written and compiled by Carrie Birdsong
https://www.profootballhof.com/news/2023/pro-football-hall-of-famer-bobby-beathard,-surfer-guy-team-builder,-dies/
Bobby Beathard was born on January
24th, 1937, in Zanesville, Ohio, which is approximately ninety miles
south of Canton, Ohio. When Bobby was 4
years old, he moved with his family to California. He did not start playing organized football
until he was a sophomore in high school, but developed in the game quite
rapidly, as a tailback he was talented enough to earn a scholarship offer from
Louisiana State University (LSU).
Back to California Beathard’s legacy as a talent evaluator on teams
that reached Super Bowls in Kansas City, Miami, Washington, and San Diego will
be preserved forever at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
Shortly after arriving at LSU in
Baton Rouge for summer workouts, he grew homesick and returned to
California. His affinity for his home
state would last forever and shape his career decisions, his daily habits, and
lifestyle.
He attended El Camino Junior
College, in Alondra Park, California, for one year, then enrolled at Cal
Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, California. As a member of the Mustangs’ successful
football team (17-2 record in 1957 and 1958), he advanced from backup running
back to starting quarterback and defensive back. He and a college teammate, fellow future Hall
of Famer John Madden, often discussed strategy and their shared love of
the game.
Undrafted by the NFL, he snagged
pro tryouts over the next two preseasons but did not land on a roster. He fell out of the game after a couple of
years, turning to various sales jobs to make ends meet.
With his passion for the game
unchecked, Beathard found a path back to football thanks to the American
Football League. In 1963, Lamar Hunt
and the Kansas City Chiefs offered him the opportunity to scout part-time in
his home state across the West. In an interview, he said, “It was
kind of a natural thing for me.”
Beathard left the Chiefs briefly to
scout for the AFL, which at that time was engaged in a heated competition with
the NFL to find, draft, and sign players.
He returned to the Chiefs for the 1966 season – just as the team was
ascending to the AFL title and being the league in the First AFL-NFL World
Championship Game. He is credited with
helping the team find and sign future Hall of Famers Curley Culp and Jan
Stenerud among other contributors to the team’s long-term success.
In 1968 he jumped leagues, joining
the fledgling Atlanta Falcons, as a scout for three seasons. Looking back on his career, he told an
interviewer. “It was beneficial for me
to see how different organizations did things.” That was an experience that
helped open another door.
Going into the 1972 season,
Beathard joined Don Shula in Miami as director of player personnel, with
the Dolphins on the cusp of the team’s historic perfect record and back-to-back
Super Bowl victories.
“Bobby made fewer mistakes than
most. He found kids for us nobody else
would take a chance on.” Shula told the Washington
Post. “He wasn’t ever afraid
to take a risk.”
Demanding and often argumentative
with his staff, Shula asked only that his personnel team come to meetings
informed and that they are prepared to defend their opinions on players
unwaveringly. Bobby Beathard met that challenge.
During a post-career interview, he
told David Spada “I probably learned more working for Shula than anybody.” Beathard said Shula allowed him to hire the
scouting staff without any second-guessing and that “set me up for how to do
things for the rest of my career.”
During his time with the Dolphins,
Beathard would scout during the week, then return to the team to coach special
teams on Saturdays and Sundays.
During his enshrinement speech in Canton,
Ohio, he said: “Working for Don Shula was probably the thing that really
prepared me for my career in the NFL.”
By the time 1978 rolled around,
Beathard was prepared for the position of general manager, which would
become his path to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. An opening existed in Washington, where the
tenure of coach/general manager George Allen had ended.
A self-professed “beach lover,”
Beathard was happy in Miami and almost turned down the interview request. “It was more responsibility and a step up,
but I didn’t want to go,” he said. Shula encouraged him to pursue the
opportunity.
Beathard impressed ownership and
got the job, but soon realized that he had entered “a situation where their
philosophy was completely different than mine.” Over the first three seasons, results were mediocre – a 24-24 record and
no playoff appearances.
He then made the most important
personnel decision of his professional career: He hired Joe Gibbs as
head coach in 1981. After a 0-5 start,
the team went 8-3 to reach .500 for the season.
In the strike-shortened 1982
season, Washington went 8-1 and reached the Super Bowl, beating the Don
Shula-coached Dolphins, 27-17 for the title.
The team featured twenty-seven free agents Beathard had signed. “It was almost like forming a new
league,” Beathard said of that unusual season, “but you had to do it in 10
days.”
As a team-builder, Beathard placed
less emphasis on high draft picks than many of his peers. In 11 years, he traded down in the first
round – or out altogether – in eight drafts.
“We did it a little bit differently
than a lot of people. A lot of people in
the league thought I was nuts,” Beathard said.
“Maybe that was true, because I started trading away first-round draft
picks, and first-round draft picks were valuable … but we figured if it was a
draft that we had evaluated … and it was rich in talent, we could get players
in the later rounds.”
Two of the first-round picks
Beathard did not relinquish became Hall of Famers: Art Monk and Darrell
Green, a player many considered too small for the NFL.
“It didn’t matter who we brought
in, whether it was a first-round pick in the draft or the last pick in the last
round of the draft, each one of those players got the same chance,” Beathard
said in his Enshrinement speech. “And
because of that, we ended up getting three Super Bowls.”
An avid runner, Beathard competed
in several Boston and New York City marathons, some while working as general
manager in Washington, and ran a part of the Olympic torch relay in 1984. He often ran the 6.4 miles from his home in
suburban Virginia to the team’s offices.
His secretary told the Washington Post in a 1981 article, “When
Bobby says he is going to ‘run home,’ he means it.” Beathard called the decision to go
to Washington “probably the best decision I made” in football.
Teams that Beathard constructed won
Super Bowls following the 1981 and 1987 seasons.
He also laid the foundation for the team that won Super Bowl XXVI three
seasons after he left Washington.
“He could go to a small school and
bring out real talent,” said Ricky Sanders, a standout receiver at Southwest
Texas State who flourished for eight seasons with Washington.
Beathard resigned from his job in
Washington before the 1989 NFL Draft.
He returned to his native California and spent one season as an NFL
analyst for NBC.
In 1990, he was hired to revive a
San Diego team that had not reached the playoffs for a decade. By Year 3, the Chargers were 11-5 and AFC
West champions. Two years later, they
reached the first time in team history, defeating the Dolphins and Steelers in
the AFC playoffs, before losing to the San Francisco 49ers.
During his Enshrinement speech, he
said, “Getting back to San Diego was like a dream come true. I got to be near my parents. And fortunately, we got enough players out
there to get to another Super Bowl.”
Beathard stayed with the Chargers
through the 2000 season. He retired
saying all the travel was taking a toll on his health and that he never wanted
to “pick a player that I hadn’t seen in person,” He was done with football, but not
done with competition.
From 2005 to 2009, Beathard took
first place in the men’s 65-and-over age group at the annual World Bodysurfing
Championships.
At a Washington team reunion,
12-year offensive tackle George Starke said: “When you think of classic
football executives, you do not think of Bobby Beathard. He’s kind of a surfer guy. He looks like a surfer guy, and he is a
surfer guy, and yet somehow, he has a natural feel for (football) talent.”
The first time Beathard met team
owner Jack Kent Cooke at the team facility, he was dressed in his usual office
attire: a T-shirt, running shorts, and running shoes.
Mike Allman, the director of player
personnel for 19 years in Washington, told a newspaper reporter: “What you see
is what you get. You could not make up a
guy like Bobby Beathard. He’s an
original.”
Describing himself as a lucky man
who “got through life without a real job,” Beathard called his life in football
“something that I loved to do every day.”