Lance Rentzel, one of the NFL's most talented and controversial wide receivers of the late 1960s and early 1970s, has died at the age of 82. Media reports confirmed that Rentzel reportedly died on Sunday in Alexandria, Virginia. No cause of death has been made public.
For football fans, the news brings back memories of a player who could change games with one catch. For others, it revives the complicated story of a career that mixed Pro Bowl-level production with off-field scandals that followed him long after his playing days ended.
Former Cowboys standout Lance Rentzel leaves behind a complicated NFL legacy
Long before his personal life drew attention, Lance Rentzel was making a name for himself on the field.
The Minnesota Vikings selected the Oklahoma star with the 23rd overall pick in the 1965 NFL Draft. As a rookie, he returned a kickoff 101 yards for a touchdown, setting a franchise record that stood until 2007.
His career took off after Minnesota traded him to the Dallas Cowboys in 1967. Playing under Tom Landry, Rentzel became a central figure in Dallas' evolving passing attack. He posted more than 950 receiving yards in each of his first three seasons with the Cowboys. In 1968, he crossed the 1,000-yard mark. A year later, he led the NFL with 12 touchdown catches while averaging an eye-popping 22.3 yards per reception.
He also delivered one of the most memorable moments of his career during the 1967 NFL Championship Game, better known as the Ice Bowl. Rentzel caught a touchdown pass from Dan Reeves against the Green Bay Packers, briefly giving Dallas the lead in one of the sport's most famous contests.
Yet football never became the whole story. In 1966, while with the Vikings, Rentzel pleaded guilty to a reduced disorderly conduct charge after an indecent exposure incident involving young girls in Minnesota. The court ordered psychiatric treatment. Four years later, in 1970, another indecent exposure case involving a 10-year-old girl in Texas brought fresh scrutiny. Rentzel pleaded guilty and received probation along with mandatory psychiatric care.
The second case effectively ended his time in Dallas. The Cowboys traded him to the Los Angeles Rams, where he played until 1974. In 1973, the NFL suspended him after a marijuana possession conviction.
Rentzel finished his nine-year NFL career with 268 receptions, 4,826 receiving yards and 38 touchdown catches across 115 games.
Following his death, an obituary obtained by The Dallas Morning News remembered another side of him, describing him as "larger than life, hilariously funny, unfailingly optimistic and happy, warm in spirit, and deeply loyal.
Lance Rentzel leaves behind a legacy that remains impossible to simplify. He was a gifted receiver who reached the top of the NFL. He was also a figure whose off-field actions forever shaped how football remembers him