Hugh McElhenny
Hugh Edward McElhenny Jr. electrified professional football as one of the most explosive and elusive halfbacks of the 1950s, earning nickname "The King" for his feared running style and captivating performances that made him to pro football what Elvis Presley was to rock and roll. Born December 31, 1928 in Los Angeles, California, McElhenny attended George Washington High School where he set state records in high and low hurdles, broad jump, and ran 100-yard dash in 9.8 seconds, winning both hurdles and long jump at 1947 CIF California State Meet.
After starring at Compton Junior College on undefeated 1948 team winning Junior Rose Bowl, McElhenny transferred to University of Washington where he formed prolific duo with quarterback Don Heinrich. He rushed over 1,000 yards in 1950—last Huskies player achieving mark until 1977—and set school records with 296 rushing yards and five touchdowns against Washington State that still stand today. His celebrated 100-yard punt return against USC in 1951 remains one of program's legendary plays. McElhenny earned first-team All-American honors and set 16 school records including career rushing yards (2,499).
San Francisco 49ers selected the 6-foot-1, 195-pound McElhenny ninth overall in 1952 NFL draft. His first professional play was 40-yard touchdown run drawn in dirt because he hadn't learned playbook. That rookie season, McElhenny recorded league's longest run from scrimmage (89 yards), longest punt return (94 yards), and top rushing average (7.0 yards per carry), earning unanimous rookie of year honors. In 1954, McElhenny joined Y.A. Tittle, Joe Perry, and John Henry Johnson forming legendary "Million Dollar Backfield"—the only full-house backfield with all four members eventually enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Quarterback Frankie Albert nicknamed McElhenny "The King" after his 96-yard punt return touchdown as rookie. His exceptional peripheral vision allowed him to see and react to tacklers most backs wouldn't detect—Washington State coach Jim Sutherland marveled "you'd think he had eyes on the back of his head." McElhenny's playing philosophy centered on fear of being caught from behind, driving relentless effort. His versatility as runner, receiver, and return specialist made him asset opponents couldn't ignore.
After his 49ers, Vikings, Giants, and Lions stints, McElhenny retired with 11,375 all-purpose yards. He served as 49ers radio color commentator (1966-1972) before attempting to bring NFL franchise to Seattle through Seattle Sea Lions and Seattle Kings ventures (1971-1973), though plans dissolved when Seahawks founded in 1974. Related to Louisiana's McIlhenny family (Tabasco sauce makers), McElhenny battled Guillain-Barré syndrome later in life, leaving him temporarily paralyzed and requiring walker. Pro Football Hall of Fame inducted McElhenny in 1970; he died June 17, 2022 age 93 in Henderson, Nevada.