Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Panthers founder Jerry Richardson passes away at 86


mcsmoak
 Share

Recommended Posts

Rest in Power BigCat

 

 you brought the NFL to Charlotte

 you accomplished so much in a lifetime

 without you and your vision Charlotte may not be what it is today

there’s countless stories of the good you’ve done for your players, you’ll be missed

 

i admired you, even had my username after you 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Joe Person's article had an appropriate title:

Panthers founder Jerry Richardson leaves behind enormous impact, troubled legacy

JR was complicated.  He could be known as incredibly generous.  Person tells this story I had not heard before:

Beane, who started working for the Panthers in 1998, recalled Richardson coming back to Bank of America Stadium one day shocked at how expensive gas had become. At the team’s next all-staff meeting, Richardson instituted a minimum salary for every full-time employee, including those who had been on an hourly wage scale.

“People with that kind of money don’t always think about people who are at the bottom of the food chain,” Beane said. “That struck him, that gas was that expensive. And I just thought, ‘What owners would actually think about something like that?’”

Beane also said:

He’s one of the most successful businesspeople you can be around,”  “Everything he touched turned to gold.”

Also Person reports:

Richardson remained out of public view after the sale. Until his health declined, Richardson would regularly go to his south Charlotte office, which oversaw charitable contributions of more than $500 million.

Richardson allowed tight end Greg Olsen to use his private plane when Olsen’s son was born with a congenital heart defect in 2012. Long snapper J.J. Jansen, who has played more games than any player in Panthers history, came to Charlotte as a 23-year-old in 2009 with little familiarity with the franchise. He said Richardson, known as “Mister” or “Big Cat” around the Panthers’ facility, was almost “larger than life.”

“To watch him glow when talking about this team and this city, and what it meant to him to not only have a football team where he grew up but to be able to bring that to this area, was always a very special thing to him,” Jansen said. “And that always meant a lot to me.”

 

........for all of Panthers founder Jerry Richardson’s business accomplishments and philanthropic efforts — his towering stature in Charlotte — his legacy also includes the troubling workplace misconduct allegations that cost him the team he loved and forever altered his perception in the city and around the NFL.

Richardson died Wednesday night at his Charlotte home, 28 years after bringing the NFL to the Carolinas and five years after selling the team after a Sports Illustrated report detailed accusations that Richardson sexually harassed several women and directed a racial slur toward a team employee.

https://theathletic.com/4269899/2023/03/03/jerry-richardson-dies-carolina-panthers/?source=dailyemail&campaign=601983

I was also reminded in something else I read that he paid for every team employee to go to the Super Bowl the 1st time the Panthers were there.

An aside...it is very ironic that both he and Olsen's son that he helped before he was born, both needed heart transplants.

 

There would not be NFL football in the Carolinas with out JR.  His great passion for the area and  football  made it happen.  It is hard to reconcile a man so generous and  also abusive. I just don't understand.  I appreciate him and am sad that his legacy was so tarnished by his misdeeds.  I feel for his family, especially his wife.

He got a lot of years out of that second heart for a man his age.  It sounds like that he quietly continued to try to do good things and make a positive impact in the community.

RIP JR

  • Pie 3
  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 hours ago, electro's horse said:

And then didn't have another winning season for seven years. 

Constant internal power squabbles, drove his own family out of the business, sexually assaulted everything that moved, infatuated with Marty Hurney, nuked his own team to make a point to the Players Union, took a heart transplant from someone who wasn't a piece of poo. 

Good riddance  

the big lebowski GIF

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, onmyown said:

That’s literally like saying if Tepper didn’t buy the Panthers we wouldn’t have an owner. It’s not true at all.

If we didn’t have a tax payers, PSL owners, and demand…we would not have the Panthers. People should really give the city/PSL owners credit for funding this team far more than the investors ever have including (in fact due to) JR.

It still takes work, negotiations, putting together a group

 

Big Kat hired a consultant who invented PSLs

Charlotte in the early 90s isn't what it is today, if you told someone you were going to Mooresville or Matthews they would think you are about to undergo a trek on the Oregon Trail

There's plenty of cities that have the means to get NFL franchises (Louisville, Austin come to mind) but it takes a bull of a man to organize it all and convince a bunch of other billionaires that he belongs in their group

  • Beer 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, TheBigKat said:

It still takes work, negotiations, putting together a group

 

Big Kat hired a consultant who invented PSLs

Charlotte in the early 90s isn't what it is today, if you told someone you were going to Mooresville or Matthews they would think you are about to undergo a trek on the Oregon Trail

There's plenty of cities that have the means to get NFL franchises (Louisville, Austin come to mind) but it takes a bull of a man to organize it all and convince a bunch of other billionaires that he belongs in their group

Oh so he hired a consulting group to figure out how to fleece the fanbase? Wow, what a hero. 

This myth that Charlotte was some dark horse to get an NFL franchise needs to die. At the time Charlotte led the league in NBA attendance, and the hornets were one of the most profitable NBA teams in the league. The Charlotte area had the money and population to support the team. There were multiple groups trying to get the Panthers to Charlotte; Richardson won not because of the "professionalism of his presentation" or whatever stupid thing (do you think the other business leaders wouldn't have been?) but because he figured out a way to scam the city with PSLs, and other owners wanted to see if it would work. Just like he was later in his career, he was more than happy to screw over his own fans and for the betterment of the league owners (2010). 

the real shocker at the time was Jacksonville. That's the one where people were probably paid off. 

  • Pie 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Like my favorite tidbit of knowledge about how big a deal the hornets were prior to the panthers is that the strip club on Tyvola on the way to the coliseum was like the fifth most profitable strip club on the east coast. I can't remember the exact number but it was shocking how much money that place would make. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, TheBigKat said:

Big Kat hired a consultant who invented PSLs

Max Muhleman.  I got to spend an afternoon with him at his house installing a computer and he was a very interesting man to talk to. The response to the PSL concept made the awarding of the franchise a no risk decision for the NFL.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Yeah and I am doubtful he can offer that consistently. I don’t have many years left at my age and in my view we have wasted two and this whole exercise with him was always a three year minimum.  I am out on that with a guy I don’t believe in, and never believed in, it has sucked. To me it is a costly detour off the right track. Years.    But I am not so rigid that I can’t see excellence. He needs to display it though, consistently before I change my outlook.  
    • No, when I said rage, I meant rage, which only applies to certain fans on this board. Your timeline of trying to assess whether he is the future or not is really tied to the discussions surrounding his second contract. If this team is going to commit to some monster contract while he has shown nothing but glimpses of brilliance would be deservedly worrisome, so the clock is genuinely ticking for him to settle into something resembling his final form. Perhaps a best case scenario is that he plays well, the team succeeds, but he does so with a more limited role that makes the rest of the league view him as a game manager, and his second contract value reflects that. Then he continues to improve and becomes a bargain comparatively while not handicapping the team around him, and we enter an era of consistent championship competitiveness that the fanbase has craved for decades and has never really experienced before. But that requires many, many things to go right and for Bryce himself to facilitate that if he ends up being the quarterback of the future.
    • Exactly. And the flame throwers as well, get location benefits from not going all out. But they have it in reserve.  Not sure how much Greg had but he was an artist.  There was a YouTube I came across last year or maybe even 2023 and I don’t how to even find now but it had two NFL QBs I want say one was Carr from the Raiders but I don’t really remember  The point of it is they stood side by side throwing identical distances to identical targets. Radar gun was used.  They threw the normal effort (not all out) and it was measured etc. Then they were asked to throw their ‘fastball’. They were missing and most often they were missing high. It demonstrated the same principle.    edit: and applying that to arm strength, give me the guy that doesn’t need max effort to have good velocity. The margins are so narrow with less velocity in tne NFL the defenders can Close on it and this is a league where they value down to the 100th of a second level. It is that tight 
×
×
  • Create New...