Former Ole Miss, New York Jets great Larry Grantham dies: obituary, funeral arrangements
Published 7:51 am Monday, June 19, 2017
Former Ole Miss football great and New York Jets outside linebacker Larry Grantham, a starter and defensive standout on the 1969 Super Bowl team, has died. He was 78.
The Jets announced Sunday night that a funeral service for Grantham will be held Wednesday in his hometown of Crystal Springs, Mississippi.
Grantham was a key player in the great Ole Miss teams of 1957, ’58, and ’59 and was named to the All SEC football team in 1958 and 1959 when Ole Miss defeated LSU in a Sugar Bowl rematch game.
He was also a former sideline commentator for Ole Miss football.
But Grantham was perhaps best known for his work on behalf of Alcoholics Anonymous and for more than three decades worked as a sort of one-man ministry, after becoming sober himself in 1986.
The Jets announced that a visitation will be held Tuesday at Stringer Family Funeral Service in Crystal Springs, with the funeral service Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the First Baptist Church.
Grantham was an original member of the New York Titans franchise, which became the Jets in 1963 after three seasons. He was a five-time AFL All-Star during his 13 years with the team and was inducted into the Jets’ Ring of Honor in 2011.
“That probably climaxes a career and doesn’t take second place to anything,” Grantham said at the time in quotes posted on the team’s website. “I’m not in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and sure, that’s a great, big honor, but to me this honor with the Jets is unbelievable. Just think of all the players they’ve had up there from 1960 till now. It’s something I can’t put into words.”
Grantham had five interceptions and three fumble recoveries as a rookie in 1960, quickly establishing himself as a playmaker for the fledgling franchise. His 43 takeaways remain a franchise career record. He went on to play in 175 of the franchise’s first 182 games.
“I always saw Larry as the captain and the leader,” former defensive end Gerry Philbin told the team’s website. “His football knowledge, the way he skirted around blockers and made tackles, he just surprised a lot of people. Pound for pound, he was the best player on the Jets.”
Grantham had three tackles and two passes defensed in the Jets’ 16-7 Super Bowl victory over the Baltimore Colts in 1969. His last season with the Jets was in 1972, but he returned to the field two years later to finish his playing career with the Florida Blazers of the World Football League.
He was a Jets radio broadcaster for a short time after his retirement before later working in the business and banking industries.
Grantham’s football career got jumpstarted at the University of Mississippi, where he was selected to the school’s All-Century Team in 1959. He was drafted in the 15th round by the Baltimore Colts in the 1960 NFL draft, but chose to instead play with New York after it made him one of its 32 picks in the AFL draft.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.