Since the Outland Trophy winners from 1946 through 1989, did not receive the authentic Outland Trophy, Downtown Rotary Club of Omaha has presented Authentic Trophies to the following past recipients: George Connor, Notre Dame, the first recipient (’46); Joe Steffy, West Point Military Academy (’47); Bill Fischer, Notre Dame (’48); J.D. Roberts, University of Oklahoma ('53); Ron Yary, USC (’67); Larry Jacobson, UNL (’71); Rich Glover, UNL (’72); John Hicks, Ohio State ('73); Lee Roy Selmon, University of Oklahoma ('75); Mark May, University of Pittsburgh (’80); Dave Rimington, UNL, (’81-’82); Dean Steinkuhler, UNL (’83); Chad Hennings, Air Force Academy (’87), and last year to Mike McGee, Duke ('59).
The 2011 Past Outland Award Trophy recipient is Bobby Bell, University of Minnesota ('62).

1962 Outland Award
1962 All-America
1960-1962 College Football Hall of Fame
6 Time AFL Allstar
3 Time Pro Bowl
2 AFL Championship Teams
1980 inducted into the Chiefs Hall of Fame
1983 inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
Ranked 66 on the top 100 Greatest Football Players
Robert "Bobby" Lee Bell, Jr (born June 17, 1940) is a former collegiate and professional American football linebacker/defensive end. He is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the College Football Hall of Fame, and was a winner in Super Bowl IV against the Minnesota Vikings.
He excelled in several sports at a then-segregated Cleveland High School where his first two years he played six-man football at halfback. During his junior year, his school converted to playing an eleven-man team where Bell served as Quarter back. He won All-State honors.
At the University of Minnesota, he was named an All-American and the winner of the 1962 Outland
Trophy and the nation's outstanding interior lineman. He joined Alpha Phi Alpha, the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for African Americans, via the Mu Chapter while at the University of Minnesota. During his years at Minnesota, he played with such greats as Carl Eller, a future Minnesota Viking. The Gopher team with Bell and Eller won the 1962 Rose Bowl Championship. Bell was also inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame for the years 1960-62.
He played for the Kansas City Chiefs, first in the American Football League from 1963 through 1969,
and then in the NFL from 1970 through 1974. Bell was an AFL All-Star for six consecutive years, 1964 through 1969, and then an NFL Pro Bowler for three straight years (1970-1972).
He was on two AFL Championship teams and a World Championship team. He was named to the All-Time All-AFL Team in 1970. He was inducted into the Chiefs Hall of Fame in 1980, and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1983. The Chiefs retired his uniform number 78. In 1999, he was ranked number 66 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players.
One of Bell's finest moments came in the 1969 AFL divisional playoff game against the New York Jets. in a critical goal-line stand, his key coverage on Jets running back Matt Snell stopped the drive and forced New York to kick a field goal. The 13-6 victory over the Jets propelled Kansas City to oits only Super Bowl triumph.
Bell was noted for his one-of-a-kind athleticism at 6' 4" and 230 pounds and was reported to have run a 4.5 forty-yard dash. Bell was possibly the most physically gifted linebacker in professional football history, for his speed at such a size made him ideal at outside linebacker. He was noted as one of the finest open-field tacklers in pro football history, and if he missed, he had the speed to make up for it.
He was also a great blitzer from the linebacker position. Chiefs records show Bell had 40career quarterback sacks and he might have had more if he had played right linebacker, not the left linebacker. In that era, more often than not the right-side linebacker got the call to "dog" or blitz since more often than not the tight end would be lined up on the right side (the defense's left). Since Bell was on the left, he usuallycovered more than he blitzed. He scored 9 touchdowns in his career: 6 off interceptions (26 in his career), 2 more touchdowns off fumble recoveries, and one off an onside kickoff return. Coach Hank Stram said that, "He could play all 22 positions on the field, and play them well."
After his retirement, he opened Bobby Bell's Bar-b-que in Kansas City.