Russ Bailey
An
outstanding center at WVU from 1915-19, Russ Bailey ranks as one of the
finest offensive linemen ever to wear the Gold & Blue. Born September 3,
1899, in Weston, W.Va., Bailey came to the University with Ira Errett
Rodgers and Andrew "Rip" King in 1915. That trio helped the Mountaineers
to 24 victories over the next five years including an 8-2 record in 1919.
Paving the way for Rodgers and King, Bailey was an agile center on
offense whose crushing blocks and intelligent play earned him rave reviews
from some of the most notable people in football.
According to John Heisman in 1928, for who the Heisman Trophy was later
named, "Russ Bailey had the unusual knack of being able to snap the ball
without watching back between his legs; he could snap accurately while
keeping his eyes fastened on the man opposite. This enabled him to charge
into the opponent much more quickly and effectively than most centers and
at the same time he had a good idea, as he snapped the ball, of the
lay-out of the enemy forces. Thus, when he snapped he simultaneously
lunged into his man, checked him for a bare instant -- long enough to give
his back time to be gone -- then knifing right through the line, again got
ahead of his runner."
Standing six feet tall and weighing a solid 180 pounds, Bailey was a
fierce tackler on defense as well. He earned first team All-America honors
from the Chicago Tribune, Pittsburgh Sun, Pittsburgh Press, New York
Evening Journal, Frank G. Menke and A.M. Welland in 1917. After WVU
canceled football for the 1918 season because of an outbreak of influenza,
Bailey again was accorded first team All-America honors from the Sioux
City Tribune and the Philadelphia Press in 1919.
After his stellar career at WVU, Bailey joined Mountaineer assistant
coach Elgie Tobin and former teammates Rip King and Harry Harris with the
Akron Pros in 1920. Playing in the American Professional Football
Association, the precursor to the NFL, Bailey helped the Pros to a 6-0-3
record and the first professional football championship. Playing one more
season with the Pros in 1921, Bailey gave up football to pursue a career
in medicine.
Considered quiet and serious-minded, Bailey was immensely popular among
the WVU student body and ranked high in just about every worthwhile
student movement.
After graduating from West Virginia and completing two years of
medicine at the University, he went on to complete his degree in medicine
at Cincinnati in 1922. After interning at Long Island College, he returned
to West Virginia and became a member of the surgical staff at the Wheeling
Clinic.
Keenly interested in the treatment of cancer, Bailey was president of
the West Virginia Cancer Society and shortly before his death was named
director of the American Cancer Society. The crowning event of his career
came in August of 1949, when he was named president of the West Virginia
State Medical Association, a post he held less than a month. He suffered a
heart attack and died in Wheeling on September 15, 1949.