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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Gipp’s DNA disproves paternity

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. – DNA from the recently exhumed body of college football hero George Gipp shows he was not the father of a child born shortly after his death, quelling longstanding rumors, relatives said Saturday.

Gipp’s remains were taken Oct. 4 for testing from a cemetery near the Upper Peninsula village of Laurium. Rick Frueh, whose grandmother was Gipp’s sister, said in a statement he authorized the exhumation, which angered some family members.

Gipp died in 1920 from pneumonia and a strep infection during his senior year at Notre Dame, where he was the school’s first All-American and set a school career rushing record that stood for more than 50 years.

He is known for the deathbed exhortation attributed to him years later by coach Knute Rockne, who rallied the underdog Fighting Irish by telling them Gipp had urged the team when the chips were down to “win one for the Gipper.”

Mike Bynum, an Alabama sports author who is researching a book on Gipp, said he came across an Internet posting several years ago by a woman who believed she was a descendant of the football great. She is a granddaughter of Eva Bright, a South Bend, Ind., woman Gipp had dated for about a year before his death, Bynum said.

Bynum said he helped put the woman in touch with Frueh and other Gipp relatives. Eventually, Frueh decided to have the body exhumed. Gipp’s right femur was removed and the other remains reburied.

The DNA testing of the bone was conducted at a laboratory in Dallas. Results last week showed no link between Gipp and Bright’s granddaughter, Bynum said.