In memoriam: Willie Mays, Jerry West, Johnny Gaudreau, Pete Rose and many more were lost in 2024

While 2024 was an incredible year in sports, it was also one that saw the losses of so many legends — some beloved, some polarizing, but all undoubtedly made their marks on sports history. Before we look ahead to 2025, let's remember those we lost in 2024.

Jan. 7: Franz Beckenbauer

The German soccer legend known as “Der Kaiser” is one of three people to win the World Cup as a player and manager. Beckenbauer won the Ballon d'Or twice and was named Germany's Footballer of the Century in 2000. At the club level, he won four Bundesliga titles, three European Cups, and the European Cup Winners' Cup with Bayern Munich, and later added another Bundesliga title with Hamburg. He would join the New York Cosmos in 1977 to play with Pelé, who described Beckenbauer as “one of the best I ever saw play.”

Jan. 11: Bud Harrelson

Harrelson died after a six-year battle with Alzheimer's. He played for three teams during his 15-year MLB team, most notably with the New York Mets, where he was a two-time All-Star and was part of the 1969 World Series winning “Miracle Mets.” He was involved in one of the most memorable playoff moments when he fought Pete Rose at second base during the 1973 NLCS. After retiring as a player, Harrelson became a coach and was on Davey Johnson’s staff when the Mets won their second World Series in 1986.

Jan. 16: Don Catlin

The modern field of anti-doping was built on Catlin’s research. The founder of the UCLA Olympic Analytical Laboratory, the United States’ first anti-doping lab, devoted his career to finding ways to detect substances that were previously slipping past the authorities. That included the carbon isotope ratio to determine if an anabolic steroid was produced naturally or from banned substances and the identification of the active ingredient in “The Clear,” which was used by Barry Bonds and others.

Jan. 17: Dejan Milojević

The Warriors were rocked by the sudden loss of Milojević, who died of a heart attack at a team dinner. Milojević had worked as an assistant coach for Golden State since 2021, winning a ring in 2022 and becoming a popular figure among players. Before the Warriors, the Serbian enjoyed a successful career as both a player and coach in Europe, winning three straight MVP awards in Eastern Europe’s ABA League and three trophies as a coach in Serbia and Montenegro.

Feb. 2: Carl Weathers

Weathers was a great athlete in real life and an even better one in fiction. Many movie fans might not know the man who became Apollo Creed was originally a football player, playing at San Diego State for two undefeated seasons and spending another two seasons with the Oakland Raiders under legendary coach John Madden. It was Madden who helped convince Weathers to pursue acting full time after seeing his player star in Shakespeare’s “Othello.” It wound up being a good move.

Feb. 11: Kelvin Kiptum

The world record for the marathon still belongs to the late Kelvin Kiptum, who became the first man to break the 2:01:00 mark when he blew away the field at the 2023 Chicago Marathon. There is no way to calculate what the long-distance running world lost when the 24-year-old prodigy died in a car crash in his native Kenya. He was responsible for three of the seven fastest seven marathon times in history, and he was just getting started.

Feb. 17: Lefty Driesell

Driesell turned Maryland into a top college basketball program during his 17 years in College Park. He also started the tradition of an opening practice for the public with "Midnight Madness," which is now an event for schools throughout the country. During his 41-year career, Driesell also coached at Davison, James Madison and Georgia State. When he retired in 2003, Driesell had the fourth-most coaching wins in Division I men's basketball. He was 92 years old when he died.

March 3: Chris Mortensen

For many football fans, Mortensen was the original NFL insider. He joined ESPN after stints with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and The National and became a ubiquitous presence across the network's TV and radio programming as the appetite for the NFL became insatiable. Dominating the beat and setting a standard for 25 years, Mortensen stepped back after being diagnosed with throat cancer. He retired in 2023 to focus on his health before his death in March at 72 years old.

March 23: Peter Angelos

Were it not for Angelos, who died in March at 93, the Baltimore Orioles could have left the city like the Bullets in 1973 and the Colts in 1983. He and the ownership group he assembled paid $173 million, a record price at that time, in 1993 to keep the Orioles under local control. Angelos put up $40 million of his own money to guarantee the sale. His meddling in baseball operations eventually caused the fans to turn on him, but as long as the O’s are in Baltimore — something new owner David Rubenstein doesn’t plan to change — Angelos’ legacy will live on.

April 1: Vontae Davis

Vontae Davis was found dead in his South Florida home in April at just 35 years old. Authorities have yet to announce a cause of death. At his peak, Davis was one of the better NFL cornerbacks of his generation and a two-time Pro Bowler with the Colts. He also played with the Dolphins and Bills in a 10-year career that spanned from 2009-18. He played in the NFL at the same time as his brother Vernon, a two-time Pro Bowl tight end.

April 10: O.J. Simpson

Simpson was a Heisman-winning running back at USC then reached superstardom as the first player in NFL history to post 2,000 rushing yards in a season, the apex of a career that saw him earn five All-Pro nods, four rushing titles and an MVP. He went on to enjoy successful careers in acting and broadcasting. Nobody cared about any of that for the final three decades of his life, and you know why.

April 15: Whitey Herzog

Herzog managed four MLB teams over his 17-year managerial career and led the St. Louis Cardinals to the 1982 World Series title. He also served as the franchise’s general manager for three seasons and acquired future Hall of Famer Ozzie Smith. Herzog won 1,281 games as a manager, winning six division titles and the 1985 NL Manager of the Year award. In 2010, he was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame and is also a member of the Cardinals and Kansas City Royals Halls of Fame.

April 15: Ken Holtzman

The winningest Jewish pitcher of all time is not Sandy Koufax. It is Holtzman, who faced the Dodgers legend as a rookie then proceeded to have an outstanding career in his own right. The southpaw threw two no-hitters with the Cubs (the first being one of three in history with zero strikeouts), then became an All-Star after being traded to the Athletics in 1971. The rotation trio he formed with Catfish Hunter and Vida Blue was a vital part of Oakland’s World Series three-peat.

May 8: Jimmy Johnson

When facing the 49ers, quarterbacks rarely threw to Johnson’s side of the field. He was a lockdown corner long before that became a term, talented enough to go step-for-step with the opposing wide receiver and versatile enough to give pass-catching a try in 1962. The eight-time All-Pro made the NFL’s 1970s All-Decade team and was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1994.

May 19: Jim Otto

Otto played for the Raiders since the franchise's inception in 1960, lining up at center for 15 seasons without missing a single game. That took a toll on his body, resulting in 70 surgeries and his right leg being amputated in 2007. Otto won an AFL title in 1967 and played in six AFL or AFC championship games with the Silver and Black. He was a 10-time first-team All-Pro and 12-time Pro Bowler, and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980. Otto died at 86 years old.

May 25: Grayson Murray

Murray died by suicide one day after withdrawing from Charles Schwab Challenge in Fort Worth, Texas after citing illness. Five months earlier, the 30-year-old Raleigh, North Carolina native snapped a six-year winless drought after earning his second PGA Tour victory at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Prior to joining the PGA Tour, Murray was a three-time Junior World Champion and was the second-youngest golfer to make the cut on the Korn Ferry Tour at age 16.

May 27: Bill Walton

Walton, one of basketball’s most colorful characters, died after struggling with cancer in recent years. He was 71 years old. The 6-foot-11 center won two national championships at UCLA and was the No. 1 overall pick by the Trail Blazers in the 1974 NBA Draft. As a professional, he won two NBA titles (one with the Celtics) and an MVP award. But generations of basketball fans likely know Walton better as an offbeat broadcaster, calling college and NBA games with memorable stories, unusual tangents and observations for CBS, NBC, the Clippers and ESPN/ABC.

June 2: Larry Allen

Larry Allen was a staple in the Cowboys offensive line for more than a decade, where he protected both Troy Aikman during the team’s last Super Bowl run and Tony Romo at the beginning of his career. The Hall of Famer, who grew up in the Los Angeles area and was once stabbed 12 times while protecting one of his brothers, was described by Aikman as a “gentle giant.” He’ll go down as one of the best lineman in the history of the league, and is one of just three players to be named to both the 1990s and 2000s All-Decade teams.

June 8: Chet Walker

Basketball Hall of Famer and seven-time NBA All-Star Chet "The Jet" Walker died in June at 84 years old. A 6-7 forward known for his speed on the court, Walker played in the playoffs in each season of his 13-year career with the 76ers and Bulls. He helped lead the 76ers to a championship in 1967 while playing alongside Wilt Chamberlain. Walker sued the NBA and the Bulls alleging anti-trust violations regarding his contract negotiations and ultimately retired 1975 when he reached a settlement. He was enshrined in the Hall of Fame 37 years later in 2012.

June 12: Jerry West

The Logo was an inner-circle Hall of Famer two times over, first as a player who was one of the NBA’s first great guards then as the executive who built multiple Lakers dynasties. He even played a role in the league’s most recent dynasty with the Warriors, serving as an executive board member. Everywhere he went, everything he did, he turned his teams into winners with one of the sharpest basketball minds in history, not to mention sheer force of will.

June 18: Willie Mays

There is really no way of evaluating baseball that doesn’t result in the Say Hey Kid being one of the best. Power: 660 home runs. Contact: 3,293 hits. Defense: an outfield-record 12 Gold Gloves, plus the greatest defensive highlight in the history of his position. Longevity: two full decades as an All-Star. Advanced stats: the most WAR of any player since integration not tainted by steroids. Character: the inaugural Roberto Clemente Award winner. It’s easy to call Mays the greatest two-way player ever, but you can also probably remove the “two-way” from that.

June 28: Orlando Cepeda

Mays wasn’t the only groundbreaking Giants legend to die this year. One of baseball’s first great Puerto Rican players, Cepeda rose from humble origins to stardom hitting behind Mays and Willie McCovey in the Giants lineup. An abrupt later landed him with the Cardinals, where he won a World Series and MVP honors in 1967. A drug arrest marred his reputation after retirement, but he successfully rehabilitated his life as a Giants ambassador and made the Hall of Fame in 1999.

July 6: Khyree Jackson

Jackson, a rookie cornerback for the Vikings, was killed in an auto accident with two friends and ormer teammates in their native Maryland. He was only 24 years old. Jackson was a fourth-round pick by Minnesota in the 2024 NFL Draft and appeared poised to win a roster spot, impressing coaches in minicamps and OTAs with his press coverage. He quit football for two years and worked at a grocery store before playing at Alabama, then Oregon.

July 11: Monte Kiffin

Perhaps no name is more synonymous with the Buccaneers' rise to relevance from the dregs of the NFL than Monte Kiffin. Kiffin joined Tony Dungy's staff in 1996 as the defensive coordinator in Tampa Bay, where they masterminded an iconic defense that finished as a top-10 unit 12 times in Kiffin's 13-year tenure. The Tampa 2 concept became a blueprint in college and the NFL and gave the Oakland Raiders fits in Super Bowl XXXVII. Bucs defenders intercepted Rich Gannon five times and returned three for touchdowns to deliver the franchise its first Super Bowl win.

July 14: Jacoby Jones

The Ravens do not reach Super Bowl XLVII without Jones catching the ball that came to be known as the “Mile High Miracle.” The Ravens do not win Super Bowl XLVII without Jones becoming the first player to score a receiving touchdown and kick return touchdown in the big game. The New Orleans native reached the apex of his career at the Superdome and died at the age of 40 in his hometown of complications from high blood pressure.

July 18: Abner Haynes

Haynes was the AFL's first Rookie of the Year and MVP, playing five seasons for the Chiefs (beginning as the Dallas Texans). A multi-purpose threat as a halfback, he still holds the team record with five touchdowns in a game. Haynes was inducted into the Chiefs Hall of Fame in 1991 and his jersey No. 28 was retired. At North Texas, he was one of the first Black athletes in Texas to play major college football. Haynes died at 86 years old.

July 20: Andre Seldon Jr.

Seldon, 22, died in an apparent cliff-diving accident shortly before he was to begin his first season at Utah State as a fifth-year senior. A native of Belleville, Michigan, the cornerback played two seasons at Michigan followed by two years at New Mexico State, where he played 28 games and started 24. Seldon went with coach Nate Dreiling from NMSU to Utah State, who became the interim head coach and defensive coordinator.

July 22: Carolyn Schuler

An International Swimming Hall of Famer, Schuler came out of nowhere to win two gold medals in the 1960 Summer Olympics at the age of 17 years old. Before achieving gold, she had never won an individual national championship. She wasn’t even the best swimmer in her favorite event on her elite YMCA team. She made the Olympic team by a fingertip and remained the underdog in Rome. Then she won.

July 28: Reyes Moronta

Moronta pitched six seasons in MLB from 2017-23. He died in a car crash in his native Dominican Republic at the age of 31. The right-hander played for the Giants, Dodgers, Diamondbacks, Angels and Rangers during his career. He compiled a 3.05 ERA and 10-11 record in 177 appearances with 202 strikeouts in 171 1/3 innings. Moronta's best season was 2018 with a 2.49 ERA and 5-2 record in 69 games, averaging 10.9 strikeouts per nine innings.

Aug. 6: Billy Bean

Prior to his death, Bean was MLB's only living openly gay player. He died at 60 years old following an 11-year struggle with acute myeloid leukemia. Bean came out in 1999, four years after a six-year major league career. He was the fourth-round pick of the Tigers in 1986, with whom he played for three seasons. Bean also played for the Dodgers and Padres. Bean was MLB's Senior VP of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. hired in 2014 by commissioner Bud Selig.

Aug. 20: Alvin Attles

Attles was a legendary figure in Warriors team history as a player, coach and general manager. Known as an enforcer and his tough defense as a point guard, he later became the third Black coach in NBA history. Attles coached a Golden State team led by Rick Barry and Jamaal Wilkes to the 1974-75 NBA championship. His No. 16 jersey was retired by the Warriors in 1977 and he was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2019. Attles was 87 years old when he died.

Aug. 29: Johnny and Matthew Gaudreau

The Gaudreau brothers were killed after they were struck by an alleged drunk driver while bike riding near their family home in New Jersey. Johnny Gaudreau, 31, was a seven-time All-Star and scored 243 goals and 743 points in 763 games over 11 NHL seasons with the Calgary Flames and Columbus Blue Jackets. Matthew Gaudreau, 29, had a professional playing career that lasted five seasons before he was hired to coach at Gloucester Catholic High School, where both brothers attended.

Sept. 5: Rebecca Cheptegei

Cheptegei finished 44th in the marathon for Uganda at the Paris Olympics in August. One month later, her former partner doused her with gasoline and set her on fire at her home in Kenya, reportedly over a land dispute. She died in the hospital with burns on more than 80% of her body. The story is horrific, but making it even worse is that she was only the third Ugandan runner to be killed by their partner since 2021.

Sept. 30: Dikembe Mutombo

In the golden age of '90s post play, Dikembe Mutombo stood out as perhaps the greatest defender of his era. A menacing presence as a rebounder and shot blocker, Mutombo embodied defensive intimidation, and his iconic finger wag carries on as an homage to his greatness. Off the court, he was anything but a menace, a beloved figure in the global basketball community who focused much of his post-basketball career on philanthropy in his home continent of Africa. He's gone too soon at 58 years old.

Sept. 30: Pete Rose

Rose should primarily be remembered as baseball’s all-time hit leader, but his legacy was twisted by everything that came after his playing career, including a lifetime ban for betting on baseball and a statutory rape allegation. The former is most known, and might have been lifted by now had Rose played ball with MLB rather than repeatedly lie about his gambling. When it came to Rose’s career, the good and the bad were both direct products of the man himself.

Oct. 2: Susie Berning

Susie Maxwell Berning was a pioneer in the golf world from the very beginning. She was the first female player to earn a golf scholarship at Oklahoma City University, where she played alongside the men. She went on to win the U.S. Women’s Open three times, and returned to win the tournament in back-to-back years after giving birth to her first daughter in 1970. The 11-time LPGA Tour winner and former Rookie of the Year was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame alongside Tiger Woods in 2022.

Oct. 4: Billy Shaw

Shaw, 85, was the only member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame who never actually played in the NFL. He played nine seasons at offensive guard for the Bills, who were in the AFL during his career. Shaw was part of two AFL championship teams in 1964 and 1965, selected to seven All-AFL teams and named an eight-time AFL All-Star. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1999.

Oct. 8: Luis Tiant

‘El Tiante’ pitched for six teams over a 19-year MLB career and was a three-time All-Star and won 229 games with Cleveland, the Minnesota Twins, Boston Red Sox, New York Yankees, Pittsburgh Pirates, and California Angels. Tiant, known for his unique delivery, made three starts during the 1975 World Series, helping the Red Sox force Game 7 against the Cincinnati Reds. He finished his MLB career with 187 complete games and 49 shutouts before retiring in 1982.

Oct. 22: Fernando Valenzuela

“Fernandomania” gripped baseball, permanently changed the Dodgers fanbase and created a national hero in Mexico. Every time the screwball-throwing southpaw reared back and looked to the Dodger Stadium sky, it was worth watching, from a rookie year that saw him win a Cy Young Award and World Series ring to the no-hitter in his final year in Los Angeles. The Dodgers winning the World Series a week after his death was a fitting tribute to a man who defined the organization.

Oct. 24: Amir Abdur-Rahim

Abdur-Rahim was a rising star in the college basketball coaching ranks after leading Kennesaw State to its first winning record at 26–9 and an NCAA tournament bid, then South Florida to a 25–8 mark and first-ever conference title. That success made him a candidate for jobs including Michigan, Vanderbilt and Louisville, but he decided to stay in Tampa and signed a contract extension. Abdur-Rahim was only 43 years old when he died due to complications from a medical procedure.

Nov. 9: Bobby Allison

One of NASCAR’s great winners and the patriarch of a racing family, Bobby Allison died in November at 86 years old. Allison’s 85 wins rank as the fourth-most in NASCAR history. Despite his win tally, he won just a single Cup Series championship in 1983. His airborne crash at Talladega in 1987 is one of the worst in NASCAR history and was the impetus for the introduction of restrictor plates. The founder of the Alabama gang, Allison was the father of NASCAR drivers Davey and Clifford Allison and the brother of driver Donnie Allison. Davey tragically died in a helicopter crash at Talladega at 32 years old in 1993.

Nov. 15: Bela Karolyi

Karolyi and his wife Marta oversaw the United States’ breakthrough in women’s gymnastics, coaching the likes of Mary Lou Retton and every other great American gymnast of the 80s and 90s. Time was not kind to their reputation, though, as the pair have become infamous for their harsh treatment of the young girls placed under their tutelage. After Karolyi spent so much effort preventing his talented students from growing up, the sport ended up outgrowing him.

Dec. 10: Rocky Colavito

There are few greater compliments than a city concluding it is cursed because its team traded you away. Such was the fate of Babe Ruth, and Colavito. The latter slugger joined Cleveland in the later years of the club’s golden age and did his best to extend it, earning a home run title and posting MLB’s eighth four-homer game in 1959. His trade to the Detroit Tigers right before the 1960 season was met with fan outrage; the longest World Series drought in MLB has only reinforced the Curse of Rocky Colavito.