NEW YORK -- Pro Football Hall of Famer Frank Gifford, who led the New York Giants to a league championship in 1956 and later teamed up with Howard Cosell and Don Meredith in the Monday Night Football booth, died Sunday. He was 84.
In a statement released by NBC News on Sunday, his family said Gifford died suddenly at his Connecticut home of natural causes that morning. His wife, Kathie Lee Gifford, is a host for NBC's "Today."
A versatile star on both offense and defense in an era when NFL players were starting to specialize, Gifford was the NFL's Most Valuable Player in 1956, when he led the Giants on their title run.
"We rejoice in the extraordinary life he was privileged to live, and we feel grateful and blessed to have been loved by such an amazing human being," his family said in the statement. "We ask that our privacy be respected at this difficult time and we thank you for your prayers."
Gifford was the centerpiece of a Giants offense that went to five NFL title games in the 1950s and '60s. Beginning in 1971, he worked for ABC's Monday Night Football, at first as a play-by-play announcer and then as an analyst.
"Frank Gifford was the ultimate Giant," team president John Mara said in a statement. "He was the face of our franchise for so many years. More importantly, he was a treasured member of our family. My father loved him like a son and was proud to act as his presenter for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, a favor Frank returned years later by presenting my father in Canton.
"For my siblings and me, Frank was like a revered older brother whom we looked up to and admired. We loved him and will miss him terribly."
Giants chairman Steve Tisch said in a statement that Gifford "will always be remembered as a Giants' Giant."
Later in life Gifford stayed in the spotlight through his marriage to Kathie Lee Gifford, who famously called him a "human love machine" and "lamb chop" to her millions of viewers.
Gifford hosted "Wide World of Sports," covered several Olympics -- his call of Franz Klammer's gold-medal run in 1976 is considered a broadcasting masterpiece -- and announced a record 411 Monday Night Football games for ABC.
Bob Iger, the former president of ABC and current chairman and CEO of The Walt Disney Company, called Gifford an "exceptional man."
"His many achievements were defined by a quiet dignity and a personal grace that is seldom seen in any arena; he truly embodied the very best of us," Iger said in a statement. "Frank's contributions to ABC Sports and our company are immeasurable. We are honored to call him a Disney Legend and I am very fortunate to have called him a dear friend and colleague."
While he worked with others, including Dan Dierdorf, Al Michaels, Joe Namath and O.J. Simpson, Gifford was most known for the eight years he served as a calm buffer between the folksy Meredith and acerbic Cosell.
In its early years the show was a cultural touchstone, with cities throwing parades for the visiting announcers, and celebrities such as John Lennon and Ronald Reagan making appearances.
"I hate to use the words 'American institution,' but there's no other way to put it, really," Gifford told The Associated Press in 1993. "There's nothing else like it."
A handsome straight shooter who came off as earnest and sincere, Gifford was popular with viewers, even if some accused him of being a shill for the NFL.
Current Monday Night Football play-by-play man Mike Tirico took to Twitter to share one of his memories of Gifford.
Gifford experienced the highs and lows as an NFL player. He had two fumbles early in the 1958 NFL championship game, both of which led to Baltimore Colts touchdowns, and later came up short on a critical third down. The Colts eventually won 23-17 in the league's first overtime game. The thrilling finish helped popularize the NFL and the game was dubbed "The Greatest Game Ever Played," although not by Gifford.
"Not my greatest game," Gifford told the AP in 2008. "I fumbled going out [of the end zone] and I fumbled going in."
Gifford and his teammates felt he was robbed by an incorrectly spotted ball with less than three minutes left in the fourth quarter, though video technology employed for a 50th anniversary documentary indicated the call was correct. In any event, the Giants were forced to punt in the '58 game, leading to a famous drive led by Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas to send it into overtime.
Gifford had his best year in 1956, rushing for 819 yards, picking up 603 yards receiving and scoring nine touchdowns in 12 games. The Giants routed the Chicago Bears 47-7 at Yankee Stadium, where Gifford shared a locker with Mickey Mantle.
"Frank Gifford was an icon of the game, both as a Hall of Fame player for the Giants and Hall of Fame broadcaster for CBS and ABC," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement. "Frank's talent and charisma on the field and on the air were important elements in the growth and popularity of the modern NFL."
A crushing hit by 233-pound Eagles linebacker Chuck Bednarik in November 1960 flattened Gifford and likely shortened his football career. Bednarik was pictured standing over the unconscious Gifford, pumping his fist in a celebration thought by many to be over the top. Gifford was in the hospital for 10 days and sidelined until 1962.
Born Aug. 16, 1930, in Santa Monica, California, Frank Newton Gifford was the son of an itinerant oil worker. Growing up in Depression-era California, Gifford estimated he moved 47 times before entering high school, occasionally sleeping in parks or the family car and eating dog food.
The Giants used Gifford at running back, defensive back, wide receiver and on special teams. He went to the Pro Bowl at three different positions. His 5,434 yards receiving were a Giants record for 39 years, until Amani Toomer surpassed him in 2003. His jersey number, 16, was retired by the team in 2000.
Gifford was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1977. Hall of Fame president David Baker spoke glowingly of Gifford in a statement released Sunday afternoon.
"Frank Gifford's passion, charisma and deep love for the game helped grow pro football into this country's most popular sport," Baker said. "He took the values he learned on the playing field during his Hall of Fame career and applied them to his long and distinguished broadcasting career. And, in doing so, he taught fans of all generations to love the Game."
When he wasn't on the field, Gifford tried to put his movie-star good looks to use in Hollywood, appearing in about a dozen films, most notably the 1959 submarine movie "Up Periscope."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.