By John Oehser, Colts.com
INDIANAPOLIS - Johnny Unitas, a Hall of Fame quarterback who played with the Colts longer than any player in the team's 50-year history, died Wednesday. He was 69.
Unitas died of a heart attack.
Unitas, who had undergone emergency triple by-pass surgery in March 1993, retired in 1973 after 18 NFL seasons, the first 17 of which he spent with the Colts. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1979 and was a member of the NFL's 75th Anniversary Team.
"My family and I, as well as our entire organization, are deeply saddened by Johnny Unitas' sudden death," Colts Owner and Chief Executive Officer Jim Irsay said in statement Wednesday. "He was a hero to so many people, including me. I first met him shortly after my 13th birthday, at the first training camp after my family acquired the team.
"When he was in high school, he was considered by some too small to succeed in football, but over time he became larger than life. Without question, Johnny was the reason that football catapulted to the top of the professional sports world. He became a legend in the NFL.
"He was a leader in so many ways, a man of incredible talent and extraordinary character. Johnny leaves us with many great memories from professional football, and we are all grateful for what he gave us in his lifetime."
Unitas' NFL career was one of the game's legendary stories during the 1950s and 1960s, when the game emerged as a rival to baseball in the country's national sports consciousness. And Unitas, as much as anyone, turned quarterback into the glamour position - perhaps the most glamorous position in sport - that it is today.
Unitas, born in Pittsburgh in May 7, 1933, was four when his father died of pneumonia. His mother went to night school to become a bookkeeper to support four children.
He played collegiately at the University of Louisville, throwing for more than 2,000 yards and 21 touchdowns in an era in which passing was far less prevalent than today.
He was drafted in the ninth round in 1955 by the Pittsburgh Steelers, but played sparingly in the preseason and was released before team's opener.
He hitchhiked home and spent that season playing semi-pro ball in Pittsburgh - for the Bloomfield Rams - while working as a pile driver on a construction site.
The Colts signed him the following season, and he made his NFL debut in the fourth game of the season. His first pass was intercepted and returned for a touchdown, and although the Colts lost, Unitas started the next game and the Colts beat the Green Bay Packers.
The next week, he started again. The Colts upset the Cleveland Browns, and Unitas spent much of the next decade and a half revolutionizing the quarterback position - and the league itself.
He directed the Colts to the 1958 and 1959 NFL Championships, and his performance in the 1958 NFL Title game - widely considered perhaps the best and almost certainly the most important game in NFL history - was key to his legend and to turning the game into a national passion.
Unitas, opponents and teammates often said, personified what the quarterback position still represents today: toughness, leadership and confidence.
In the 1958 title game, in which the Colts beat the New York Giants 23-17 in overtime, Unitas completed four passes in the final 90 seconds to set up a field goal that sent the game into the first overtime in NFL history. In overtime, he led an 80-yard drive that fullback Alan Ameche capped with a one-yard run.
The game was nationally televised and the finish - and Unitas' heroics - helped the sport capture the nation's imagination.
Of Unitas, his teammate - Hall of Fame tight end John Mackey - once said, "It's like being in the huddle with God."
After that game, Unitas was asked about a particular play in overtime. With the Colts in Giants territory, Unitas threw a short pass to the sideline. The pass was considered dangerous by some. Had it been intercepted, the Giants defender would have had an easy path to a touchdown. As it was, it gave the Colts a first down at the Giants 1 and set up Ameche's historic touchdown.
Unitas, asked why he threw such a dangerous pass, replied, "If you know what you're doing, you don't get intercepted."
"There's a big difference between confidence and conceit," Unitas said once. "To me, conceit is bragging about yourself. Being confident means you believe you can get the job done, but you know you can't get your job done unless you also have the confidence that the other guys are going to get their jobs done too. Without them, I'm nothing."
Unitas led the Colts to the NFL title the following year, and was named the NFL's Most Valuable Player three times - in 1959, 1964 and 1965. He played in 10 Pro Bowls, a team record, and was named All-Pro in 1958, 1959, 1965 and 1967.
When he retired, he finished his 18-year career as the NFL leader for passes attempted (5,186), completed (2,830), yards gained (40,239), most seasons 3,000 yards (three), most 300-yard games (26) and most touchdown passes (290).
His 22 NFL records at the time included the most consecutive seasons leading the NFL in touchdown passes (four) and most consecutive games with a touchdown pass (57), the latter of which still stands is considered a record on par with Joe Dimaggio's 56-game hitting streak in baseball.
Both those critical catches were works of art like Michael Jordan above the rim. Both times Unitas threw the ball to a point slightly outside the field of play. Both times, Berry planted his feet, fell forwards out of bounds, and caught the ball that arrived just as he fell forward.
There was no defense to a pass like that. Perfectly thrown, perfectly caught, for a perfect result.
I saw almost all of this man's career. To Colt fans, third and 20 with Unitas taking the snap was not a disaster, but an opportunity. As a sports writer once wrote of Brooks Robinson, "He played likie he came down from a higher league."
Sleep well, 19. You done good.
Congressman Billybob
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Godspeed Mr. Unitas, it was a pleasure watching you play the game the way it was meant to be played.