Former Atlanta Falcons, Texas great Tommy Nobis dies at 74
He was not on the list.
Tommy Nobis, the first player drafted by the expansion
Atlanta Falcons and a hard-hitting middle linebacker who was never fully
recognized for his talents on a struggling franchise that failed to make the
playoffs during his long career, died Wednesday. He was 74.
The team said he died at his suburban Atlanta home after an
extended illness with his wife of more than 50 years, Lynn, at his side. Nobis
was among hundreds of ex-NFL players who struggled with physical and cognitive
ailments after their careers ended, having played in an era when no one paid
much attention to the lingering impact of concussions nor thought twice about
groggily going back on the field after a shot to the head.
When the Falcons reached the Super Bowl last season, his
wife told the Houston Chronicle she wasn't sure if Nobis had any idea what his
former team had accomplished.
"We've told him the Falcons are in the Super Bowl, and
we wear red and black," Lynn Nobis said. "But it doesn't seem to
click. I don't know if he understands."
A native of San Antonio who sported a red-headed crew cut,
Nobis starred on both sides of the line at the University of Texas, where his
No. 60 is one of six numbers retired by the school. Despite being slowed by a
knee injury during his senior season, he won the Maxwell Award as the nation's
best all-around player and the Outland Trophy as top lineman. He also finished
seventh in the Heisman Trophy balloting — highest among those who played
defense — and appeared on the cover of Life and Sports Illustrated.
"The best defender in college football," SI
declared .
He was drafted first overall by the Falcons and also picked
by his home-state Houston Oilers of the American Football League, leading to a
spirited bidding war that drew interest as far away as outer space. While
orbiting the Earth in his Gemini spacecraft, astronaut Frank Borman — whose two
sons were ball boys for the Oilers — urged Nobis to sign with Houston .
"I hope he comes here," Borman said as his
spaceship flew over Houston during its 59th orbit.
Nobis wound up signing with Atlanta, becoming the first
player in franchise history and a beloved figure who would forever be known as
"Mr. Falcon." He earned NFL rookie of the year honors and the first
of five Pro Bowl berths in 1966, the launch of an 11-year career spent entirely
with the Falcons.
No. 60 has never been worn by any other Atlanta player.
Nobis was among the initial inductees into the team's "Ring of Honor"
in 2004.
Former Falcons coach Dan Reeves, who entered the league a
year ahead of Nobis and became good friends, called him "the best middle
linebacker I ever played against in my time" — an era that included Hall
of Famers such as Dick Butkus and Ray Nitschke.
"Tommy could play the run and the pass," Reeves
said. "Butkus was really good against the run, but Tommy could do both
really good. He never came out of the game. Nitschke was good, but he was with
a great team."
Nobis never got the chance to play for a great NFL team,
which is likely the main reason he was passed over for the Pro Football Hall of
Fame. The Falcons had only two winning seasons in his career and only came
close to making the playoffs in 1973.
"The fact that he's not in is really a tragedy,"
Reeves said. "But they go so much by the team, by winning. They just
didn't have that ability being an expansion team. ... He wasn't surrounded by a
lot of great players."
Nobis was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in
1981. Playing both linebacker and offensive guard, he helped the Longhorns win
the national title in 1963 under coach Darrell Royal and is perhaps best
remembered for leading a fourth-down stop at the goal line on Joe Namath to
preserve a 21-17 victory over top-ranked Alabama in the 1965 Orange Bowl .
"When you're one of the six numbers retired in the
long, proud history of Texas football, your legacy is something special,"
said former Texas coach Mack Brown. "Coach Royal told me many times that
Tommy was one of the best players he had ever coached or seen. He was as
physically dominant of a linebacker as the game will ever have."
As an NFL rookie, Nobis was credited unofficially with a
staggering 296 solo and assisted tackles — an average of more than 21 per game
that remains the franchise record. He also had 12 career interceptions,
returning two for touchdowns.
After his playing days were over, Nobis spent another three
decades in the Falcons front office and became well known in Atlanta for
running a charitable organization that provided job training to people with
disabilities.
"We will always be grateful for his many contributions
to our team and community," Falcons owner Arthur Blank said in a
statement.
Nobis' individual brilliance was overshadowed by the
Falcons' cumulative record of 50-100-4 during his career. He retired after a
dismal 1976 campaign, his next-to-last game a 59-0 rout by the Los Angeles
Rams.
"It's a stigma," Nobis told The Associated Press
in a 1998 interview. "When you're a part of something that's losing, it's
hard to pull out of it. Very hard."
Nobis had been in poor health with physical and cognitive
ailments that may have been related to his football career. He was among
hundreds of ex-players who were part of a plan that reimburses them for expenses
related to the treatment of dementia and other neurological disorders. He also
was among the plaintiffs who settled a massive concussion lawsuit against with
the league.
"It's sad what football has done to these
players," his wife said in the interview with the Houston newspaper.
"But I know he loved it more than anything. He wouldn't have had it any
other way."
Tommy is survived by his wife and three children, Tommy,
Kevin and Devon, as well as eight grandchildren.
His teammates include:
Tommy McDonald, Claude Humphrey, Randy Johnson, George Kunz, Jeff Van Note, Jim R. Mitchell, Steve Bartkowski, Alfred Jenkins, John James and Rolland Lawrence.
His coaches included: Norb Hecker, Norm Van Brocklin and Marion Campbell
The team was owned by Rankin M. Smith Sr. during his tenure with the Falcons.
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