Carroll Rosenbloom

Carroll Rosenbloom
Born (1907-03-05)March 5, 1907
Baltimore, Maryland
Died April 2, 1979(1979-04-02) (aged 72)
Golden Beach, Florida
Cause of death Drowning due to probable heart attack
Occupation Businessman
Known for owner of the Baltimore Colts and Los Angeles Rams
Spouse(s) Velma Anderson (divorced)
Georgia Frontiere (until death)
Children with Anderson:
-Steve Rosenbloom
-Dan Rosenbloom
-Suzanne Rosenbloom
with Frontiere:
-Chip Rosenbloom
-Lucia Rodriguez
Parent(s) Anna Rosenbloom
Solomon Rosenbloom

Carroll Rosenbloom (March 5, 1907 – April 2, 1979) was an American businessman. He was the owner of two National Football League franchises; he was the first owner of the Baltimore Colts, and later switched teams, taking ownership of the Los Angeles Rams.[1][2]

During his stewardship of both franchises, Rosenbloom amassed the best ownership winning percentage in league history (.660), a total regular season record of 226 wins, 116 losses, and 8 ties, as well as 3 NFL championships (1958,1959,1968), and 1 Super Bowl (Super Bowl V).[3]

Rosenbloom has been described as the NFL's first modern owner and the first players' owner.[3] Rosenbloom was part of the NFL inner circle that negotiated the league's network TV contracts with NBC and CBS and the NFL/AFL merger, both of which contributed to professional football becoming both profitable and the most watched spectator sport in the United States.[3][4][5]

Early life and education

Rosenbloom was born in Baltimore, Maryland on March 5, 1907, to Anna and Solomon Rosenbloom. He was the eighth of nine children, raised in a Jewish family.[6] His father, an immigrant from Russian Poland, started a successful work-clothing manufacturing company.[1]

As a youth, Sports Illustrated described Rosenbloom as an "indifferent student" but a "good athlete." He played football and baseball and boxed.[1]

Rosenbloom graduated from Baltimore City College in 1926 then later that year attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he studied psychology and business and played halfback on the football team.[7] At the time, the Quakers' backfield coach was Bert Bell, who later became the commissioner of the NFL.[1]

Business career

Upon graduation, Rosenbloom returned to Baltimore to work for his father's clothing company. After being sent to liquidate the Blue Ridge Overalls Company, a small factory his father had acquired, Rosenbloom decided he wanted to run the fledgling company on his own. Based in Roanoke, Virginia, Blue Ridge had suffered during the Depression. But Rosenbloom was intent to turn it around. When the U.S. Civilian Conservation Corps was authorized in 1933 and officials needed denim work clothes, Rosenbloom successfully secured Blue Ridge a large order.[1]

By 1940, after attaining distribution through large channels like Sears-Roebuck and J.C. Penney, Blue Ridge had grown into a prosperous company allowing Rosenbloom to retire at 32.[1] (As a youth, Rosenbloom told his brother Ben he planned to retire at 34.)[1] During a brief retirement, Rosenbloom lived as a gentleman farmer on Maryland's Eastern Shore, growing corn and peaches. As well, during this time, Rosenbloom married Velma Anderson.[1]

Rosenbloom's father's death in 1942 cut his retirement short, however. When Rosenbloom was named the executor of his father's estate, he chose to return to business life.[1]

By 1959, Blue Ridge had grown to include almost a dozen shirt and overall companies and 7,000 employees, leading some to dub Rosenbloom "America's Overalls King."[3] In the financial interests of his family, Rosenbloom decided to sell the company to P & R, the price being $7 million in cash and more than $20 million in stock. At P & R, Rosenbloom served as a Director.[1]

With the success of his first enterprise, Rosenbloom diversified his business interests. In the late 1950s, Rosenbloom and his partners bought control of Universal Products Co. He went on to buy American Totalisator and other small companies, eventually lumping them all together under the name Universal Controls, Inc.[1]

Rosenbloom was one of the largest individual shareholders in Seven Arts Productions Limited, which backed the Broadway musical Funny Girl, and the films Lolita, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?, and The Night of the Iguana.[1]

National Football League

Baltimore Colts (1953–1971)

After losing the original Colts team in 1951, the city of Baltimore petitioned the NFL for another franchise. Around this time, NFL Commissioner Bert Bell wanted to find a new home for the Dallas Texans, an NFL expansion team that folded after one failed season in 1952. Bell sought a competitive new owner with financial resources. From their days together at Penn, Bell thought Rosenbloom would be a great fit. Though Rosenbloom was hesitant at first to own a franchise, he relented and bought the team along with a group of other investors. Rosenbloom's share cost him $13,000. In January 1953, the NFL awarded the city of Baltimore the Dallas Texans franchise, with Rosenbloom as the principal owner.[2][4]

Adopting the nickname of the city's earlier professional incarnation, the Colts, Rosenbloom asked fans to give him five years to create a winning team.[1]

Before their first season, Rosenbloom helped organize one of the biggest trades in sports history: in exchange for ten Cleveland Browns, the Colts traded five players. Among the players traded to Baltimore were Don Shula, Art Spinney, Bert Rechichar, Carl Taseff, Ed Sharkey, Gern Nagler, Harry Agganis, Dick Batten, Stu Sheets, and Elmer Willhoite.[8]

In 1954, the Colts hired Weeb Ewbank as head coach. Ewbank led the Colts for nine seasons and won two conference and NFL Championships with the help of 1956 free agent quarterback Johnny Unitas.[8]

On November 30, 1958, the Colts clinched their first Western Conference title. Four weeks later, the team won its first NFL Championship, beating the New York Giants, 23-17 in what is regarded as "The Greatest Game Ever Played," six years after Rosenbloom purchased the team. The televised game, a sudden death thriller, would serve as a launching point for the start of the NFL's enormous boom in popularity.[1][8][9]

The Colts repeated as champions in 1959, again defeating the Giants, 31-16, for the NFL Championship.[9] During the 1960 through 1962 seasons, the Colts struggled.[8] So in 1963 Rosenbloom let go of Coach Ewbank and hired Don Shula, then the youngest coach in NFL history.[8][10][11] Over the next several seasons the team did not win another championship but did make it to the NFL Championship game in 1964, losing to the Cleveland Browns 27-0, and to the 1968 Super Bowl III, again to lose, this time to the New York Jets 16-7.[9] (The NFL Championship retroactively changed names to the Super Bowl in 1966 prior to the AFL-NFL merger of 1970.)

After the 1969 season, Shula left Baltimore for Miami after Dolphins owner Joe Robbie tempted Shula with about $750,000 and other perks.[6] Rosenbloom was furious and successfully argued that Miami had tampered with Shula. Because of the infraction, the NFL awarded the Colts Miami's 1971 first-round draft choice.[6]

On January 17, 1971, the Colts won a fourth league title, defeating the Dallas Cowboys 16-13 in Super Bowl V.[8][9]

A fierce competitor, Rosenbloom had a profound interest in his team succeeding. Describing his commitment to the Colts and his experience running a franchise, Rosenbloom told Sports Illustrated magazine:

"After the first year in football, I found that of all the things I've ever done, this is the thing. There is nothing more rewarding. You have everything wrapped up in one bundle. You meet much nicer people than you do in business. You meet the public, and you must learn to look out for them. There's no place where your word is more your bond than in sports. You'd never find 14 men who deal as fairly with one another as the 14 owners in the National Football League, particularly after some of the things that have gone on in business or on Wall Street. You play a part in the lives of young men, and you help them grow. And then every Sunday you have the great pleasure of dying."[1]

However, while Rosenbloom loved the Colts, due to issues with the Baltimore Memorial Stadium and the city's officials, Rosenbloom wanted to leave Baltimore.[2] In the next offseason in 1972, Rosenbloom completed a historic tax-free swapping of teams with new Los Angeles Rams owner Robert Irsay.[12] When Rosenbloom left, he received recognition from his players. Colts linebacker Mike Curtis said, "I hate to see Carroll go. He was a damn good owner. It wasn't the coaches who made Baltimore a winner for 14 years."[2]

Los Angeles Rams (1972–1979)

By the 1972 season, Rosenbloom assumed control as the majority owner of the Rams.[12]

The Rams remained solid contenders in the 1970s, winning seven straight NFC West championships between 1973 and 1979. Though a strong team, the Rams lost the first four conference championship games they played in that decade, twice to Minnesota (1974, 1976) and twice to Dallas (1975, 1978) and failed to win a Super Bowl.[13]

In 1978, Rosenbloom announced plans to move the Rams to Anaheim Stadium, citing dissatisfaction with the Los Angeles Coliseum and the location as the motives behind the move.[14] (The move eventually occurred in 1980, a year after Rosenbloom's death. The extra time was needed to retrofit Anaheim Stadium, which opened in 1966 for Major League Baseball's California Angels, from a baseball-only facility into a multi-purpose stadium.)[13]

Death and ensuing controversy

While swimming at Golden Beach, Florida, Rosenbloom drowned on April 2, 1979. He was 72. Though Dr. Joseph H. Davis, the Dade County coroner, stated, "there is not one scintilla of reason to believe this is anything other than an unfortunate accident," a PBS Frontline documentary called "An Unauthorized History of the NFL" suggested that Rosenbloom, a known gambler, may have been murdered,[15] causing law enforcement to question the case.

The final conclusion was that Carroll, who had been one of the first heart bypass patients, had suffered a heart attack while swimming. Witnesses at the scene and the Miami coroner's office and the Miami chief of police confirmed this finding.[16]

After Rosenbloom's death, his second wife, Georgia Frontiere, inherited a 70% ownership stake in the Los Angeles Rams. Rosenbloom's five children inherited the other 30%.[17][18]

Frontiere's inheritance came as a surprise to many fans (though not to close friends and family)[17] who thought Steve Rosenbloom, the former owner's son from a previous marriage and the Rams' vice-president, would take a leadership role in the team's management. It was not a surprise to close friends and family because Rosenbloom was trying to take advantage of the widow's tax exemption. There was a draft of Rosenbloom's will that was to be changed so the team would be left to his son Steve, however, it was never executed.[19] Over 900 people attended Rosenbloom's memorial service, including 15 NFL owners, sportscaster Howard Cosell, the entire Rams organization and actors Warren Beatty, Kirk Douglas, Cary Grant, Jimmy Stewart, Rod Steiger, and Henry Mancini.[3]

Influence on the NFL

Rosenbloom influenced the modern day NFL in many ways, namely in that he envisioned that the league could be a successful business. In 1960, the NFL owners were deadlocked about naming a successor to Commissioner Bell. After reviewing 23 ballots, Rosenbloom brought up the name of Los Angeles Rams general manager Pete Rozelle as a compromise candidate because he had successfully made the Rams profitable.[3]

At the age of 33, Rozelle was elected commissioner. Rozelle, with the help of Rosenbloom, would spearhead equal revenue sharing of all TV contracts among the 12 league franchises, which helped make the league profitable and caused football to surpass baseball as the most watched spectator sport in the US.[3]

Upon Rosenbloom's death, Rozelle said, "Carroll Rosenbloom played a major role in the growth and success of the NFL, both through the teams he produced and through his active participation in the league's decision making process."[3]

Rosenbloom was also influential in making the AFL-NFL merger possible. He helped push the merger forward in 1970 by taking $3 million and agreeing to move the Colts to the American Football Conference (along with the Browns and Steelers).[3] He was also the NFL's first visible owner and its first players' owner, and envisioned revenue-generating stadiums and luxury suites before anyone else.[3]

Awards and recognition

In 1960, the City of Baltimore awarded Rosenbloom the "Man of the Year Award."[20]

Since his death, the Rams' players and coaches give the Carroll Rosenbloom Memorial Award to the team's rookie of the year.[21]

Rosenbloom was elected to the Rams' Ring of Honor.[3]

Personal life

Rosenbloom was married to Velma Anderson, his first wife, when he met his second wife, 20 years his junior, who was also married, at a party hosted by his friend Joseph Kennedy at his Palm Beach estate in 1957.[1][22][23][24] Rosenbloom met seven times married former lounge singer Georgia Frontiere, then a TV personality in Miami. Rosenbloom and Frontiere married in 1966, though they had been together for eight years and had two children together.[24] When Rosenbloom died, Frontiere and his five children (Dan, Steve, and Suzanne, from his first wife, and Lucia and Chip with Frontiere) survived him.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 The Pleasure of Dying on Sunday, Sports Illustrated, Dec 13, 1965. Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Nay On The Neighs, Yea On The Baas, Sports Illustrated, Aug 14, 1972. Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 The NFL’s first “Modern Owner, Dallas Sports Source", Aug 13, 2010. Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  4. 1 2 Eisenberg, John. "Caroll Rosenbloom: Man of Mystery". Press Box Online. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  5. Brulia, Tim (2004). "A CHRONOLOGY OF PRO FOOTBALL ON TELEVISION: Part 1" (PDF). The Coffin Corner. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-18. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  6. 1 2 3 The Rosenbloom-robbie Bowl, Sports Illustrated 2", Nov 9, 1970. Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  7. "Hall of Fame Members - Baltimore City College Alumni Association, INC". Cityforever.org. 2011-03-25. Archived from the original on 2011-10-02. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 A look at the history of the Colts Archived March 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine., "Colts". Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  9. 1 2 3 4 The Pleasure of Dying on Sunday, Sports Encyclopedia", Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  10. "Don Shula". Professional Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  11. "Colts Fire Ewbank, Name Shula Coach". Ocala Star-Banner. Jan 9, 1963. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  12. 1 2 "Rams, Colts Ownership Reportedly Will Change". Gadsden Times. Jun 23, 1972. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  13. 1 2 "History". St. Louis Rams. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  14. "Rosenbloom announced Rams move to Anaheim". St. Petersburg Times. July 26, 1978. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  15. "Rosenbloom death not murder - coroner". Pittsburg Press. January 16, 1983. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  16. Taaffe, William (Jan 31, 1983). "Unfounded findings". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  17. 1 2 Georgia’s Playbook, St. Louis Business Journal, Jan 26, 2003. Accessed Dec 15, 2010.
  18. "Socialite moved Rams to St. Louis, ''Los Angeles Times'', Jan 19, 2008. Accessed Dec 15, 2010". Los Angeles Times. 2008-01-19. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  19. Stewart, Larry (January 11, 2000). "As the Rams Turned". Los Angeles Times.
  20. "Man of the Year". Baltimore Sun. December 11, 1960. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  21. Writer, Staff (2011-01-06). "Rams Announce Their 2010 Team Awards". Football News Now. Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  22. Sports Illustrated: "The Pleasure Of Dying On Sunday" by Robert H. Boyle December 13, 1965
  23. "Georgia Frontiere, Owner of the St. Louis Rams Football Team Passed Away Today - St. Louis Rams Football". Stlrams.com. Archived from the original on 2011-08-28. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
  24. 1 2 Goldstein, Richard (2008-01-19). "Georgia Frontiere, 80, First Female N.F.L Owner, Is Dead, ''NY Times," Jan 19, 2008. Accessed Dec 15, 2010". New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-06.
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