At the team banquet in late November 1922, the Wisconsin players chose Below as the captain of the 1923 team.[10] During the 1923 season, the Badgers played Red Grange's Fighting Illini to a scoreless tie. Grange later called Below "the greatest lineman that I ever played against".[11] In picking Below for his all-time team, Grange in 1926 said, "We always avoided his side of the line, knowing that we could gain nothing through him."[12] At the end of the 1923 season, Below was selected as a consensus member of the 1923 College Football All-America Team. He received first-team honors from Athletic World magazine (chosen by 500 coaches),[13]Football World magazine,[14]Norman E. Brown,[7] and Davis J. Walsh, sports editor for the International News Service.[15]
Later years
In February 1924, Below announced that, despite receiving multiple offers, he would not play professional football. He concluded his class work at the end of the fall semester in 1923 and stated that he intended to pursue a career in business.[16] He appeared at a Madison gymnasium with a written offer from the manager of one of the top professional teams, tore it up, and threw it in a waste basket, stating: "No one loves to play football any better than I do, but in my opinion there is no comparison between college and professional football. I have completed my work in college and therefore I have played my last game."[17]
Below was employed until 1948 by Commonwealth Edison in Chicago. From the late 1940s through the early 1970s, he was employed by the Kieffer-Nolde Engraving Company in Chicago. He was president of the Wisconsin Alumni Association. He died in 1984 at Evanston, Illinois.[2]
Below was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988.[18] He was also inducted into the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame in 1992.[3]
References
^Full name from Ancestry.com. U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918 [database on-line].
^ abcDon Kopriva; Jim Mott (2014). On Wisconsin!: A Celebration of Football, Basketball, and Other Badger Sports. Skyhorse Publishing, Inc. p. 45.
^"Two Oshkosh Men Are Gaining Fame at the University: Work of Leonard Smith and Marty Below on Wisconsin Football Team Is High Class". The Daily Northwestern (Oshkosh, WI). October 23, 1922. p. 8.
^"Below A Bright Star: Former Oshkosh Athlete, Captain And Star Tackle for Wisconsin Looms Large". The Daily Northwestern. October 5, 1923. p. 18.
^"M'Carthy Picks Them In Pairs". The Newark Advocate. December 5, 1922.
^ abNorman E. Brown (December 8, 1922). "Below Wins Place on 'All-American' Eleven Selected by Prominent Sports Writer: Harry Kipke Named as Year's Best All-Round Man". Capital Times. Madison, WI.
^"Championship Locke At Quarter on Camp's First Team". Iowa City Press-Citizen. December 26, 1922.
^Dave Anderson (2005). University of Wisconsin Football. Arcadia Publishing. p. 38.
^"On All-Star Eleven: "Marty" Below, Former Oshkosh Man, Is Chosen for Mythical Team by Famous Grid Warrior". The Daily Northwestern (Oshkosh, WI). December 1, 1926. p. 12.
^"Athletic World All America". The Decatur Review. December 16, 1923.