Lytle was selected in the second round of the 1977 NFL draft, and played for the Broncos until 1983. In his seven seasons, Lytle compiled 1,451 rushing yards, 562 receiving yards and 14 touchdowns.
Early life
Born and raised in Fremont, Ohio, where his family had operated a clothing store for several generations,[1] Lytle graduated from its Ross High School in 1973.[2]
As a sophomore in 1974, Lytle was the Wolverines' second leading rusher with 802 yards on 140 carries for an average of 5.7 yards per carry.[4] In 1975, he started at fullback in all 12 games,[5] and was the again the team's second leading rusher with 1,030 yards on 193 carries (average: 5.3 yards).[4]
In his senior season in 1976, Lytle started nine games at fullback and three at tailback for the Big Ten championship team which finished the season at 10–2 and ranked third in the finalAP Poll.[6] He led the team with 1,469 rushing yards on 221 carries and 14 rushing touchdowns.[4] A consensus first-team All-American,[7][8] Lytle was third in the Heisman Trophyballoting, behind winner Tony Dorsett and Ricky Bell.[9][10]
During three years as a regular player at Michigan, Lytle set the school's career record with 3,307 rushing yards. It was broken five years later by Butch Woolfolk, and he now ranks eighth in rushing yards.[11] Lytle was involved in two games in which Michigan had three rushers accumulate 100 yards,[12] and he was posthumously inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2015.[13]
He spent seven seasons in the NFL with the Broncos and rushed for 1,451 yards, caught 61 passes for 562 yards, returned six kickoffs for 99 yards, and scored 14 touchdowns (12 rushing and two receiving).[2]
Writing as an adult, his son Kelly tells how Michigan Coach Schembechler called him the “toughest player” he had ever coached. And yet, in the pros “What fans never saw, though, was how Dad was an invalid during the week and transformed into a warrior on Sundays by fixing a cocktail of cortisone, painkillers, adrenaline, and his obsession to play football.”[14]
^ abc"Michigan Football Statistic Archive Query Page". University of Michigan. Archived from the original on May 24, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2015.(to retrieve information for a particular season, go to "Games & Totals by Season" and select the year for which statistics are to be retrieved)
^"1975 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved March 27, 2015.
^"1976 Football Team". University of Michigan, Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved March 27, 2015.
^"Michigan Football Statistic Archive Query Page". University of Michigan. Archived from the original on May 24, 2013. (The two games are: October 18, 1975 vs. Northwestern - Huckleby [157], Lytle [105], Bell [100]; September 18, 1976 vs. Stanford - Huckleby [157], Davis [116], Lytle [100])