About Rolf Benirschke
Through his work as the founder of the Great Comebacks™ Program, Rolf
has provided patients and family members who face the physical and emotional
challenges of Inflammatory Bowel Disease with hope, inspiration and education
for more than 20 years.
As the place-kicker for the San Diego Chargers for 10 seasons, Rolf
held 16 team records and was the third-most accurate kicker in league
history when he retired. What makes Rolf's football career
so remarkable is that he played the majority of his career with ulcerative
colitis and an ostomy.
After being diagnosed with IBD, Rolf played "sick" through
two seasons. Four weeks into the 1979 season, Rolf collapsed
on a team flight and needed emergency ostomy surgery. After
a month in the intensive care unit and his weight a frail 123 pounds,
he was finally released from the hospital. Rolf
was devastated not only about the prospect of never playing football
again, but also adjusting to life with an ileostomy.
Rolf amazingly returned to professional football the following year, healthier
and stronger than ever. He would play seven more seasons and retired as
the team's leading scorer, but Rolf is most proud of the visibility he has brought
to IBD and ostomy surgery through the Great Comebacks™ Program.
His field goal in a 1982 playoff game in Miami lifted the Chargers to
a 41-38 overtime victory against the Dolphins — a game that many sportswriters
still consider the most exciting NFL game ever played.
For Rolf, his illness turned out to be more than learning to cope with IBD
and ostomy surgery. It became an inspirational blessing that would define
a mission for the rest of his life — a passion for patients that is exemplified
in the spirit of the Great Comebacks™ Program.
In addition to being named 1979 "NFL Man of the Year," Benirschke
received such honors as "Comeback Player of the Year," the
Philadelphia Sportswriters Association's "Most Courageous Athlete,"
the NFL Players Association's "Hero of the Year" and the NFL
"Justice Byron 'Whizzer' White
Award," and played in the Pro Bowl. In 1997, he became the 20th
player inducted into the San Diego Chargers Hall of Fame.
Today, Rolf is a successful businessman in the San Diego community, an author,
TV personality and frequent motivational speaker for companies across the country.
Married with four children, Rolf volunteers his time for numerous organizations,
including the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America, San Diego Zoo, Scripps
Hospital, United Way, San Diego Chargers and the San Diego Blood Bank.