Hall of Famer and Seattle Seahawks legend Kenny Easley dies at age 66
He was not on the list.
One of the greatest players in the 50-season history of the Seattle Seahawks has died.
Hall of Fame safety Kenny Easley, who was 66, passed away Friday night.
"We are deeply saddened by the passing of Seahawks Legend Kenny Easley. Kenny embodied what it meant to be a Seahawk through his leadership, toughness, intensity, and fearlessness," the team said in a statement distributed Saturday afternoon. "His intimidating nature and athletic grace made him one the best players of all-time.
"A man of faith, Kenny will forever be remembered as a
beloved member of the Seahawks family and his legacy will live on as an
inspiration to fans around the world. We extend our sincere condolences to his
wife, Gail, and children Kendrick, Gabrielle and Giordanna." He played with some fo the greats like Dave Krieg and Steve Largent.
The fourth overall pick of the 1981 NFL draft out of UCLA,
Easley only played seven years in the league, but he was spectacular throughout
his short career.
The five-time Pro Bowler and three-time first-team All-Pro was also the league's Defensive Player of the Year in 1984, when the Seahawks set a franchise-record (at that time) with 12 regular-season wins.
Known as "The Enforcer" for his rugged and hard-hitting style of play, Easley picked off a league-best 10 passes that season and returned two for touchdowns. The 1984 Seahawks forced 63 turnovers, most ever by a team since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger.
Easley was a key member of the 1983, '84 and '87 Seahawks, the first three squads in club history to reach the playoffs. The '83 team advanced all the way to the AFC championship game before losing to the eventual Super Bowl 18 champion Los Angeles Raiders.
Easley finished his career with 32 picks, 11 fumble recoveries, nine forced fumbles and eight sacks in 89 games.
One of the best safeties in league history, he was also a member of the NFL's All-Decade Team in the 1980s and was enshrined into Canton in 2017 despite a career that was cut short.
Seattle traded Easley to the Phoenix Cardinals prior to the 1988 season, but a severe kidney disease forced him into retirement. He later sued the Seahawks and their medical staff, stating an overdose of Advil caused his kidney failure. Easley and the team settled the case years later, and he eventually received a kidney transplant. He also underwent triple bypass surgery in 2016. No cause of death was provided by the Seahawks or Hall of Fame on Saturday.
After their bitter divorce, Easley and the organization reconciled in later years, and he was inducted into the Seahawks' Ring of Honor in 2002 − one of just 11 players so recognized by the franchise. His No. 45 was also retired by Seattle, one of only five jerseys the organization has taken out of circulation.
"It was good that the reconciliation happened,"
Easley said in 2017 via the Seahawks' website. "To be honest, I never gave
it much thought, because I was wallowing in my own anger. I thought I was done
unfairly, it didn't have to happen what happened to me, and it took me a while
to get over that. For 15 years, I didn't watch a football game. I never saw
Cortez Kennedy play a single game, because from 1987 to 2002, the night that I
went into the Ring of Honor, I had not seen an NFL football game in that entire
time. In fact, any kind of football, because I had to divorce myself from it
completely."
“Kenny Easley would have been a dominant safety in any era. When he was enshrined in 2017, he took his rightful place in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and embraced his football immortality. Kenny possessed excellent ball skills, but make no mistake: His biggest strengths were his fearlessness and intensity. If you had the ball as an opposing offensive player, he was going to hit you hard – and you were going to feel it for a while," Hall President and CEO Jim Porter said in a statement Saturday.
“The Hall of Fame staff sends its condolences to Kenny’s
wife, Gail, and the entire Easley family.”
In 1996, Oscar F. Smith High School honored Easley and two
other football graduates Ed Beard and Steve DeLong by naming its football
stadium "Beard–DeLong–Easley Field" on September 6.
He also played basketball at the junior varsity level for
UCLA and was selected by the Chicago Bulls in the tenth round of the 1981 NBA
draft but did not play.
Easley was the fourth overall pick of the 1981 NFL draft,
selected by the Seattle Seahawks.He became an immediate starter as a rookie in
1981, recording three interceptions for 155 yards and one touchdown, earning
him AFC Defensive Rookie of the Year honors. In 1983, the Seahawks hired former
Buffalo Bills coach Chuck Knox as their head coach and Easley immediately
became the "backbone" of Knox's defense. In his first season playing
for Knox, Easley won the AFC Defensive Player of the Year Award and recorded
seven interceptions. In 1984, Easley led the NFL in interceptions with ten,
which tied a club record. He returned two of them for touchdowns and was named
as the NFL Defensive Player of the Year, the first safety awarded since Dick
Anderson in 1973. In 1984, during a 45–0 win over the Kansas City Chiefs in the
Kingdome on November 4, the Seahawks returned four interceptions for
touchdowns, including one caught by Easley, breaking the record for most
touchdowns scored from an interception in a game. He also took over the role of
the team's main punt returner when Paul Johns got injured earlier in the season.
In 1999, Easley, along with Buffalo Bills defensive end
Bruce Smith, were named as the new owners of the Norfolk Nighthawks of the AF2,
a semi-professional arena football league branched out from the Arena Football
League. The day after the city announced Easley and Smith as owners, a
controversy arose with Mark Garcea and Page Johnson, the owners of the Hampton
Roads Admirals minor league hockey team, and the city of Norfolk, Virginia.
Garcea and Johnson stated that they participated in the original AF2 meetings
and asked the city for exclusive rights to own the franchise, providing a
$5,000 down payment.

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