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Obituaries

Robustelli Brought Defense to the Fore

Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive end succumbs; Stamford native was 85.

Few fans thought about the defensive side of football until Andy Robustelli and several of his New York Giants teammates turned it into an art form during the 1950s.

With Robustelli and Jim Katcavage at defensive end, Sam Huff at middle linebacker, and Rosey Grier and Dick Modzelewski at defensive tackle, the Giants’ defensive unit developed a rabid following. Indeed, with most of this unit intact, the club competed in no fewer than six National Football League championship games in an eight-season span, winning it all in 1956.

Robustelli, the Stamford native who rose from an obscure small college program – Arnold College in Milford – to become a seven-time All-NFL selection and a 1971 inductee into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, died Tuesday at age 85.

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Fairfield people of a certain age have warm memories of the Giants training at Fairfield University during the late 1950s and early '60s. Fans were able to rub elbows and exchange pleasantries with Robustelli, Huff, all-purpose back Frank Gifford, quarterbacks Charlie Conerly and Y.A. Tittle, receiver Kyle Rote, fullback Alex Webster and other members of Big Blue at the pre-season camp.

During the sportswriting segment of my career, I had the opportunity to interview Robustelli on a few occasions, once on the Fairfield U. campus during the summer of 1974. This was after Andy had rejoined the club as director of operations and the Giants had returned to Fairfield for summer training.

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I asked him if a director of operations was akin to being a general manager. “I don’t think any one man can run a club (today), with the possible exception of Paul Brown,” he responded. “It’s too difficult. I don’t know where you can find the time to do it.”

Robustelli believed, correctly, that the day of the front-office specialist had arrived, when one man – in this case, Ray Walsh, who retained the title of general manager – would handle business matters, while Robustelli oversaw everything pertaining to football:  Coaching, scouting, player signings, trades, and the pre-season camp.

“I think it’s just the beginning of what will eventually happen,” he predicted. “I think you’ll have a person who’ll specialize in signing people. Because of the increase in business agents, there are so many more aspects now…deferred payments, different combinations of contracts.”

As the co-owner of a sporting goods store in the Cos Cob section of Greenwich and the operator of Stamford-based Robustelli Travel Services, Inc., Robustelli possessed the business acumen to deal with the complexities of modern football.

“I’m in the good and unique position of having 10 years in business. That’s rare in football,” he said. “I bargained for everything I got in business.”

He also oversaw a family that encompassed nine children (six boys, three girls) and ultimately 29 grandchildren. The general manager in this case was Jeanne, his wife of more than 60 years. She died in April.

The Robustelli football legacy began in his native Stamford and at Stamford High School, where, inexplicably, he was not selected to the All-State team. After serving in the Navy during World War II, he entered Arnold College on the GI Bill, and played both football and baseball.

Few recall that Robustelli was a fine player on the diamond, a barrel-chested third baseman who stopped hard-hit ground balls and hit hard enough and often enough to bat clean-up in the Arnold line-up. The New York Giants, his favorite baseball team, reportedly offered him a contract with a Class-B farm club.

“We had a lot of good ballplayers on that Arnold team,” he remembered. “I think our record was something like 18-and-2. We even beat St. John’s.”

One of the Arnold pitchers, a Westport native named Frank Monardo, was a long-time member of the Waterbury Republican sports staff. He once shared a story with me about Robustelli’s competitiveness on the diamond.

I don’t recall the opponent, but Monardo was wild on this particular afternoon and he proceeded to fill the bases with walks. Andy called time and ambled over to the mound. Frank expected a pep talk, the you-can-get-‘im-kid sort of thing, but that wasn’t the case. “Get the f------ ball over,” he told the pitcher.

A two-way end at Arnold playing against the likes of New Haven State Teachers College, St. Michael’s, Adelphi and American International, Robustelli’s pass-catching and jarring tackles attracted the attention of a part-time Los Angeles Rams scout named Lou DeFilippo. The Rams heeded DeFilippo’s advice and selected Andy on the 19th round of the 1951 NFL draft.

The Rams were among the NFL’s early glamour teams, a powerhouse with two superb quarterbacks, Norm Van Brocklin and Bob Waterfield, two of the finest pass-catchers in Elroy “Crazy Legs” Hirsch and Tom Fears, and quality running backs in Deacon Dan Towler and Paul “Tank” Younger.

They played their home games in the Los Angeles Coliseum, usually before 85,000 people, some of whom were more famous than the athletes they were watching.

“Jane Russell was married to Waterfield then. She was always there,” Robustelli said. “Bob Hope had an interest and Bing Crosby always came out with his kids. And Tony Martin, the singer.”

Enter Andrew Richard Robustelli, son of a Stamford barber and 19th round draft choice from a college few had heard of.

“I started at $4,200,” Andy said. “Our top draft choice, Charley Toogood, a tackle from Nebraska, got a $5,000 contract and a $500 bonus. We thought he was rich.”

With Robustelli starting at defensive end, the Rams won the NFL title in 1951, his rookie year, and Western Division championships that same season and in 1955.

Traded to the Giants for a future draft choice – who turned out to be pass catcher-extraordinaire Del Shofner – Robustelli helped to transform the Maramen into a championship club. They captured the league title in 1956 and won five Eastern Division titles in the next seven seasons.

Although Andy Robustelli never earned more than $24,000 in a season, and that was as a combination player-coach in 1964, he had few regrets. “I never looked over my shoulder,” he said.

Only opposing linemen did that.

Connecticut Players in Pro Football Hall of Fame

 

Player Position Hometown/High School Teams Career Inducted Ken Strong Jr. HB-K West Haven/West Haven Stapletons, Giants, Yanks 1929-35, ’39, ’44-47
1967 Andy Robustelli DE Stamford/Stamford Rams, Giants 1951-64   1971 Steve Young QB Greenwich H.S. Buccaneers, 49ers 1985-99 2005 Floyd Little HB Waterbury/Hillhouse Broncos 1967-75 2010
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