McClendon remembered as energy 'visionary' despite controversy

By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Ernest Scheyder

NEW YORK/HOUSTON, March 2 (Reuters) - Aubrey McClendon, an oil and gas entrepreneur whose outsized ambition and high tolerance for risk propelled him to become a leading figure in the American energy revolution, died in a single-car crash on Wednesday in Oklahoma City. He was 56.

McClendon was considered one of the most influential CEOs of his generation, revered by oilmen but despised by environmentalists for championing the extraction technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, that ushered in U.S. energy independence.

He was often compared to the titans of American commerce: an Andrew Mellon or John Rockefeller of his time.

But some investors viewed him warily for his reported lavish spending and mingling of personal and corporate investments that eventually led to his ouster in 2013 from Chesapeake Energy Corp , a company he founded in 1989 and turned into the No. 2 U.S. natural gas producer.

His death came one day after the U.S. Department of Justice indicted him for allegedly violating antitrust laws by colluding to rig bids for oil and gas acreage while he was CEO of Chesapeake. He denied the charges.

Police said they were investigating why his 2013 Chevy Tahoe slammed into an overpass.

Tom Price, a retired executive who worked alongside McClendon for decades at Chesapeake, said he was resilient.

"Every day was a day that Aub(rey) was going to make the best of it. He was a guy who could always find a way to make something positive out of something negative," said Price, who exchanged emails with him Tuesday.

Price said McClendon had bounced back from numerous setbacks.

"I remember I once asked him - 'in the face of everything you're going through, how can you be such a stalwart?'", Price recalled. "And he said: 'What's the choice? I can continue to try to build the best company.'"

In addition to founding Chesapeake, he was instrumental in convincing the Seattle SuperSonics basketball team to move in 2008 as the Oklahoma City Thunder. McClendon himself held a nearly 20 percent stake in the team.

Oklahoma's governor and energy companies mourned the loss.

"He played an instrumental role in America's energy renaissance," Oklahoma-based Devon Energy Corp said in a statement. "His philanthropic efforts and other contributions have helped countless people."

McClendon is survived by his wife, Katie, a Whirlpool heiress, and their three children, Jack, Callie and Will.

DESTINED TO WORK IN OIL

Born in 1959, McClendon seemed destined to work in oil and gas. He was a great nephew of former Oklahoma Governor Robert Kerr, co-founder of U.S. oil-and-gas pioneer Kerr-McGee Corp.