After the war, Aschenbrenner was drafted in the sixth round of the
1947 NFL draft by the
Pittsburgh Steelers and also in the first round of the
1947 AAFC Draft by the
Buffalo Bills. Aschenbrenner, however, returned to college to finish his education at
Northwestern University and never played for the Steelers or Bills. In fact, his rights were traded by both teams with the Steelers sending him to the
Los Angeles Rams and the Bills to the Cleveland Browns. Meanwhile, Aschenbrenner became a star at Northwestern and played in the
1949 Rose Bowl, where he was named the outstanding player in the game, running for 119 yards, which included a 73-yard dash for a touchdown to open the scoring. Aschenbrenner's rights in the AAFC had been traded by Cleveland to the
Chicago Hornets. Aschenbrenner played six games for Chicago in 1949, but the team had tried to convert him to defense, where he had never played before. The experiment proved a failure and he was soon released. Aschenbrenner then spent another two years in the Navy Air Corps before a brief four game stint with the
Montreal Alouettes of the
Canadian Football League in 1951. In 1993, Aschenbrenner was inducted into the
Rose Bowl Hall of Fame, along with
Bo Schembechler and
O. J. Simpson. He died on January 30, 2012, in
Arizona. ==References==