Chattanooga Times Free Press

Green Bay great Herb Adderley dead at 81

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Herb Adderley, the Pro Football Hall of Fame cornerback who joined the NFL as a running back and became part of a record six championsh­ip teams with the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys, has died. He was 81.

His death was confirmed on Twitter on Friday by cousin Nasir Adderley, a safety for the Los Angeles Chargers. No details were given. He called him a “unique soul who has had such an incredible influence on my life.”

Herb Adderley played in four of the first six Super Bowls and won five NFL championsh­ips with Green Bay and one with Dallas during his 12-year career. He was always a Packer at heart.

“I’m the only man with a Dallas Cowboys Super Bowl ring who doesn’t wear it. I’m a Green Bay Packer,” Adderley said in the book “Distant Replay,” a memoir by former Packers teammate Jerry Kramer.

Adderley is one of four players in pro football history to play on six championsh­ip teams, with former teammates Forrest Gregg and Fuzzy Thurston two of the others. Tom Brady is the fourth.

Adderley was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980, and Bart Starr, the Hall of Fame quarterbac­k and a former Packers teammate, once called him “the greatest cornerback to ever play the game.”

Born on June 8, 1939, in Philadelph­ia, Adderley was a threesport star in high school. He excelled at running back at Michigan State and was the 12th pick of the 1961 draft. He came to training camp expecting to compete for a starting job against future Hall of Fame running backs Paul Hornung and Jim Taylor.

Midway through the season, Packers coach Vince Lombardi switched Adderley to defense to replace injured starter Hank Gremminger. The move paid immediate dividends.

Adderley’s speed and instincts made him a quick learner in his new position, which helped propel him into a stalwart of Green Bay’s secondary. Adderley intercepte­d 48 passes, returning them for 1,046 yards and seven touchdowns for his career.

“Herb Adderley simply wouldn’t let me get to the outside,” Hall of Fame receiver Tommy McDonald once said. “He’d just beat me up, force me to turn underneath routes all the time.”

The 6- foot- 1, 205- pound Adderley had a career- best seven intercepti­ons in 1962. He also led the league in intercepti­ons in 1965 and 1969. Adderley also returned kickoffs in all but the final year of his playing days with the Packers, averaging 25.7 yards per return.

In the early days of football on television, Adderley made his appearance­s count and is most remembered for his postseason contributi­ons. He was a member of all five of Lombardi’s NFL title teams and played in the first two Super Bowls. In the second Super Bowl in 1968, he returned an intercepti­on 60 yards for the clinching touchdown over the Oakland Raiders.

“I was too stubborn to switch him to defense until I had to,” Lombardi said. “Now when I think of what Adderley means to our defense, it scares me to think of how I almost mishandled him.”

Adderley played in two more Super Bowls, with Dallas in 1971 and 1972, winning his sixth title with the Cowboys in his final season.

After retiring, he became a crusader for the rights of former players. In 2007, Adderley and two other retired players filed a class-action lawsuit against the NFL Players Associatio­n, alleging nonpayment of licensing fees. He had received only $126.85 per month in pension from the NFL.

He became the lead plaintiff in the case on behalf of more than 2,000 retired players who claimed the NFLPA breached licensing and marketing terms by using their images in video games, sports trading cards and other items. The case was settled for $26.25 million in 2009.

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