Bubba Smith, N.F.L. Star and Actor, Dies at 66
When hearing tales of Bubba Smith, you wonder, is he man or myth?
Ogden Nash
Bubba Smith, an outsize presence in the National Football League who went on to a prolific career in television and the movies, was found dead on Wednesday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 66.
The cause was not yet known, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County coroners office said, adding, There is no indication of anything other than natural death.
A 6-foot-7 (or possibly 6-8), nearly 300-pound behemoth of a man, Smith, a defensive lineman, was the No. 1 draft pick for the Baltimore Colts in 1967. He spent nine seasons in the N.F.L., playing on two Pro Bowl teams, in 1970 and 1971. In 1971 he helped propel the Colts to a 16-13 victory over the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl V.
Traded to the Oakland Raiders before the start of the 1972 season, Smith played two seasons with them before winding up his career with the Houston Oilers. He retired after the 1976 season.
Afterward, Smith made a career of playing rather large men on film and television. He was best known for his role as Moses Hightower, the mild-mannered florist-turned-lawman in the film comedy Police Academy (1984) and many of its sequels.
He starred in the short-lived TV crime series Blue Thunder (1984) and had roles on many other shows, including Good Times, Charlies Angels, Semi-Tough, Hart to Hart, Married With Children and Family Matters.
He was also seen in a well-known series of Miller Lite commercials Tastes Great; Less Filling in the 1970s and 80s.
Charles Aaron Smith, known since childhood as Bubba, was born in Beaumont, Tex., on Feb. 28, 1945. His father coached the high school football team on which he played; the elder mans techniques, Bubba Smith told The New York Times in 1971, included whacking his son with a board he took to the field for that purpose. What redeemed these episodes, the son said, was that he didnt holler.
Smith played defensive end at Michigan State, where his size and prowess gave rise to the chant Kill, Bubba, Kill, which emanated frequently from the stands. He was named an all-American in 1965 and 1966.
As a senior, Smith took part in what came to be called the game of the century one of several games so designated in the annals of college football played at home against Notre Dame on Nov. 19, 1966. Smith sacked and knocked out Notre Dame quarterback Terry Hanratty in the first quarter, and the game ended in a 10-10 tie.
Smith was the author, with Hal DeWindt, of the book Kill, Bubba, Kill!, published by Simon & Schuster in 1983. In it, Smith intimated that Super Bowl III in which his highly favored Colts lost to the upstart Jets under Joe Namath was fixed, although he supplied no evidence. Smiths assertion drew fire in the news media.
Information on Smiths survivors was not available. (His brother Tody played for the Dallas Cowboys, the Oilers and the Buffalo Bills.)
Smith was named to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988. Michigan State retired his number, 95, in 2006.
For all his acclaim, Smith, drawing on the teachings of his father, was philosophical about his abilities.
He taught us to be humble off the field, Smith told The Times in 1969. Inside, Ive got to feel Im the best, but if I tell you Im the best, then Im a fool.