Sweeley enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1899. He played four years of football at Michigan from 1899 to 1902 at the end, fullback, and halfback positions, but he was best known as one of the game's premier punters and placekickers.
Before enrolling at Michigan, Sweeley said he had never seen a college football game.[4] In four seasons, he missed only one game, the result of what Sweeley called "a little row with a math professor."[4]
While playing for Michigan, Sweeley set the college football record for the longest kick on record. In 1902, he kicked the football 86 yards before touching the ground.[5] Sweeley also held "an enviable distinction unboasted by any other hero of the gridiron." In four years punting for Michigan, he never had a single punt blocked.[5] Sweeley was known for punts that were both high and long. He would reportedly tell his ends accurately where each punt was to go, "and by this concerted action Michigan gained many yards."[5] Sweeley was also "an expert place kicker," scoring over 100 points for Michigan in this manner.[5] A 1906 newspaper feature reported that his greatest talent was "the running punt trick," a play in which Sweeley would run a ball "until he was hard pressed and then kick, often thus adding many yards to the ground gained."[5]
In the 1902 Rose Bowl, Sweeley kicked four field goals and punted 21 times for a 38.9-yard average.[6] A newspaper story in 1950 reported on Sweeley's kicking ability: "Sweeley, a truly great kicker in the days when the ball resembled a pumpkin rather than the tapered oblate spheroid now in use, introduced the spiral pant to Coast fans that memorable day [in the 1902 Rose Bowl]. His towering punts outdistanced the end-over-end kicks of the Indians by 20 yards."[7]
After retiring from coaching, Sweeley moved to Twin Falls, Idaho where he worked as a lawyer. In September 1907, he married Hazel Jury Brown (1886–1972) at Spokane, Washington. According to the 1920 United States Census, Sweeley and his wife had two children at that time, Jean B Sweeley (age 9) and Anna L. Sweeley (age 6).[12]
Sweeley also became an expert trap shooter and ballistics expert. In 1916, he won the interstate trapshooting championship.[13] He was elected prosecutor in 1938.[14]
In his draft registration card signed in April 1942, Sweeley listed his residence as Twin Falls, his employer as the County of Twin Falls, and his place of employment as the County Courthouse in Twin Falls.[2]
In 1952, Sweeley attended a reunion in California of the 1902 Rose Bowl team. At the time, Sweeley was a practicing attorney living in Twin Falls, and was recalled as "a great punter back at the turn of the century."[15] He served as a probate judge in the mid-1950s.[16][17]
^Beal, M.D.; Wells, M.W. (1959). History of Idaho. Vol. 3. Lewis Historical Publishing Company. Retrieved April 6, 2015.
^ abUnited States Draft Registration Card signed by Everett Marlin Sweeley, April 1942. The National Archives Pacific Alaska Region (Seattle); Seattle, Washington; Fourth Registration Draft Cards (WWII); State Headquarters: Idaho; Record Group Name: Records of the Selective Service System; Record Group Number: 147; Archive Number: 563870; Box Number: 49.
^Quigg, Gary, comp. Iowa State Census 1885 [database on-line]. Ancestry.com
^ ab"Kicked Four Years Without A Block". News-Palladium. November 18, 1943.
^ abcde"OLD-TIME FOOTBALL PLAYERS". Elyria Reporter. November 13, 1906.