In March of 1948 he was signed by the 49ers of the All-American Football Conference. He helped the 49ers have a record-setting rushing attack: the team rushed for a staggering 3,653 yards in only fourteen games, a professional football record that still stands.[4][5] Nonetheless, he was released in August of 1949, just before the 1949 season started.[6][7]
Later in 1949, he was playing with the minor league Richmond Rebels when he was signed by the Redskins; but the Redskins had to give him up after the Rebels sued.[8] That season he made the American Football league's All-AFL team and helped them to win the League Championship over the Patterson Panthers.[9][10]
In the summer of 1950 he was purchase by the Colts and spent the 1950 NFL season with them. Early in the next year he was drafted by the New York Giants in the 7th Round (85th overall) of the 1951 NFL Draft. He became a free agent and then signed with the Giants.[11] But he never played with New York and instead headed to Canada where he spent two years playing professionally in the Canadian Football League (CFL), which at the time was offering pay competitive to the NFL. He played one season with the Eskiomos and one with the Tiger-Cats.[6]
In 1950, he also worked as an assistant coach at Angelo State University.[12]
References
^"Joel Williams". profootballarchives.com. Retrieved September 6, 2024.
^The next-highest total, set in a 16-game schedule by the 1978 Patriots, is 488 yards short of the record. The next-highest total in a 14-game schedule, set by the 1973 Bills, is 565 yards shy.
^"1949 Richmond Rebels (AFL)". Archived from the original on July 3, 2022. Retrieved September 20, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^"Grid Giants Sign 2 Former Colts". The Baltimore Sun. May 18, 1951.
^"Rambling Rams". The Ram Page. April 5, 1950. Retrieved September 20, 2024.