Jerry Smith (tight end)

Player

Birthday July 19, 1943

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Eugene, Oregon, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1986-10-15, Silver Spring, Maryland, U.S. (43 years old)

Nationality United States

#51843 Most Popular

1942

Smith caught 421 passes, including 60 touchdowns, a career record for tight ends at the time and the 17th highest total in NFL history.

1943

Gerald Thomas Smith (July 19, 1943 – October 15, 1986) was an American professional football player who was a tight end for the National Football League (NFL)'s Washington Redskins for 13 seasons, from 1965 through 1977.

By the time he retired, he held the NFL record for most career touchdowns by a tight end.

1964

Joining the team as a walk-on wide receiver in 1964, Smith caught 9 passes for 129 yards and 2 touchdowns in 9 games.

The following season, Smith was converted to tight end, and went on to catch 42 passes for 618 yards and 5 touchdowns.

1965

Selected in the ninth round (118th overall) of the 1965 NFL Draft, - where his team mates included Charley Taylor, and his college friends included David Mixner - Smith was also drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the 18th round of the 1965 AFL Draft.

Smith developed his Redskins career as a running and catching tight end under head coaches Bill McPeak, Otto Graham and most memorably under Vince Lombardi, who had a positive approach to gay players.

1967

From 1967 to 1970, Smith was a full time starter for the Redskins.

1971

He missed several games in 1971 to injury, but was back as a full time starter the following season, and would be until his final season in 1977.

During his career, Smith made several All-Pro teams.

1972

After Lombardi's death, under George Allen his role changed to mainly blocking, leading the team to Super Bowl VII at the end of the 1972 season.

In the fourth quarter with the Redskins trailing the Miami Dolphins, quarterback Billy Kilmer tried a pass to Smith who was running across the end zone, but the ball hit the goal post.

Although the Redskins lost the game 14–7, Sports Illustrated called Smith "an outstanding receiver among tight ends, with the ability to break open for a long gain."

1976

In 1976 the Redskins signed the larger and faster Jean Fugett, who Smith helped and assisted in his integration to the team.

In the same year, he was quietly approached by Washington Star journalist Lynn Rosellini with regards her series of gay sports people.

Smith contributed on the understanding that neither his name, team or position were revealed.

Rosellini opened her article with a description of Smith's hands, which led former team mate Dave Kopay to recognize the player as Smith, and hence lead to Kopay telephoning Rosellini and becoming the first former football player to come out two days later.

Despite his skills having diminished, coach Allen kept bringing Smith back into the Redskins roster due to his work ethic.

1977

Smith made one catch in 1977, and spent the 1978 season on the injured list.

1978

After officially retiring at the end of the 1978 season, Smith quietly came out as gay to a few family members.

This allowed him to explain why he moved to Austin, Texas, where he co-owned the gay bar "The Boathouse" – a decision he later regretted.

1986

Smith publicly announced he had AIDS in August 1986, being the first professional athlete to do so.

He died two months later.

Smith moved back to the support of his family in Silver Spring, Maryland in 1986, where looking thinner and coughing, he was diagnosed at the Holy Cross Hospital with HIV.

After discussing the matter with his family and friends, he contacted Washington Post journalist George Solomon – the ground rule being that they did not discuss how he got the disease – with the resultant front page article published on August 7, 1986.

He was subsequently visited and supported by all of his former teammates and coaches.

Smith died of AIDS at age 43 on October 15, 1986, at Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring, Maryland.

He was the first former professional athlete to die of the disease.

Although he acknowledged that he had AIDS, he never publicly acknowledged he was gay.

At a funeral attended by all of his former team mates and coaches—some of whom also acted as coffin bearers—Smith was buried at Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Silver Spring.

Head coach Vince Lombardi, who had a gay brother, demanded a homophobia free locker room but "not even the legendary Lombardi could insulate him from the crippling societal homophobia of the era."

Shortly before he died, Smith said: "Every important thing a man searches for in his life, I found in Coach Lombardi. He made us men."

Smith's sexuality was confirmed after his death by former teammate pro NFL football player David Kopay, who had come out years earlier.

2003

His record held for 27 years, beaten by Shannon Sharpe on November 16, 2003.

His 421 receptions were the third highest total ever by a tight end when he retired, trailing only Hall of Famers Mike Ditka and Jackie Smith.

Smith was named All-Pro twice and held several NFL records that stood for years.

2011

In 2011, the Professional Football Researchers Association named Smith to the PRFA Hall of Very Good Class of 2011.

In, as a part of a USO tour in association with the NFL, Smith, along with other stars John Brown, Butch Byrd, Fred Hoaglin, George Kunz, and Tom Woodeshick, visited and signed autographs for wounded military personnel in Vietnam.

2014

A 2014 documentary from the NFL Network's A Football Life series profiles his career, as well as his "double life as a closeted gay man and a star athlete."

Smith attended Arizona State, where he did not play football until his junior season.