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| Enshrined in 1999 |
Guard >>> 6-2, 258 |
Georgia Tech |
| 1961-1969 Buffalo Bills |
| William Lewis Shaw
First player to spend entire career in
AFL to be elected to Hall of
Fame
Two-way collegiate player
Drafted by Cowboys (NFL) and Bills
(AFL)
Chose Bills to play on offensive line
Equally adept at pass blocking and run
blocking
Driving force behind offensive unit that led Buffalo to back-to-back AFL titles in
1964, 1965
All-AFL five times
Named to eight All-Star games
Born December 15, 1938 in
Natchez, Mississippi. |
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In 1961, Billy Shaw, a 6-2, 258-pound All-America lineman out of Georgia Tech was drafted by both
the Buffalo Bills of the American Football League and the Dallas Cowboys of the then-rival National
Football League.
Shaw, who played both offense and defense at Georgia Tech, felt his size and speed were better
suited to guard, where the Bills who drafted him in the second-round planned to use him. He heard
that Dallas had planned to use him as a linebacker.
| Billy Shaw |
| Bills Statistics |
| Games |
119 |
| Related Items |
| Coming Soon |
The fact that he went on to become one of the best and most-honored guards of the 1960s proves
that he chose well. The stereotypical view of the AFL in the early 1960s was that of a pass-happy
league. That, however, was not the case in Buffalo, where the Bills featured power running and a strong
defense.
Equally adept at pass blocking and run blocking, his ability to pull out in front of runners was
a perfect fit for the Bills. In fact, because Buffalos runners tended to be more durable than fast, he
sometimes was able to stay in front of them to make blocks far downfield. Shaws speed, strength, and
natural ability made him the driving force of the offensive unit according to his former offensive
line coach Jerry Smith.
Especially effective on short-yardage scoring plays, Shaw would pull out from his left guard
position followed by heavy-duty runners Cookie Gilchrist and Wray Carlton. Bills quarterback Jack Kemp
or his super-sub Daryle Lamonica would follow the powerful trio of blockers often untouched into
the end zone.
The Bills of 1962, 1963, and 1964 still rank among the best in the team record book for most
rushing touchdowns scored in a season. A key member of the Bills teams that won AFL titles in 1964 and
1965, Shaw was named a first-team All-AFL selection five times (1962 through 1966) and also a second
team All-AFL choice in 1962, 1968 and 1969.
He was selected to play in eight AFL All-Star Games and was named to the All-Time AFL Team. Named
to pro footballs All-Decade Team of the 1960s, Shaw is the first Hall of Fame member to play his
entire career in the AFL.
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