At the end of his junior season, it was incorrectly believed that Hegman still had a year of eligibility. The Dallas Cowboys were thought to be one of the only NFL teams that knew he was eligible for the draft, and drafted him in what came to be known as the Dirty Dozen Draft in 1975.[1] Two games into the 1975 college football season, the NCAA declared him ineligible and forced him to sit our the rest of the games. Although he sat out most of the year, he was allowed to play in the Senior Bowl.[2]
Professional career
The Dallas Cowboys selected him as a junior in the seventh round (173rd overall) of the 1975 NFL draft. The team was allowed to retain his rights, after they were proven right that he was technically eligibile, because his class had graduated that year.[3]
Hegman became the starting strong-side linebacker after the team waived Henderson 11 games into the 1979 season. In 1985, he lost five games with a broken arm.[5] In 1987, he missed 6 games with a broken leg.[6]
In 1988, he suffered cartilage tear in his right knee during the preseason and was placed on the injured reserve list.[7] He was released as part of a youth movement on October 25.[8]
Hegman played 12 years and started in 116 games, becoming a dependable player in the Cowboys defense for more than a decade. He helped the Cowboys win two NFC Championships and one Super Bowl during his career.
Personal life
During the 1980 offseason, he faced prosecution on a charge of forging a friend's name on $10,534 worth of checks.[9] The case was dismissed after he paid the money he owed, with the help of players like Cliff Harris, Roger Staubach, Bob Breunig and Tony Dorsett, who gave $2,000 each to help cover the debt.