Kenny Walker (American football)


Kenny Wayne Walker is an American former professional gridiron football player who was a defensive lineman for the Denver Broncos and the first deaf player to have played in the Canadian Football League and one of only five to have played in the National Football League. He played college football for the Nebraska Cornhuskers

Biography

Walker became profoundly deaf from meningitis at the age of two. He is the second of only three deaf players in the history of the National Football League. Bonnie Sloan, who played in the 1970s, and Derrick Coleman of the Seattle Seahawks are the other deaf NFL players.
Walker starred at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. At his final home game for the Cornhuskers, the capacity crowd showed their appreciation for Walker by signing "applause" to him in unison. After playing in the Senior Bowl, the Broncos selected him in the eighth round of the 1991 NFL Draft.
Walker emerged as a regular for the Broncos in 1991, playing in all 16 games. The following year, he started in all but one of the team's games, but his career ended after that. Following his time in the NFL, Walker played a short, three-season stint in the Canadian Football League with the Calgary Stampeders and Winnipeg Blue Bombers, becoming the first deaf player in the history of the CFL. Additionally, Walker sued the Denver Broncos in 1995 for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act by misrepresenting his disability to other NFL teams. The outcome of the suit was not reported.
Walker published an autobiography Roar of Silence: The Kenny Walker Story in 1998, and also has a chapter dedicated to him in the book Great Deaf Americans.
In September 2010, Walker was hired as the defensive line coach at Gallaudet University, a federally-charted private university for the deaf that plays football in NCAA Division III. He would leave this position after only one season with the Gallaudet Bisons. Prior to this, Walker was a coach and counselor at the Iowa School for the Deaf.
In 2014, Walker was back in Denver, working as an assistant coach with the Highlands Ranch track team.