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・ Jim Dougal
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・ Jim Dougherty (footballer)
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Jim Doran : ウィキペディア英語版
Jim Doran

James Robert Doran (August 11, 1927 - June 29, 1994) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League (NFL) for the Detroit Lions (1951–1959) and the Dallas Cowboys (1960–1961). He played college football at Iowa State University. He was a two-way player, playing both on offense and defense. He played 94 games as a defensive lineman, usually defensive end, and 115 games as a tight end. Injuries to teammates forced him to also become a tight end during Detroit's 1953 championship season, and he scored from that position in the 1953 NFL Championship Game. He was left unprotected in the 1960 NFL Expansion Draft, and Dallas drafted him. He was the first Pro Bowl player for the Cowboys.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title= Greatest Cowboys By Their Jersey Numbers: #83 )
==Early life and college career==
Because of the small size of Beaver High School, it had no football program, so Doran practiced basketball and baseball. His first exposure to the sport was at Buena Vista College in the fall of 1947, on the "B" team, joining after a short stint in the navy during World War II. He played defensive tackle despite being a relative lightweight at 175 pounds.
Doran transferred to Iowa State University in 1948, joining the track team as a sprinter and throwing the shot put. In 1949 he helped the team post a 5–3–1 record, the school's first winning football season in a span of 14 years, and being named to the all-Big Seven team at offensive end, with 689 yards on 34 catches, breaking the single-season Big Seven receiving mark by over 200 yards.
In 1949 Doran set a national college record against the Oklahoma Sooners by catching eight passes for 203 yards, a mark that remains unbroken in the Iowa State University record book. His 652 yards on 42 receptions and six touchdowns as a senior, earned him first-team All-America and all-Big Seven honors. He was the Cyclone's only football All-American in two decades, and more recently he was voted to the modern all-time all-Big Eight team. Doran closed out his Cyclone career owning virtually every Iowa State and Big Seven receiving mark. He also played in the Hula Bowl and East–West Shrine Game in 1951.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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