Before 1960, only a handful of African-Americans lettered in football at the University of Minnesota.
One of those pioneers was Robert "Bob" Blakley. A three-sport standout at St. Paul Central High School, he lettered for the Gophers in 1956 and 1957 — leading the team in rushing in 1957.
"He was one of the best athletes I ever played with or against," said former Gophers athletic director Tom Moe, a teammate of Blakley.
Blakley, who went on to serve in the U.S. Army before playing for teams in three professional leagues, died Oct. 30. He was 79.
"He was a good guy — humble," said Floyd Smaller. "We were great friends. We always supported each other even though we were always competing against each other."
Blakley, who great up in the Rondo neighborhood, and Smaller started out together at St. Paul Marshall High School. When Marshall closed in 1953, Blakley went to Central while Smaller went to Mechanic Arts.
"What I remember most was all the time we spent working out and competing," said Smaller, who coached football at Central from 1976 to 2000. "We'd go to Central's stadium on Saturday and Sunday mornings and practice the shot put, practice the discus, catching and throwing a football."
At Central, Blakley led the Minutemen to a state title in track and field and a St. Paul City Conference championship in football. In 1954, Blakley led the Minutemen to a 27-7 victory over Minneapolis Washburn in the Twin Cities Championship game, scoring all of his team's points on four touchdowns and three extra points. The game was played before 15,500 at Memorial Stadium.