Matt Snell, the bruising running back whose powerful legs helped deliver one of the greatest upsets in football history, died Tuesday morning on Long Island. He was 84. His son Beau confirmed the passing. No cause of death was announced.
Snell spent his entire professional career with the New York Jets, joining the franchise in 1964 and retiring in 1972. Over nine seasons, he became one of the most recognizable figures from the team that reshaped professional football in the late 1960s.
Snell and the Jets Rise
Snell arrived in New York during the early years of the American Football League, a league still fighting for credibility against the established National Football League. Young players carried the burden of proving the AFL belonged on the same stage — and he wasted no time delivering.
In his debut season he earned AFL Rookie of the Year honors and earned a spot in the AFL All-Star game. His running style leaned on strength over speed. Defenders bounced off him. He pushed forward when others stopped.
By mid-decade, Snell had become a central piece of the Jets offense, sharing the spotlight with quarterback Joe Namath — the larger-than-life signal-caller who would come to define the era.
Snell’s Super Bowl III Legacy
His most enduring moment arrived on a January afternoon in 1969. The Jets entered Super Bowl III as heavy underdogs against the powerhouse Baltimore Colts. Namath famously guaranteed victory before kickoff. Snell delivered the physical work that made it possible.
Playing through a knee injury, Snell carried the ball 30 times for 121 yards, controlling the clock and dictating the pace of the game. He also scored the Jets’ only touchdown — a short run that gave New York an early lead they never surrendered.
The Jets defeated the Colts 16 to 7. That victory helped legitimize the AFL and accelerated the momentum toward the AFL-NFL merger. More than five decades later, it remains the Jets’ only Super Bowl appearance.
Life After Football
Snell finished his career with 4,285 rushing yards and 31 touchdowns across 86 games. The years after retirement proved more complicated.
For a long period, he maintained a strained relationship with the Jets organization — a tension later detailed in the 2018 book Beyond Broadway Joe— The Super Bowl Team That Changed Football. Snell believed former Jets part owner Sonny Werblin had promised him a permanent role with the franchise after his playing days ended. That arrangement never materialized once Werblin sold his ownership stake.
Snell later described feeling overlooked during difficult years following football, including a stretch in the 1970s when steady work proved hard to find. The frustration lingered for years and shaped his distance from the team he once helped lead to glory.
A Late Recognition for Snell
Time softened some of that tension. In 2015, the Jets inducted Snell into the team’s Ring of Honor, placing his name among the players who shaped the franchise — a long-overdue public acknowledgment of his role in the most important victory in team history.
While Namath often stood at the center of the Super Bowl III story, those who watched closely understood how critical his performance had been. His relentless rushing controlled the tempo and kept the Colts defense exhausted and on the field.
Matt Snell‘s career unfolded during a formative period for professional football — a time when the AFL was growing, the merger was approaching, and the sport was expanding into a national spectacle. He ran into contact, absorbed punishment, and came back for the next play. The numbers alone do not fully capture his impact. His role in the Jets’ championship victory secured a permanent place in football history, and more than half a century later, that memory still echoes through the story of the franchise.

