After the 1943 season, Derleth was inducted into the U.S. Navy and assigned to aviation training cadet at the Iowa Pre-Flight School in Iowa City, Iowa. He also played football on the Navy's Iowa Seahawks team.[6][7] The 1944 Iowa Seahawks included star players such as Les Horvath, and defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes in 1944 by a score of 30 to 6.[8] Derleth also took up track while in the Navy as reflected in a June 1945 wire report: "Bob Derleth and Bobby Mickelson took up track for the first time this season. Proof that Derleth, a former Michigan football tackle, catches on quickly is illustrated by his 133 feet 7-inch cast of the discus which brought him the all-time Seahawk mark in the event."[9]
While Derleth was serving in the Navy, the Detroit Lions selected him as a late pick in the 29th round of the 1944 NFL draft.[10] Upon being placed on inactive status by the Navy in October 1945, Derleth elected to return to the University of Michigan rather than play professional football. The Associated Press reported that Derleth's return to the team had "sparked" the Wolverines.[11] The article continued:
"Derleth reported for practice yesterday after being placed on inactive dutv by the Navy. The Marquette, Mich., lineman immediately was issued a uniform and put in considerable time at the right guard spot during scrimmage. The former aviation cadet said he was in 'pretty good' physical shape and was an inch taller and about 14 pounds heavier than the last time he played for Michigan. In 1942 he was six-two and weighed 203."[11][12]
In mid-October 1945, Derleth returned to Michigan after being placed on inactive duty by the Navy.[13] He saw action in the November 1945 "Homecoming" game against Minnesota.[14] During the 1946 season, Derleth returned to the starting lineup at the tackle position.[15] Derleth suffered a concussion in the 1946 game against Illinois and did not play the following week.[16]
After his 1946 season at Michigan, Derleth was drafted in by the Chicago Rockets in the 1947 AAFC Draft as the 25th overall pick.[17] In May 1947, Derleth signed instead with the Detroit Lions, who still held the NFL rights to his services.[6][18][19] At the time Derleth signed with the Lions, he weighed 230 pounds.[6] The 1947 Detroit Lions team included six former Michigan football players, including Derleth's Wolverine teammates Bob Westfall, Merv Pregulman, Bob Wiese, and Elmer Madar. Derleth appeared in only one game for the Lions in 1947.[10] He was later recognized by the Pro Football Hall of Fame on the honor roll of more than 1,000 NFL personnel to serve in the military during World War II.[20]
^"1942 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
^"1943 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved January 1, 2010.
^Jerry Liska (November 5, 1943). "Odds Favor Ann Arbor 11: Bob Derleth, of Marquette, Mich., to Play for Wolverines". Ironwood Daily Globe.
^"Captain Hurt". Billings Gazette. December 29, 1943. ("A knee injury, suffered when he crashed into the boards, will keep Bob Derleth, Michigan's hockey captain, out a month.")
^John U. Bacon, "Blue Ice: The Story of Michigan Hockey," p. 408
^ abc"Michigan Tackle Signs With Lions". Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune (AP story). May 21, 1947.
^"Bob Derleth Out of Seahawk Line for Next Contest". Muscatine Journal and News-Tribune (AP story). October 10, 1944.
^"Seahawks Lick Iowa In Second Half, 30-6". Wisconsin State Journal. November 26, 1944.
^"Two Seahawks Make Records Look Easy". Council Bluffs Nonpareil (NEA wire story). June 4, 1945.