Andy Russell, core of Steelers defense in rise to Super Bowl wins, dies at 82

Posted by Patria Henriques on Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Andy Russell, a linebacker who was an integral part of the Pittsburgh Steelers’ evolution from perennial losers to Super Bowl champions, died March 2. He was 82.

The team confirmed Mr. Russell’s death but no other details were made public.

A 16th-round pick in the 1963 draft, Mr. Russell won two Super Bowls during a 12-year NFL career interrupted by a two-year stint in the military. Mr. Russell spent 10 years as a team captain and was named to the Pro Bowl seven times.

His Steelers teammates voted Mr. Russell the club’s MVP in 1971, a season in which the roster included future Hall of Famers Joe Greene, Mel Blount, Jack Ham and Terry Bradshaw. “Andy was part of the foundation of the great Steelers teams of the 1970s,” Steelers president Art Rooney II said in a statement.

Equal parts heady and durable, Mr. Russell and his No. 34 were one of the few bright spots on Steeler teams that finished near the bottom of the league during the first portion of his career. That changed in 1969 when Chuck Noll took over as head coach.

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“[Noll] said: ‘You’re good people. You’re going to be good citizens. Unfortunately, you can’t run fast enough or jump high enough, and I’m going to have to replace most of you,’” Mr. Russell told Pittsburgh Quarterly in 2006.

Mr. Russell became one of the cornerstones of a defense that helped the franchise win four Super Bowls during the 1970s. He put together a resume that his teammates consider Hall of Fame worthy.

“It would have been easy for [Andy] to give up or be sucked into the mediocrity that he saw all around him, but he refused to do so,” wrote Ham, who played alongside Mr. Russell for six seasons. “That attitude was clear to me from my first day of training camp to Andy’s last game with the Steelers.”

Mr. Russell had 38 sacks and 18 interceptions during the regular season and added three sacks and a pick during 11 playoff games, two of which ended with the Steelers raising the Lombardi Trophy as Super Bowl champions.

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A two-way star during his collegiate career at Missouri, Mr. Russell was discouraged from playing in the NFL by his father, who told him it would be an “embarrassment to the Russell family” if Andy went to the league.

Mr. Russell followed his father’s orders. When NFL teams sent him a questionnaire that included a query on whether he wanted to play professional football, Mr. Russell checked the box marked “no.”

The only team that didn’t mail him a survey was the Steelers, who made the 6-foot-2, 225-pound Mr. Russell the 220th pick and then offered him a $12,000 contract and a $3,000 signing bonus.

Mr. Russell’s initial plan was to play one season for the money, then pursue an MBA. An injury to linebacker John Reger in the season opener against Philadelphia led Mr. Russell to enter the lineup to fill in and he never left.

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“You talk about luck,” Mr. Russell said. “If that hadn’t happened, I would have played one year, got my MBA and gone into business. I just got an enormous break.”

Mr. Russell missed the 1964 and 1965 seasons while completing the military commitment required as a ROTC member.

When he returned, the Steelers were still mired in the standings, winning a combined 11 games over the next three seasons, with Mr. Russell’s stellar play often lost amid all the losing. He did fulfill his goal, earning an MBA in finance in 1967 and launching a series of businesses, including an investment firm tied to Wall Street, and starting an investment bank.

Mr. Russell’s football fortunes turned when Noll came on board. The Steelers drafted Ham in 1971 and future Hall of Famer Jack Lambert in 1974, the trio forming one of the greatest linebacking groups in NFL history. Pittsburgh won its first two Super Bowls after the 1974 and 1975 seasons.

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Mr. Russell retired after the Steelers lost to Oakland in the 1976 AFC championship game.

Charles Andrew Russell was born on Oct. 29, 1941, in Detroit. He was a standout at Ladue Horton Watkins High in the St. Louis suburbs in the late 1950s before earning three letters at Missouri from 1960 to 1962, playing both running back and linebacker.

Mr. Russell wrote three books about his career after his retirement and was an avid climber, reaching all 54 peaks in Colorado that reach an elevation of at least 14,000 feet. He remained active in the Pittsburgh community and launched the Andy Russell Charitable Foundation, which supported a variety of local charities across western Pennsylvania.

Survivors include his wife, Cindy; two children and seven grandchildren.

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