The Boston Globe

Dick Kazmaier, Heisman Trophy winner

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PRINCETON, N.J. — Dick Kazmaier, the last Ivy League football player to win the Heisman Trophy, has died. He was 82.

Princeton University said Mr. Kazmaier died Thursday at a Boston hospital. He had been living in Concord, Mass.

Mr. Kazmaier played halfback for Princeton and as a senior in 1951 won the Heisman Trophy in a landslide, receiving 506 first-place votes and 1,777 points, which was a record at the time. He also won the Maxwell Award as the nation’s best player, and was the Associated Press male athlete of the year.

In his final two college seasons, the Tigers went 18-0. When he was done playing, he was Princeton’s career leader in yards rushing (1,950) and ranked second in yards passing (2,404). His career completion percentage of 59.5 still ranks third at Princeton.

He was voted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1966 and in 2008 Princeton retired No. 42, a jersey number also worn by Basketball Hall of Famer Bill Bradley.

‘‘Notwithsta­nding all of the achievemen­ts in his athletic, business, and philanthro­pic endeavors, Dick remained one of the most self-effacing individual­s I have ever met,’’ Princeton’s athletic director, Gary Walters, said. ‘‘He never sought the spotlight and always led in a thoughtful and ethical manner.

‘‘Indeed, Dick was also the father of six daughters, and he became a major force behind the scenes as he helped to implement the Title IX Legislatio­n that was passed in 1972 in order to provide equal competitiv­e opportunit­ies for women.”

Three of Mr. Kazmaier’s daughters with his wife, Patty, attended Princeton, including Patricia Kazmaier, who played hockey for the Tigers and helped them to three consecutiv­e Ivy League championsh­ips in the early 1980s.

The Ohio native from the small town of Maumee passed on a chance to play in the NFL after being drafted by the Chicago Bears in 1952, instead choosing to attend business school at Harvard. He also served three years in the Navy.

‘‘His strongest characteri­stic was loyalty, and his greatest talent was friendship,’’ Pulitzerwi­nning author and former classmate John McPhee said.

He went on to found Kazmaier Associates Inc., an investment and consulting firm that specialize­s in sports marketing and products and is based in Concord, Mass.

He served as president of the National Football Foundation, which runs the College Hall of Fame, from 1974-84 and was chairman of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness under presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

After his wife died of a rare blood disease in 1990, Dick Kazmaier and the USA Hockey Foundation created the Patty Kazmaier Award, which has been given to the top player in NCAA Division I women’s ice hockey since 1998.

‘‘It’s certainly an honor to have worn the same number as him. He was somebody that I admired [when] playing football in high school and in the sandlot when Iwas a kid,’’ Bradley told the Daily Princetoni­an in 2006. ‘‘He had won the Heisman Trophy, and he went to Princeton, and I wanted to be him.’’

 ?? JOHN ROONEY/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? Princeton halfback Dick Kazmaier won the Heisman in a landslide in 1951, receiving 506 first-place votes.
JOHN ROONEY/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE Princeton halfback Dick Kazmaier won the Heisman in a landslide in 1951, receiving 506 first-place votes.

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