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Not every story was flattering, however. Fralic’s size and stature had their drawbacks, for one. That same UPI story described how “he has been a target of thrill-seekers and macho men. He has had to learn to laugh off barroom challenges to his virility.” Pitt began the ’84 season ranked No. 3, and Fralic—by then up to 285 pounds—was even being touted as a Heisman Trophy candidate. But on the day before the Panthers’ opener against BYU, he was quoted in the Pitt student newspaper as saying, “I like to go play golf and go fuck girls and get drunk. If you can put that in there, put that in there. I don’t care.” After the BYU game, Fralic didn’t shy away from anything and explained himself to a Sports Illustrated reporter this way:

“The [student] reporter was so ill at ease doing the interview that I just wanted to make a little joke and make him feel better. Look, I don’t profess to be the cleanest-mouthed guy, but I’m a single male. However, I learned I should be more cautious, and I learned I was naive. But I never professed to be an angel or a genius.”

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Still, according to the Associated Press, the university went into damage control mode, and both the reporter and the editor of the student paper resigned. A little more than a month after that, per the AP, Fralic was cited for simple assault after a woman alleged he threw a glass at her at a local bar “for no apparent reason.” The woman, who received treatment at a local hospital for a forehead laceration, never pressed charges. She did tell a newspaper she had received an out-of-court settlement, only to reverse course a day later to deny there was any settlement, while also declining to say whether the incident even took place.

The Falcons drafted Fralic No. 2 overall in 1985. In eight seasons in Atlanta, where he played right guard, Fralic made four Pro Bowls and was a two-time All-Pro. The NFL selected him to its all-decade team for the 1980s, and he finished his playing career in 1993 with the Detroit Lions. In 1990, Fralic revealed to Sports Illustrated’s Peter King that he had used steroids while at Pitt. After his father once found his stash of Dianabol, Fralic told King, he explained himself by saying, “Everybody else is doing them. If I want to be a player, I’ve got to do them.” During his NFL days, Fralic became an outspoken opponent of performance enhancing drugs, at one point testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee that “probably about 75 percent” all NFL linemen, linebackers, and tight ends were on the stuff. This stance put him at odds with some of the leadership at NFLPA and several of his fellow players, who resisted Fralic’s call for a frequent random testing regimen—a tactic that tends to shift more of the risk toward players and to absolve management of perhaps pressuring players into seeking an edge.

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Fralic ran an Atlanta-based insurance company after his playing days, and he did separate stints as a radio color commentator for Pitt and the Falcons over the years. His name was recently in the news again. Last Friday, when Penn Hills High played for (and won) a Pennsylvania state football championship, budget constraints forced the team to plan to drive to Hershey, Pa., to play the game, and to travel back, all in one day—a 420-mile round trip. Bill Fralic stepped in to cover the team’s hotel costs so it could get there a day early. His legend somehow got even bigger.