Junious "Buck" Buchanan was a professional football player, a defensive tackle with the Kansas City Chiefs in the American Football League and in the National Football League.
Education
Buchanan attended A. H. Parker High School in Birmingham, Alabama, and was a standout in football and basketball.
Buchanan attended Grambling College in Louisiana and was a letterman in football and an National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics All-America selection. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1996. He is one of four players, Willie Brown, Willie Davis, and Charlie Joiner coached by Eddie Robinson enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Career
The 6 ft 7 in (201 m) 287 lb (130 kg) Buchanan was the first overall selection in the American Federation of Labor-Congress Draft by the Kansas City Chiefs. Eddie Robinson, his coach at Grambling State, where he had been an National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics All-American in 1962, called him "the finest lineman I have seen." Buchanan was the first black number one draft choice in Professional Football. Others who had watched Buchanan in action were equally enthusiastic.
Buchanan had the physical size plus the athletic instincts to be exceptionally successful at his job of foiling opposing offenses.
He was particularly effective at intimidating the passer and in one season alone (1967) he batted down 16 passes at or behind the line of scrimmage. He was clocked at 4.9 in the 40-yard dash and 10.2 in the 100-yard dash at Grambling State and with that speed he could range from sideline to sideline to make tackles.
In spite of the weekly pounding he took on the line of scrimmage, Buchanan was extremely durable. He played in 182 career games that included a string of 166 straight.
After dabbling briefly at defensive end as a rookie, Buchanan settled down to his permanent job as the Chiefs" defensive right tackle.
He was named to his first American Federation of Labor-Congress All-Star Game after his second season and played in six American Federation of Labor-Congress All-Star games and two AFC-NFC Pro Bowls. He teamed with Curley Culp, Aaron Brown and Jerry Mays to establish a dominant front four for the Chiefs, culminating in their victory over the Minnesota Vikings in Super Bowl IV, when they allowed Viking runners only 67 yards rushing in 19 carries and 172 Netto passing yards, Buchanan in particular dominating the opposing center, Mick Tingelhoff, a 5-time Associated Press first-team All-Pro selection up to that 1969 season, as handily as the left guard, Jim Vellone. He was selected to the second team of the American Federation of Labor-Congress All-Time Team, and was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1987 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1990.
Two years after he was inducted to the Pro Hall of Fame, he died from lung cancer at the age of 51.
In 1999, he was ranked number 67 on The Sporting News" list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, right behind his former Chiefs teammate Bobby Bell at number 66. The Chiefs also retired his uniform number 86.
Buchanan once appeared on American Broadcasting Company"s The American Sportsman hosted by Grits Gresham of Natchitoches, Louisiana. The program featured Gresham taking celebrities on big-game hunting trips, fishing tournaments, or shooting contests in exotic places around the world.
After his football career Buck started the construction company All Pro Construction, Incorporated. in Olathe, Kansas. They specialized in interior renovations and miscellaneous bridge work.
Buchanan"s widow, Georgia continued to run the company after his death until 2006 when she sold. Buchanan was diagnosed with lung cancer a week before his Hall of Fame induction and died at age 51 in his Kansas City home on July 16, 1992.