Frank Gifford, Star for Giants and in the Broadcast Booth, Dies at 84
He was number 109 on the list.
Frank Gifford, a gleaming hero of sports and television in
an era when such things were possible, who moved seamlessly from stardom in the
Giants’ offense to celebrity in the broadcast booth of “Monday Night Football,”
died on Sunday at his home in Greenwich, Conn. He was 84.
His family confirmed the death in a statement.
A shifty running back and later a cagey and clutch receiver
who was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1977, Gifford began his
career at a time when the professional game was overshadowed by college
football and by Major League Baseball — hardly the American obsession it has
become. But as much as anyone, he helped push it in that direction.
By the time he retired as a player (for the second time) in
1964, the Giants and the National Football League had gained the national sports
spotlight, and the versatile and handsome Gifford had become a celebrity. A few
years later, in the early 1970s, he became one of the best-known figures in
television sports (and maybe television in general).
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As the play-by-play man of ABC’s “Monday Night Football,”
Gifford, with his low-key persona, provided the perfect backdrop to bring his
boothmates — the contentious Howard Cosell (who died in 1995) and the
country-boy-irreverent Don Meredith (who died in 2010) — into high relief. It
was a formula that made the weekly autumn broadcasts must-see programming for
much of America.
As a player, Gifford was the personification of the Giants
during their glory years in the 1950s and early ’60s, the best-known figure on
teams that featured many other stars, including quarterbacks Charlie Conerly and
Y. A. Tittle, linebacker Sam Huff, fullback Alex Webster, defensive back Emlen
Tunnell, defensive linemen Andy Robustelli and Roosevelt Grier, and his fellow
running back and receiver Kyle Rote.
Gifford played for the team from 1952 until 1960, when a
brutal injury interrupted and nearly finished his career. By then he had made
seven consecutive Pro Bowls, been named to the all-N.F.L. first team four times
and helped the Giants reach three N.F.L. championship games. They won one of
them, 47-7, over the Chicago Bears in 1956, the same year Gifford was named the
league’s most valuable player.
It was on Nov. 20, 1960, that Gifford was the recipient of
one of football history’s most famous tackles. Playing against the Philadelphia
Eagles, he caught a pass over the middle and was running with the ball when he
was leveled, hit high and flattened by Chuck Bednarik, the Eagles’ rough
linebacker and a future Hall of Famer himself.
Gifford dropped the ball and lay motionless on the turf as
Bednarik waved his arms and shook his fists, an image that became one of
football’s most memorable photographs. Bednarik later said he did not
immediately know that Gifford was hurt, and Gifford himself said he considered
the hit perfectly legal and bore Bednarik, who died in March, no resentment.
Gifford was carted off the field with a concussion, ending
his season, and in February 1961 he announced his retirement.
He returned, however, after missing only the 1961 season,
and his career had a resilient second act. In three subsequent years, the
Giants reached the N.F.L. championship game twice (losing to the Green Bay
Packers in 1962 and the Bears in 1963), and Gifford returned to the Pro Bowl in
1963.
All told, Gifford ran for 3,609 yards and 34 touchdowns,
caught 367 passes for 5,434 yards and 43 touchdowns, and threw 14 touchdown
passes on the halfback option.
“Frank Gifford was the ultimate Giant,” John Mara, the
team’s president, said in a statement on Sunday. “He was the face of our
franchise for so many years.”
Francis Newton Gifford was born on Aug. 16, 1930, in Santa
Monica, Calif., one of three children of an oil-field worker hard pressed to
find a steady job amid the Depression. By the time Gifford was in high school, his
father, Weldon, had moved the family 47 times, traveling through California and
West Texas.
Gifford became a single-wing tailback at Bakersfield High
School in California and then displayed his versatility at the University of
Southern California, where he was an all-American, running and passing out of
the single wing, playing in the defensive backfield and place-kicking.
While at U.S.C., he developed a persona, however modest,
beyond the football field, gaining Hollywood bit parts. In the 1951 Dean
Martin-Jerry Lewis football movie “That’s My Boy,” it was Gifford who kicked
the winning field goal as the stand-in for Lewis. A handsome campus hero,
Gifford made his mark in contemporary literature as well, serving as the
glittering object of envy for one of his classmates, Frederick Exley, whose
1968 memoir, “A Fan’s Notes,” is a staple of the genre (although the author
freely acknowledged that some of it was fiction).
The Giants selected Gifford in the first round of the 1952
draft, and in his first two seasons, the team’s longtime coach Steve Owen often
played him in the defensive backfield. But Gifford also filled in at halfback
for the celebrated Rote, who had injured his knee and was eventually switched
to receiver.
Before the 1954 season, the Giants’ fortunes, as well as
Gifford’s, began to turn when Owen was fired and replaced by Jim Lee Howell,
who hired Vince Lombardi to coach the offense and Tom Landry to oversee the
defense. Lombardi gave Gifford the left halfback spot, and he soon thrived on
power sweeps, taking handoffs from Conerly and following the pulling guards.
Gifford usually ran upfield, but he also proved effective throwing the ball on
the option play.
He was in his prime when the Giants defeated the Bears to
win the 1956 championship. Two years later, in a thrilling championship game
often cited for turning the fortunes of the N.F.L. because it was televised
nationally, Gifford ran for 60 yards on 12 carries and caught a go-ahead
touchdown pass in the fourth quarter, although the Giants lost in overtime,
23-17, to the Baltimore Colts. In 1959, the Colts rubbed salt in the wound,
beating the Giants for the championship again.
By that time, Gifford had become a part of the New York
celebrity scene. He appeared in advertisements for Lucky Strike cigarettes and
Vitalis hair tonic. He made a guest appearance on the television show “What’s
My Line?” and became a regular at Toots Shor’s, a Midtown restaurant and bar
that drew high-profile figures from sports and the political world.
Gifford long remained in the public eye as the husband of
Kathie Lee Gifford. He hosted "Today" with her in 2009.
“All of a sudden, in a city where Mickey Mantle was a god
and the memory of Joe DiMaggio even more sacred, there was an awareness of
another sport, another player, another team,” Gifford recalled in his memoir,
“The Whole Ten Yards,” written with Harry Waters (1994). “I was the player, and
the Giants were the team. Heady stuff — and I loved it.”
Gifford’s luster remained undimmed after he retired as a
player. He joined “Monday Night Football” in 1971, its second season, and the
program — conceived by Roone Arledge, ABC’s director of sports, as a prime-time
spectacle — became a TV phenomenon. As the game broadcaster and later as an
analyst and briefly as a pregame host, Gifford remained with the show through
the 1998 season, an evenhanded presence amid the theatrics provided by Cosell
and Meredith and a host of others.
“Roone saw it not so much as a football game as an
entertainment show,” Gifford said in his memoir. “Howard was the elitist New York
know-it-all, the bombastic lawyer Middle America loved to hate. Don was the
good ol’ country boy who put Howard in his place. As for me, I was cast as the
nice guy, the guy who got the numbers out and the names down and the game
played.”
After his concussion led to his first retirement, Gifford
broadcast sports on the radio for CBS and became a Giants scout. When he
rejoined the Giants, who had reached the league championship game once again in
1961 under Allie Sherman, Sherman played him at flanker.
Frank Gifford was one of a kind. I had the pleasure of
meeting him and Kathie Lee in the Bahamas years back. They were both very
gracious....
Gifford started the season on the bench, but in the second
game of the season, against Pittsburgh, he caught two big passes, one for a
touchdown, from Tittle, a quarterback with whom he had not played before.
“All of a sudden, he got me in the huddle,” Gifford recalled
about Tittle in a television interview years later. “And he said, ‘Got
something, Frank?’ I said, ‘Yeah.’ ”
He added: “We needed a big play, it was third-and-long, and
somehow I caught the ball. We get the first down, and I came back, and he said,
‘What else you got?’ I said, ‘A fly — give me a fly.’ Again he looked at me,
like, ‘You out of your mind?’
“It was the most important catch of my life, I think. And I
caught it just by the tip of the ball. And I was back.”
When Gifford retired after the 1964 season, he returned to
CBS as a TV sports broadcaster, and he remained with the network until joining
ABC. In addition to “Monday Night Football,” he appeared on ABC’s “Wide World
of Sports” and as part of its Olympic coverage.
Gifford was also in the public eye long after his playing
days as the husband of Kathie Lee Gifford, a longtime co-host, with Regis
Philbin, of the morning program “Live With Regis & Kathie Lee.” Frank
Gifford occasionally filled in as a host.
In the late 1990s, Gifford’s image was tainted when his
affair with an airline stewardess (who later posed for Playboy) became tabloid
fodder. And in 2013, a book about Johnny Carson by his lawyer, Henry Bushkin,
claimed that in 1970, when Gifford was married to his second wife, Astrid
Lindley, Gifford had an affair with Carson’s wife.
Gifford’s marriage to Lindley ended in divorce, as had his
marriage to his first wife, the former Maxine Ewart. He married Kathie Lee
Epstein in 1986. In addition to her, his survivors include their son, Cody, and
their daughter, Cassidy, as well as two sons, Jeff and Kyle, and a daughter,
Victoria, from his first marriage.
None of the tumult in Gifford’s personal life dulled his
light in the eyes of longtime Giants fans, or longtime Giants.
When he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame,
Gifford was presented by Wellington Mara, the Giants’ owner at the time, whose
roots with the franchise extended to its founding in the 1920s.
In 1997, when Mara (who died in 2005) was inducted into the
Hall, he selected Gifford as his presenter. He is one of many Giants in the Hall of Fame including: Morris Red Badgro, Benny Friedman, Harry Carson, Roosevelt Brown,
Frank Gifford, Mel Hein, Sam Huff, Tuffy Leemans, Tim Mara, Steve Owen, Andy
Robustelli, Ken Strong, Fran Tarkenton, Lawrence Taylor, Y.A. Tittle, Emlen
Tunnell, Ray Flaherty, Arnie Herber, Robert Cal Hubbard and Arnie Weinmeister.
Three years after that, Mara surprised Gifford at a dinner
honoring him for his nearly half-century association with the N.F.L. Mara held
aloft a white Giants jersey with Gifford’s No. 16 and announced its retirement.
As Mara put it, “he’s an all-time all-timer with us.”
Filmography
Film
Year Title Role Notes ref
1953 All American Stan Pomeroy
1959 Up Periscope Ensign Cy Mount
1973 The World’s Greatest Athlete Himself
1996 Jerry Maguire Himself
2002 Three Days of Rain Extra
2011 Beatles Stories Guest
Television
Year Title Role Notes ref
1956 What's My Line? Himself
1962 Captain Kangaroo Himself Episode: "October 6, 1962" (S 8:Ep 30)
1963 Our Man Higgins Guest Episode: "Delinquent for a Day" (S 1:Ep 30)
Hazel Himself Episode: "Hazel and the Halfback" (S 3:Ep 15)
1964 What's My Line? Guest Episode: "EPISODE #732" (S 16:Ep 4)
The Reporter Himself Episode: "How Much For A Prince" (S 1:Ep 3)
1971–97 Monday Night Football Play by Play Announcer Main
1975 The Way It Was Panelist Episode: "1958 NFL Championship" (S 1:Ep 1)
$10,000 Pyramid Himself Episode: "Kate Jackson & Frank Gifford" (S 3: Ep 36–40)
Episode: "Sandy Duncan & Frank Gifford" (S 4:Ep 12–16)
1976 The Six Million Dollar Man Himself Episode: "The Bionic Boy, part 1" (S 4:Ep 8)
1977 The San Pedro Beach Bums Himself Episode: "The Shortest Yard" (S 1:Ep 2)
1981 The Primetime Emmy Awards Himself Episode: "The 33rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards" (S 33:Ep 1)
1984 Webster Himself Episode: "You Can't Go Home Again" (S 2:Ep 7)
1993 The Adventures of Pete & Pete Himself Episode: "Range Boy" (S 1:Ep 4)
1995 Coach Himself Episode: "The Day I Met Frank Gifford" (S 7:Ep 20)
1996 Coach Himself Episode: "You Win Some, You Lose Some" (S 9:Ep 8)
1997 Spin City Himself Episode: "An Affair to Remember" (S 1:Ep 17)
1999 Biography Himself Episode: "Kathie Lee Gifford: Having it All" (S 2:Ep 33)
2000–05 SportsCentury ABC Sports Reporter Recurring
2004 ESPN25: Who's#1? Interviewee Episode: "Most Outrageous Characters" (S 1:Ep 5)
2007 Intimate Portrait Guest
2008 Celebrity Family Feud Himself Episode: "Episode 106" (S 1:Ep 2)
TMZ on TV Himself Episode: "Episode #2.029" (S 2:Ep 29)
Center Stage Guest Episode: "Frank Gifford" (S 4:Ep 6)
2009 Psych Play-by-Play voice
Filmography
Film
Year Title Role Notes ref
1953 All American Stan Pomeroy
1959 Up Periscope Ensign Cy Mount
1973 The World’s Greatest Athlete Himself
1996 Jerry Maguire Himself
2002 Three Days of Rain Extra
2011 Beatles Stories Guest
Television
Year Title Role Notes ref
1956 What's My Line? Himself
1962 Captain Kangaroo Himself Episode: "October 6, 1962" (S 8:Ep 30)
1963 Our Man Higgins Guest Episode: "Delinquent for a Day" (S 1:Ep 30)
Hazel Himself Episode: "Hazel and the Halfback" (S 3:Ep 15)
1964 What's My Line? Guest Episode: "EPISODE #732" (S 16:Ep 4)
The Reporter Himself Episode: "How Much For A Prince" (S 1:Ep 3)
1971–97 Monday Night Football Play by Play Announcer Main
1975 The Way It Was Panelist Episode: "1958 NFL Championship" (S 1:Ep 1)
$10,000 Pyramid Himself Episode: "Kate Jackson & Frank Gifford" (S 3: Ep 36–40)
Episode: "Sandy Duncan & Frank Gifford" (S 4:Ep 12–16)
1976 The Six Million Dollar Man Himself Episode: "The Bionic Boy, part 1" (S 4:Ep 8)
1977 The San Pedro Beach Bums Himself Episode: "The Shortest Yard" (S 1:Ep 2)
1981 The Primetime Emmy Awards Himself Episode: "The 33rd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards" (S 33:Ep 1)
1984 Webster Himself Episode: "You Can't Go Home Again" (S 2:Ep 7)
1993 The Adventures of Pete & Pete Himself Episode: "Range Boy" (S 1:Ep 4)
1995 Coach Himself Episode: "The Day I Met Frank Gifford" (S 7:Ep 20)
1996 Coach Himself Episode: "You Win Some, You Lose Some" (S 9:Ep 8)
1997 Spin City Himself Episode: "An Affair to Remember" (S 1:Ep 17)
1999 Biography Himself Episode: "Kathie Lee Gifford: Having it All" (S 2:Ep 33)
2000–05 SportsCentury ABC Sports Reporter Recurring
2004 ESPN25: Who's#1? Interviewee Episode: "Most Outrageous Characters" (S 1:Ep 5)
2007 Intimate Portrait Guest
2008 Celebrity Family Feud Himself Episode: "Episode 106" (S 1:Ep 2)
TMZ on TV Himself Episode: "Episode #2.029" (S 2:Ep 29)
Center Stage Guest Episode: "Frank Gifford" (S 4:Ep 6)
2009 Psych Play-by-Play voice
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