![Gale Sayers](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.hollywoodreporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/GettyImages-150142125-H-2020-1600873512.jpg?w=1296&h=730&crop=1)
Gale Sayers, the legendary all-purpose running back whose friendship with cancer-stricken Chicago Bears teammate Brian Piccolo was recounted in the fabled telefilm Brian’s Song, has died. He was 77.
Nicknamed “The Kansas Comet” and considered among the best open-field runners the game has ever seen, Sayers died Wednesday, according to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Relatives of Sayers had said that he was diagnosed with dementia. In March 2017, his wife, Ardythe, said she partly blamed his football career.
In Brian’s Song, a 1971 ABC Movie of the Week, Billy Dee Williams played Sayers and James Caan was Piccolo, a fellow running back who was diagnosed with terminal cancer shortly after turning pro. Both actors received Emmy nominations for portraying the first interracial roommates in NFL history.
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Lou Gossett Jr. was originally slated to play Sayers, but when he tore his Achilles tendon a week before shooting was to begin, Williams was asked to step in.
There wasn’t much money left in the budget, but Williams told Leonard Goldberg that he “would do it for nothing, because I know what this is going to do,” the producer recalled in a 2004 chat for the TV Academy Foundation website The Interviews.
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Based on a portion of Sayers’ 1970 autobiography, I Am Third, Brian’s Song was seen by 55 million people — half of those in the U.S. who owned a TV at the time — when it aired on Nov. 30, 1971. Then the fourth most-watched film ever to air on television (behind only Ben-Hur, The Birds and The Bridge on the River Kwai), it made grown men weep and went on to play on the big screen.
Sayers in real life was a blur to NFL defenses, ghosting would-be tacklers or zooming by them like few running backs or kick returners before or since. He was a two-time All-American at Kansas and inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as well.
He was selected by Chicago with the fourth pick overall in 1965, and his versatility produced dividends and highlight-reel slaloms through opposing defenses right from the start. He tied one NFL record with six touchdowns in a game and set another with 22 touchdowns in his first season: 14 rushing, six receiving, one punt and one kickoff return. Sayers was a unanimous choice for Offensive Rookie of the Year.
Sayers followed that by being voted an All-Pro during the first five of his seven NFL seasons (1965-71). But he was stuck on a handful of middling-to-bad Bears teams and, like Dick Butkus, another Hall of Fame teammate selected in the same 1965 draft, he never played in the postseason. Sayers appeared in only 68 games total and just two in each of his final two seasons while attempting to return from those knee injuries.
Butkus said he hadn’t even seen Sayers play until a highlight film was shown at an event in New York that both attended honoring the 1964 All-America team. He said the real-life version of Sayers was even better.
“He was amazing. I still attribute a lot of my success from trying to tackle him [in practice],” Butkus said at the Bears’ 100th anniversary celebration in June 2019.
“I never came up against a running back like him in my whole career, as far as a halfback. And that was counting O.J. [Simpson] and a couple of other guys,” he added. “No one could touch this guy.”
The Bears drafted them with back-to-back picks in ’65, taking Butkus at No. 3 and Sayers at No. 4. It didn’t take long for Sayers to win over veterans who had helped the Bears take the NFL championship in 1963.
“We were both No. 1s, so they’re going to make it hard on us and show us the ropes and everything else,” Butkus said. “But Gale just ran circles around everybody. Quickly, they adopted him.”
The friendship between Sayers and backfield mate Piccolo began in 1967, when the two became unlikely roommates. Sayers was Black and already a star; Piccolo was white and had worked his way up from the practice squad. Early on, they were competing for playing time and carries.
But when the club dropped its policy of segregating players by race in hotel room assignments, they forged a bond. In 1968, Piccolo helped Sayers through a tough rehab process while he recovered from a torn ligament in his right knee. After Sayers returned the next season to become an All-Pro, he made sure his friend shared in the credit.
They became even closer after Piccolo pulled himself out of a game early in the 1969 season because of breathing difficulties and was diagnosed with cancer.
Sayers stayed by Piccolo’s side as the illness took its toll, donating blood and providing support. Just days before Piccolo’s death age 26, Sayers received the George S. Halas Award for courage and said: “You flatter me by giving me this award, but I can tell you here and now that I accept it for Brian Piccolo. … I love Brian Piccolo and I’d like all of you to love him, too. Tonight, when you hit your knees, please ask God to love him.”
After his playing days, Sayers served as athletic director at Southern Illinois University-Carbondale and founded several technology and consulting businesses.
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