Maxie Baughan, one of the most fearsome linebackers of the Nineteen Sixties, who earned 9 Pro Bowl nods as a member of the Philadelphia Eagles and Los Angeles Rams, died on Saturday in Ithaca, N.Y. He was 85.
His dying was confirmed in an announcement by the National Football League.
Baughan, a member of the College Football Hall of Fame, is one of 12 gamers who’re semifinalists in the seniors class for the Pro Football Hall of Fame Class of 2024.
For Baughan, born on Aug. 3, 1938, in tiny Forkland, Ala., throughout the Great Depression, glory on any nationwide stage appeared like a protracted shot rising up. His father was a sharecropper turned lineman whose job entailed shimmying up phone poles for repairs.
“You could tell when he came home, his arms would have black marks with blood in them,” Baughan stated in a 2016 interview with the newspaper The News & Advance in Lynchburg, Va. “I decided I didn’t want to do that, so I didn’t. But I sure as heck didn’t think I was going to be playing professional football. I never dreamed of that.”
When he left house to play soccer for the celebrated coach Bobby Dodd at Georgia Tech, his father handed him $20 and stated, “That’s it.”
It was apparently sufficient.
Blending ferocity with a seeming omnipresence on the gridiron, Baughan grew to become a two-way standout for the Yellow Jackets, beginning at linebacker and heart and turning into crew captain. By his senior season, in 1959, he was a star. He was named a consensus All-American that 12 months and voted the Southeastern Conference lineman of the 12 months.
Although Georgia Tech misplaced the 1960 Gator Bowl to Frank Broyles’s Arkansas Razorbacks, Baughan was named one of two most precious gamers in the sport, together with the Arkansas security Jim Mooty.
Although not bodily imposing by N.F.L. requirements, Baughan, at 6 foot 1 and 227 kilos, was picked by the Eagles in the second spherical of the 1960 draft. Still, the league itself was one thing of a thriller to him. At that time there was no crew in its japanese convention additional south than Washington.
“I didn’t even know the names of the teams,” he later stated, “so when the Eagles drafted me, I figured, ‘OK, I’ll see what this is all about.’”
In his rookie 1960 season, Baughan stepped in as a weakside linebacker alongside the future Hall of Famer Chuck Bednarik, the punishing linebacker often called “Concrete Charlie” (who additionally performed heart), to bolster a punishing Eagles protection.
The crew stormed to a 10-2 file that 12 months and victory in the championship sport over Vince Lombardi’s Green Bay Packers, with Baughan intercepting three passes.
He got here in second in the league’s United Press International rookie of the 12 months balloting and was named to his first of 5 Pro Bowl alternatives with the Eagles.
After a commerce to the Los Angeles Rams in 1966, Baughan picked up the place he had left off. The Rams’ coach George Allen named him the crew’s defensive captain and sign caller. Behind the quarterback Roman Gabriel, the Rams reached the divisional spherical of the playoffs twice over the subsequent 5 years, with Baughan cleansing up on protection behind the crew’s heralded defensive position, often called the Fearsome Foursome, starring Deacon Jones, Lamar Lundy, Rosey Grier and Merlin Olsen.
He would notch 4 extra Pro Bowl appearances throughout his Rams tenure, including to an N.F.L. résumé that additionally included 5 years as a second-team All-Pro and one as a first-teamer.
Baughan retired in 1970 and later grew to become the defensive coordinator at his alma mater, Georgia Tech. But his N.F.L. enjoying days weren’t fairly over. In 1974, Baughan briefly served as a player-coach for the Washington Redskins, though he suited up for simply two video games.
He would patrol the sidelines for greater than twenty years, serving as a defensive coordinator for the Baltimore Colts and Detroit Lions and head coach at Cornell University. He capped his profession as a linebackers coach for the Minnesota Vikings, (*85*) Bay Buccaneers and Baltimore Ravens.
In that function, he mentored the future Hall of Famers Derrick Brooks of the Buccaneers and Ray Lewis of the Ravens.
Baughan is survived by his spouse of 62 years, Dianne; his sons Max, Mark and Matt; and eight grandchildren.
He is a member of the Eagles Hall of Fame and was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988. The Pro Football Hall of Fame seniors committee was to satisfy on Tuesday to slender the discipline of 12 semifinalists to 3 finalists for induction into the Class of 2024. Players in the senior class performed their video games in skilled soccer no later than the 1998 season.
“Being just a small kid from a small town, didn’t have but one pair of shoes and didn’t have a sport coat when I went to college,” Baughan stated in a tv interview in 1988, recalling the profound honor he felt when he was named the Yellow Jackets’ captain. “There were some things that weren’t supposed to happen to me.”
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