The Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund
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BRIAN PICCOLO'S RUSHING STATS
YEAR GAMES ATTEMPTS YARDS AVERAGE TDS
1965 0 0 0 0.0 0
1966 14 3 12 4.0 0
1967 14 87 317 3.6 0
1968 14 123 450 3.7 2
1969 9 45 148 3.3 2
TOTALS 51 258 927 3.6 4


BRIAN PICCOLO'S RECEIVING STATS
YEAR GAMES NUMBER YARDS AVERAGE TDS
1965 0 0 0 0.0 0
1966 14 0 0 0.0 0
1967 14 13 103 8.0 0
1968 14 28 291 10.0 0
1969 9 17 143 8.0 1
TOTALS 51 58 537 9.3 1


BRIAN PICCOLO'S PUNT RETURNS STATS
YEAR GAMES NUMBER YARDS AVERAGE TDS
1965 0 0 0 0.0 0
1966 14 0 0 0.0 0
1967 14 0 0 0.0 0
1968 14 0 0 0.0 0
1969 9 9 43 5.0 0
TOTALS 51 9 43 5.0 0


BRIAN PICCOLO'S KICKOFF RETURNS STATS
YEAR GAMES NUMBER YARDS AVERAGE TDS
1965 0 0 0 0.0 0
1966 14 0 0 0.0 0
1967 14 0 0 0.0 0
1968 14 0 0 0.0 0
1969 9 0 0 0.0 0
TOTALS 51 0 0 0.0 0

After a slow start in his pro football career, Brian came into his own in 1967 as he wound up second on the Bears to Gale Sayers, 1965 was his "roughest year"...he sat it out because of a severe leg injury.

Brian also led the nation in scoring and rushing with Wake Forest in 1964. 111 points and 1044 yards rushing.

The Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund

Honoring Brian Piccolo

Running back Brian Piccolo played for the Chicago Bears for only four seasons, and his statistics were not remarkable. But the fact that Piccolo's number, 41, is one of the few retired in the Bears' long history, and that the Piccolo name is still revered by football fans everywhere, is a testimony to the remarkable values Brian brought both to the game and to life.

Brian was just 26 years old when he died of a rare form of cancer, embryonal cell carcinoma, on June 16, 1970. He left behind his wife, Joy, and daughters Lori, Traci and Kristi. He also left a legacy of love that was recounted in Jeannie Morris' best-selling biography, Brian Piccolo, A Short Season, and in the film, "Brian's Song."

Born in Pittsfield, Mass., on October 31, 1943, Brian grew up in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., where his football performance led to a scholarship at Wake Forest University. During his senior year there, he led the nation in rushing yardage, carrying the ball 252 times for more than 1,000 yards.

Passed up in the NFL draft, the All-American halfback signed with the Bears as a free agent in 1965 -- the same year Gale Sayers was drafted. The two became roommates, and Brian's support of Gale through a devastating knee injury, as well as Gale's devotion to Brian when he was stricken with cancer, became the stuff of legends.

Following his death, Brian's friends in Chicago established the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund to raise money for cancer research. It is a fitting legacy for a man who battled his illness the way he played football: with the heart of a champion, refusing to give up until the final whistle blew.


Brian Piccolo 41

Click here for Brian's Song
Brian's Song on ABC, Dec.2

Brian Piccolo Park

Park dedicated in Florida where Brian grew up.


Gale Sayers

Brian's partner in the backfield.
Gale Sayers and Brian Piccolo, both running backs for the Chicago Bears, began rooming together in 1967. During the 1969 season, Piccolo was cut down with cancer. They had planned, with their wives, to sit together at the Professional Football Writers annual dinner in New York, where Sayers was to be given the George S. Halas Award as the most courageous player in pro football. But instead, "Pick" was confined to his bed at home. At the dinner, Sayers stood to receive the award, tears in his eyes. The ordinarily terse athlete had this to say as he took the trophy: "You flatter me by giving me this award, but I tell you here and now that I accept it for Brian Piccolo. Brian Piccolo is the man of courage who should receive the George S. Halas Award. I love Brian Piccolo, and I'd like you to love him." "I love Brian Piccolo." How many times have you heard a man say something like that? Not very often. Yet how much richer would our lives be if we had the courage to declare our affection as Sayers did that night in New York.
--Rodney L. Cooper, institute director at Western Seminary in Portland

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Brian Piccolo
BP 41

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DI'S CHICAGO BEARS HISTORY

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