Francis "Reds" Bagnell
Football
Penn's legendary All-American halfback
In the late 1940s,
the University of
Pennsylvania football
team was a nationally
ranked independent
playing a big-time
schedule that included
Penn State, Virginia,
Wisconsin, and California.
The Quakers filled Franklin Field weekly,
with home attendance doubling that of
the NFL champion Philadelphia Eagles.
The star of that Penn team was Francis
"Reds" Bagnell, a freckle-faced kid
from the neighborhood who grew up
dreaming of playing for the Quakers. As a
12-year-old, Bagnell served as the team's
water boy, and he went on to become
one of the school's all-time great
athletes, lettering in football, baseball,
and basketball.
"I can't say I knew he'd be a great player
when I made him our water boy," coach
George Munger once said. "I did realize,
‘Here's a kid who's willing to pay the
price.' Nobody worked harder or played
harder than Reds.
"We used to kid him about his (lack
of) speed and he didn't like it. One day
he returned a punt for a
touchdown against Navy.
He came over to me,
still puffing, and said, ‘No
speed, huh?' We still laugh
about that."
Bagnell grew up near 36th
and Sansom, a short bicycle
ride from River Field where
the Penn football team
practiced. He became such
a fixture at the workouts that Munger
gave him a Penn jacket. Years later, when
Notre Dame tried to recruit Bagnell, he
never even considered it.
"I was a Penn man all the way," he
explained.
Bagnell was an All-City performer at
West Catholic High and a perfect fit
in Penn's single wing offense. In 1950,
the tailback finished among the NCAA
leaders in total offense and won the
Maxwell Award as college football's
outstanding player. He led Penn to a
6-3 record and a #13 national ranking.
Their game against #2-ranked Army
drew 78,000 fans to Franklin Field. The
highlight of that season was a win over
Dartmouth in which Bagnell set an NCAA
record with 490 total yards (214 rushing,
276 passing). Joseph M. Sheehan later
wrote in The New York Times: "Bagnell
put on what indubitably is the greatest
one-man show Franklin Field has ever
witnessed."
After his senior year, Bagnell was
selected to play in the North-South
All-Star Game and the College All-Star
Game. He could have gone on to the
NFL–the New York Giants selected him
in the 1951 draft–but he enlisted in the
Navy and served four years as an officer.
After his discharge, he returned to
Philadelphia where he joined Fahnestock
and Company Investment Bankers.
In 1967, he was named Senior Vice
President of the New York Stock
Exchange, but he never lost touch
with his football roots. He was elected
president of the Maxwell Football Club
in 1976 and inducted into the College
Football Hall of Fame one year later.
Bagnell passed away in 1995 at age 67.
Given his love for his hometown, tonight's
honor would have pleased him greatly.
"I love Philadelphia. I love all the teams
and I love the fact I'm part of the city's
sports history," he once said. "People
still talk about our (Catholic League) title
game against
Roman. They talk
about my game
against Dartmouth
or the (1950) game
against Army. As
a kid growing up here, that's the stuff I
dreamed about.
"When I got the chance to play for Penn,
I thought that was the ultimate. When I
made All-American and won the Maxwell
Award, all my aspirations were satisfied.
I never even thought about making the
Hall of Fame. To me, the Hall of Fame
players were the immortals, guys like Red
Grange, Doak Walker and Gale Sayers,
guys who had unique talents.
"I don't put myself in that class. I was a
plugger, a hang-in-there kind of player.
I didn't have great natural ability. If I
had one outstanding quality, it was my
competitiveness."
"Reds and I were the same type of
players, both hotheads," said Chuck
Bednarik, who was Penn's senior center
when Bagnell was a sophomore tailback.
"My last game, we were losing to Cornell
and Reds threw a long pass that was
incomplete. I didn't know it, but Reds
got the hell knocked out of him when he
released the ball.
"I was ticked off about the incompletion,
so I asked Reds, ‘What happened?' He
tore into me. He said, ‘Whaddya mean
what happened? (Bleep) you.' I was 22
years old, just back from the war. I
wasn't about to take a lot of (bleep)
from some 18-year-old. I said,
‘Don't talk to me like that, you
little red-headed so-and-so.'
The coaches had to cool us
down.
"But that's how Reds was. He did a
helluva job as a leader. He wasn't a
big fellow, but he played big every
week."
Bagnell was once asked how he
would like to be remembered,
and replied, "I only want to be
remembered as a guy who
tried hard and made a few
friends along the way."
By Ray Didinger-Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame - Inductee