Jim Taylor, the bruising fullback who played on four N.F.L. championship teams with the Green Bay Packers of the 1960s and became the first star in Coach Vince Lombardi’s dynasty to be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, died on Saturday. He was 83.

He died at a hospital in Baton Rouge, La., the Packers said in a statement on Saturday.

Taylor ran for more than 1,000 yards in five consecutive 12- or 14-game seasons and was named to the N.F.L.’s all-decade team for the ’60s.

He also scored the first rushing touchdown in Super Bowl history, running for 14 yards in the second quarter of the inaugural game, when the Packers scored a 35-10 victory over the American Football League’s Kansas City Chiefs in January 1967.

When he wasn’t bowling over would-be tacklers, Taylor handed out crushing blocks, most famously on the Packers’ signature play, the power sweep, helping clear a path for halfback Paul Hornung, his fellow Hall of Famer, to run wide.