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Brian Piccolo

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Brian Piccolo Famous memorial

Original Name
Louis Brian Piccolo
Birth
Pittsfield, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
16 Jun 1970 (aged 26)
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Evergreen Park, Cook County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 41.7284538, Longitude: -87.7149029
Plot
Section AM, Lot 222, Grave 2NE
Memorial ID
View Source
Professional Football Player. Famously not picked in the NFL draft after 20 rounds, "Pic," as he was often called, went on to make a career in the National Football League as a running back for the Chicago Bears despite his small size and slow speed. What he lacked in the usual qualities of a football player, he made up in determination and hard work. A letterman in a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, High School, he attended Wake Forest University. During his senior year, 1964, he led the nation rushing. This fact may have led Chicago Bears coach George Halas to sign him as a free agent. Halas actually held a press conference to announce the fact. Although on the team, he spent the year of 1965 on the practice squad while the #4 pick of that year, Gale Sayers, was chosen Rookie of The Year. In 1966, he was active in all 14 games with 103 receiving yards and 317 rushing yards. Although he improved in his play each year, it was a struggle for him to make the team. Piccolo and Gale Sayers, the "Kansas Comet," had become the first interracial roommates before the 1967 season. They soon became fast friends and fierce competitors. During the ninth game of the season in 1968, Sayers was felled by a knee injury that put him out for the season. Piccolo stepped in for the last five games and scored his first two NFL touchdowns, gained 450 yards, and had 28 passes for 291 yards. Piccolo helped his friend successfully return to the game by helping with his rehab. It was a physical as well as a mental job. He was determined not to win his spot on the team due to an injured player. When the season started in 1969, Piccolo was ready to prove his point, as Sayers had returned, fully recuperated. Suffering from a lingering cough, Piccolo continued to play. A pre-season x-ray and physical exam had shown no problems. During a game on November 16th, he took himself out of the game. Having never removed himself from the game, the team managers and his friends and family were concerned. A rare cancer was diagnosed and treatment began. Although he was determined to continue playing football, he was not able to overcome his disease. At the time, treatments for such a rare disease were not available. Piccolo died at the Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York, at the age of 26. After his death, the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund was founded. It began with a group of friends, teammates, and family members. Through the efforts of the fund, the cancer that took his life now has a better than 80 percent cure rate. A related cancer to Piccolo's disease which the fund also supports, testicular cancer, now has a 95 percent cure rate. In 1991, the fund began supporting breast cancer research. Wake Forest University Students started the Brian Piccolo Cancer Fund Drive in 1980 in his memory. As to this date, 2009, in the 29 years of the fund, they have raised over eight million dollars which they donate to the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. Brian's life is chronicled in the book "Brian Piccolo: A Short Season" by Jeannie Morris. "Brian's Song," a film starring James Caan as Piccolo and Billy Dee Williams in the role of Gale Sayers, was released in 1971. Gale Sayers documented his life and his story with Piccolo in the book "I Am Third."
Professional Football Player. Famously not picked in the NFL draft after 20 rounds, "Pic," as he was often called, went on to make a career in the National Football League as a running back for the Chicago Bears despite his small size and slow speed. What he lacked in the usual qualities of a football player, he made up in determination and hard work. A letterman in a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, High School, he attended Wake Forest University. During his senior year, 1964, he led the nation rushing. This fact may have led Chicago Bears coach George Halas to sign him as a free agent. Halas actually held a press conference to announce the fact. Although on the team, he spent the year of 1965 on the practice squad while the #4 pick of that year, Gale Sayers, was chosen Rookie of The Year. In 1966, he was active in all 14 games with 103 receiving yards and 317 rushing yards. Although he improved in his play each year, it was a struggle for him to make the team. Piccolo and Gale Sayers, the "Kansas Comet," had become the first interracial roommates before the 1967 season. They soon became fast friends and fierce competitors. During the ninth game of the season in 1968, Sayers was felled by a knee injury that put him out for the season. Piccolo stepped in for the last five games and scored his first two NFL touchdowns, gained 450 yards, and had 28 passes for 291 yards. Piccolo helped his friend successfully return to the game by helping with his rehab. It was a physical as well as a mental job. He was determined not to win his spot on the team due to an injured player. When the season started in 1969, Piccolo was ready to prove his point, as Sayers had returned, fully recuperated. Suffering from a lingering cough, Piccolo continued to play. A pre-season x-ray and physical exam had shown no problems. During a game on November 16th, he took himself out of the game. Having never removed himself from the game, the team managers and his friends and family were concerned. A rare cancer was diagnosed and treatment began. Although he was determined to continue playing football, he was not able to overcome his disease. At the time, treatments for such a rare disease were not available. Piccolo died at the Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York, at the age of 26. After his death, the Brian Piccolo Cancer Research Fund was founded. It began with a group of friends, teammates, and family members. Through the efforts of the fund, the cancer that took his life now has a better than 80 percent cure rate. A related cancer to Piccolo's disease which the fund also supports, testicular cancer, now has a 95 percent cure rate. In 1991, the fund began supporting breast cancer research. Wake Forest University Students started the Brian Piccolo Cancer Fund Drive in 1980 in his memory. As to this date, 2009, in the 29 years of the fund, they have raised over eight million dollars which they donate to the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center. Brian's life is chronicled in the book "Brian Piccolo: A Short Season" by Jeannie Morris. "Brian's Song," a film starring James Caan as Piccolo and Billy Dee Williams in the role of Gale Sayers, was released in 1971. Gale Sayers documented his life and his story with Piccolo in the book "I Am Third."

Bio by: Julie Karen Hancock (Cooper) Jackson


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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Apr 25, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/810/brian-piccolo: accessed ), memorial page for Brian Piccolo (31 Oct 1943–16 Jun 1970), Find a Grave Memorial ID 810, citing Saint Mary Catholic Cemetery and Mausoleum, Evergreen Park, Cook County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.