New York Daily News

Richardson, who founded & owned Panthers, dies

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Jerry Richardson, the Carolina Panthers founder and for years one of the NFL’s most influentia­l owners until a scandal forced him to sell the team, has died. He was 86.

Richardson died peacefully Wednesday night at his Charlotte home, the team said in a statement.

Richardson became the first former NFL player to own a team since Chicago’s George Halas when he landed the expansion Panthers in 1993.

A former teammate of Johnny Unitas who caught a touchdown pass in the Baltimore Colts’ victory over the Giants in the 1959 NFL championsh­ip game, Richardson only spent two years in the NFL before venturing into the restaurant business. He used his championsh­ip bonus money to open the first Hardee’s in Spartanbur­g, South Carolina.

He went on to make his fortune in the restaurant business, becoming chief executive officer of Flagstar, the sixth-largest food service company in the country at the time.

The Spring Hope, North Carolina, native spent years trying to persuade the NFL to put a team in the Carolinas, ultimately succeeding through a relatively original concept of funding a new stadium through the sales of permanent seat licenses.

“Jerry Richardson’s contributi­ons to profession­al football in the Carolinas are historic,” current Panthers owner David Tepper and his wife Nicole said in a statement. “With the arrival of the Panthers in 1995, he changed the landscape of sports in the region and gave the NFL fans here a team to call their own.”

Carolina began play in 1995 and Richardson quickly built the Panthers into one of the league’s model franchises, while becoming a powerful figure in the NFL.

MORE WOMEN’S PRO HOCKEY

The Profession­al Women’s Hockey Player’s Associatio­n is finalizing plans with corporate sponsors to launch what would be North America’s second women’s pro league by the end of this year, a key stakeholde­r said Thursday.

If establishe­d, it would rival the Premier Hockey Federation, which was founded in 2015 and currently features seven teams.

GEORGIA GAMBLING DEALT BLOW

Sports gambling advocates in Georgia were dealt a setback Thursday when the state Senate rejected a bill that would have allowed sports betting, including on horse races.

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