NFL-star-turned-dentist, John Williams, succumbs at 64

Email Print Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg More Destinations

Played for Rams, Colts

John McKay Williams, a National Football League offensive lineman from 1968 through 1979, died on July 8, in Minneapolis at age 64. He had recently been the recipient of a kidney transplant.

Born in Jackson, Miss., Williams began his athletic career as a stand-out football star in Toledo, Ohio. He received his bachelor’s in education from the University of Minnesota in 1969.

During the time Williams spent in the NFL, he appeared in three Super Bowls: Super Bowl III and V with the Baltimore Colts; and Super Bowl XIV for the Los Angeles Rams. He played college football at the University of Minnesota where he was a First Team All-Big Ten tackle in 1967 and led the Gophers to a Big Ten title.

Throughout his life, Williams continued his civic engagement with the University of Minnesota and the larger community on many fronts, including economic development and won the Minneapolis Volunteer of the Year award in 1992.

But Williams was no one-trick pony. While in the NFL he used his time in the off-season to go to the University of Maryland and earn a doctorate in dentistry. Once he retired from the NFL in 1979 after a tearing a calf muscle, Williams opened his own dental practice in North Minneapolis.

Williams also was a private pilot and served on the Metropolitan Airports Commission, the governing board of Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. He was appointed in 2002 by Gov. Jesse Ventura, and reappointed twice by Gov. Tim Pawlenty. During his free time,Williams flew small planes for fun.

The NFL star also led a prison ministry team, and at the time of his death was serving as the president of the American Odontological Forensics Society of America.

Williams is survived by his wife Barbara and three sons from a previous marriage.

Related Articles

  • ‘Black Palm Springs’ promoter dies -

    If you were an African American of any means at all living in Los Angeles in the 1930s, you went to or owned property in Val Verde, then known as “The Black Palm Springs.” Frank Godden, known as “Mr. Val Verde” because of his long involvement in the development of this once-Black resort town died Aug. 3 of cancer. He was 101.

  • Donna: compare her to a Summer’s day -

    The late singer, Donna Summer, the undisputed Queen of Disco, will be laid to rest in a private ceremony, but her legacy will survive long after her death. From the heady days of disco to the quiet moments with family out of the glare of the limelight where she lived as a devout Christian, wife and mother, she never gave up her passion for singing.

  • Filmmaker Jamaa Fanaka, 69, succumbs -

    Jamaa Fanaka, born Walter Gordon, on Sept. 6, 1942, was an American filmmaker best known for his 1979 film, “Penitentiary,” and one of the leading directors of the L.A. Rebellion film movement. Fanaka died April 1, from complication of diabetes. He was 69.

  • Griot of protest: Gil Scott-Heron -

    Gil Scott-Heron the seminal author, poet, and musician died at the age of 62 on May 27 of undisclosed causes at St. Luke’s Hospital in New York’s Manhattan borough. A funeral service was scheduled for 8:30 am, at the Riverside Church, with a public viewing in the evening from 6 to 9 pm at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Home at Madison Avenue and 81st Street. Scott-Heron is survived by his wife, Blaxploitation actress Brenda Sykes, and their daughter Gia Scott-Heron.

  • Jazz icon -

    Jazz icon Buddy Collette (born William Marcel Collette) died Sunday Sept. 19 at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles after suffering shortness of breath.

    Buddy was a well-known saxophone, clarinet, and flute player who organized his own band at the age of 12 and started performing professionally by age of 17.

    Collette contributed immensely to the jazz movement while he simultaneously rose to fame alongside life-long friends, bassist Charles Mingus, saxophonist Dexter Gordon, and drummer Chico Hamilton.

  • Our Community