- Lamar Hunt
Infobox NFL PlayerCoach
Name=Lamar Hunt
DateOfBirth=birth date|1932|8|2|df=y
Birthplace=El Dorado, Arkansas
DateOfDeath=death date and age|2006|12|13|1932|8|2
PlaceOfDeath=Dallas, Texas
College=Southern Methodist
Position=Founder of the American Football League (1960-69)
Co-Founder of the North American Soccer League (1967-84)
Founder/owner of Chicago Bulls
Charter Investor of Major League Soccer
Founder/owner of Dallas Texans/Kansas City Chiefs
Founder/owner of Columbus Crew
Owner of FC Dallas
Founder/previous owner of Kansas City Wizards
|Honors=Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup
(est.1914) Oldest U.S. sports tournament now named for himNational Soccer Hall of Fame
HOF inductee 1982
HOF Medal of Honor 1999
Records=
coach=no
coachingyears=1967-1981
1994-2006
1995-2006
2003-2006
1959-1962
1963-1969
1970-2006
coachingteams=Dallas Tornado (NASL)Columbus Crew (MLS)Kansas City Wizards (MLS)FC Dallas (MLS)
Dallas Texans (AFL)Kansas City Chiefs (AFL)Kansas City Chiefs (NFL)
HOF=103
HOFYear=1972Lamar Hunt (
August 2 ,1932 –December 13 ,2006 ) was an American sportsman and promoter ofAmerican football , soccer,basketball , andice hockey in theUnited States and an inductee of the first three sports' halls of fame. He was one of the founders of theAmerican Football League (AFL) andMajor League Soccer (MLS), as well as MLS predecessor theNorth American Soccer League (NASL). He was also the founder and owner of theNational Football League 'sKansas City Chiefs , theKansas City Wizards and at his death owned two MLS teams,Columbus Crew andFC Dallas . The oldest annual team tournament in the U.S. in any sport, soccer's U.S. Open Cup (founded 1914) now bears his name in honor of his pioneering role in that sport stateside. In Kansas City, Hunt also helped establish theWorlds of Fun andOceans of Fun theme parks. He was inducted into thePro Football Hall of Fame in 1972; into theNational Soccer Hall of Fame in 1982; and into theInternational Tennis Hall of Fame in 1993. The National Soccer Hall of Fame bestowed upon Hunt their Medal of Honor in 1999, an award given to only 3 recipients in history thus far. He was married for 42 years to second wife Norma, and had four children, Sharron, Lamar Jr., Daniel andClark Hunt .Early life
Hunt was born in
El Dorado, Arkansas , the son of oiltycoon H. L. Hunt and younger brother of tycoonNelson Bunker Hunt . Lamar was raised inDallas, Texas . He graduated fromThe Hill School inPennsylvania in 1950 andSouthern Methodist University in Dallas in 1956, with a B.S. degree ingeology . Hunt was acollege football player who rode the bench but was still an avid sports enthusiast during his time in college and throughout his entire childhood. While attending SMU Hunt joined theKappa Sigma Fraternity and in 1972 was named "man of the year".Founding of the American Football League
On the strength of his great inherited oil wealth, Hunt applied for a
National Football League expansion franchise but was turned down. In 1959, professional football was a distant second toMajor League Baseball in popularity, and the thinking among NFL executives was that the league must be careful not to "oversaturate" the market by expanding too quickly. [cite news
url=http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/121406dnmethuntobit.90f04cf.html
date=2006-12-13
publisher=Dallas Morning News
title=Hunt remembered for energy, integrity
accessdate=2006-12-14
author=Brad Townsend]In response, in 1960 Hunt took the lead with fellow Texan and oil man K.S.
Bud Adams of Houston, who likewise had tried and failed to be granted an NFL franchise, in forming theAmerican Football League . Hunt and Adams encouraged, wheedled, and cajoled six other like-minded wealthy men, three of them fellow Texan to form this new league. The group of the eight founders of the AFL teams was referred to as the "Foolish Club." Hunt's goal was to bring professional football to Texas and to acquire an NFL team for the Hunt family. Hunt became owner of the Dallas Texans and hired future hall-of-famerHank Stram as the team's first head coach.Ownership and NFL merger
The Dallas Texans won the AFL Championship in 1962 over the 2-time defending champion
Houston Oilers in the longest professional game ever played as of that time and were one of the most successful AFL teams in the league's early days. But the Texans' success failed to draw fans in large numbers, as the Texans had to compete for fan loyalty with their cross-town NFL rivals, theDallas Cowboys . In 1963 Hunt began to consider moving the team. Kansas City quickly became one of the contending cities for the franchise. During cloak-and-dagger negotiating sessions, in order to convince Hunt to move the team to Kansas City, mayorH. Roe Bartle promised Hunt home attendance of 25,000 people per game. Hunt finally agreed to move the team to Kansas City and in 1963 the Dallas Texans became theKansas City Chiefs .In the Chiefs' early days, attendance did not match the expansive claims Mayor Bartle had made. But in 1966 average home attendance at Chiefs games picked up and reached 37,000. By 1969 -- aided by some very successful and entertaining teams -- Chiefs' home attendance had reached 51,000. In 1966 the Chiefs won their first AFL Championship and reached the first ever Super Bowl (a name coined by Hunt, who took it in part from the then popular toy, the
Super Ball [Archive footage of an interview with Hunt. "SportsCenter ",ESPN ,December 14 2006 .] )-- then called the “AFL-NFL Championship Game” -- where they lost to theGreen Bay Packers . The Chiefs remained successful through the 1960s, and in 1970 the Chiefs reached the pinnacle of success, winning the AFL Championship and later went on to winSuper Bowl IV (the last Super Bowl played when the AFL was a separate league prior to it being absorbed into the NFL as theAmerican Football Conference ) over the heavily-favoredMinnesota Vikings .The rosters of the AFL were always stocked with a certain number of players who would have excelled in any league -- and that number grew as the 1960s progressed. The best AFL coaches and owners, many of them new to the pro game, brought color, excitement and important new strategic and marketing ideas to pro football, which had often been dominated by play-calling which overrated the value of eliminating mistakes and underrated the element of surprise. While the NFL was always almost certainly the better league as a whole, the best teams of the AFL were increasingly the equals of any team in the NFL.
The AFL also substantially raised football players' salaries by frequently bidding against the NFL for the top college stars. It was the NFL's concern for containing salaries, more than anything else, that led a reluctant NFL to accept a merger between the two leagues in 1970. The older league could no longer claim to be far superior because by then the AFL champion
New York Jets had defeated the vaunted Baltimore Colts of the NFL to win the Super Bowl. The Chiefs' triumph over the Vikings the following season further showcased the AFL's ability.Today's "descendants" from the AFL, the Patriots, Bills, Jets, Titans, Broncos, Chiefs, Raiders, Chargers, Dolphins and Bengals would not have existed if it hadn’t been for Lamar Hunt. What’s more, the NFL’s Cowboys, created specifically to drive the AFL out of Dallas, would not have existed. Neither would the Vikings, an NFL franchise that was given to Max Winter to pull out of the original eight-team American Football League; nor would the Falcons, which the NFL gave to Rankin Smith to deter him from the AFL’s Miami franchise. Neither would the Saints, whose franchise was granted by the NFL after certain Louisiana congressmen pushed the AFL-NFL merger to completion. Or the Houston Texans, created to replace the Houston Oilers after they moved to Tennessee and became the Tennessee Titans. Thus, fifteen professional football teams would not have existed in fifteen cities today, if Lamar Hunt had not had the vision and the courage to “fight the establishment”.
In 1972, Hunt became the first American Football League personage inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame . The trophy presented to each year's AFC Champions is named the Lamar Hunt Trophy. In 1984, Hunt was also inducted into the Texas Sports Hall of Fame.Hunt has also been influential in soccer and
tennis , and has contributed to the growth of those sports in the US. He has been elected to the Halls of Fame of both sports.The NASL: ownership and battles with the NFL
With much already accomplished in the world of American football, Hunt moved on in 1967 to help jump start soccer in the U.S. In 1966 he had become enthralled with the World Cup on TV, and when it was decided that new pro leagues were to be formed in the U.S., Hunt wanted to be one of the initial movers and shakers.
His team in the
North American Soccer League was theDallas Tornado , and they debuted in 1967 as a part of the USA:United Soccer Association . In a more fledgling version of what was occurring with the AFL and NFL, in 1968 a pro soccer merger took place to form theNorth American Soccer League . Eventually, the NASL reached 24 teams, and at times, the most popular teams such as theNew York Cosmos occasionally outdrawing their NFL and MLB counterparts in the same cities on the same dates, although the soccer teams did not sustain such attendance levels. With Lamar Hunt as an active advocate for the sport and the league, his team theDallas Tornado won the NASL championship in 1971 and were runners-up '73.The NFL was not happy with Hunt's ownership in and promotion of pro soccer, a sport that was taking away attention and spectators from the American football game. The NFL attempted to force legal requirements that would disallow team ownership in more than one sport for owners of NFL franchises. This strategy backfired onto the NFL, and in fact, the NASL won an anti-trust case against the NFL. A primary benefactor of this outcome was Lamar Hunt, and his legacy of leadership and ownership of pro soccer in those times remains to this day. cite news
url=http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns/story?id=394199&root=us25&cc=5901
date=2006-12-13
publisher=ESPN
title=Hunt a quiet pioneer of U.S. soccer
accessdate=2006-12-14
author=Frank Dell'apa]Major League Soccer
Lamar Hunt was also one of the original founding investors of Major League Soccer, which debuted in 1996. This time he owned two teams: the
Columbus Crew and theKansas City Wizards . In 1999, Hunt financed the construction of theColumbus Crew Stadium , the first of several largesoccer-specific stadium s in the USA. In 2003, Hunt purchased a third team, the Dallas Burn (nowFC Dallas ), after announcing that he would partially finance the construction of their own soccer-specific stadium. On31 August 2006 , Hunt sold the Wizards to a six-man ownership group led byCerner Corporation co-founders Neal Patterson and Cliff Illig.Other sports and activities
Basketball: Hunt was one of the founding investors of the
Chicago Bulls of theNational Basketball Association . He remained a minority owner until his death.Tennis: In 1967, Hunt co-founded the
World Championship Tennis circuit, which gave birth to the open era in tennis. He was inducted into theInternational Tennis Hall of Fame in 1993.NHL: Hunt and
John H. McConnell formed Columbus Hockey Limited, L.L.C. (CHL) in an effort to obtain aNational Hockey League franchise forColumbus, Ohio . Following disagreements over the financing for an arena, McConnell accepted an offer to lease a new arena from Nationwide Insurance Enterprise. McConnell froze-out CHL and Hunt and was awarded the NHLColumbus Blue Jackets franchise. See "McConnell v. Hunt Sports Enterprises", 132 Ohio App.3d 657, 725 N.E.2d 1193 (1999), a lawsuit that Lamar Hunt lost and thus granted McConnel sole ownership of theColumbus Blue Jackets .Amusement Parks and Caves: Hunt was also the founder of two theme parks in Kansas City:
Worlds of Fun andOceans of Fun , which opened in 1973 and 1982 respectively. The two parks were an outgrowth and adjoined a vast industrial park he developed in the bluffs above theMissouri River inClay County, Missouri . Immediately south of the parks is the Hunt-developedSubTropolis , a 55,000,000 square foot (5,060,000 m³), 1,100-acre manmadelimestone cave which is claimed to be the "World's Largest Underground Business Complex (TM)." Hunt's extensive business dealings in Clay County were to contribute to the Chiefs having theirNFL Training Camp atWilliam Jewell College inLiberty, Missouri until 1991.Honors
*For service to
Dallas, Texas , Lamar Hunt was honored duringhalftime of theDallas Cowboys /Kansas City Chiefs game in 2005.
*For his efforts in building the sport of soccer in the United States in the modern era, Hunt was inducted into theNational Soccer Hall of Fame in 1992, and given their prestigious Medal of Honor in 1999, an award so far given out only 3 times in history.
*TheUnited States Soccer Federation changed the name of its oldest and most prestigious competition, the U.S. Open Cup (est.1914), to theLamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in 1999.
*The NFL's trophy for the champion of theAmerican Football Conference is named in honor of Lamar Hunt.
*The winner of the Border Showdown football game receives a trophy named for Lamar Hunt, effective with the 2007 return of the series to Kansas City.
* OnDecember 17 ,2006 's "Sunday Night Football" game against theSan Diego Chargers , the Kansas City Chiefs wore an emblem on the back of their helmets with the initials "LH" and continued to wear them until the end of the season. For the 2007 season, see "Tribute".
* OnMarch 11 ,2007 , the inauguralLamar Hunt Pioneer Cup match was held atPizza Hut Park between Hunt's MLS teams,FC Dallas and theColumbus Crew .
* For the 2007 season, Major League Soccer players will wear a small patch on their arm with the initials LH as a memorial to Lamar Hunt and his contribution to soccer in America.
* OnFebruary 20 ,2008 , Hunt was inducted into theHall of Famous Missourians in the Missouri state Capitol.Death
Lamar Hunt died December 13, 2006 at Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas of complications related to a ten-year battle with
prostate cancer . Upon his death, Cowboys ownerJerry Jones called Hunt, "a founder of the NFL as we know it today.... He's been an inspiration for me."cite news | url=http://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/121406dnmethuntobit.90f04cf.html | date=2006-12-13 | accessdate=2006-12-14 | author=Joe Simnacher and Brad Townsend | title=Sports innovator Lamar Hunt dies | publisher=WFAA ]Said
Dan Rooney , chairman of thePittsburgh Steelers : "Lamar Hunt was one of the most influential owners in professional football over the past 40-plus years, He was instrumental in the formation of the American Football League and in the AFL-NFL merger, which helped theNational Football League grow into America's passion."The Mayor of
Kansas City, Missouri ,Kay Waldo Barnes , requested that all city flags fly at half-staff the following Thursday and Friday of his passing.Upon his death his son
Clark Hunt was named chairman of the Kansas City Chiefs. He was elected by his other three siblings, Lamar Jr., Sharron Munson, and Daniel.Tribute
In 2007, the Kansas City Chiefs honored Hunt and the AFL. The Chiefs "2007 Media Guide" is full of images, logos and anecdotes about the league and each of its original teams. Prominently featured in the "Guide" and in the Chiefs "2007 Yearbook" is a special AFL patch. The "Yearbook's" description of the patch states: "As part of a year-long tribute to Hunt in 2007, the Chiefs will wear a commemorative patch that prominently features the American Football League logo to serve as a reminder of Hunt's formation of the AFL and the lasting impact the American Football League has made on the game of Professional Football. The patch will be affixed to the left chest of both Kansas City's home and away jerseys, meaning this piece of woven symbolism will be worn over the heart of every Chiefs player." On January 31, 2008, Clark Hunt, Lamar Hunt's son and President of the Chiefs, announced that henceforth, the patch will be a permanent part of the Chiefs uniform.
In 2007, the Columbus Crew honored their founder and owner by displaying a commemorative Lamar Hunt emblem on the left chest of both the home and away jerseys. The emblem consisted of the initials "LH" within a circle. Prior to the 2008 season, the Crew announced that the "LH" emblem will be a permanent patch on the left sleeve of the club's jerseys.
References
ee also
*Other American Football League players, coaches and contributors
*Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup External links
* [http://www.profootballhof.com/hof/member.jsp?player_id=103 Pro Football Hall of Fame]
* [http://www.tennisfame.com/famer.aspx?pgID=867&hof_id=158 International Tennis Hall of Fame]
* [http://www.soccerhall.org/builders/lamar_hunt.htm U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame]
* [http://soccernet.espn.go.com/columns/story?id=394199&root=us25&cc=5901 ESPN Soccer Net bio and Hunt's soccer legacy]
* [http://msn.foxsports.com/nfl/story/6271074?FSO1&ATT=HMA FOX Sports Net information on Hunt's death]
* [http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/121406dnmethuntobit.90f04cf.html "Dallas Morning News" article on Hunt's death]
* [http://sportsecyclopedia.com/memorial/06/hunt.html Sports E-Cyclopedia's Memoriam to Lamar Hunt]
* [http://www.remembertheafl.com/LamarHunt.htm Program from the "Celebration of the Life of Lamar Hunt"]
* [http://www.remembertheafl.com/LamarHunt.htm#HuntTribute Excerpts from Chiefs 2007 "Media Guide" and "Yearbook"]
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