Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Chiefs fan goes from POW to special Super Bowl guest

- By Dave Skretta

MIAMI >> Edward Lee Hubbard had no idea his beloved Kansas City Chiefs were playing in the Super Bowl the previous time they made it to the big stage, nor did he learn that they had won the 1970 championsh­ip until three years after the fact.

Hubbard instead was living in a 6-by-6 prison cell as a prisoner of war.

The Kansas City, Mo., native had been flying a mission over North Vietnam when he was shot down by two surface-to-air missiles. After running through the jungle for a number of hours, the first lieutenant was captured by Viet Cong soldiers and put in a prison camp, where he subsisted on 300 calories a day for what wound up being 2,420 days.

When NFL officials heard his story, they decided to make sure Hubbard wouldn’t miss the Chiefs in their return. So with a special invitation from Commission­er Roger Goodell, Hubbard, 81, will be in Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday.

“We are inspired by your story and service and sacrifice,” Goodell told him in a video. “I read all about what you went through, the 6½ years is incredible, and we just don’t want you to miss the Kansas City Chiefs playing in the next Super Bowl. We would like you to be here so you can see it live.”

With a big smile, Hubbard replied: “It would be the greatest day of my life.”

He’s had plenty of good ones since that fateful July day in 1966.

Hubbard joined the Air Force Reserves in 1955 at age 17. Six years later, Hubbard went on active duty and entered the aviation program.

He had flown 25 missions during the Vietnam War without a major incident. It was the 26th that changed his life.

When he was finally released on March 4, 1973, Hubbard returned home to Kansas

City. He learned the Chiefs had won the Super Bowl after the 1969 season, and thencoach Hank Stram even gave him a tour of the stadium.

“When I got home that evening,” Hubbard told Goodell, “my son was asking me — he was only 10 years old. And he asked, ‘Who did you meet today?’ And I said Curley Culp, Otis Taylor, all the great ones. My son knew all of those guys.”

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