Samuel Adrian Baugh (March 17, 1914 – December 17,
2008) was an
American football
player and coach.
He played college
football for the Horned
Frogs at Texas Christian University
, where he was a two-time All-American. He then played in the
National Football League
for the
Washington Redskins from
1937 to
1952.
He was inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
in the 17-member charter class of 1963. He
was known as "Slingin' Sammy".
Biography
Early life
Baugh was
born on a farm near Houston, Texas
, and was the second son of James, who worked for
the Santa Fe Railroad, and Lucy
Baugh. His parents later divorced and his mother raised the
three children.
When he was 16, the family then moved to
Sweetwater,
Texas
, and he attended Sweetwater High School. As the
quarterback of his
high school football team, he would
practice for hours throwing a football through a swinging
automobile tire, often on the run. But apparently, Baugh would
practice
punting more than
throwing.
Baugh,
however, really wanted to become a professional baseball player and almost received a scholarship to play at Washington State
University
. But about a month before he started at
Washington State, Baugh hurt his knee while sliding into second
base during a game, and the scholarship fell through.
College career
Football
After
coach Dutch Meyer told him he could play
three sports (football, baseball, and basketball), Baugh attended Texas Christian
University
. While at Texas Christian, he threw 587
passes in his three varsity seasons for 39 touchdowns. Baugh was
named an
All-American in
1935 and
1936. He also led
TCU to two
bowl game wins, a 3–2 victory over
Louisiana State in the
1936 Sugar Bowl, and a 16-6
victory over
Marquette in
the first annual
Cotton Bowl
Classic in
1937 after which he was named
MVP. He finished fourth in
voting for the
Heisman Trophy in
1936.
In the spring of his senior year,
Redskins owner
George Preston Marshall offered
Baugh $4,000 to play with the franchise. Originally unsure about
playing professional football (coach Meyer offered him a job as the
freshman coach and he still thought about playing professional
baseball), he did not agree to the contract until after the
College All-Star Game, where
the team beat the
Green Bay
Packers 6–0.
Statistics
| Year |
Comp |
Att |
Comp % |
Passing |
TD |
| 1934 |
69 |
171 |
40.4 |
883 |
10 |
| 1935 |
97 |
210 |
46.2 |
1241 |
18 |
| 1936 |
104 |
206 |
50.5 |
1196 |
12 |
Baseball
Baugh was also a baseball player at Texas Christian, where he
played
third base.
It was during his time
as a baseball player that he earned the nickname "Slingin' Sammy",
which he got from a Texas
sportswriter. After college, Sammy signed a contract with
the St. Louis Cardinals and was
sent to the minor leagues in
Columbus,
Ohio
after being converted to shortstop. He was then sent to an even lower league
in Rochester, New
York
. While there he received little playing time
behind starting shortstop
Marty Marion
and was unhappy with his prospects, so he then turned to
professional football.
Professional career
As
expected, Baugh was drafted in the first
round (sixth overall) of the 1937 NFL
Draft by the Washington
Redskins, the same year the team moved from Boston
. He
signed a one-year contract with the Redskins and received $8,000,
making him the highest paid player on the team. He is credited for
making the
forward pass an integral
part of the offensive play in the NFL.
During his rookie season in
1937,
Baugh played
quarterback,
defensive back, and
punter, set an NFL record for
completions with 91 in 218 attempts and threw for a league-high
1,127 yards. He led the Redskins to the
NFL Championship game against
the
Chicago Bears, where
he finished 17 of 33 for 335 yards and his second-half touchdown
passes of 55, 78 and 33 yards gave Washington a 28–21 victory. The
Redskins and
Bears would meet three
times in championship games between
1940 and
1943. In the
1940 Championship game, the
Bears recorded the most one-sided victory in NFL history, beating
Washington 73–0.
In
1942, Baugh and the
Redskins won the East
Conference with a 10–1 record. During the same season the Bears
went 11–0 and outscored their opponents 376–84. In the
1942 Championship game, Baugh
threw a touchdown pass and kept the
Bears in their own territory with
some strong punts, including an 85-yard quick kick, and Washington
won 14–6.
Baugh was even more successful in
1943 and led the league in passing,
punting (45.9-yard average) and
interceptions (11). One of Baugh's
more memorable single performances during the season was when he
threw four touchdown passes and intercepted four passes in a 42–20
victory over
Detroit. The
Redskins again made it to the
championship game, but lost to
the
Bears 41–21. During
the game, Baugh suffered a
concussion
while tackling Bears
quarterback
Sid Luckman and had to leave.
During the
1945 season, Baugh
completed 128 of 182 passes for a 70.33 completion percentage,
which was an NFL record then and remains the second best today (to
Ken Anderson, 70.55
in
1982). He threw 11 touchdown
passes and only four interceptions. The Redskins again won the East
Conference but lost 15–14 in the
1945 Championship game against
the
Cleveland Rams. The
one-point margin of victory came under scrutiny because of a
safety that occurred early
in the game. In the first quarter, the Redskins had the ball at
their own 5 yard line. Dropping back into the
end zone, Baugh threw to an open receiver, but the
ball hit the goal post (which at the time were on the goal line
instead of at the back of the end zone) and bounced back to the
ground in the end zone. Under the rules at the time, this was ruled
as a safety and thus gave the Rams a 2–0 lead. It was that safety
that proved to be the margin of victory. Owner Marshall was so mad
at the outcome that he became a major force in passing the
following major rule change after the season: A forward pass that
strikes the goal posts is automatically ruled incomplete. This
later became known as the "Baugh/Marshall Rule".
One of Baugh's more memorable single performances came on "Sammy
Baugh Day" on November 23, 1947. That day, the
Washington D.C. Touchdown Club honored him at
Griffith
Stadium
and gave him a station
wagon. Against the
Chicago
Cardinals he passed for 355 yards and six touchdowns. That
season, the Redskins finished 4–8, but Baugh had career highs in
completions (210), attempts (354), yards (2,938) and touchdown
passes (25), leading the league in all four categories.
Baugh played for five more years—leading the league in completion
percentage for the sixth and seventh times in
1948 and
1949. He then retired after the
1952 season.
In his final game, a 27–21 win over
Philadelphia at
Griffith
Stadium
, he played for several minutes before retiring to a
prolonged standing ovation from the crowd. Baugh won a
record-setting six NFL passing titles and earned first-team All-NFL
honors seven times in his career. He completed 1,693 of 2,995
passes for 21,886 yards.
Records
By the time he retired, Baugh set 13 NFL records in three player
positions: quarterback, punter, and defensive back. He is
considered one of the all-time great football players. He gave
birth to the fanaticism of Redskins fans. As
Michael Wilbon of
The Washington Post says: "He
brought not just victories but thrills and ignited Washington with
a passion even the worst Redskins periods can barely diminish." He
was the first to play the position of quarterback as it is played
today, the first to make of the forward pass an effective weapon
rather than an "act of desperation".
He was the last
surviving member of the inaugural class inducted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame
in 1963, including Bronko Nagurski, Red
Grange, Jim Thorpe, Curly Lambeau, Don
Hutson, George Halas, Ernie Nevers, and Mel
Hein.
Two of his records as quarterback still stand: most seasons leading
the league in passing (six; tied with
Steve Young) and most
seasons leading the league with the lowest interception percentage
(five). He is also second in highest single-season completion
percentage (70.33), most seasons leading the league in yards gained
(four) and most seasons leading the league in completion percentage
(seven).
As a punter, Baugh retired with the NFL record for highest punting
average in a career (45.1 yards), and is still second all-time
(
Shane Lechler 46.5 yards), and has
the best (51.4 in 1940) and fourth best (48.7 in 1941) season
marks. As a defensive back, he was the first player in league
history to intercept four passes in a game, and is the only player
to lead the league in passing, punting, and interceptions in the
same season. Baugh also led the league in punting from
1940 through
1943.
When comparing Baugh's athletic achievements with modern football
greats, consider the actual football he threw then was rounder at
the ends and fatter in the middle than the one used today, making
it far more difficult to pass well (or even to create a proper
spiral).
Coaching career
Baugh
left Washington
D.C.
in 1952. He chose not to return for Redskins
team functions, despite repeated organization invitations. After
his playing career, he became head coach at
Hardin-Simmons University where he
compiled a 23–28 record between 1955 and 1959. Baugh was the first
coach of the
New York Titans of the
American Football League in
1960 and
1961. He was an assistant at the
University of Tulsa in 1963
under head coach
Glenn Dobbs. At Tulsa,
he coached
All-American quarterback
Jerry Rhome. In
1964, Baugh coached the AFL's
Houston Oilers and went 4–10.
Acting
Baugh also took up acting. In 1941, he made $6,400 for starring in
a 12-week
serial as a dark-haired
Texas Ranger named Tom King. The serial, called
King of the Texas Rangers,
was released by
Republic Studios.
The episodes ran in theaters as Saturday matinees; it also starred
Duncan Renaldo, later famous as TV's
Cisco Kid.
After football
Early in his career, Baugh paid $200 an acre for a ranch in
West Texas, northwest of Abilene. After
retiring from football all together, Baugh and Edmonia Smith, his
wife, moved to the ranch and had four boys and a girl. Edmonia died
in 1990, after 52 years of marriage to Baugh, who was her high
school sweetheart.
Baugh lived in a nursing home in a little West Texas town not far
from Double Mountain Ranch. The Double Mountain Ranch is now in the
hands of Baugh's son David and is still a cow-calf operation, on
.
Death
The
Associated Press quoted Baugh's son on December 17, 2008, saying
Baugh had died after numerous health issues at Fisher County
Hospital in Rotan,
Texas
.
Honors
Baugh was
the last surviving member of the 17-member charter class of the
Pro Football
Hall of Fame
. Additionally he was honored by the Redskins
with the retirement of his jersey number, #33, the only number the
team has officially retired.
Additional Honors:
- An
avenue in his hometown of Rotan, Texas

- 50th Anniversary Team by the NFL (1969)
- 75th Anniversary Team by the NFL (1994)
- 36th greatest athlete of the 20th century by Burt Randolph
Sugar (1995)
- 64th greatest athlete of the 20th century by ESPN (1999)
- 43rd greatest athlete of the 20th century by the Associated Press (1999)
- 3rd greatest NFL player of the 20th century by the Associated
Press (1999)
- 11th greatest NFL player of the 20th century by The Sporting News (1999); highest-ranking
player for the Redskins
- Scripps-Howard all-time college football team (1999)
- 4th greatest college football player by SPORT magazine(1999)
- 3rd greatest college football player by College Football News
(2003)
- 7th greatest college football player by Brad Rawlins
(2006)
- 5th greatest college football player by ESPN (2007)
- Named starting quarterback, defensive back and punter of the
Cold, Hard Football Facts.com "All-Time 11"
(2006)
- Named as the Most Versatile Player of all-time by the NFL
Network (2007).
- Has his number retired at Sweetwater High School, his alma
mater.
- Has a children's home in Jayton, Kent County, Texas named in
his honor.
- TCU's Indoor Practice Facility is named after him.
Pop culture references
Robert Duvall patterned the role of Gus McCrae in the television
series
Lonesome Dove after
Baugh, particularly his arm movements, after visiting him at his
home in Texas in 1988.
Hip-Hop artist
Jay-Z
wore Baugh's
Mitchell & Ness
1947 Washington jersey in his 2002 video for the single "
Girls, Girls, Girls". This
increased demand for the throwback jersey and renewed popular
awareness of Baugh.
References
- "Getting In a Word For Slingin' Sammy" by
Michael Wilbon, December 19, 2008]
- Nash, Bruce, and Allen Zullo (1986). The Football Hall of
Shame, 68-69, Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-74551-4.
- Sammy Baugh dies
- Hall of Fame quarterback Sammy Baugh dies at
94
- http://www.coldhardfootballfacts.com/Article.php?Page=1055
External links