman Trophy winner, Mike Garrett, and his senior year blocking for Heisman winner OJ Simpson, Mike led the USC Rose Bowl team in rushing with a 6.7 yd per carry average as the USC team’s leading rusher, winning the “Roy Bullet Baker” award as the Trojan’s Most Valuable back, and also being selected as the Most Valuable Player in the USC vs. UCLA game, while rushing for 147 yds on 14 carries against the Bruins.
Professional career
Hull played for the Chicago BearsChicago Bears
The Chicago Bears are a professional American football team based in Chicago, Illinois. They are members of the North Division of the National Football Conference in the National Football League...
and Washington Redskins
Washington Redskins
The Washington Redskins are a professional American football team and members of the East Division of the National Football Conference in the National Football League . The team plays at FedExField in Landover, Maryland, while its headquarters and training facility are at Redskin Park in Ashburn,...
between 1968 and 1974.
Mike was then drafted in the First Round of the NFL draft by the Chicago Bears and Papa Bear George Halas, where he wore #33. Mike was the 16th player picked in the 1968 NFL draft. He played for the Bears for three years, suffering through the Brian Piccolo tragedy, though helping All Pro and future Hall of Famer Gale Sayers, as the lead blocker, earn the NFL rushing title in 1969.
In 1971 Mike was traded to the Washington Redskins and Coach George Allen’s “Over-the-Hill-Gang”, wearing #25, where he played in 86 consecutive games, over five NFL seasons, six NFL playoff games, the NFL Championship and the Super Bowl, where he was Special Teams Captain.
After seven years in the NFL Mike started his law school education at Georgetown University Law Center, in Washington D.C., earning his Juris Doctor degree in 1979. Mike was an Assistant Corporation Counsel for the District of Columbia, and then became an Assistant US Attorney for the USA, a Prosecutor for the United States. He met his wife Connie, then a lawyer representing the NFL, married and had a daughter, Michelle. After 20 years in the East as a professional football player, law student and lawyer, he moved back with Connie and Michelle to his beloved Southern California, where his son, Thomas, was born. His other son, Ernie, from a prior marriage, graduated from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, has his Masters from Pepperdine University and two boys.
Mike now resides in San Clemente, California with wife Connie. Their son, Thomas, who is a graduating senior at Harvard and three year starting punter on the Harvard University Ivy League Championship football team, winning Ivy League Titles in both 2007 and 2008, and a second in 2009; Thomas punted for over 4,700 yds. for the Crimson, often winning Ivy League Honors.
Mike is currently Vice President and General Counsel for Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Southern California.