The Hamilton Spectator

Football says good bye to The Bald Eagle

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Y.A. Tittle, the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k and 1963 National Football League Most Valuable Player, has died. He was 90.

His family confirmed to LSU, where Tittle starred in college, that he passed away. No details were immediatel­y provided.

Known as “The Bald Eagle” as much for his sturdy leadership as his prematurel­y receding hairline, Tittle played 17 seasons of pro football. He began with the All-America Football Conference’s Baltimore Colts in 1948 and finished with the NFL’s New York Giants. He played 10 years in between with the San Francisco 49ers, but had his greatest success in New York, leading the Giants to three division titles in four years in a remarkable late-career surge.

Tittle never won a championsh­ip, but came to personify the competitiv­e spirit of football, thanks to an iconic photo taken by Dozier Mobley during Tittle’s final season in 1964.

The frame caught the then-37year-old quarterbac­k, who looked older than his years, after throwing an intercepti­on returned for a touchdown by Pittsburgh’s Chuck Hinton. Tittle is seen kneeling in exhaustion and pain from an injured rib, blood dripping down his face from a head gash.

Tittle, also called “YAT” by his teammates, was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971. He threw 36 touchdown passes while winning the MVP award in ’63, and held the NFL record for most TD passes in a season until Dan Marino threw 48 in 1984.

Tittle passed for 33,070 yards and 242 touchdowns in two leagues during his career, including 13 300-yard passing games in an age when the running game dominated the sport. Tittle was the only quarterbac­k of his generation to throw at least 30 touchdown passes in back-to-back seasons when he did it with the Giants.

Born Yelberton Abraham Tittle in Marshall, Texas, on Oct. 24, 1926, he led LSU to the Cotton Bowl before he was drafted by the NFL’s Detroit Lions in 1948. He joined Baltimore of the AAFC instead, sticking with the Colts when they joined the NFL in 1950 until they temporaril­y disbanded the following year, when he was redrafted by San Francisco, another former AAFC club.

Tittle then started 78 games and earned four of his seven Pro Bowl selections during a decade with the 49ers. He became the Giants’ starter in 1961. Tittle appeared briefly in the 1999 movie “Any Given Sunday,” playing a coach, and was a favourite presence at memorabili­a shows and NFL alumni functions.

 ?? DOZIER MOBLEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In one of the most famous sports photos ever taken, Y.A. Tittle looks dazed after being hit in a game against Pittsburgh on Sept. 20, 1964.
DOZIER MOBLEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In one of the most famous sports photos ever taken, Y.A. Tittle looks dazed after being hit in a game against Pittsburgh on Sept. 20, 1964.

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