Name Ladd, Ernest (The Big
Cat) DT | 77
Height/Wgt 6-9 305-315
College Grambling State
High School Wallace, Orange TX
Born 11/28/38
Died 03/12/07 See obituary below
In Rayville, LA
Drafted 1961 Round 15 SD
Honors AFL All-Star Games 1963,
64, 65, 66
Chargers
Hall of Fame 1981
Breitbard Hall of Fame 2005
Member of the "Fearsome Foursome"
Record:
1961 SD 14G
1962 SD 14
1963 SD 14
1964 SD 14
1965 SD 14
1966-67 Hou
1967 Kc
Total 112 games Int 1-3
ERNIE LADD 1938–2007
Pioneer Chargers DT Ladd dies at 68
Massive lineman had fought cancer
By Jerry Magee
STAFF WRITER
March 13, 2007
Ernie Ladd, the 6-foot-9, 325-pound colossus of the Chargers' defensive line
of the early 1960s, died yesterday in Franklin, La., where he was serving
as a pastor. He was 68.
His death was attributed to cancer, which he had been battling since
2004. The cancer first was detected in his colon and then spread to his stomach
and bones, according to his widow, Roslyn.
Ladd played for the Chargers from 1961-65. With the late Ron Nery, Earl Faison
and Richard Hudson, he was a member of what was known as the team's “Fearsome
Foursome” defensive front. Ladd, indeed, could be fearsome, including vocally.
“He was second to none,” said Paul Lowe, a Chargers contemporary as the club's
stellar running back. “No one could block him when he wanted to really play,
and he was a motivator for the defense. He would growl at you and talk bad
to you. That was 'Red.' That was his nickname to us.”
His football and subsequent wrestling careers concluding, Ladd became active
in Republican politics. “He was with me on every campaign I ever ran,” said
Jack Kemp. “He was a dear, dear personal friend. A wonderful man.”
Kemp, the Chargers' quarterback during the team's first season in San Diego
in 1961 and later a congressman from a Buffalo, N.Y., district and a vice
presidential candidate, said he has advised President Bush of Ladd's death
and that Bush intends to send a letter to Ladd's widow.
Kemp, in Vail, Colo., yesterday, said he plans to attend Ladd's funeral Saturday
in Franklin.
When he was in Congress, Kemp said he had a picture in his office of Ladd
when he was playing for the Chargers and Kemp was the quarterback of the
Buffalo Bills. “All 6-foot-9 of Ernie, and he is about to land all of it
on a Jack Kemp who is wearing no thigh pads and no knee pads,” said Kemp.
Kemp's intention, he said, is to present this picture to Ladd's widow at
the funeral. Kemp remembered that Ladd accompanied him on a flight to New
Orleans when Kemp was campaigning for the vice presidency. Normally, Kemp
said, members of the press and others accompanying a political candidate
would debark from a plane through the rear, which would leave the candidate
and his family to leave from the front.
On this flight, though, Kemp said he invited Ladd to join him in leaving
from the front of the plane. “The next morning, very early, Ernie was at
my door,” Kemp said, “and he had a tear in his eye. The New Orleans newspaper
had published his picture with my wife and me. He said it was the first time
he had been pictured with a candidate. For me, it was a striking moment.”
For all his ferocity, Ladd in his time with the Chargers delighted in playing
games. Chess was among his favorites. Playing, he would loom up over the
board, seeking to intimidate the other player, which for him was not difficult.
He had a 52-inch chest, a 19-inch neck, 20-inch biceps and wore size-18D
shoes.
Ladd four times was an American Football League all-star, from 1962-65. This,
though when he was on the field, he had a tether attached to one of his arms
that made it impossible for him to extend his arm fully. Even with this handicap,
he was a powerful pass rusher who would pick up a rival center and cast him
aside, then wade through anybody else attempting to impede him.
The Chargers chose Ladd, then attending Grambling, in the 15th round of the
AFL's 1961 draft as a “future” – a player with remaining eligibility. Ladd
later would contend that he was kidnapped, that representatives of the team
transported him to Southern California on a private plane and signed him
for considerably less than he merited.
Ladd played for the Houston Oilers in 1966-67 and for the Kansas City Chiefs
in 1967-68.
In 1961, Ladd had agreed as a publicity stunt to participate in a wrestling
show in Los Angeles. His appearance was so well-received that his football
career concluding, he began wrestling professionally. He took the role of
a bad guy and became a hated figure on the wrestling circuit.
Ladd had many matches against wrestling champions Bruno Samartino, Pedro
Morales and Bob Backlund and opposed Andre the Giant, whom Ladd referred
to as “Andre the Dummy.”
Ladd retired as a wrestler in 1986. He subsequently was voted into the Louisiana
Sports Hall of Fame.
Funeral arrangements are pending, according to Ladd's widow.
Jerry Magee: (619) 293-1830; jerry.magee@uniontrib.com