Floyd Little, Broncos Hall of Fame running back, dies at age 78
Little was the Broncos’ first franchise player in the 1960s and ’70s
He was not on the list.
The first great player in Broncos history has passed away.
Floyd Little, the franchise’s star during years of struggles in the 1960s and ‘70s, died Friday night following a battle with a rare form of cell cancer.
He was 78.
Universally beloved by his alma mater Syracuse, by Broncos Country and by contemporaries in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Little’s passion for football, energy for helping others and overall enthusiasm for life created unforgettable memories.
“Floyd Little was a true hero of the game,” Pro Football Hall of Fame president David Baker said. “He was a man of great integrity, passion and courage. His contributions off the field were even greater than his amazing accomplishments he did on it. Floyd’s smile, heart and character epitomized what it meant to have a Hall of Fame life.”
Little, who resided in the Las Vegas area, began chemotherapy treatments last May and his former Syracuse teammate and long-time friend, Pat Killorin, started a GoFundMe to help cover the medical expenses. On Nov. 21, Killorin announced Little had been placed in hospice.
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement Little “was not only a Hall of Fame running back, he was a Hall of Fame person. Faith, family and football were the pillars of his life. I was so fortunate to know Floyd and witnessed first-hand the impact he had on others.”
Little is a member of the College Football Hall of Fame (1983), the Broncos’ inaugural Ring of Fame class (1984) and the Pro Football Hall of Fame (2010).
Little joined the Broncos in their eighth year of existence (1967) and was their bright light as the team struggled to become competitive. A five-time Pro Bowl selection and one-time All Pro, Little played all of his 117 games for the Broncos, retiring in 1975 with 6,323 yards rushing and a combined 53 rushing/receiving/return touchdowns.
“Without question, Floyd was one of the greatest Broncos of all-time and an unforgettable part of our history,” Broncos president/CEO Joe Ellis said in a statement Saturday. “He rightfully earned the nickname, ‘The Franchise,’ for his profound impact on this organization, helping put the Broncos on the pro football map in the early days.”
Little’s No. 44 is one of only three jerseys retired by the Broncos, joining quarterback John Elway (No. 7) and quarterbacks Frank Tripucka/Peyton Manning (No. 18).
Little is survived by his wife, DeBorah, three children (Marc, Christy and Kyra) and five grandchildren.
Connection with Ernie Davis
Floyd Little was born July 4, 1942, in New Haven, Conn., and attended Hillhouse High School in New Haven and Bordentown Military Institute in New Jersey. He was six when his father died of cancer.
Little was recruited by the United States Military Academy (led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur), Notre Dame and Syracuse. Little’s meeting with MacArthur was at the Waldorf Astoria in New York and included meeting baseball stars Roy Campanella and Elston Howard.
“General MacArthur pretty much guaranteed that I’d become the first African-American general,” Little said in 2010. “When you think about that, I could’ve been Colin Powell’s boss. I could’ve been General (Norman) Schwarzkopf’s boss. I could’ve been General (David) Petraeus’ boss. Just think about that.”
According to reports, Little chose Syracuse on the advice of former Orange running back Ernie Davis, who visited Little in Connecticut. At Syracuse, Little continued the tradition of star running backs who wore No. 44, following Jim Brown and Davis.
A three-time All-America selection from 1964-66 (freshmen
were ineligible to play), Little rushed for 2,704 yards and 46 touchdowns. He
finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy balloting in ’65 and ’66. Little played in
the same Orange backfield as future Hall of Fame running back Larry Csonka and
two-time Super Bowl-winning coach Tom Coughlin.
In 2010, decades after his college career, Little returned to Syracuse to be a special assistant to the athletic director, aiding with fundraising, recruiting and mentoring.
“No one loves Syracuse University as Floyd Little loves Syracuse University — he truly is Mr. Syracuse University,” Coughlin said.
As Little was starring for the football team, Jim Boeheim was playing for the Syracuse basketball team and has been the program’s coach since 1976.
“Floyd was one of a kind on and off the field,” Boeheim said in comments distributed by Syracuse on Saturday. “He could make anybody smile. He could get along with everybody. He had everybody feel good about themselves and everything else. … It’s hard to explain how great of a person Floyd Little was. There is nobody better than Floyd Little in any way, shape or form, on the field or off the field.
“It was a privilege just to know Floyd Little.”
Upon his return to Syracuse, Little said Davis, who died at age 24 in 1963 due to leukemia, was the motivating factor.
“My life has been tied to Ernie’s life because I wanted to
be the Ernie Davis that he couldn’t be,” Little said. “That’s how I lived my
life, because of Ernie Davis not having a chance to live his.”
Little worked at Syracuse until 2016, when he and his wife relocated to Las Vegas.
“Floyd Little embodied what it means to be Orange,” Syracuse
Chancellor Kent Syverud said in a statement. “He was an all-American
student-athlete. He set records in the NFL. He achieved success in the business
world. Floyd mentored countless student-athletes and dedicated his time, energy
and resources to improving the lives of others. He was a great friend, to me
and to his beloved Syracuse University. … Floyd Little, No. 44, will forever be
our Orange MVP.”
Joe Biden was a Syracuse Law School student when Little played for the Orange and the two remained in contact for the ensuing decades.
“He was full of character, decency and integrity,” Biden said in a statement released Saturday night. “I remember our call when he was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the joy in his voice. And I remember the more recent call when he shared his cancer diagnosis and how fearless he was in his conviction to fight it.
“As with everything else he did in life, Floyd lived to the very end with grit and heart and love for his family and faith in God. I will miss my friend. He was a good man.”
Still looking for their first winning season, the Broncos chose Little sixth overall in the 1967 AFL/NFL draft. Four players from the first round would become Hall of Fame members — Purdue quarterback Bob Griese (fourth to Miami), Notre Dame defensive tackle Alan Page (15th to Minnesota) and Texas A&M guard Gene Upshaw (17th to Oakland).
Griese and Upshaw became Super Bowl champions and Page played in four title games. Team success, though, eluded Little for his entire Broncos career.
Playing on struggling teams and with mix-and-match quarterbacks, Little was long the Broncos’ shining light. He was the NFL rushing champion in 1971 (1,133 yards) and currently ranks second in team history in rushing attempts (1,641), yards (6,323) and touchdowns (43), behind fellow Hall of Famer Terrell Davis in all three categories.
Little never appeared in a playoff game and was a part of only two winning teams (7-5-2 in ’73 and 7-6-1 in ’74), but his contributions to making pro football in this region a hit will never be forgotten.
Little led the Broncos in rushing seven times, and the
season-ticket base rose from 24,650 to 49,000 during his career.
“Without Floyd Little, there would be no Denver Broncos,” said Tom Mackie, who co-authored Little’s 2006 autobiography, in a 2010 interview with the Post’s Mark Kiszla. “Either they don’t get picked up by the NFL in the merger or they move to Alabama and become the Birmingham Broncos.”
Think about this: In the first 23 years of Broncos history, Little was the only eventual Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee to play for the franchise. From 1983-2002, six eventual Hall of Famers starred for Denver.
Translation: For many years, Little was It for the Broncos.
Little’s first six Broncos teams never won more than five games. The AFL West in those days was ruled by Kansas City and Oakland. But he led the AFL in 1969 in yards per rush (5.0) and yards per game (81.0) and earned All-Pro honors.
In Little’s final home game, against Philadelphia in December 1975, he scored on a 66-yard catch and a two-yard rush.
At the time of his retirement, he ranked seventh all-time in rushing and he had nearly 5,000 more yards rushing than the next-closest Broncos player.
Little was universally beloved by fans and teammates and widely respected by opponents.
Two days after he played his 117th and final pro football
game, and one day after he announced his retirement, Floyd Little was honored
in a letter to the editor that appeared in the Dec. 22, 1975, Miami Herald.
“I always dreaded seeing him come out of the backfield on a
pass pattern or get the handoff from the quarterback, always wondering how I
would ever stop him. No matter how bruised and battered he was after the game,
he always managed to find me in the middle of the field to say hello and ask
about my health. … He is a person which all children can look up to and the
parents can honestly say, ‘I hope my child grows up to be like him.’”
The letter was signed “Nicholas A. Buoniconti,” Dolphins linebacker.
Little’s wait for pro football immortality was frustrating. He had the support of his contemporaries, like former Baltimore Colts tight end/NFL Players Association president John Mackey, who wrote to the selection committee: “If there’s no room for Floyd Little in the Hall of Fame, please take me out and put him in.”
Thirty-five years after his retirement, Little was selected for induction. Shortly after, he received a call from former Pittsburgh defensive lineman “Mean” Joe Greene.
“He said, ‘Floyd, you’re the best football player I’ve ever played against in my 16 years,’” Little said in a February 2019 interview. “I said, ‘Joe, are you serious?’ And he said, ‘You’re the best football player. Not running back. Best football player I played against.’”
What did Nick Buoniconti and “Mean Joe” see? The first great Broncos player. Period.
“If I were a (New York) Jet and had the same career I had, I would have been in a long time ago,” Little said in 2010.
Maybe so, but Little never let his long wait dampen his enthusiasm for having a bust in Canton, Ohio.
On August 7, 2010, Little was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame alongside Jerry Rice, Emmitt Smith, Russ Grimm, Rickey Jackson, John Randle, and Dick LeBeau.
In February 2019, the Hall of Famers gathered in a second-floor ballroom at the Atlanta Marriott Marquis for the annual Merlin Olsen Luncheon. Little walked over to the Denver media contingent on hand to cover the next night’s selection of owner Pat Bowlen and cornerback Champ Bailey.
If there is somebody who enjoyed being a Hall of Famer more than Floyd Little, they need to step forward. He loved the jacket. He loved going back to Canton. He loved all of the events with his colleagues. He loved it all.
As the interview was breaking up, Little was asked, “What’s it really like to be a Hall of Famer?”
“I tell the guys, if you’re not feeling well, you’re sick, you have a little cold, just can’t get started — go to your closet and put this baby on,” he said of his gold jacket. “You will feel so much better. Wearing one of these is one of the great experiences in my life.
“I love wearing it. It makes me feel different.”
Little was a charter member of the Broncos' Ring of Fame in 1984, which also included; Rich Jackson, Lionel Taylor, and Goose Gonsoulin. His notable teammates and coaches include: Lou Saban, Stan Jones, Sam Rutigliano, Marlin Briscoe, Paul Smith, Billy Thompson, Dave Washington, Jerry Smith, Lyle Alzado, Riley Odoms, Haven Moses, Charley Johnson, John Ralston, Tom Jackson, Otis Armstrong, Randy Gradishar, Rick Upchurch, Louis Wright and Jim Turner.
Little
finished 40th in his class of 140 at the University of Denver law school, from
which he received his masters in legal administration degree in 1975. Little
owned automobile dealerships in Denver, the Seattle area and Santa Barbara. In
May 2020, his former Syracuse teammate Pat Killorin announced that Little had
been fighting cancer.
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