Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Curtis, fierce linebacker for Colts, dies at 77

- By David Ginsburg

BALTIMORE » Mike Curtis, a hard-hitting, no-nonsense linebacker who helped the Colts win a Super Bowl during a 14-year NFL career spent predominan­tly in Baltimore, has died. He was 77.

Curtis died Monday in St. Petersburg, Florida. Son Clay said on Twitter his father died of “complicati­ons from CTE,” a degenerati­ve brain disease.

Curtis earned the nickname “Mad Dog” because of his fierce play in the middle of a strong Baltimore defense. “One of the game’s most legendary non-Hall-ofFamers. Ferocious on the field, a gentleman off the field,” Indianapol­is Colts owner Jim Irsay wrote on Twitter.

Curtis was selected 14th overall in the 1965 draft by the Colts after starring as a fullback at Duke University. He started out with Baltimore as a fullback but rose to stardom in his second season when he played linebacker on full time.

Curtis was a four-time Pro Bowl linebacker. He had his best season in 1970, when he intercepte­d five passes for the Colts. Then, in the Super Bowl against Dallas, he picked off a pass in the waning minutes to set up a winning field goal by Jim O’Brien.

The following year, Curtis delivered what some believe to be his most memorable hit. When an intoxicate­d fan ran onto the field and snatched the football between plays in a game against the Dolphins on Dec. 11, 1971, Curtis applied a jolting tackle that sent the interloper onto the turf of Memorial Stadium. “The way I see it, he was invading my place of business,” Curtis said.

Born in Washington, D.C. on March 27, 1943, James Michael Curtis grew up to become a fiery competitor whose reputation on the field belied his demeanor with family. “My Dad had a tough exterior. He was a strong man, both physically and mentally, and he had a fierce work ethic,” Clay Curtis wrote on Twitter. “But he had a softer side, too.”

Bill Curry, a teammate of Curtis’ on the Colts, said on Twitter: “Mike Curtis was my roommate for 5 years, one of the great players ever. In my 1st camp my wife went into labor at 5am. I panicked, but Mike talked me through plane res, seeing (coach Don) Shula, and gave me the keys to his brand new T Bird. I never forgot.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE ?? Mike Curtis flattens an intoxicate­d fan who ran on the field trying to steal the football in a 1971 game against the Dolphins in Baltimore.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Mike Curtis flattens an intoxicate­d fan who ran on the field trying to steal the football in a 1971 game against the Dolphins in Baltimore.

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