After graduating from Iowa, Minick moved to Los Angeles where he became an assistant coach for the 1925 USC Trojans football team.[3] He served as the line coach under head coach Howard Jones who had previously coached Iowa while Minick was a player.
Minick also played professional football beginning in 1926 with the New York Yankees of the American Football League.[1] He also played for Red Grange's all-star professional football team in 1926.[7] He then played three years in the National Football League (NFL), mostly at the guard position, for the Buffalo Bisons (1927) and Green Bay Packers (1928–1929).[1] He was a member of the 1929 Green Bay Packers that won the NFL championship. In 1929, the Green Bay Press-Gazette praised his contributions to the club:
Paul is a smart line man and ... gained the distinction of being the Packers' leading guard. ... Minick follows the ball like a hawk. He seems to have a super football sense ... and often would pull out of his position and nail a carrier in his tracks.[8]
Minick continued work in the Hollywood movie business in the off-season while playing for the Packers.[8]
Later years
Minick moved to Springfield, Missouri, in 1940 and worked as an insurance agent.[9] His son, Peter David Minick, died in a car crash in 1957 while in college in Washington, DC.[10] He died in Springfield in 1978 at age 79.[9]
References
^ abcd"Paul Minick". Pro Football Archives. Retrieved August 19, 2023.