Ernie "Big Cat" Ladd passed away this past weekend...

jksmith269

Proud Navy Veteran 1990-1995
Messages
3,939
Reaction score
57
I remember him more from his wrestling days, but from the highlights I saw of him he was a monster.... RIP Ernie



Ernie 'Big Cat' Ladd dead at 68
Print this | E-mail this | Comments on this article: 10

Posted: March 12, 2007

Associated Press


GRAMBLING, La. -- Ernie "Big Cat" Ladd, who played on championship professional football teams before finding more lucrative success in pro wrestling, has died. He was 68.

Ladd played in the America Football League and is a member of the World Wrestling Federation Hall of Fame. He died Saturday night after a long bout with cancer.


"It's a personal loss not just to our family, but to the whole community," said Eddie Robinson Jr., whose ailing father coached Ladd at Grambling State. "I was fortunate enough to be in high school when he was here, so my football heroes growing up were people like Ernie Ladd."

Ladd, who was almost 6-foot-10 and weighed over 300 pounds, was the 15th player taken in the 1961 AFL draft and played for the San Diego Chargers, Houston Oilers and Kansas City Chiefs.

Born Nov. 28, 1938, in Rayville, La., but raised in Orange, Texas, he had battled cancer -- first in his colon, then later in his stomach and bones -- since 2004.

"The doctor told me I had three-to-six months to live," Ladd said in 2005, then at the midway point in his nearly four-year battle with cancer. "I told him Dr. Jesus has the verdict on me."

While playing football, Ladd began making appearances at wrestling events at first as a special referee and later as a wrestler. Knee problems, and what at the time ended up being a more lucrative career as a wrestler, ended his football career.

"In what other sport can you pick up a $14 pair of boots, $0.59 socks -- spend maybe a total of $50 -- and convert it into $100,000 a year, if you are sharp and train?" Ladd asked. "My intention was to go back to football, but pro wrestling was so good to me."

Ladd was a defensive stalwart on Grambling's first Southwestern Athletic Conference championship football squad. He then helped San Diego win the 1963 AFL championship.

When Ladd completed his eight-year pro career, he had played in 112 consecutive AFL games. He played for the Chiefs when they reached the Super Bowl in 1967 and '70.

As big as he was, Ladd was known for his quickness, something that inspired his lifelong nickname.

Ladd's bad-guy story lines, not to mention signature moves that included the "guillotine drop" and a boot to the face, made him star in the WWF.
 

Mavs Man

All outta bubble gum
Messages
4,672
Reaction score
0
I can't remember the last time I read of a former WWF wrestler who died past the age of 45.
 

Skip

Member
Messages
379
Reaction score
3
I am from the same home town he was from (Orange Texas) and I got to meet him when he was in high school. He was huge! I couldn't believe it and some times they even gave him the ball in high school and he would run down the field using a stiff arm knocking what looked like children down. I was a small kid my self then, not even in high school. I was probably about 10-12.

Rest in Peace Ernie and May God Bless him and his family!
 

MichaelWinicki

"You want some?"
Staff member
Messages
47,997
Reaction score
27,917
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
People have to remember that the 6'9" Ernie Ladd was a DT... not a DE. That's right a DT.

He was an incredible athlete.

Here are a couple things I posted on Ladd a while back...

Ernie "The Big Cat" Ladd--

I remember one story that appears in the book, "The Thinking Man's Guide to Pro Football" where Ladd, with one slap, broke the guards face mask and cheekbone. The next slap literally spun the helmet around the guard's head.

And this was in the 1960's when football players weren't 6'9" tall and weighed over 300lbs.

Here is a brief article I found on Ladd...

The massive Ladd was the centerpiece of a front wall that is remembered as the West Coast's original "Fearsome Foursome." When the Chargers drafted Ladd in 1961, assistant coach Al Davis urged his boss, Sid Gillman, to sign Ladd despite his large contract demands. "Just think Sid," Davis said. "We'll have the biggest damn line in the game."

The 6-9, 321-pound Ladd joined with tackle Henry Schmidt and ends Earl Faison and Ron Nery on a "Fearsome Foursome" that predated the Rams' version by five years. An off-season pro wrestler, Ladd was monstrous, with a massive upper body, 22-inch thighs, and 17 EEE shoes. When Ladd lined up over center, he blocked out the sun.

"It was dark," Boston center Jon Morris said when asked what it was like to see Ladd opposite him. "I couldn't see the linebackers. I couldn't see the goalposts. It was like being locked in a closet."

Said All-AFL center Jim Otto, "Ladd was a presence."

Ladd encased his forearms in rolls of tape, then used his arms like a scythe to cut down offensive linemen. "He comes out there," Morris said, "and you can't get your eyes off his arms. He has those long arms and all over them he has these pads and bandages. He keeps hitting you with the right forearm over and over again."

As a wrestler Ladd certainly ranks as one of the greatest of all time.

His "mic-work" was as good as his work inside the ring.

Here's classic Ladd at the mic...

"Yes, mister TV announcer! I am Ernie the Big Cat Ladd! I am six foot nine, three hundred pounds, and size 17 shoe! And I am tired of all these wrestlers walking around talking out the side of their necks! Staying, YAK, yak, yak. YIP, yip yip, I do this, I do that! You ain't doing nothing to the Big Cat Ernie Ladd! Do you smell whiskey Gordon Solie?"

"Aaaaahh, no Mister Ladd, I do not."

"It must be that drunken Indian Wahoo McDaniel! I hate Wahoo McDaniel! I hate him! He is nothing! Wahoo is nothing but a drug store Indian with a cigar stuck in his mouth! Nothing worse than a drunken Indian! He needs to be sent back to his reservation and I am just the man to do it! Shut Up! I am tried of it!"


Ladd's battles against Andre the Giant in the old Madison Square Garden were what wrestling was all about.

21.jpg
 

CrazyCowboy

Well-Known Member
Messages
32,287
Reaction score
440
I don't remember him in the NFL, however the Big Cat was great at wrestling
 

MadCow

Member
Messages
468
Reaction score
10
Sad news indeed. I spent many Saturday afternoons of my youth enjoying his entertainment as well as other wrestlers. Definitely warms the heart to hear him profess the faith.

Rest In Peace 'Big Cat'
 

THUMPER

Papa
Messages
9,522
Reaction score
61
Sorry to hear that the Big Cat is gone. I loved watching him play for the Chargers back in the early 60s (they showed the games in L.A. since the Chargers originally played there) and then on Saturdays when he was a wrestler. For a while my nickname was the Big Cat after him (I was bigger than the other kids) when we used to wrestle in the backyard. I loved doing his leg drop on other kids.

He had a head slap that made Deacon Jones' look like a love tap. He'd tape up his forearms and smack the heck out of opposing OLs. It was fun to watch.

Sad to see him go.
 
Top