Hoppe attended and played high school football at Chattanooga Central High School, where he led his team to three state championships and two undefeated seasons. As halfback in Central's T formation he was dubbed the Chattanooga Choo Choo and Hippity Hoppe by local sports writers. Hoppe earned his nicknames as a prolific running back, gaining nearly 1,500 yards in his senior season and scoring 33 touchdowns during his junior and senior seasons. He was named the first high school All-American from Chattanooga, TN after his senior season.
College career
Hoppe was one of the most highly recruited football players of his era with 19 colleges seeking his commitment, including Auburn, Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, North Carolina, Vanderbilt, Tennessee, Florida, Mississippi, South Carolina, Louisiana State, Miami, Rice, Indiana, SMU, and Texas Tech. He accepted a scholarship to play for Auburn under head football coachShug Jordan. After a high school career as a running back, Hoppe became known in the Southeastern Conference both as a devastating blocking back from the right halfback position and as a hard hitting defensive back on the national championship team. He also continued to run the football and finished his Auburn career in 4th position on the all-time rushing list. Hoppe's played his senior season under a heavy personal cloud that did not come fully to light until 31 years later. Just prior to his senior season Hoppe allegedly shot and killed a Chattanooga bootlegger, Don Hudson. Hoppe was not indicted for the shooting until 1988.
Professional career
Hoppe was drafted by the San Francisco 49ers in the third round, and traded to the Washington Redskins after one year. He was injured shortly after the trade. He made a short comeback with the Chattanooga Cherokees in 1965.
In 1988, thirty-one years after Don Hudson was killed, a Chattanooga grand jury indicted Bobby Hoppe for his murder, in one of America's first cold case trials. Hoppe's trial became a national media event that ended with a hung jury. Hoppe was defended by Bobby Lee Cook of Georgia, one of the most noted defense attorneys in the United States whose clients included Jimmy Hoffa, along with Chattanooga attorney Leroy Phillips. Hoppe's wife, Sherry Lee Hoppe, wrote in 2010, "My husband Bobby shot a man, and he died. I wish it were not so, but it is. It happened in 1957, and Bobby hid the terrible truth for 31 years."