New York Post

Ex-NFL tight end dies in plane crash

- By ANDREW CRANE acrane@nypost.com

Russ Francis, a former NFL tight end who played 13 profession­al seasons and made three Pro Bowls, died Sunday in a plane crash at Lake Placid Airport, according to multiple reports. He was 70 years old. Francis had become a coowner of Lake Placid Airways in July, and Sunday, he was in a plane with Aircraft Owners and Pilots Associatio­n’s senior vice president Richard McSpadden when it experience­d problems shortly after takeoff around

4 p.m., according to the Adirondack Daily Enterprise and a statement from the AOPA.

The AOPA wrote that Francis and McSpadden, who also died in the crash, tried to return to the airport but didn’t reach the runway.

Francis was born in Kailua, Hawaii, and attended college at Oregon before the Patriots selected him in the first round of the 1975 NFL Draft.

He was also drafted by the Royals in the MLB draft.

But his path to the NFL wasn’t always clear-cut, and he reportedly only played one full season at Oregon.

As a senior, he opted to not play football with the Ducks and took lessons three times a day to earn his flight license in weeks, according to a Washington Post story from 1977.

He still ended up with an opportunit­y in the NFL, though, and Francis finished with 393 catches for 5,262 yards and 40 touchdowns across seven-plus with the Patriots and five-plus with the 49ers.

In January 1985, Francis won Super Bowl XIX alongside legendary Niners quarterbac­k Joe Montana.

“This guy was a superstar before Tua, before Marcus, and really put Hawaii on the map,” Rich Miano, who played in the NFL at the same time, told Hawaii’s KHON News. “He was Hawaii football. He had that appreciati­on, that love for Hawaii that, to me, is so special.”

Francis was also a profession­al wrestler and broadcaste­r at different stages of his life, according to multiple outlets.

 ?? ?? RUSS FRANCIS
RUSS FRANCIS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States