For more than 90 years, the Maxwell Football Club has occupied a distinctive place in the American sporting landscape, recognising excellence across college and professional football through a suite of awards that have become benchmarks of achievement. As milestone anniversaries approach for several of its most celebrated honourees, the organisation is revisiting the seasons and careers that helped define both individual legacies and the broader game.
The latest review focuses on award winners from the 1995 season, whose performances continue to resonate three decades on. According to the Maxwell Football Club, recognition is intended to represent more than individual success, instead reflecting “entry into a football family defined by excellence, integrity, and lasting impact”.
Eddie George and the Maxwell Award
The 1995 Maxwell Award was claimed by Eddie George, then a running back at Ohio State Buckeyes. Ohio State entered the mid-1990s with depth across the roster, but George’s emergence as a dominant offensive force provided the consistency the programme required. He rushed for a school-record 1,927 yards and led the nation with 24 touchdowns, adding a further 47 receptions and contributing to an 11–2 season.
George’s collegiate dominance translated into professional reliability. Drafted 14th overall by the Houston Oilers in 1996, he delivered five consecutive 1,000-yard rushing seasons and later helped the franchise, by then the Tennessee Titans, reach Super Bowl XXXIV. Following retirement, George established a post-playing career spanning business, broadcasting and acting, before returning to the sport as a head coach. He is currently leading Bowling Green Falcons and, this year, is being honoured as the 21st recipient of the Maxwell Football Club’s Legends Award.
Pat Fitzgerald and the Bednarik Award
The 1995 Bednarik Award went to linebacker Pat Fitzgerald, whose performances anchored one of the most unexpected seasons in college football history at Northwestern Wildcats. Northwestern, long considered an outsider in the Big Ten, captured the conference title for the first time since 1936, defeating Notre Dame and Michigan along the way.
Fitzgerald recorded 124 tackles and provided leadership that matched the team’s discipline and defensive structure. He returned in 1996 to secure a second Bednarik Award before being inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. Appointed Northwestern head coach at 31, Fitzgerald spent 17 seasons building a reputation for programme stability and competitive consistency. He has since returned to the Big Ten as head coach of Michigan State Spartans.
Brett Favre and the Bert Bell Award
At the professional level, the Bert Bell Award in 1995 was awarded to quarterback Brett Favre of the Green Bay Packers. Operating under head coach Mike Holmgren, Favre threw for 4,413 yards and 38 touchdowns, leading the league in both categories and guiding Green Bay to an 11–5 record and the NFC Central title.
The season marked the start of a sustained peak. Favre won three consecutive NFL MVP awards from 1995 to 1997 and led the Packers to victory in Super Bowl XXXI. Over a 20-year career, he accumulated more than 71,000 passing yards and redefined durability at the quarterback position, becoming a first-ballot Pro Football Hall of Famer in 2016.
Gary Barnett and the Munger Award
The Munger Award recognised head coach Gary Barnett for orchestrating Northwestern’s dramatic transformation. Prior to 1995, the programme had not enjoyed a winning season since 1971. Barnett’s team finished 10–2, went undefeated in Big Ten play and secured a long-awaited Rose Bowl appearance.
Barnett later carried that culture-building approach to Colorado Buffaloes, where he delivered a Big 12 title in 2001. His career is widely regarded as an example of how structural discipline and belief can overcome historical limitations.
The Maxwell Football Club will formally celebrate this year’s award recipients at the 89th Maxwell Awards Gala, scheduled for 14 March at the Coca-Cola Roxy in Atlanta. The event is expected to draw leading figures from across the football community, underscoring the enduring commercial and cultural value of sporting excellence.








