Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

4 Super Bowl champs featured his imprint

- By Stephen Whyno

Bobby Beathard, the architect of four Super Bowl-winning teams with two different organizati­ons during his lengthy tenure in football, has died. He was 86.

A spokespers­on for the Washington Commanders said Beathard’s family told the team he died Monday at his home in Franklin, Tennessee, less than a week after his 86th birthday. A cause of death was not immediatel­y available.

Beathard was director of player personnel for two NFL championsh­ips by the Miami Dolphins in the 1970s and served as general manager for two more by Washington in the 1980s.

He also scouted for Kansas City when the Chiefs won the American Football League title and made Super Bowl I following the 1966 season and was GM with San Diego when the Chargers got there in the mid-1990s.

Part of seven teams that made the Super Bowl during his lengthy front-office career, Beathard was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2018. Washington added him to the organizati­on’s Ring of Honor in 2016.

“Bobby not only built winning teams throughout his career, but he also built winning cultures that lasted beyond his years with an organizati­on,” Pro Football Hall of Fame President Jim Porter said in a statement. “He combined an eye for talent with a special gift for working with other people. The results speak for themselves.”

Beathard also scouted for the Atlanta Falcons but is most known for his roles with Don Shula’s Dolphins that won the Super Bowl back-to-back and then hiring coach Joe Gibbs and drafting Darrell Green, Art Monk and others during his time in Washington.

“I came to the Redskins from the Miami Dolphins, and the years at the Miami Dolphins, including the ’72 season of undefeated teams and being with Shula, I learned a lot more than I ever had up until that time about football,” Beathard said in 2016 at Washington’s training camp in Richmond, Virginia.

Beathard resigned from that job in 1989, before Washington won a third Super Bowl with a core he constructe­d, and went into TV before being hired as GM of the Chargers in 1990.

Beathard in more than three decades in an NFL front office loathed first-round picks and reveled in taking chances on players from out-of-the-way colleges, a strategy that paid off along the way. In 1988 Sports Illustrate­d called him “The Smartest Man in the NFL” — a title he did not like.

“That was kind of embarrassi­ng,” Beathard said in 2018 before going into the Hall of Fame.

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