Skip navigation
sponsored by 

NFL players union chief Upshaw dies at 63

Hall of Famer helped usher in free agency but also had his share of critics

Image: Upshaw, Tagliabue
Mark Wilson / Getty Images
Former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue, left, and NFL Players Union chief Gene Upshaw listen to testimony during a steroids hearing in Congress in 2004.
Video
  NFL mourns death of Gene Upshaw
Aug. 21: Gene Upshaw, head of the NFL Players Association and former Oakland Raiders lineman, died of cancer Thursday at age 63. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

Nightly News

Slide show
Image: Kansas quarterback Todd Reesing
  Week in Sports Pictures
Dogs on the ski slopes, motorcycles in the harbor and more madness from the sports world.

more photos

Slide Show
Bobby Murcer
Gone, not forgotten
Notable sports deaths of 2008.
Special feature
UPSHAW
Gene Upshaw: Player and Director
A look at an NFL legend both on and off the playing field.
  Special report

Matchups if postseason started today

Video: Football from NBC Sports
Minnesota Vikings v Jacksonville Jaguars
Getty Images
Exclusive interview with Adrian Peterson
In Depth with Graham Bensinger: Adrian Peterson talks about everything from his relationship with his father to his love for Halle Berry.

  NFL power rankings
Dallas Cowboys v Washington Redskins
Getty Images

See the experts' picks and rank all the teams yourself.

Presented by

Special feature
Minnesota Vikings v Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Sideline support
Check out some of the NFL cheerleaders from across the league.

NBCSports.com

updated 7:26 p.m. ET Aug. 21, 2008

NEW YORK - Gene Upshaw was a punishing blocker who intimidated opponents on the field. Off it, his power was greater.

A Hall of Fame guard for the Oakland Raiders, Upshaw died Wednesday at age 63 from pancreatic cancer, an illness he only learned about Sunday. His death cut short a 25-year, post-playing career as union boss in which he led NFL players to riches that would have been almost unimaginable when he was a rookie in 1967.

“The Raider organization, the National Football League, and the world have lost a great man,” Raiders founder Al Davis said. “He is as prominent a sportsman as the world has known.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

The unexpected nature of Upshaw’s death shocked people throughout the NFL. This was a towering man who played 15 years — all for an Oakland team that reached the Super Bowl three times and won twice.

Upshaw died Wednesday night at his home near California’s Lake Tahoe, the NFL Players Association said Thursday. His wife Terri and sons Eugene Jr., Justin and Daniel were by his side. NFLPA president and Tennessee Titans center Kevin Mawae said Upshaw was diagnosed Sunday after he fell ill and his wife took him to the hospital.

“Gene was a great player. He was an All-Pro. He was a Hall of Famer. If you look at the history of the NFL you’re going to find out that he was one of the most influential people that the league has known. He did so much, not only for the players, but also for the owners, the teams, and the game of pro football,” John Madden, who coached Upshaw when Oakland won its first Super Bowl, said in a statement.

“This is deeper than head of the union passing away, and it’s deeper than an ex-player. This is missing someone that is and was like family. It’s a tough day for all of us.”

In the wake of his death, many of those who had made him the focal point for their complaints over pension and health benefits for retired players softened the rhetoric and spoke of their respect for Upshaw.

As a player, the seven-time Pro Bowler was one of the best ever, elected to the Hall of Fame in 1987, the first time he was eligible.

That also was the year Upshaw led the second players’ strike in five years, a short walkout that led to the embarrassing spectacle of games with replacement players, or “scab football” as it was jokingly called at the time.

By 1989, while the union was pressing in court for a settlement, the league implemented a limited form of freedom, called Plan B. A new, seven-year contract was finally worked out in 1993, bringing in a new age of free agency and salary caps.

That will go down as Upshaw’s legacy because it brought prosperity to both union members and owners, leaving many of today’s players appreciating Upshaw as a labor leader without knowing much about his playing career. Brandon Moore, the New York Jets player representative was 2 years old when Upshaw retired and said simply: “From what I hear, he was a pretty good player.”

What Upshaw did for Moore, and his counterparts is make them money — the salary cap for this season is $116 million and the players are making close to 60 percent of the 32 teams’ total revenues, as specified in the 2006 labor agreement. The players will be paid $4.5 billion this year, according to owners.

That sum led the owners to opt out in May from the collective bargaining agreement, meaning that if no new deal is reached, there will be an uncapped year in 2010, the season before the contract is expected to expire.

Upshaw, who had often been criticized for his close relationship with Paul Tagliabue, the former commissioner, and Roger Goodell, the current one, had been talking tougher than usual about upcoming negotiations, vowing that if the cap was ever abolished, he would never accede to a new one.

Upshaw’s death raises a big question mark about negotiations although the union’s executive committee tried to answer it quickly by appointing the union’s most experienced official, Richard Berthelsen, as the interim executive director.

Berthelsen, the NFLPA’s chief counsel and Upshaw’s top aide, has been involved in labor negotiations for 37 years and is expected to steer the union through the negotiations and then make way for a younger man, probably an ex-player such as Trace Armstrong or Troy Vincent, two past presidents, or former Minnesota running back Robert Smith, who has expressed an interest in the job.


Sponsored links