Saturday, July 15, 2017

Babe Parilli obit

Former Patriots QB Vito 'Babe' Parilli Dies at Age 87



He was not on the list.


Former New England Patriots quarterback Vito "Babe" Parilli, who made the NFL's All-Decade team for the 1960s, died Saturday.

He was 87.

Ben Volin of the Boston Globe shared the announcement from the Patriots:

    Ben Volin @BenVolin

    RIP former Patriots QB Babe Parilli https://t.co/3nsCXwUpRt

Patriots owner Robert Kraft released a statement on Parilli's death on Sunday:

    New England Patriots @Patriots

    Statement from Robert Kraft on the passing of Vito “Babe” Parilli: https://t.co/UpwBJkUAzL

The fourth overall pick in the 1952 NFL draft, Parilli bounced around six franchises (five in the AFL/NFL and one in the CFL) during a career that spanned nearly two decades. He played for the Green Bay Packers, Ottawa Rough Riders, Cleveland Browns, Oakland Raiders and New York Jets in addition to the then-Boston Patriots.
 
A three-time AFL All-Star, Parilli had his most success with the Patriots. He was an All-Pro in 1964, he won Comeback Player of the Year honors in 1966, and all three of his All-Star selections came when he was with the franchise.
 
Parilli ranks fourth in franchise history in passing yards (16,747) and touchdown passes (132). The Patriots inducted him into their Hall of Fame in 1993, and he's also a member of the College Football Hall of Fame for his career at Kentucky.

Parilli was born and raised in Rochester, Pennsylvania, an industrial town northwest of Pittsburgh, Parilli graduated from Rochester High School in 1948.

Parilli then played college football at the University of Kentucky in Lexington, and was a quarterback for the Wildcats under head coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. He was a consensus All-American in 1950 and 1951 and was fourth in the Heisman Trophy voting in 1950 and third in 1951. He led the Wildcats to victories in consecutive New Year's Day bowl games in the 1951 Sugar Bowl and 1952 Cotton Bowl.

At age 30, Parilli was picked up by the Oakland Raiders of the fledgling American Football League on August 17, 1960, and threw for just over 1,000 yards that season.

On April 4, 1961, he was part of a five-player trade that sent him to the Boston Patriots,[2][3] and he went on to become one of the AFL's most productive and colorful players. Playing for the Patriots from 1961 through 1967, Parilli finished his career with over 25,000 total yards and 200 touchdowns, ending among the top five quarterbacks in 23 categories such as passing yards, passing touchdowns and rushing yards. Parilli was selected for three All-Star Games. In 1964, throwing primarily to Gino Cappelletti, Parilli amassed nearly 3,500 yards passing with 31 touchdowns; the latter was a Patriots record until Tom Brady broke it in 2007. During that season's contest against the Oakland Raiders on October 16, he threw for 422 yards and four touchdown passes in a 43–43 tie. Parilli is a member of the Patriots All-1960s (AFL) Team.

Parilli completed his career with the New York Jets, where he earned a ring as Joe Namath's backup in Super Bowl III, when the Jets stunned the Baltimore Colts by a 16–7 score. Coincidentally, this gave the Jets two quarterbacks from Pennsylvania's Beaver County, with Parilli being from Rochester and Namath being from nearby Beaver Falls and both played for "Bear" Bryant in college, Namath at Alabama. In 1967, it was discovered by Life magazine that Parilli and several other professional athletes were regular patrons of Patriarca crime family mobster Arthur Ventola's major fencing operation called Arthur's Farm in Revere, Massachusetts. Despite the organized crime connection, journalist Howie Carr stated that there was never any inside information passed between Parilli and Ventola. Arthur was the uncle of mob associate Richard Castucci.

Besides his considerable skills as a quarterback, he was one of the best holders in the history of football and was nicknamed "gold-finger" as a result of kicker Jim Turner's then-record 145 points kicked in 1968 (plus another 19 points in the play-offs and in Super Bowl III). He is one of only 20 players who were in the American Football League for its entire ten-year existence, and is a member of the University of Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame. In 1982, Parilli was named to the College Football Hall of Fame.

Because of their Italian surnames, the Patriots' wide receiver-quarterback duo of Cappelletti and Parilli was nicknamed "Grand Opera."

Career history

As a player:

 

    Green Bay Packers (1952–1953)

    Ottawa Rough Riders (1954–1955)

    Cleveland Browns (1956)

    Green Bay Packers (1957–1958)

    Ottawa Rough Riders (1959)

    Oakland Raiders (1960)

    Boston Patriots (1961–1967)

    New York Jets (1968–1969)

In 1974, Parilli became the head coach of the New York Stars of the World Football League; after going bankrupt, the franchise moved to Charlotte mid-season. The next year, he was tabbed as coach of the WFL's Chicago Winds, and briefly seemed to have a chance to coach his old teammate, Joe Namath. But Namath turned Chicago down, and Parilli was replaced in late July after only two pre-season games. (The Winds would play only five regular-season contests before folding, and the rest of the WFL would collapse a few months later.) Parilli would later coach in the Arena Football League, helming the New England Steamrollers, Denver Dynamite, Charlotte Rage, Las Vegas Sting, Anaheim Piranhas and Florida Bobcats

As a coach:

 

    Pittsburgh Steelers (1973) (quarterbacks)

    New York Stars (1974)

    Charlotte Hornets (1975)

    New England Steamrollers (1988)

    Denver Dynamite (1989–1991)

    Charlotte Rage (1992)

    Las Vegas Sting (1994–1995)

    Anaheim Piranhas (1996)

    Florida Bobcats (1997)

  Some of his teammates included:

Tom Addison, Fred Bruney, Gino Cappelletti, Bob Dee, Larry Garron, Jim Lee Hunt,  Chuck Leo, Jim Colclough, Charlie Long, Dick Felt, Larry Eisenhauer, Nick Buoniconti, Houston Antwine, Billy Neighbors,  Jon Morris, Jim Nance, Len. St. Jean, Chuck Shonta, Tom Neville, Don Oakes, Winston Hill, Bill Mathis, Don Maynard, George Sauer, Jr.,  Clayton Massey, Pete Brewster and Tom Flores.

In 1974, Parilli became the head coach of the New York Stars of the World Football League; after going bankrupt, the franchise moved to Charlotte (Hornets) mid-season. The next year, he was tabbed as coach of the WFL's Chicago Winds, and briefly seemed to have a chance to coach his old teammate, Joe Namath. But Namath turned Chicago down, and Parilli was replaced in late July after only two pre-season games. (The Winds would play only five regular-season contests before folding, and the rest of the WFL would collapse a few months later.) Parilli would later coach in the Arena Football League, helming the New England Steamrollers, Denver Dynamite, Charlotte Rage, Las Vegas Sting, Anaheim Piranhas and Florida Bobcats.

 

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