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Kenny "The Snake" Stabler dead at 69

I remember when he became a Houston Oiler. I liked the nickname, too, especially as a kid and Escape from New York came out around the same time with Kurt Russell as Snake Pissken.
 
Former Oilers quarterback Ken Stabler has died, The Tuscaloosa News reported Thursday. He was 69.

Stabler played at Alabama and then in the NFL from 1970-84. He achieved his greatest success with the Oakland Raiders, whom he led to a Super Bowl title in 1977.

Stabler played for the Oilers from 1980-81 after being acquired in a trade for Dan Postorini. Stabler threw for 5,190 yards and 27 touchdowns with 46 interceptions. The Oilers went 16-12 in his 28 starts for them. He led the Oilers to the 1980 playoffs, where they lost to the eventual Super Bowl champion Raiders in the wild-card round.



http://blog.chron.com/ultimatetexans/2015/07/report-former-oilers-qb-ken-stabler-dies/
 
Now it's confirmed... RIP Snake

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I had a couple of those.

I had been a fan of Stabler's when he was with the Raiders. I loved it when he came to the Oilers, had some high hopes for us.

So sad to hear he's passed away. He was still pretty young. (Strange how the definition of "young" changes the older you get.)
 
Now it's confirmed... RIP Snake

photos-super-bowl-celebrations-f8611595d4b7dc36jpg-b41a62f75adec454.JPG

Apparently some sources are retracting the statement that he died, but some are not. I think he really did, since he was fighting colon cancer. Too much contradictory info on the internet. Who knows, maybe he became a zombie and that accounts for the reports that he is very much alive, and the ones where he is dead. Beats me. Then again:

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Statements on the Passing of Ken Stabler

“The Raiders are deeply saddened by the passing of the great Ken Stabler,” said Owner Mark Davis. “He was a cherished member of the Raider family and personified what it means to be a Raider. He wore the Silver and Black with Pride and Poise and will continue to live in the hearts of Raider fans everywhere. Our sincerest thoughts and prayers go out to Kenny’s family.”

Statement from John Madden

“I was head coach of the Raiders the entire time Kenny was there and he led us to a whole bunch of victories including one in Super Bowl XI. I've often said, If I had one drive to win a game to this day, and I had a quarterback to pick, I would pick Kenny. Snake was a lot cooler than I was. He was a perfect quarterback and a perfect Raider. When you think about the Raiders you think about Ken Stabler. Kenny loved life. It is a sad day for all Raiders.”

Family’s Statement on the Passing of Ken Stabler

We announce with great sadness that our father, Ken Stabler, passed away Wednesday, July 8 as a result of complications associated with colon cancer.

He passed peacefully surrounded by the people he loved most, including his three daughters and longtime partner, as some of his favorite songs played in the background, such as Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama” and Van Morrison’s “Leaves Falling Down.”
He quietly battled Stage 4 colon cancer since being diagnosed in February 2015.

He wanted to make a difference in the lives of others in both life and death. At his request, his brain and spinal cord were donated to Boston University’s Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy Center to support research for degenerative brain disease in athletes.

He was a kind, generous and unselfish man, never turning down an autograph request or an opportunity to help someone in need. A great quarterback, he was an even greater father to his three girls and grandfather to his two “grand snakes.”

We are grateful for the tremendous love and support from friends and fans. We ask that you please respect our privacy during this difficult time as we grieve this heartbreaking loss.

Funeral Arrangements are pending. In lieu of flowers, we ask that donations be made to the XOXO Stabler Foundation to support research of colon cancer and sports-‐related head trauma. More Information will be available on Ken Stabler’s Facebook Fan page and the XOXO Stabler Foundation.

He is survived by his three daughters Kendra Stabler Moyes (husband, Scott), Alexa (fiancé, Hunter Adams) and Marissa; His grandsons Jack And Justin Moyes; Sister Carolyn Bishop; Nephew Scott Bishop; and great nephew and niece Tayler and Payton Bishop. He is preceded in death by his father, Leroy Stabler, and mother, Sally Stabler.​
 
I had a couple of those.

I had been a fan of Stabler's when he was with the Raiders. I loved it when he came to the Oilers, had some high hopes for us.

So sad to hear he's passed away. He was still pretty young. (Strange how the definition of "young" changes the older you get.)

I pretty sure most of those 69 years were hard years.


RIP Snake
 
This is from two years ago, but great read:
A tribute to Ken Stabler, baddest man on the planet

Growing up as a 49ers fan, I’ve had few complaints. I was born in 1970, and suffered very little as a fan before the team won its first of five Super Bowls. We had tough guys and smart coaches, arguably the best signal caller of all time, and running backs and receivers who were a blast to watch. Our lean times have never seemed totally hopeless, and just when the Eddie DeBartolo years started to feel like a distant memory, his nephew took over as owner and displayed some of the same qualities.


But I’ve still always looked at the team across the bay with a little bit of envy. Because they had Kenny Stabler.



Stabler was a good quarterback and fun to watch, but he represented something more. He was everything great about the latter half of the 1970s, with none of the crappy stuff from that era. Stabler was like a Burt Reynolds movie, Willie Nelson song and Bounty paper towel ad, wrapped into one grizzly hard-living package.

http://blog.sfgate.com/thebigevent/2013/08/22/a-tribute-to-ken-stabler-baddest-man-on-the-planet/
Full Article

 
My dad says he remembers seeing him smoking a cig in the locker room after a game. Couldn't imagine the reaction to that nowadays.
 
Worth a listen, McClain is indeed a good storyteller... evidently shared more off air that had the guys in tears laughing:



Then another side of the Snake...

Padecky: Ken Stabler memories, on and off the football field
BY BOB PADECKY|FOR THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

My friend Pat Gallagher emailed me Thursday with a perspective. “I can’t help it. Every time I think of him, I think of you.”

Myself, I get a little more detailed. Every time I think of Kenny Stabler, I think of handcuffs, submachine guns, a jail cell that stunk because of that clogged toilet, standing half-naked in front of laughing cops and, of course, about seven-eighths of a gram of cocaine.

I wish my initial memories of Snake were otherwise. God knows, there were enough of them. His gifted left arm delivered the most magical, photogenic and improbable touchdown pass in NFL history, that floater which somehow found Clarence Davis in a 1974 AFC divisional playoff game. Watch the replay on YouTube; like a potato chip, I bet you can’t do just one.

Snake made Johnny Manziel look like a Buddhist monk. Snake was more fun to watch than Chinese acrobats. Snake could ride shotgun in any car I was driving because, well, Snake, might be carrying a shotgun. Snake was a thrill ride, a roller coaster all by himself, and those Raiders of the ’70s happily, gratefully, took a seat behind him.

In his last days as colon cancer ravaged him, it made perfect sense Snake was listening to “Sweet Home Alabama.” He was ’Bama right down to his last margarita. There will never be another Snake in the NFL, if for no other reason than it would be bad for business. The suits would never allow it. His loss is nearly incalculable to anyone who loves the Raiders.

Snake had flair, guile and Jan. 22, 1979.

By October 1978, Stabler had stopped talking to the media; the wheels were falling off for his season. He would wind up with 16 touchdowns and 30 picks. Snake was grumpy. As the Raiders beat reporter for the Sacramento Bee I was there when Stabler told us he would talk after the season. I took him at his word. Looking back on it, I was naive.

On Jan. 1, 1979, I was in New Orleans, having just covered the Sugar Bowl game between Alabama and Penn State. Stabler made his offseason home in Gulf Shores, Ala., just 196 miles from New Orleans. Well, I’ll just drive over and see Kenny. Yeah, OK. He said he’d talk once the season was over. Yeah, OK. Wouldn’t be a problem. Yeah, OK. Wouldn’t even have to call ahead. We always got along. Hee haw. Hee haw. Hee haw. All that was missing for me was a corncob pipe and a hay wagon. What a rube.

Snake said he didn’t want to talk. Sorry. But I’m here. Let’s chat. Nope. Well, I’ll talk to the folks in Gulf Shores and neighboring Foley. Wish you wouldn’t do that, he said. Then talk to me, I said. Nope. Off I went. Spent 36 hours interviewing people. Wrote a three-part series for the Bee.

The worst of it? The folks said Snake needed to get in better shape. Do a little jogging. Get to bed earlier. Oh, and it’d be terrific if he’d marry that woman he’s living with — Wonderfully Wicked Wanda. In the Bible Belt, of which Alabama holds the buckle, living in sin wrinkles the noses of those good Southern Baptists.

As damning evidence, I thought what I wrote was rather lightweight. The series’ third part was how Foley and Gulf Shores loved football. What I failed to realize — forgot, actually, since I grew up in Florida — is that the South don’t cotton to outsiders. Southerners like their privacy. As the risk of generalization, Southerners are most comfortable and trusting of Southerners.

In a statement that would become quite prophetic, Billy Walker, a friend, told me, “You don’t want to make Kenny mad.”

Stabler felt invaded. I see that now. Furious, I was to find out. In Miami later that month to cover Super Bowl XIII, I got a call midweek. Kenny wanted “to spill his guts” to me. On everything, including how he was treated by Al Davis. Fly up as soon as you can. I did, the morning after the Steelers beat the Cowboys. On Jan. 22, 1979.

Met Stabler at Lefty’s, a restaurant he co-owned. Stayed for a few minutes. Suddenly he had to leave. I’ll give you a call. Call came. Meet me at BJ’s, another local restaurant. Stayed for a few minutes. He was not conversant. Sullen was his expression. Gotta go. A business deal. I’ll give you a call. Call came. Meet me at the Silver Dollar Lounge.

By this time, I developed a bit of a twitch. An anxiety became too real when he said at the Silver Dollar, “I don’t know why you are out to get me. I never met anyone like you. You’re the first reporter to come into my town trying to dig up dirt.”

I just wanted you to talk about the season, Kenny. You said you would. I might as well have said: “Why don’t we scramble some eggs and rub them into my hair?” for all the good it was doing. Snake wasn’t listening. He was lecturing. For 10 minutes he went on, pounding the table, uttering the occasional curse word.

Snake saw my tape recorder and burst out with “You better make sure that son-of-a-***** is off. This is all off the record. Otherwise I’m going to get my lawyer and sue your ass.”

Snake left the table. Two of his friends, Randall Watson and Walker, remained, looking like I just tried to pick their pocket. Snake returned, calm. Gotta go again. Sorry. Meet me back at BJs. I’ll tell you everything there. Watson, Walker and Kenny left. The lights in the restaurant were out. I noticed, from where I was sitting, I couldn’t see my luxurious 1979 Mercury Bobcat rental car.

I walked to my rental car and just as all four wheels touched down on Highway 59, three police squads peeled rubber to surround me. Guns drawn. Get out of the car. I was patted down. Placed in handcuffs. Read my rights. One law enforcement officer went directly to my left front wheel well. Removed a magnetic key case that contained a white powder that later was analyzed as cocaine.

At the police station, I was asked to partially undress. I assume it was to determine if I had stored any baggies where the sun don’t shine. I peeled back some clothes, to snickers.

I was arrested for possession of a controlled substance.

“Where did you get the cocaine?” asked the interrogator, which I now find interesting since the toxicology report was weeks away.

“I’m a sports writer,” I replied weakly.

“Now I’ve heard it all,” he said. “I know a judge and I’m going to ask him for the maximum sentence.”

After placing my one phone call to the best journalist I ever knew, Bee Managing Editor Frank McCulloch, I was escorted to my cell. It was only for five minutes. Felt like five hours. Especially with the commode smelling like skunk road kill.

Cotton Long, a Gulf Shores cop, fetched me. “I think you’ve been set up.” I told Cotton he was onto something, all right. Let’s go back to the Holiday Inn where I was staying. Call Stabler and tell him you got mistakenly pulled over for DUI. Maybe the bad guys will return to retrieve the cocaine, I was told.

For 90 minutes, I sat in Room 114 at the Holiday Inn. Gulf Shores police chief Jimmy Maples was in my room, holding his .357 Magnum.

“I got five cars staking out the area,” Maples said. “I can take an army, if that’s what they want.”

Great, I thought. I’m in the Battle of the Bulge. Can’t wait to see what happens next. Maybe I’ll get to interview Big Foot. I was trying to dial down the tension.

After those 90 minutes — as Maples pointed to a cop on the roof of the Holiday Inn — Long returned.

“I don’t want to sell you a bill of goods,” Long said, “but I just learned your life might be in danger.”

Do you want a police escort to the airport in Pensacola, to fly back to Miami?

Thought you’d never ask, I said.

Maples sat with me in my luxurious Bobcat, showing me his weapon resting on his lap.

“This is a submachine gun,” the chief said. “If anyone tries to stop us, you brake the car hard, swerve to the shoulder — and I’ll take care of them.”

Fine, but would you mind if I pee in my pants first?

So I crossed state lines, one police car in front of me, one behind me. Maples and one of his cops walked me up to a runway on the Eastern Airlines passenger jet. Each cop was openly carrying a weapon. When I saw the look of the seated passengers staring at me, I’m fairly certain that, if asked, they all would have deplaned eagerly. I felt more naked than when I had partially disrobed for the boys in blue in Gulf Shores.

I checked into the Pier 66 hotel in Fort Lauderdale under an assumed name. I wrote through the night, finishing after going two days without sleep.

The story broke. Kenny said he had no idea what was going on. He was totally surprised. He said maybe it was one of his friends. The state of Alabama, the FBI and the NFL investigated. No one was charged or arrested. Curiously, there was no arrest report in Gulf Shores, even though I had been arrested and was going to get the maximum sentence.

Apparently, the cocaine in the magnetic key case just magically adhered itself to my rental car. Maybe I was living an out-take from a Harry Potter movie. In a small town where you can hear someone sneeze, no one knew anything.

I tried speaking to Snake at the beginning of the 1979 training camp. Walked up to him on the practice field at the now-gone El Rancho Tropicana in Santa Rosa and said hello.

“Duck you,” said Kenny. Or something like that.

Stabler went to Houston after the 1979 season. His career had crested. Time moved on for the 1974 NFL MVP. I’d get messages whenever a Stabler story emerged and opinions as well, that Snake should never be in Canton, that he didn’t have the great numbers over many seasons, that he wasn’t consistent enough.

I’d respond by saying I never enjoyed watching a quarterback more, and that includes the great Joe Montana or Peyton Manning or even Brett Favre, the closest I’ve seen to matching Stabler’s charisma. It’s a tossup for me who leads the offense 80 yards downfield with two minutes left, Joe or Kenny.

What Kenny Stabler revealed to me was a truth I needed to know and I learned it 36 years ago: Athletes are human, like sports writers. They make mistakes, like the rest of us. They let ego trump common sense, like the rest of us. They are capable of exceptional examples of physical wonder. That’s why we go to their games, to see possibly what has never been seen before, like the “Sea of Hands” catch by Clarence Davis.

If along the way they go sideways and make us scratch our heads, oh well. It’s what us human beings do and have been doing for thousands of years. Such a conundrum can happen to the best of us or the least of us.

History is best written after the passage of time, smoothing out the raw edges of hyperactive impulse. The last time I saw Snake was 2009 at Sonoma Raceway. He smiled. I smiled. I said Kenny. He said Bob. We shook hands. I wasn’t expecting a dinner invitation, not even a mint under my pillow or a magnetic key case in my wheel well. What I did see, however, was what I was hoping to see.

Time took both of us down a notch. The most bizarre story in the history of sports gave us both a moment of pause. Jan. 22, 1979 linked us forever but didn’t define us. Which brings me to write something I never thought I would.

I liked Kenny Stabler. And I will miss him.​

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