Education
In that game Nobby completed 18 of 21 pass attempts, leading Miami past Arizona State.
coach Football player Argonauts head
In that game Nobby completed 18 of 21 pass attempts, leading Miami past Arizona State.
He is best known as quarterback of the Toronto Argonauts. Wirkowski played for two exceptional football coaches while attending Miami University. He started under Sid Gillman, whose ideas revolutionized the passing game in American football, and when Gillman left, Woody Hayes replaced him.
Wirkowski led Miami to a 13-12 victory over Texas Technical in the 1948 Sun Bowl and then 3 years later put on a spectacular performance in the Salad Bowl.
After college, he joined the Toronto Argonauts and took over the quarterbacking spot for Toronto, leading the Argonauts to a 7-5 record in the 1951 season. He was traded to Hamilton in 1955 where he played for two years and was then traded to Calgary.
At the end of the 1959 season he returned to Toronto as back-up quarterback and assistant coach. The following year Nobby saw his final action as a professional player when he injured his knee in a preseason exhibition game with the NFL Saint Louis Cardinals.
In 1963, Argonauts General Manager Lew Hayman promoted Wirkowski to the head coaching position after Lou Agase was fired.
He served as the Argonauts head coach through the 1964 season, after which he was promoted to Director of Player Personnel. He served in that role through the 1967 season. After the 1967 season Wirkowski was approached by York University.
He coached York from 1968–1975 and from 1988-1989, and was an associate coach for the 1984 and 1987 seasons.
On October 15, 2014, Wirkowski died with his family at his side at the age of 88.
The touchdown he engineered in the 1952 Grey Cup turned out to be the last offensive touchdown by the Argonauts in a Grey Cup for 30 years. Born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, he excelled in athletics and became the first athlete at Crane Technical High School to letter in 3 sports (football, basketball, and baseball) since George Halas accomplished the feat at the turn of the century. In 1952, Wirkowski led Toronto to a Grey Cup championship over the Edmonton Eskimos. From 1952 to 1957, Wirkowski coached the senior football team at De Louisiana Salle College (Toronto) which won consecutive league championships in 1955, 1956 and 1957.
While at Miami, Wirkowski became a member of the Phi Kappa Tau fraternity. He is a member of the Miami University Athletic Hall of Fame and the Mississauga Hall of Fame.