Football legend George Blanda dead at 83

Search

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
Messages
14,237
Tokens
CNN) -- Pro football Hall of Famer George Blanda, whose 26 seasons set a record for career longevity, has died at age 83, the Oakland Raiders announced Monday.
A quarterback who occasionally doubled as a placekicker, Blanda retired in 1975 at age 48. During stints with the Raiders, the Chicago Bears, Baltimore Colts and the Houston Oilers, he threw for 236 touchdowns and 27,000 yards.
Blanda died after a brief illness, the Pro Football Hall of Fame announced. He was a personal friend of Raiders owner Al Davis, who once called him "the greatest clutch player the game of pro football has ever known."
"Our heart goes out to his wife Betty and the Blanda family, and we grieve with them for our great friend," the team said.
 

New member
Joined
Nov 8, 2006
Messages
9,491
Tokens
Blanda dead at 83

Raiders legend George Blanda dies at 83


Dwight Chapin,Vittorio Tafur, Chronicle Staff Writers
San Francisco Chronicle September 27, 2010 12:08 PM Copyright San Francisco Chronicle. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Prod
Monday, September 27, 2010



articlebox_img_bg.gif

Courtesy photo
The Oakland Raiders George Blanda.



Images


Oakland Raiders


NFL


Fan Zone


Fan Shop

Get your Raiders gear here




San Francisco 49ers


NFL


Fan Zone


Fan Shop

Get your 49ers gear here




More Raiders



(09-27) 12:08 PDT -- Former Raider quarterback George Blanda, whose passing and kicking exploits during a 26-year NFL career led him to a spot in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, has died. He was 83.
Blanda was known as the Ageless Wonder because he didn't retire until he was just short of his 49th birthday.
And some of his best work came in his last decade in the NFL, with Oakland.
After playing college ball for Bear Bryant at the University of Kentucky, the Pennsylvania-born Blanda spent 10 seasons with George Halas and the Chicago Bears, helping lead them to the NFL title game in 1956.
When he left the Bears, in 1959, after a squabble over money and playing time, he retired for the first time and sat out a season.
The next season, Blanda was coaxed into joining the Houston Oilers of the American Football League.
"I signed with Houston because I knew Bud Adams (the team owner) had a lot of money," Blanda said.
As a quarterback and placekicker, he paced the Oilers to the first two AFL titles in 1960 and 1961.
"I will always think of myself as an AFL player," he once said.
Raiders owner Al Davis acquired the 39-year-old Blanda in 1967, after Blanda had put in 17 years of pro ball, for just a waiver price of $100, and Blanda played nine seasons in the Bay Area, often spectacularly, as a kicker and backup quarterback to Daryle Lamonica.
Blanda's most memorable season in Oakland was 1970, when in a five-game stretch, he won four games and tied another with his arm and/or foot, a feat that led to him being named AFC Player of the Year.
"Al Davis always liked my attitude, and my time with the Raiders was special, because it looked like my career was over" the always-blunt Blanda said. "Instead, I played another nine years, which by itself was more than twice the average playing career."
When he retired after the 1975 season, he had scored 2,002 points, a record that stood until kicker Gary Anderson broke it in the 2000 season. He also set marks for most career field-goal attempts (637), and most PATs made and attempted (943 of 959).
His 340-game career was the longest in league history, and his 26 years of service were five seasons longer than any other player.
With Davis as his presenter, Blanda was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1981.
"Two renegades, me and Al Davis," Blanda said. "It was great."
Among other things that day, Davis said, "George Blanda inspired a whole nation in 1970. I really believe he is the greatest clutch player in the history of this game."
Blanda was voted into the Bay Area Sports Hall of Fame in 1989.
After retirement, Blanda gave motivational speeches to corporate groups, played in 25 or more celebrity golf events around the country (he was a 7-handicapper) and followed another favorite sport, horse racing.
He and his wife, Betty, split time between Chicago and LaQuinta, near Palm Springs.
Vittorio Tafur covers the Raiders for The San Francisco Chronicle. Dwight Chapin is a former San Francisco Chronicle sportswriter.





 

New member
Joined
Nov 8, 2006
Messages
9,491
Tokens
I did not see this when I posted. Would a mod please combine them.
 

New member
Joined
Sep 20, 2004
Messages
29,752
Tokens
Rip....George Blanda

ALAMEDA, Calif. -- George Blanda, who played longer than anyone in pro football history and racked up the most points in a career that spanned four decades, mostly with the Chicago Bears and Oakland Raiders, died Monday. He was 83.

"We are deeply saddened by the passing of the great George Blanda," the Raiders said Monday in confirming his death. "George was a brave Raider and a close personal friend of Raiders owner Al Davis." The Pro Football Hall of Fame said on its website that Blanda died Monday after a brief illness.


George Blanda Bio
• 26 seasons (1949-'75)
• 1961 AFL Player of Year
• Won two AFL titles (1960, '61 with Houston)
• Four Pro Bowls
• 2,002 points
(NFL record at retirement)
• Pro Football Hall of Famer
(inducted in 1981)

-- ESPN Stats & Information

George Blanda's NFL career
NFL rank
Seasons 26 1st
Games 340* 4th
Points 2,002* 5th
PAT 943 1st
*NFL record at time of retirement

Blanda retired a month shy of his 49th birthday before the 1976 season. He spent 10 seasons with the Bears, part of one with the Baltimore Colts, seven with the Houston Oilers and his final nine with the Raiders.

He held the pro scoring record when he retired, with 2,002 points. He kicked 335 field goals and 943 extra points, running for nine touchdowns and throwing for 236 more.

He also threw for 26,920 yards in his career and held the pro football record with 277 interceptions until Brett Favre passed him in 2007. His points record stood until it was topped by several players in recent years.

"It certainly doesn't bother me," Blanda said about losing the scoring record. "The one record I was happy to get rid of was the one for the most interceptions, when Brett Favre got that one."

It was a five-game stretch for Oakland in 1970 that is the lasting imprint of his career. As a 43-year-old, Blanda led the Raiders to four wins and one tie with late touchdown passes or field goals.

Later that season, he became the oldest quarterback to play in a championship game, throwing two touchdown passes and kicking a field goal in Oakland's 27-17 loss to Baltimore in the AFC title game. His performance that season earned him The Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year.

Blanda joined the Oilers of the new American Football League in 1960 and played 16 seasons before hanging it up for good following the 1975 campaign. He led the Oilers to the first two AFL titles, beating the Chargers for the championship following the 1960 and '61 seasons.

He nearly won a third straight title when he led the Oilers back from a 17-0 halftime deficit to the Dallas Texans in the 1962 title game before losing in double overtime.

"George Blanda will always be remembered as a legend of our game," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement, "including his amazing career longevity of 26 seasons in four different decades. George's multi-talented flair for the dramatic highlighted the excitement of pro football during an important period of growth for our sport."

Blanda began his memorable run in 1970 by throwing three touchdown passes in place of an injured Daryle Lamonica in a 31-14 win over Pittsburgh on Oct. 25. The following week he kicked a 48-yard field goal in the final seconds to give the Raiders a 17-17 tie against Kansas City.

Blanda was just getting started. He threw a tying touchdown pass with 1:34 remaining and then kicked the game-winning 52-yard field goal in the final seconds the following week in a 23-20 win over Cleveland.


AP Photo/NFL Photos
George Blanda scored 2,002 points in his 26-year career, a pro football record when he retired a month shy of his 49th birthday.
He followed that with a 20-yard TD pass to Fred Biletnikoff in place of Lamonica in a 24-19 victory over Denver the next week, then kicked a 16-yard field goal in the closing seconds to beat San Diego 20-17 on Nov. 22.

"The game that I remember the most was playing against Cleveland in 1970," he once said. "We were down 20-13 and I came in and we got a touchdown and then we got a field goal in the last three seconds."

Blanda entered the NFL out of Kentucky as a 12th-round pick (119th overall) of the Chicago Bears in 1949. He spent most of the next decade with the Bears, leaving to play one game for the Colts in 1950. After winning the Bears starting job in 1953, Blanda promptly lost it the following season because of injury. His playing time at quarterback quickly diminished and he retired in 1959 at age 31 when Chicago planned to make him a full-time kicker. It was a short-lived break because he then joined the AFL's Oilers the next season.

Blanda was one of the new league's many prolific passers, throwing for 19,149 yards and 165 touchdowns in seven seasons for the Oilers. He was the AFL Player of the Year in 1961, holds AFL single-game passing record of 464 yards on Oct. 29, 1961, against Buffalo, and was chosen the league's all-time kicker.

"We did all the strategy right on the field," he once said. "Today, the coaches call all the plays, so all the quarterbacks have to do is perform. They are more or less programmed."

Oilers owner Bud Adams said Blanda's flair was a reason the AFL attracted so much attention.

"He was the perfect fit for the start of the AFL, joining our league from the NFL and displaying the ability to lead a high flying offense," Adams said in a statement. "His play garnered our league a lot of attention and fans. We had a celebration last year in Houston for the 1960 and 1961 AFL championship seasons and the team hall of fame members and it was great to have George join us and remember fondly those early years."

In 1967, the Oilers thought Blanda was at the end of his career, but the Raiders picked him up as a backup quarterback and kicker and he lasted nine more seasons.

"A seemingly ageless wonder, George inspired legions of fans over a 26-year career, with his clutch performances as a quarterback and place kicker. He will be truly missed," said Steve Perry, executive director of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
 

Member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Messages
714
Tokens
Hell of a year he had in 1970. He wanted to keep playing in 1976 but the Raiders forced him to retire.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,108,479
Messages
13,451,915
Members
99,416
Latest member
go789click
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com