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・ John Gordon Mein
・ John Gordon Perrin
・ John Gordon Purvis
・ John Gordon Sinclair
・ John Gordon Skellam
・ John Gordon Smith
・ John Gordon Smith (Queensland politician)
・ John Gordon Williamson
・ John Gordon, 11th Earl of Sutherland
・ John Gordon, 14th Earl of Sutherland
・ John Gordon, 16th Earl of Sutherland
・ John Gordon, 1st Viscount of Kenmure
・ John Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aboyne
・ John Gordon, 7th/10th Viscount of Kenmure
・ John Gordon, Lord Gordon
John Gordy
・ John Gore
・ John Gore (Lord Mayor)
・ John Gore (Royal Navy officer, born 1772)
・ John Gore (Royal Navy officer, died 1790)
・ John Gore (theater producer)
・ John Gore Jones
・ John Gore, 1st Baron Annaly
・ John Gorham
・ John Gorham (graphic designer)
・ John Gorham (military officer)
・ John Gorham (physician)
・ John Gorham Maitland
・ John Gorka
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John Gordy : ウィキペディア英語版
John Gordy

John Gordy (July 17, 1935 – January 30, 2009) was an American football offensive guard who played for the Detroit Lions in an eleven-year career that lasted from 1957 to 1967 in the National Football League.
Gordy played high school football at the former Isaac Litton High School in Nashville, Tennessee and subsequently college football at the University of Tennessee. While at the University of Tennessee he joined Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. In his senior season, he served as captain of the Vols. He was a teammate of Johnny Majors, who served as his alternate captain (and went on to become a legendary coach at the University of Pittsburgh and at Tennessee). The 1956 Vols won the championship of the Southeastern Conference. Gordy was drafted in the second round of the 1957 NFL Draft by the Lions. The 1957 Lions, quarterbacked primarily by Tobin Rote and with Gordy playing a key role in the blocking schemes, won the NFL championship, the last Lions team (as of 2015) to do so. He played in three Pro Bowls during his professional career.
Gordy served as president and executive director of the professional football players union, the National Football League Players Association. As such, he was a key negotiator of the first collective bargaining agreement in major professional sports. Shortly after its ratification, he was forced to retire from the NFL due to a lingering knee injury.
"Participatory journalist" George Plimpton stated that Gordy was the inspiration for his second book (of three) about professional American football, ''Mad Ducks and Bears''. Plimpton initially met Gordy in 1960 while doing early research for what would become his first pro football book, ''Paper Lion'', and was told by Gordy that in his opinion there was an obvious wide market for a book about football line play, consisting of young men and boys currently playing those positions and older men who had done so in the past, together forming a potential readership of millions. Gordy, whose football nickname was "Bear" due to his histruteness, was able to interest his erstwhile training camp roommate, Alex Karras ("Mad Duck") in the project as well, although the book was not published until 13 years after this initial meeting, and rather than being a technical work about methods and techniques that Gordy had envisioned was primarily a collection of anecdotes. 〔 Plimpton, George title=Mad Ducks and Bears pub=Random House date=1973 ISBN 0-394-48847-4 pp. 3-11〕
Gordy became the California state director of Fellowship of Christian Athletes in 1999. At that time, there were only a handful of public high schools that were participating with FCA. By the time John died, nearly every single high school in Southern California had an FCA group on their campus. Gordy considered this his greatest accomplishment.〔
Gordy died on January 30, 2009, in Orange, California, after a lengthy battle with cancer.〔(Gordy, captain of 1956 SEC championship team, dies at 73 )〕
==References==


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