• You do not need to register if you are not going to pay the yearly fee to post. If you register please click here or log in go to "settings" then "my account" then "User Upgrades" and you can renew.

HuskerMax readers can save 50% on  Omaha Steaks .

John Hadl RIP

BigRedMax

Administrator
Staff member
20 Year Member
From https://footballfoundation.org/

John Hadl, a 1994 College Football Hall of Fame inductee who starred at Kansas from 1959-61, passed away Nov. 30. He was 82 years old.

"John Hadl established himself as one of the greatest Jayhawks ever, and he continued to give back as a coach and administrator," said NFF Chairman Archie Manning. "His contributions to the KU program and our sport will not be forgotten as they are forever immortalized in the College Football Hall of Fame. Our thoughts are with his family and friends at this time of loss."

Hadl attended Lawrence High School in Kansas as an all-state halfback for the football team and as a centerfielder for the baseball team. He remained in state, selecting to attend KU, and he would go on to become the Jayhawks' first two-time First Team All-American.

He broke in as a halfback in 1959. A versatile two-way player, his contributions included a 98-yard interception return against TCU (a KU record until 2007), a 97-yard kickoff return against Syracuse, and a 94-yard punt against Oklahoma (a KU record, which still stands). His punting average for the season (45.6 yards) led the nation.

His junior and senior campaigns would etch his name in the KU and college football history books. He earned First Team All-America honors at halfback in 1960, and the following season, he moved to quarterback, again claiming All-America honors. He finished seventh in the 1961 Heisman voting. He was also the team's punter and shared kick-return duties all three years. With Hadl running the offense, the Jayhawks were ranked in the top-20 his junior and senior years, and KU finished the two-season span 14-5-2.

In the Bluebonnet Bowl after the 1961 season, he completed 7-of-10 passes in a 33-7 victory over Rice, notching KU's first ever bowl win.

Hadl played in the East-West Shrine Game and the College All-Star Game after the 1961 season and was named Most Valuable Player in both, becoming the first player ever to win both honors.

Hadl played professionally 16 years from 1962-77 as a quarterback for four different teams, earning six Pro Bowl selections. In 1965, playing for San Diego, he led the American Football League in passing, and in 1973, he claimed NFC Player of the Year honors with the Los Angeles Rams. He finished his career with the Green Bay Packers and Houston Oilers.

After his playing days, Hadl coached at KU as an assistant and then in the NFL with the Rams and Broncos before serving as the head coach of the Los Angeles Express in the USFL. He returned to KU in 1988 for three decades as an associate athletics director and major fundraiser. He retired in 2018.

He is a member of the KU Athletics Hall of Fame, the state of Kansas Sports Hall of Fame and the San Diego Chargers Hall of Fame. He also was named the NFL's Man of the Year in 1971. A statue of Hadl was unveiled during the 2020 season outside the KU Anderson Family Football Complex, and it stands next to a statue of the late KU running back Gale Sayers, a 1977 College Football Hall of Fame inductee. A member of KU's ring of honor, his No. 21 is one of three Kansas football numbers to be retired.
 





GET TICKETS


Get 50% off on Omaha Steaks

Back
Top