Alex Rado

[5] Rado was inducted into his college's hall of fame and the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference named him to their "All Time Star" 50th anniversary team in 1974.

[6] Rado joined the Kiefer Drugs, a semi-professional football team in Ohio, for the 1933 season.

[10] His salary was $100 per game,[11] and he missed one month of the season due to a broken collarbone suffered during a tackle of Bronko Nagurski.

[15] He and Basilio Marchi filed workers' compensation claims in Pennsylvania against the Steelers, asserting that they should receive salaries despite their injuries during the 1934 season.

[16] He joined the Los Angeles Bulldogs in 1936,[17] and signed with the Dayton Rosies of the Midwest Football League in December 1936.

[40] Renamed the Wiedemann Buds,[41] they played for the city championship against the Dayton Bombers again in 1949[42] and won their fourth title, 25–6.

[44] He worked for Delco Products as a tool process engineer after moving back to Dayton in 1936.