Gordy Soltau
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2023) |
No. 82 | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Position: | Wide receiver / placekicker | ||||||||
Personal information | |||||||||
Born: | Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. | January 25, 1925||||||||
Died: | October 26, 2014 Santa Clara, California, U.S. | (aged 89)||||||||
Career information | |||||||||
College: | Minnesota | ||||||||
NFL draft: | 1950 / round: 3 / pick: 30 | ||||||||
Career history | |||||||||
Career highlights and awards | |||||||||
| |||||||||
Career NFL statistics | |||||||||
|
Gordon Leroy Soltau (born January 25, 1925) was an American professional football player who was a wide receiver for nine seasons with the San Francisco 49ers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Minnesota Golden Gophers.
During this time in professional football most players had to have an outside job to survive the off-season. Gordy, in 1954, went to work as a sales rep. for Schwabacher/Frey, a San Francisco printing, stationery and office supply company. The firm was bought out by Diamond International, makers of Diamond matches, packaging material, folding cartons and corrugated. Their other interests included saw mills, lumber, and building supplies. Gordy rose to vice president in charge of sales for the West Coast and was executive vice president when he retired.
Soltau was the first player representative for the 49ers. There were only 12 teams in the league in 1954. Many players had some issues with the owners and wanted to start a "Players Association". The owners objected, particularly the ones from the oldest teams in the league, even threatening to cut players who participated. However, in 1954 a representative from each of the six younger teams in the league had their first meeting in Philadelphia. The teams were the Detroit Lions, Chicago Bears, Washington Redskins, New York Giants, and the 49ers, represented by Gordy. Bert Bell, commissioner of the league, was invited but didn't come. There were three major issues on the table.
The league should establish a pension plan. Players should be paid for exhibition games during training. Team owners should provide playing shoes. In 1954 players had to furnish their own shoes. The players started a Players Association. Dues were $25.00 a year per player. Gordy persuaded 49er's owner, Tony Moribato, to deduct it from the players' checks. The rest of the teams refused and the reps had to chase players who hadn't paid around the locker room, in their favorite bar or in the parking lot to collect the $25.00. Gordy for his work as a players' rep got the nickname "The Senator". (He did become a member of "Athletes for Reagan" during Ronnie's first run for governor in 1966.)
It took 4 years to get the owners to talk about the issues. It wasn't until 1962 that the owners put money in a pension plan. The Players Association gradually disintegrated. Then in the early sixties Vic Matland, a close friend to Art Rooney (owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers) came up with a plan and the philosophy "Caring For Kids" that owners could live with. The Players Association changed this to "The NFL Alumni Association.
Gordy played a major role along with Alyn Beals, Eddie Forest, Bruce Bosley and Norm Standee in establishing The Northern California Chapter of the NFL Alumni Association. He was the chapter's first president and has been golf chairman of the chapter's main fund raising event since 1981. The golf tournament is played each year at the prestigious Olympic Club in San Francisco.
In 1959, Gordy retired from the 49ers and was later inducted into The Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame. He was a color commentator for 10 years with Bob Fouts at CBS television. His next gig was five years at KSFO with Lon Simmons. He is an avid golfer and played in ten of Bing Crosby's Celebrity Pro-Ams at Pebble Beach. He was a friend of Bing's and has some great Crosby stories like the following.
During the 1960 winter Olympic Winter Games in Squaw Valley, Gordy along with Lon Simmons, Russ Hodges and Marty Martin were broadcasting the games over the Olympic Radio Special created by Franklin Mieuli, a producer as well as owner of the Warriors' basketball team. Here Gordy ran into Bing Crosby; and after partying most of the night at the Squaw Valley Lodge with Bing singing to the patrons, Gordy talked him into coming the next day to help Gordy and Lon Simmons broadcast the final hockey game. (Crosby was supposed to be in Stockton, CA., filming "High Time").
Today Gordy lives with his wife, Nancy, in Menlo Park, California. His daughter, Jill, worked twenty-five years for Hewlett Packard and is now retired. His son, John, is a packaging designer and his other son, Mark, is a journalist for Golf Digest. Mark from his days at Stanford University knows Tiger Woods and created Tiger's website when he turned professional.
More in-depth information can be read about Gordy in Dennis Georgatos' new book "Game of My Life, San Francisco 49ers, Memorable Stories of 49er Football".
Career highlights: scored 26 points in victory over the Rams in 1951, which was the 49er single game scoring record that stood for 39 years until broken by Jerry Rice; caught 10 passes for 190 yards against the Giants in 1952; kicked four field goals against the Rams to win 33–30 in 1956. Served as a color commentator on 49ers TV broadcasts in the 1960s. Enshrined in the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1999. The NFL Alumni Northern California Chapter added a special award to their 27th Annual Charity Golf Classic, giving Gordy Soltau, Tournament Chairman, a Lifetime Achievement Award for his work over the past 27 years. In addition, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom sent a proclamation form the City of San Francisco declaring Monday June 16, 2008, Gordy Soltau Day. On October 26, 2014, Soltau died at the age of 89.[1]