Cliff Patton

Cliff Patton (born July 29, 1924 in Clyde, Texas) is a former professional American football player who played guard for six seasons for the Philadelphia Eagles and the Chicago Cardinals.

Philadelphia Eagles 1948 NFL Champions
  • 11 Tommy Thompson
  • 15 Steve Van Buren
  • 27 Al Johnson
  • 30 Bosh Pritchard
  • 32 Jack Myers
  • 33 Russ Craft
  • 35 Pete Pihos
  • 36 Joe Muha
  • 37 Ernie Steele
  • 39 Bill Mackrides
  • 40 Les Palmer
  • 41 Gil Steinke
  • 43 Jim Parmer
  • 44 Ben Kish
  • 45 Noble Doss
  • 49 Pat McHugh
  • 51 Frank Szymanski
  • 52 Vic Lindskog
  • 53 Alex Wojciechowicz
  • 61 Duke Maronic
  • 64 Mario Giannelli
  • 65 Cliff Patton
  • 66 Baptiste Manzini
  • 67 John Magee
  • 70 Al Wistert
  • 71 Otis Douglas
  • 73 Fred Hartman
  • 74 Walt Barnes
  • 75 George Savitsky
  • 76 Bucko Kilroy
  • 79 Vic Sears
  • 80 Neill Armstrong
  • 81 Dick Humbert
  • 83 Jack Ferrante
  • 86 Hal Prescott
  • 88 Jay MacDowell
  • 89 John Green
  • Head Coach: Greasy Neale
  • Assistant Coaches: Larry Cabrelli
  • Charley Ewart
  • John Kellison
Philadelphia Eagles 1949 NFL Champions
  • Neill Armstrong
  • Walt Barnes
  • Chuck Bednarik
  • Russ Craft
  • Otis Douglas
  • Jack Ferrante
  • Mario Giannelli
  • John Green
  • Dick Humbert
  • Mike Jarmoluk
  • Bucko Kilroy
  • Ben Kish
  • Vic Lindskog
  • Jay MacDowell
  • Bill Mackrides
  • John Magee
  • Duke Maronic
  • Pat McHugh
  • Joe Muha
  • Jack Myers
  • Jim Parmer
  • Cliff Patton
  • Pete Pihos
  • Hal Prescott
  • Bosh Pritchard
  • Frank Reagan
  • George Savitsky
  • Clyde Scott
  • Vic Sears
  • Leo Skladany
  • Tommy Thompson
  • Steve Van Buren
  • Al Wistert
  • Alex Wojciechowicz
  • Frank Ziegler

  • Head Coach: Greasy Neale
Persondata
Name Patton, Cliff
Alternative names
Short description American football player
Date of birth July 29, 1924
Place of birth Clyde, Texas
Date of death
Place of death


Famous quotes containing the words cliff and/or patton:

    Just under the surface I shall be, all together at first, then separate and drift, through all the earth and perhaps in the end through a cliff into the sea, something of me.
    Samuel Beckett (1906–1989)

    ... one of the blind spots of most Negroes is their failure to realize that small overtures from whites have a large significance ... I now realize that this feeling inevitably takes possession of one in the bitter struggle for equality. Indeed, I share it. Yet I wonder how we can expect total acceptance to step full grown from the womb of prejudice, with no embryo or infancy or childhood stages.
    —Sarah Patton Boyle, U.S. civil rights activist and author. The Desegregated Heart, part 1, ch. 10 (1962)