USA TODAY US Edition

Lions owner lauded as loyal, generous

- Dave Birkett @davebirket­t USA TODAY Sports Birkett writes for the Detroit Free Press.

Detroit Lions owner William Clay Ford, the grandson of auto pioneer Henry Ford, died Sunday morning, according to Ford Motor Co.

Ford, 88, had been increasing­ly reclusive around the team in recent years as his health became fragile. He made one appearance at training camp last summer, was in a wheelchair when he attended home games at Ford Field and had at least three previous heart operations.

The team president and a Ford Motor Co. executive in the early 1960s, Ford bought the Lions for $4.5 million in the fall of 1963 and had run the organizati­on for the past 50 years.

The Lions won one playoff game in Ford’s tenure, a 38-6 victory against the Dallas Cowboys in January 1992, and the owner had a dubious relationsh­ip with his fan base.

Known by players and executives within the organizati­on and across the league for his uncommon generosity, Ford was exceedingl­y loyal to the men he put in charge of running his team.

Russ Thomas spent 22 years as general manager and made one playoff appearance. Wayne Fontes is the winningest and losingest coach in team history. And Matt Millen amassed a league-worst 31-84 record as GM from 2001 to 2008.

“I came away a better person for knowing him and I probably didn’t return the favor, but I thought the world of him.” Former Lions general manager Matt Millen on William Clay Ford

Millen, in an interview last fall, said Ford’s loyalty was a product of his upbringing and the lessons he learned living a fruitful but private life.

The two men grew close during weekly conversati­ons at the Lions’ Allen Park headquarte­rs and at Ford’s Grosse Point home. They talked, Millen said, about history, football and faith, often with Ford eating baloney sandwiches on white bread.

“I loved Mr. Ford,” Millen said. “I think the world of him. Like I said, I wish the people of Detroit could know him the way I know him.

“I came away a better person for knowing him and I probably didn’t return the favor, but I thought the world of him.”

Bobby Ross, the Lions coach from 1997 to 2000, said he had offers from two other teams to be head coach when he opted to head to Detroit because of Ford.

“He was a wonderful man,” Ross said. “I mean, from the first day that I met him on my interview to the very last, he’s a special human being. And not only that, but a really good owner. Took an interest in the players, a strong interest.

“I mean every ballgame at home he’d be down in that dressing room walking around, talking to the players, a good hour, hour and a half before the game. Maybe two hours before. And then I would meet with him after every home game for probably a couple hours. And we’d go over everything, and I’d give him the rundown. He was involved, but yet he let you do your job, too.

“That’s what I liked about it; he was very involved, and I liked that. I thought that was good. But he was just a good, good kind man, too. I don’t know that I could have had a better person to work for than that man.”

Ford is survived by his wife, Martha, and his children, Martha, Sheila, Elizabeth and Bill Jr., the team’s vice chairman who has taken an active role in the Lions front office in recent years.

Funeral arrangemen­ts were pending.

 ?? 2003 PHOTO BY KIRTHMON F. DOZIER, DETROIT FREE PRESS ?? “He was involved, but yet he let you do your job, too,” former coach Bobby Ross said of the Lions’ William Clay Ford, above.
2003 PHOTO BY KIRTHMON F. DOZIER, DETROIT FREE PRESS “He was involved, but yet he let you do your job, too,” former coach Bobby Ross said of the Lions’ William Clay Ford, above.

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