Thomas Henry Nobis, Jr.
(born September 20, 1943 in San Antonio, Texas) is a former American football player. He attended San Antonio Jefferson High School where he was an all-state offensive end and middle linebacker. He played college football for the University of Texas at Austin and professionally, in the National Football League, for the Atlanta Falcons.
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NOBIS TICKETS
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College years
Tommy Nobis is one of college football’s all-time greatest
linebackers. In his tenure with the
Texas Longhorns (1963-1965) he averaged nearly 20
tackles a game and, as the only sophomore
starter, was an important participant on the Longhorns’ 1963
National College Football Championship team, which defeated
Heisman Trophy winner
Roger Staubach in the
Cotton Bowl. Nobis was a two time
All-American and made the All-
Southwest Conference team three times. In the 1965
Orange Bowl, Nobis made one of the most famous tackles in the game’s history. On fourth-and-inches, and clinging to a 21-17 lead, he led his teammates to a game saving halt of top ranked
Alabama’s
QB Joe Namath. Tommy Nobis was an iron man, playing (and starting) on both
defense and
offense for his entire college career. Aside from being an All-American linebacker, he also played
guard on the offensive side of the ball and was often the primary
blocker on
touchdown runs.
Famed Texas
coach Darrell K. Royal called him "the finest two-way player I have ever seen." A knee injury slowed him during the latter part of his senior season, but he still was able to perform at a high level and won a number of major individual awards including the
Knute Rockne Award, best
lineman, the
Outland Trophy, best interior lineman, and the
Maxwell Award for college football’s best player. Nobis also finished seventh in the Heisman voting to
USC’s
Mike Garrett. He appeared on the covers of
LIFE
,
Sports Illustrated
and
TIME
magazines.
NFL career
In
1965, Tommy Nobis became the first player ever drafted by the
expansion Atlanta Falcons
as well as the first linebacker to be chosen first overall when he was taken with the #1 pick in the
1966 NFL Draft on
November 27,
1965. The
Houston Oilers also drafted him in the
American Football League Draft. This presented a dilemma and also sparked a debate that reached as far as outer space when
Frank Borman, an
astronaut aboard
Gemini 7, talked back to earth with the message, "tell Nobis to sign with Houston." Tommy Nobis instead signed with Atlanta on
December 14,
1965 and became the first ever member of the Atlanta Falcons. This culminated in the nickname "Mr. Falcon".
Tommy Nobis joined the Falcons for their inaugural season in
1966. That season he won the league's
NFL Rookie of the Year, was voted to the
Pro Bowl and amassed an unprecedented 294 combined tackles which still stands today as the team's all-time single-season record
, and is unofficially the most tackles ever credited to one player, in a season, in NFL history. In eleven professional seasons he led the Falcons in tackles nine times, went to five Pro Bowls (one in
1972 after two knee surgeries), was named
All-Pro twice and was chosen for the
NFL's "All-Decade Team" for the 1960s.
Miami Dolphins great,
running back Larry Csonka commented, "I'd rather play against
Dick Butkus than Nobis," and Falcon's coach
Norm Van Brocklin once pointed to Nobis' locker and proclaimed, "There's where our football team dresses."
Nobis is a member of the Atlanta Falcons' Ring of Honor and his #60 was the first number retired by the team. No other Falcons player has ever worn the number.
Pro Hall of Fame Career?
Nobis enjoyed a successful NFL career that many believe is worthy of
Pro Football Hall of Fame induction. Former NFL player and coach
Dan Reeves, while
head coach of the Falcons, remarked, "As a running back for eight seasons in the NFL, I certainly took my share of hits. Unfortunately I remember some of them, particularly the ones from Falcons linebacker Tommy Nobis. 'Mr. Falcon,' as he is known in this part of the country, should be considered a worthy candidate for the Hall of Fame.” Reeves based his assertion on the fact that while playing in Atlanta, prior to the days of mass media coverage, Nobis was overlooked because of the “Falcons lack of success during his tenure”. He states, “I played and coached on some great teams while I was with
Dallas. Those teams consisted of Hall of Fame members like
Bob Lilly, Roger Staubach and
Tom Landry. I feel that Nobis' contributions on the field merit those of the Cowboys Hall of Fame players.”
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
columnist and Hall of Fame voter
Furman Bisher wrote, "There isn't much more one can say about Tommy Nobis. In the glow of a winning team, where he would have been a star on the isolated camera, he would already have been residing in
Canton. It's not a Falcons thing, it's a Nobis thing, and here is a man who lives up to all the ideals I would establish for admission to the Pro Football Hall of Fame."
After the NFL
Number 60 is also revered at
Texas where it was offered only to the best of linebackers. All American Britt Hager wore #60 during his senior season, as did All American Brian Jones. In 2004, another Longhorn All-American linebacker,
Derrick Johnson, decided to wear the jersey in his final collegiate home game to honor Nobis.
[1] The number has recently joined
Earl Campbell's #20 as UT's only retired numbers.
Tommy Nobis was inducted into the Texas Longhorn Hall of Honor in 1976. He was named to
Sports Illustrated
’s All-Century Team (1869-1969)
and is a member of the
College Football Hall of Fame, the State of Texas Hall of Fame, the
Georgia Sports Hall of Fame, the San Antonio Sports Hall of Fame, and the Atlanta Sports Hall of Fame. In May 2007, he was inducted as a charter member into the Thomas Jefferson High School Alumni Hall of Fame.
Tommy Nobis is currently the Falcons Vice President of Corporate Development and has been a member of the organization, in the front office and on the field, for over 40 years.
Apart from football Nobis is the founder and a Board of Directors member of the Tommy Nobis Center that began in 1975. The center provides youth and adults, with disabilities, job training and employment services. He won the
Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. award for his work with the Georgia
Special Olympics and has been named the NFL Man of the Year.
References
- Derrick Johnson dons No. 60 for final home game