75th Season Feature: The day the Steelers were Giants killers
By BOB BARNETT
Reprinted, Courtesy
PFRA
If you asked
the average Pittsburgh Steelers fan to pick the greatest victory in franchise
history, the majority of the selections would be either the 1972 AFC playoff win
over the Oakland Raiders, which was made possible by Franco Harris’ “Immaculate
Reception,” or maybe the 1974 AFC Championship Game, or any one of the Super
Bowls.
They would be
wrong on any of the above.
All of those victories,
great as they were, were won when the Steelers were winners and the victory was
just one more in an otherwise successful season. It is easy to win when you are
already a winner. Great victories are won by underdogs, by outmanned losers who,
with the stink of defeat around them, rise up and smite their heavily favored
opponent. Kind of the David and Goliath thing.
Based on that criteria,
for the Pittsburgh Steelers, their greatest victory occurred on a cold Dec. 1 in
1952.
You might argue with
that. You might even say I’m a little prejudiced because I saw that game as a
9-year-old at his first pro football game. But consider this: all the elements
for a great victory were in place. The Steelers certainly did stink and their
opponents were truly Goliaths – the Eastern Conference-leading New York
Giants.
You might argue that the
Steelers weren’t actually that bad back in 1952 despite going into the Giants
game with a 3-6 record. They had lost twice to the co-conference leading
Cleveland Browns by one point each time, and had lost three other games by a
total of 15 points. In fact, they might just as easily have been 8-1 – except
they were losers.
The Steelers were a
tough, physical team with a defense led by ends Bill McPeak and George
Tarasovic, tackle Ernie Stautner and safety Jack Butler. The offense was led by
quarterback Jim Finks, halfbacks Ray Mathews and Lynn Chandnois, fullbacks Ed
Modzelewski and Fran Rogel, along with veteran end Elbie
Nickel.
The Steelers’ coach that
year was Joe Bach. Bach had previously coached the Steelers in 1935-1936 but had
been fired by owner Art Rooney. Rooney, who had been the best man at Bach’s
wedding, rehired Bach just before the 1952 season began. Bach changed the
Steelers’ offense from an old-fashioned, hard-nosed, single-wing to a modern
passing T-formation.
“We always had real great
personnel with the Steelers, but lousy coaching,” recalled Chandnois, a halfback
on the team from 1950-1956. “Now Bach was a good coach, and he was starting to
turn the team around in 1952.”
Going into the game with
the Steelers, the Giants had a 6-3 record and were in a three-way tie with the
Cleveland Browns and Philadelphia Eagles for first place in the Eastern
Division. Interestingly enough, that weekend’s games matched the three top teams
in the division vs. the three bottom teams. It was Cleveland vs. Washington,
Philadelphia vs. Chicago Cardinals and the Steelers vs.
Giants.
The Giants’ defense was
loaded, with tackles Al DeRogatis and Arnie Weinmeister, cornerback Em Tunnell,
and someone named Tom Landry also was in the secondary. The offense, which had
been the team’s weak link, featured the NFL’s leading ground gainer in fullback
Ed Price, plus halfback Kyle Rote and quarterback Charlie
Conerly.
Despite their overall
strength as a team, injuries had been a problem for the Giants that season, and
Conerly was a questionable starter for the Steelers game with a bruised
shoulder. Rookie halfback Frank Gifford remained behind in New York to nurse a
leg injury.
During the night of Nov.
30 and on into the early-morning hours of Dec. 1, the first snow of the winter
fell. Game day was one of those beautiful early winter days that occur in
Western Pennsylvania when the temperature hovers just around the 30 degree mark
and the snow is just damp enough to stick to
everything.
My father woke me early
that Sunday morning because the normal one-hour drive from our home in West
Virginia’s northern panhandle would double because of the snow. I did not have
to worry about my father cancelling the trip; my uncle had given us reserved
seat tickets almost on the field at the goal line, and football fever was upon
him.
The drive to Pittsburgh
was fun. My father repeated all his old high school football stories, for about
the 10th time. But I loved those stories, and with each story I egged him on,
demanding more detail. Lunch at The Clock restaurant, only a short walk from old
Forbes Field, completed our pregame ritual.
The field looked
beautiful. The grounds keepers had carefully removed the tarp with the snow on
top and had piled the snow around the edge of the playing surface. The grass
looked like an emerald in a snow-white setting.
I really can’t remember
much about the game, except the opening kickoff, which in fact set the tone for
the whole game.
Chandnois, however,
remembered the game clearly, particularly the opening kickoff. “The trouble with
kickoff return men today is that they stand there and wait for the ball to come
down. I liked to take the ball on the run. In fact the pitchers mound in Forbes
Field was just to the side of the line, and I used to like to stand on the mound
to get a good start down hill.”
The Giants kicked off,
and true to form Chandnois caught the ball on the dead run at the 9-yard line.
Not a single Giants player touched him. It was a 91-yard kick-off return for a
touchdown. Exactly 17 seconds into the game the Steelers had a 7-0 lead. The
Steelers rang up a second touchdown by Chandnois in the first quarter, and they
scored twice in the second quarter on passes from Jim Finks to Elbie Nickel (21
yards) and to Ray Mathews (42 yards).
The situation looked bad
for the Giants.
Then disaster struck the
visitors from New York. Both Conerly, the starting quarterback, and backup
quarterback Fred Benners were injured during the first half. In those days, NFL
teams only carried two quarterbacks. Even Kyle Rote, who had served as an
insurance quarterback in such emergencies, had been knocked out of the game with
a concussion.
The second half
quarterback duties fell to Tom Landry, who had handled the ball only as a punter
and defensive back.
The third quarter was
played evenly with both teams scoring a touchdown. The Giants score came on a
70-yard flea-flicker pass from Landry.
But the final quarter was
a nightmare for the Giants. The Steelers scored four unanswered touchdowns: one
on a blocked kick, one on a short run following a Landry fumble, and two on
passes. Near the end of the game, the Steelers even toyed with the Giants by
putting linebacker Jerry Shipkey in at fullback and defensive back Jack Butler
in at flanker.
The 63-7 final score
clearly reflected the devastation of the Giants. Not only were the Steelers an
offensive machine that day, but the defense also intercepted seven passes,
recovered two fumbles, scored on a blocked punt, and crushed the Giants
physically. “We always played the Giants tough,” recalled Chandnois, “but in
that game we couldn’t do anything wrong.”
At a press conference on
Monday, Giants’ coach Steve Owen confessed he would have problems fielding a
team for the next game because of injuries inflicted by the Steelers. Owen also
told the press he would have to split the quarterback duties between Landry and
Kyle Rote.
Landry finished the
season with 11 completions in 47 attempts for an anemic 23 percent completion
rate, and the seven interceptions he threw compounded the problem. He never
played quarterback again.
For the Giants, the loss
to the Steelers ruined their chance to win the Eastern Division championship.
The loss to Pittsburgh put them one-game behind the Browns with two to play, and
then a Giants loss to the cellar-dwelling Redskins, 27-17, the following week
clinched the championship for the Browns.
For the Steelers the rout
of the Giants was the high point of the 1952 season. They split their last two
games to finish the season with a 5-7 record.
For my father and me, it
was a perfect day. After all, how many times does a person get to see his
favorite team’s greatest victory
ever.
Game Day
Blount set the standard for NFL CBs
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Blount set the standard for NFL CBs
By DON
SMITH
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Mel Blount joined the Pittsburgh
Steelers as a third-round draft selection in 1970. He played for 14 seasons
before retiring after the 1983 campaign. During his career, he was hailed as the
prototype cornerback of his era and a major reason why the Steelers were the
dominant team of the National Football League in the 1970s.
Throughout his pro football career,
Blount's goals were quite simple. "I didn't want to be second to anyone," he
said. "I wanted to set the standards for my
position."
Proof that Blount accomplished what he
set out to do came with his election in his first year of eligibility to the Pro
Football Hall of Fame's class of 1989.
The 6-foot-3, 205-pound Blount without
question was one of the finest athletes on a team loaded with outstanding
talent. He could run the 40 in 4.5 and outlast everyone on the treadmill test
every day. Olympics hurdling star Renaldo Nehemiah performed an excellent
standing vertical jump. Even though he was wearing wing-tipped shoes and a
three-piece suit, Blount leaped several inches above Renaldo's
mark.
"When you create a cornerback, the mold
is Mel Blount," Steelers linebacker Jack Ham, a 1988 Hall of Fame enshrinee,
marveled. "I played in a lot of Pro Bowls. I never saw a cornerback like him. He
was the most incredible athlete I have ever seen. With Mel, you could take one
wide receiver and just write him off. He could handle anybody in the
league."
"Size, speed, quickness, toughness --
that's what Mel had," quarterback Terry Hanratty said. "If you gave Blount free
rein to hit you, you were in trouble because, if he missed, he had the speed to
catch up. A lot of receivers got short arms when they were in Mel's
territory."
Success, however, did not come
immediately for Blount. He started his rookie campaign returning kickoffs, and
he averaged 29.7 yards on 18 returns, but when John Rowser was injured in the fifth game in 1970, Mel
was forced into the regular lineup for the rest of the year.
He was a semi-regular again in 1971, but
his play left much to be desired. Miami's Paul Warfield burned him on touchdown receptions of 12,
86 and 60 yards in a 24-21 Dolphins' victory. Many other receivers were having
similar success against Blount. Impatient Steelers fans gave him a hard time,
and even Blount admitted: "Yeah, I thought about quitting. I thought a whole lot
about it."
After the season, Blount went back to
the family farm near Vidalia, Ga., where he was born on April 10,
1948. This was the home from
which Blount, one of nine children, migrated to Southern University in
Baton
Rouge,
La., to play college football. At Southern, he starred as both
a safety and a cornerback and was his team's Most Valuable Player his junior and
senior seasons. In 1969, he was named to All-America teams by The Sporting News,
Pro Scouts and Pittsburgh Courier.
"As I had time to sort things out,"
Blount remembers, "I realized that the football I had played at Southern hadn't
given me the background I needed for pro football. In college, the game was so
much less complex, but more physical. It was played on natural ability and very
little else."
Once Blount recognized the reasons for
his slow start in the NFL, his attitude changed. "I had to realize every mistake
I made was a lesson," he explained. "Instead of thinking about how many times I
had been beaten, I decided to think of how many lessons I had learned."
A groin muscle tear limited his playing
time in the 1972 preseason but the Steelers' defensive backfield coach, Bud
Carson, decided Blount was ready to take over as the starting right cornerback.
"I know Mel is an outstanding prospect," Carson said. "He has great ability and speed. He shows all
the physical requisites to be as good as anyone in the league."
The turnabout in Blount's play was
phenomenal. He didn't let a single receiver beat him for a touchdown in 1972.
"I owe it all to Bud Carson," Blount
acknowledged. "He gave me something no one else on the staff ever did -- he
helped me believe in myself."
Once he was established on the first
team, Blount began to contribute in a major way. In 1975, his fourth year as a
starter, he was named the NFL's Most Valuable Defensive Player by Associated
Press. He was a consensus All-Pro and selected to play in his first Pro Bowl. Even though he missed all
of the 1977 preseason because of a contract dispute, Blount was All-Pro that
year and again in 1981. In the seven-season span between 1975 and 1981, Blount
played in five Pro Bowls and was All-AFC four times. With two interceptions, he
was named the Most Valuable Player in the 1977 Pro Bowl.
Blount, who had at least one
interception in each of his 14 seasons, wound up with 57 to rank first in
franchise history in the category. With 11 interceptions in his banner 1975
campaign, Blount became the first Steelers player to lead the NFL in
interceptions since Bill Dudley in 1946. He also recovered 13 opponents' fumbles
and scored four touchdowns, two each on interceptions and fumble returns. He saw
only sporadic duty on the kickoff return team after his rookie season but wound
up with 36 returns for 911 yards.
In spite of his rugged, aggressive
style, Blount enjoyed a relatively injury-free pro football career. He missed
just one regular season game, that in 1974, in 14 seasons and just one playoff
contest, the first-round game against Denver in 1977. Altogether, Blount played in 200 regular
season games; he also
played in six AFC
Championship games and in Super Bowls IX, X, XIII and XIV.
Statistics, however, tell only part of
the Blount saga. When he first entered the NFL, it was legal for a defensive
back to maintain contact with a receiver until the pass was thrown. Blount did
the job with awesome efficiency. He regularly stymied
Oakland's ace receivers, Cliff Branch and Fred Biletnikoff,
held off Cincinnati's Isaac Curtis so long his quarterback had to eat
the ball and broke the ribs of the Cowboys' Golden Richards.
Frustrated by the way Blount and other
talented defensive backs were shutting down the offenses, the NFL's competition
committee simply changed the rules; it outlawed Blount's favorite "bump-and-run"
tactics more than 5 yards beyond the scrimmage line.
The rules-makers insisted they were only
trying to increase overall scoring all around the league but Coach Chuck Noll
disagreed: "They ganged up on us and are trying to win the championship through
legislation. But whatever the rules, you have to adjust to them and play with
them."
Nobody adjusted more quickly or
effectively than Blount. No longer able to usher receivers downfield on his
terms, he merely played behind them, appearing to be beaten, before swooping in
like a starved vulture to deflect the pass or gobble up an interception.
Ironically, when the Steelers were
steamrolling toward their first Super Bowl appearance in 1974, Blount became
briefly embroiled in a heated controversy with Carson, the coach who had
provided the breakthrough boost to his career. In the AFC Championship Game
against Oakland, Blount was having a bad day against Branch. When
the Raiders speedster slipped behind him for a 42-yard touchdown,
Carson pulled Blount from the line-up.
"I really didn't think a smart coach
would do something like that in a championship game," Blount fumed. "The
touchdown pass to Branch was only the third I have given up all season and the
other two came in one game against Atlanta. Taking me out of the game was the worst thing he
could have done."
Blount got himself further in the
Steelers doghouse by not only criticizing Carson publicly but by insisting
several AFC quarterbacks were superior to the Minnesota Vikings' Fran Tarkenton,
whom the Steelers were going to face in Super Bowl IX. "I hope to get a lot of
action," Mel said. "I went the whole season without much action because they
didn't throw to my side that much."
The mini-feud died down, however, and in
the Super Bowl against the Vikings, Blount intercepted a pass at the goal line
to kill the Vikings' most dangerous drive as the Steelers won, 16-6.
In the summer of 1975, Blount reported
to training camp with his head shaven clean. The reason was that he was going
bald anyway and he just wanted to keep cool. Some, however, interpreted it as a
ploy to appear more sinister and menacing on the field. Even if that were his
purpose, it wouldn't have been necessary. He already was a major headache for
every opponent.
"A lot of cornerbacks want to be
intimidators," Steelers tackle Jon Kolb said. "They go through all kinds of
things to be intimidating. Mel could just walk out there, look down on the guy
and then run side by side with him. That would be intimidating."
By 1975, Blount was at his absolute
best. Always superb as a man-to-man defender, he had adapted to zone coverages
and he never was shy about attacking the line of scrimmage in run support. When
he learned he had been named the NFL Defensive Player of the Year, he was
predictably enthused but with some reservations.
"I knew I was getting local publicity,"
he said, "but this is a national award and it makes you feel good about being
recognized all over the country. I feel I played just as well the past two or
three seasons as I did this year. But to most people those years, I was just
another ballplayer."
Blount, always confident that he ranked
at the very top of his profession as a defensive back, still was never satisfied
and he worked tirelessly to improve himself. He was a fierce competitor even in
practice, where he had the good fortune to have to work against a pair of the
game's premier wide receivers, Lynn Swann and John Stallworth.
As the defensive and offensive units
lined up, Blount would whisper to Donnie Shell: "Just watch, no one on my side
is catching a pass."
And no one would catch a pass. By the
time Sunday came around, Blount, as well as Swann and Stallworth knew they were
in effect playing the "B" team compared to the caliber of their practice
opposition.
When he was notified of his election to
the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Blount reflected on his playing
career.
"If the scales were balanced, there was
nobody I couldn't cover," he said. "That's what motivated me, drove me to be as
good as I was. I was in front of 50,000 people in the stands and millions on TV.
I didn't want to be embarrassed."
He rarely was.
75th Season Feature: One crazy summer
It was a spectacle so
bizarre, so beyond the realm of common sense and ordinary imagination that it
might have been the creation of some mad comic production – a cross between Mel
Brooks and the Marquis de Sade.”
--William Oscar
Johnson in Sports Illustrated
By BOB
LABRIOLA
Steelers.com
What came to a
crescendo in July 1977 began on Sept. 13, 1976 in a small room in the offices
portion of Three Rivers Stadium. There, Chuck Noll was brought for his regular
weekly press conference, and it was there that he would come to utter one of the
most well-known phrases in NFL history.
The day before, Noll
had watched his team give up 24 points in the fourth quarter to blow the game
that opened their 1976 season, and if that wasn’t bad enough the loss had been
at the hands of arch-nemesis Oakland. Immediately after the loss, Noll’s
postgame remarks were gracious toward the victorious Raiders until the subject
of George Atkinson’s hit on Lynn Swann was broached.
The play in question
was a third-and-5 from the Oakland 44-yard line with 1:24 left in the first
half. Terry Bradshaw dumped the ball to Franco Harris down the left sideline.
Swann was coming across the field from the right side and almost stopped at the
30-yard line as Harris was running down the far sideline. Atkinson came up from
behind and slugged Swann in the back of the head with his
forearm.
Former Cowboys
quarterback Don Meredith was doing the color commentary for NBC’s broadcast of
the game, and he said on the air as the replay was shown: “I’m telling you,
they’re picking on Lynn. I don’t think you’re supposed to do that. I think
Atkinson did another no-no – gave him a karate chop across the back of the
neck.”
Noll’s postgame ire
first was pointed at the league office: “There was a lot of discussion about
putting a rule in against it this year. It wasn’t done and the reason given was
that, although it was illegal, no special rule was needed. There should’ve been
a rule against slapping receivers years ago. Maybe they’re waiting for somebody
to get killed.”
Then Noll turned it
toward the Raiders: “They went after Swann again. People that sick shouldn’t be
allowed to play this game. Watching something like that clouds the hell out of
what their offense did. It seems to come only from their defensive unit. Maybe
that’s a reflection on their coaching.”
The day after, at his
weekly press conference, Noll’s quotes went to the next level. According to the
Pittsburgh Press: “Noll was in no mood for subtlety, citing the blows as being
applied ‘with the intent to main and not with football in mind. People like that
should be kicked out of the game, or out of football … There is a certain
criminal element in every aspect of society. Apparently, we have it in the NFL,
too.’”
The reporters there
that day instantly realized this was powerful stuff, and so they pressed
forward. Noll offered this: “What I could see was that Swann had his back turned
and somebody hit him in the back of the head and neck. That’s why we have
officials. That’s why we have a league office.”
Then, when reminded
that the Steelers also have been accused of dirty play, Noll added, “We usually
hit people straight on, nose-to-nose. There’s nothing wrong with hard-hitting
football, but not when your back is turned. It’s something that has to be
straightened out. I don’t think that’s football … We play football. We don’t
want to get involved with criminal actions.”
The next day, when
the Raiders were asked by reporters for a response, Atkinson said, “It was
nothing intentional. The game is a contact sport. It might be different if we
had flags in our pockets. I get knocked around; I’ve had concussions. I don’t
complain about it. I don’t even think it was that severe a hit. The hit I gave
him last year was worse.”
Then, Commissioner
Pete Rozelle got involved, and two from each team were fined: Atkinson ($1,500)
and Jack Tatum ($750 for a different incident in the game) from the Raiders, and
Noll ($1,000)and Ernie Holmes
($200 for a different incident) for the Steelers.
After he got news of
his fine, Atkinson said, “This may be defamation of character,” and then on Dec.
6, 1976 Atkinson filed a $3 million slander and libel lawsuit against Noll, the
Steelers and the Oakland Tribune, whose columnist, Ed Levitt, had written back
in September that Atkinson “could’ve killed Swann instead of giving him a
concussion. He could be facing a murder rap.”
***
In football, all of
the players wear numbered jerseys so fans can identify them. The players in this
courtroom competition wore suits without numbers, but it didn’t take long for
them to become recognizable to the fans of this bizarre
competition.
Atkinson’s attorney
was Willie Brown, then an assemblyman from San Francisco who spoke at the 1972
Democratic National Convention and who had been instrumental in helping New
Jersey get casino gambling. In the two years prior to this trial, Brown had
defended Atkinson against charges of embezzlement, larceny and theft in the
cashing of $3,000 worth of bank securities.
The man heading up
the Steelers’ defense team was James MacInnes, who had been the first choice of
the Hearst family to represent Patty Hearst in that famous
trial.
The case was heard
before U.S. District Court Judge Samuel Conti, a no-nonsense jurist whose first
ruling was that Atkinson only can seek compensatory damages, not punitive
damages. During the jury selection process that began on July 11, Conti warned
the pool that the trial could take two-to-three weeks, instead of the assumed
couple of days.
The jury ultimately
consisted of five women and one man, whose collective football knowledge was so
limited that even rudimentary terms such as linebacker had to be explained to
them in detail.
Noll was the first
witness, and since he had been called by Atkinson’s lawyers, Conti allowed him
to be treated as hostile. Dan Mason handled the direct examination of Noll, and
some of the exchanges were entertaining.
Mason: “Is there
anybody else who constitutes ‘Noll’s criminals?’”
Noll: “The criminal
element is made up of people who break the rules wantonly. I’d have to go back
the review the films and find who fits into that
category.”
Mason: “Come up with
another name, other than Atkinson.”
Noll: “There have
been people who played against us – Tatum.”
As Mason continued
and the film projector whirred in the courtroom, Noll grudgingly agreed that
incidents shown on the screen involving Glen Edwards, Joe Greene and Mel Blount
were the type of willful and wanton acts Noll spoke out against. Mason: “Shall I
add those names to your list?”
Noll: “That’s not my
list. That’s your list.”
On a play involving
Blount hitting Raiders receiver Cliff Branch in the head with a forearm, Noll
said, “I think what Blount did was not right or correct. He was talked to after
the game. We don’t want that thing to happen. It was an act we do not approve
of.”
After Noll made
similar critiques of plays involving Edwards and Greene, Mason said, “Let’s add
them to the list.”
Noll: “Go ahead. You
have the chalk.”
Mason on what Noll
had said to draw the $1,500 fine from Rozelle: “Wasn’t that a willful and wanton
violation of the rules of the NFL constitution.”
Noll: “It was. Go put
my name on your list.”
Eventually, during
his nine hours on the witness stand, Noll was able to make the point that what
he said was only in reference to criminal in terms of violating football rules.
If he had meant to say Atkinson was a societal criminal, he would have said
“thrown in jail” instead of saying “kicked out of the
game.”
But just because Noll
was excused as a witness didn’t mean he was finished with all of the
aggravation. On July 15, Blount told reporters he was suing Noll for $5 million
in compensatory damages plus $1 million in punitive damages. “There’s no chance
at all that I’ll play for the Steelers under Noll.”
When contacted by
reporters about his name being included on the list, Greene refused to throw
gasoline on the fire. “I feel sorry for Chuck. He’s paying a high price for his
success. He doesn’t want to be in San Francisco testifying in some courtroom. He
wants to be in training camp where he belongs. From here on, I’ll be inclined to
think that the Oakland Raiders are using it as a wedge to turn us against Chuck.
I’d rather settle any Raiders-Steelers differences on the football field, but
then again, I’m pretty old-fashioned. I don’t think football matters belong in a
courtroom.”
The case went to the
jury on July 22, and deliberations began at 9:30 a.m. Just after lunch that day,
the jury sent Judge Conti a message asking again for the definition of “actual
malice.” Conti’s reply was that Noll’s statements had to “lower Atkinson in the
estimation of the community, or to deter third persons from associating or
dealing with him” to be defamation.
Since Atkinson had
been signing autographs throughout the trial, his chances to win weren’t good,
and four hours after getting the case the jury came back in favor of Noll and
the Steelers. Then almost impossibly, the rhetoric went to a whole other
level.
“The vindication of
Chuck Noll and the Steelers is a very good thing for football,” said MacInnes.
“It will put a stop to the kind of thing for which he criticized George
Atkinson. As for George Atkinson, for whom we have nothing but good wishes, the
verdict may be an indication of how he should play, and it may in the end make
him a better and more glorious player.”
Responded Brown, “The
jury has substantially sanctioned Chuck Noll’s right to use that term against
anyone he deems it appropriate to do so. They should be ashamed of themselves. I
don’t understand how any citizens could sit back and let someone say someone is
a criminal element without doing something about it.”
Dan Rooney’s reaction
was fitting for a man whose family had been committed to furthering the National
Football League for over 40 years. “I’m pleased. It has been the most depressing
experience of my life. I’m happy.”
Blount eventually
dropped his suit against Noll and reported to the team after missing 56 days of
camp, but as William Oscar Johnson wrote in Sports Illustrated, there really
were no winners in this sordid affair.
Well, maybe there was
one winner. As MacInnes said, “My grandson is the only person in the world with
a football that has Lynn Swann’s autograph on one side and George Atkinson’s
autograph on the other.”
9 bradshaw[1].jpg Image
BRADSHAW WAS AT HIS BEST IN BIG GAMES
By DON SMITH
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Possibly no pro football superstar ever experienced more absolute
highs and lows, more criticism and applause, more disdain and adulation than
Terry Bradshaw did during his 14 years with the Pittsburgh
Steelers.
Bradshaw's career began on the highest
possible plane when he was selected as the first player in the entire NFL Draft
in 1970. When the 6-foot-3, 210-pound quarterback from Louisiana Tech failed to
attain immediate stardom, he suffered the consequences of an impatient fan and
media corps. His confidence was shattered and sometimes he didn't know what to
do next.
Finally, midway into his fifth season in 1974,
Bradshaw was given complete control of the Steelers offense for the first time.
Almost immediately, Bradshaw developed into an overpowering dynamo who was at
his best in the most crucial games, of which there were many. During the
Bradshaw reign as the starting quarterback, Pittsburgh won eight AFC Central Division championships and
four Super Bowls.
Bradshaw's achievements at the height of
his career made him one of the most respected players of his time. That
universal acclaim reached its zenith with his election to the Pro Football Hall
of Fame in his first year of eligibility
Bradshaw's career statistics are
impressive, but his performances in 19 playoff games are awesome. His career
records show that he completed 2025 passes for 27,989 yards, 212 touchdowns and
a solid 70.7 passing rating, which improves to 78.2 if you delete his five
"learning seasons." He also rushed 444 times for 2257 yards and 32
touchdowns.
In six AFC Championship games, Bradshaw threw seven
touchdown passes. He threw go-ahead scoring passes to defeat
Oakland in both 1974 and 1975. In conference championship
wins over Houston in 1978 and 1979, Bradshaw contributed two touchdown
passes each year.
In Super Bowl IX, Bradshaw's fourth-quarter pass to
Larry Brown clinched a 16-6 victory over Minnesota. Against Dallas in Super Bowl X, Bradshaw threw to Randy Grossman to
forge a tie and then won the game with a spectacular 64-yard pass to
Lynn
Swann. Bradshaw, who
was knocked unconscious just as he released the ball, did not know what happened
until after the game.
The Pittsburgh field general was at his absolute best in Super Bowl
XIII. He almost single-handedly did in the Dallas Cowboys with a 318-yard,
four-touchdown passing explosion. In Super Bowl XIV against the Los Angeles
Rams, Bradshaw was almost as spectacular with 308 passing yards, a 47-yard
scoring shot to Swann and a 73-yard bomb to John Stallworth to clinch the history-making fourth Super
Bowl championship for the Steelers. Bradshaw was named the Most Valuable Player
in both Super Bowls XIII and XIV.
He holds numerous Super Bowl career
marks including most yards passing (932) and most touchdown passes (9). His
3,833 yards and 30 touchdowns passing are both records for all post-season
games.
Born in Shreveport, Louisiana, on Sept. 2,
1948, the second of three
sons of Bill and Novis Bradshaw, Terry lived in
Clinton, Iowa, for several years before his family returned to
Shreveport when he was a teenager. He played junior varsity
high school football for two years but showed his tremendous potential when he
led the WoodlawnHigh School varsity to the state finals in his senior season. He
also
proved the strength of
his arm by throwing the javelin farther than any prep athlete in
history.
When it came to college, Bradshaw chose Louisiana
Tech in Reston, 65 miles from home. He also decided he had a better
future in football than in track. Bradshaw played briefly as a freshman, shared
a starting role as a sophomore and then blossomed into a star of unusual
proportions his last two years. He wound up with 7,149 yards and 42 touchdowns
passing and became the hottest pro prospect in the college ranks in 1969. He was named to
several All-American teams.
Since the Chicago Bears and Steelers
each finished 1-13 in 1969, the teams had to flip a coin for the drafting rights
to Bradshaw. "I can laugh now, but back than I had no idea what it meant to be
the No.1 draft choice in the NFL," Bradshaw
remembers.
For the first few years, Bradshaw had to
fight off the challenges of Terry Hanratty, a former Notre Dame star, and later
Joe Gilliam. Bradshaw started eight games as a rookie and the Steelers' record
improved to 5-9 but his performances fell far below expectations. He completed
only 38.1 percent of his passes and had 24 interceptions, the highest total in
pro football.
"My rookie year was a disaster,"
Bradshaw agrees. "I was totally unprepared for pro football. I had had no
schooling on reading defenses. I had never studied the game films the way a
quarterback should. I was an outsider who didn't mingle well. The other players
looked on me as a Bible-toting Li'l Abner."
Bradshaw was discouraged, but not
defeated, and he spent his first offseason plotting his plans for improvement.
Fortunately, Coach Chuck Noll still felt Bradshaw was a diamond in the rough.
"Terry was always the guy with the talent," Noll said. "There never was a
question about that."
Both the Steelers and Bradshaw improved in 1971.
Bradshaw started all but one game and, in 1972, quarterbacked the Steelers to
their first division championship in 40 years of NFL competition. In the
first-round playoff game against Oakland, Bradshaw etched his name in pro football lore when
he launched the "Immaculate Reception" pass to Frenchy Fuqua that caromed to Franco Harris for a last-second 13-7
victory.
"I have had three years now," Bradshaw said in
assessing his progress after the season. "One year of frustration, one where
I've learned to
pass and one of
learning how to run. Maybe next year I can learn to do them all together. Then
maybe I'll be able to drive them all crazy."
Eventually, "driving them crazy" is just
what Bradshaw did but that would have to wait a while longer. A separated
shoulder cut into his playing time in 1973. In 1974, Noll started the season
with Gilliam as his No.1 quarterback.
Bradshaw stewed on the bench for six games. Suddenly,
even though the Steelers were 4-1-1 under Gilliam, Noll changed and thrust Bradshaw back
into the starting lineup, where he could call his own plays and take complete
charge of the offense on the field. Except when he was injured, he never had to
worry about sitting on the bench again.
"When I got the confidence from that man
(Noll) was when I became a pro quarterback," Bradshaw said. "Prior to that, I
wasn't making any progress. I knew that when I made mistakes, I was going to be
benched. But when he said 'Go make your mistakes, we're going to win with you,'
that's when I became a quarterback."
Although Bradshaw led
Pittsburgh to two straight Super Bowl championships after he
received Noll's vote of confidence, he received very little respect or
recognition for his increasingly outstanding contributions. That situation,
however, began to change in 1978, when Bradshaw led the AFC with an 84.6 passing
rating and was a runaway winner in the AFC Player of the Year derby. He led the
Steelers to a third Super Bowl victory with an MVP performance. He was named
All-Pro and selected for the Pro Bowl for the first time, honors that were
repeated in 1979.
Suddenly, after nine years, Bradshaw was big news.
Overnight, his image had changed -- the Steelers were winners, in everyone's
mind, because of Bradshaw. Part of the change was brought about by Noll, who
decided to
put the forward pass
more and more into his game plan. Previously, the Steelers were known as a
ball-control team with running back Franco Harris being the principal weapon.
But in 1978, it became Bradshaw's kind of game and he
delivered.
He even got help from the NFL rules committee, when
it passed new legislation prohibiting defensive backs
from
employing the "bump and
run" tactic on receivers more than 5 yards past the scrimmage line. The rules
were specifically designed to put more scoring into pro football. Since Bradshaw was blessed with two
superior receivers in Swann and Stallworth as his principal targets, he was a
prime beneficiary of the new guidelines.
There was perhaps one other reason. "I
was more relaxed," Bradshaw reflected. "I decided to just have fun, just go out
and play football without putting all of those pressures on
myself."
Bradshaw continued to excel in the early 1980s but
the Steelers, decimated by the retirement or aging of many of its finest players
from the Super Bowl years, fell out of contention in 1980 and 1981. In the
strike-shortened 1982 season, Pittsburgh entered the AFC playoff tournament with a 6-3 record
but lost to the San Diego Chargers, 31-28, in the first round. Bradshaw,
however, was still up to his old tricks. He passed for 335 yards and two
touchdowns and added a third score on a 1-yard run.
In March, 1983, Bradshaw underwent elbow
surgery. When he returned to camp in July, he found the zip was gone from his
passing arm. Bradshaw did not play until the next-to-last game of the season
when he started against the New York Jets in a must- win situation for the
Steelers. He carefully pieced together two long drives, both of them capped by
his touchdown passes. But after the first 16 minutes, the elbow flared up again
and Bradshaw took himself out of the game for the last time. He waited until
summer camp began in 1984 to be sure he couldn't play but it was evident he had
no choice but to retire.
Throughout his career, Bradshaw, a born-again
Christian and active member of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes, became involved in a number of
off-the-field pursuits such as country singing, the movies and network
television.
In the seasons while Bradshaw was
struggling to survive in the NFL, he had to endure the bum rap of being a "dumb"
quarterback. Of all the various indignities Bradshaw had to endure, those
charges irritated him the most.
"Sure, I made some mistakes,
particularly when I was a rookie," he said. "Like scrambling all around the
field and then throwing an interception. So some guy wrote about me being dumb.
When things didn't go right for me, it was because I was 'dumb.' I had nobody
defend me either. Any time I'd come out and defend myself, I'd just dig my hole
deeper, so I finally just said to heck with it."
Even after Bradshaw had become an acknowledged
superstar and a quarterback who called his own plays in a highly-effective
offense, the "dumb" image lingered in some minds. During the pregame hoopla
before Super Bowl XIII, Dallas Cowboys' linebacker Thomas "Hollywood"
Henderson chortled: "We're going to play against a quarterback who can't even spell
c-a-t."
When Bradshaw shredded the
Dallas defenses with his four- touchdown outburst, it was
obvious to all who saw him that day that Bradshaw knew better than anyone how
to
produce results that
spelled v-i-c-t-o-r-y.
JIM FINKS WAS A BUILDER
By Don Smith
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
The 45-year career of Jim Finks found him at one time
or another doing almost everything imaginable in professional football.
While Finks was associated briefly with professional baseball, his working
career centered around the National Football League, first as a player with the Pittsburgh Steelers
and later as a highly-regarded executive for the Minnesota Vikings, Chicago
Bears and New Orleans Saints.
During that long tenure, Finks developed the
reputation of a shrewd operator who specialized in turning struggling National
Football League franchises into either Super Bowl champions or
consistent contenders. Equally impressive was that each of his three teams
continued to thrive with players Finks had acquired long after he had departed.
As one executive remarked six months after Finks left
Minnesota: "He has us so well organized. We carry on as though
he were still here."
Finks also gained widespread praise for
his contributions on the NFL player management competition committees. When the
NFL sought a new commissioner to replace Pete Rozelle in 1989, Finks was the
leading candidate who just missed getting the necessary number of votes for
election.
His ultimate recognition, election into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame, came posthumously for Finks, who died of lung cancer on
May 8, 1994.
First, the Steelers
Although Finks is in the Hall of Famer because of his
off-the- field activities in pro football, he was a fine player during his
seven-year stint from 1949 to 1955 with the Pittsburgh Steelers. A T-formation
quarterback at Tulsa, Finks was the 12th-round pick of
Pittsburgh in the 1949 NFL draft.
Pittsburgh was using the single-wing offense at the time, so
Finks played primarily as a defensive back for three
seasons.
In 1952, the Steelers converted to the T-formation,
the last team in the NFL to do so, and Finks became the starting
quarterback. In his first full season as a regular, Finks tied
Cleveland's Otto Graham for the league lead with 20 touchdown
passes. He also earned a Pro Bowl invitation. In seven years, Finks completed
661 passes for 8,622 yards and 55 touchdowns.
Finks later joked that his main claim
to
playing fame was that
he beat out Johnny Unitas for the starting quarterback job in 1955.
The next year, Unitas launched his legendary career with the Baltimore Colts.
However, Steelers founder Art Rooney insisted that "Jimmy was a great
quarterback, not just a good one. But we were never big winners and he just
didn't get the attention he deserved."
Finks retired as an active player after the 1955
season. He served as an assistant coach under Terry Brennan at Notre Dame in
1956 and then moved to the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football
League where he served first as a player, assistant
coach, scout and later as general manager. Finks brought the Stampeders a Grey
Cup title -- the CFL equivalent of a Super Bowl championship -- during his
eight-year stay in Canada.
Chief of the Vikings
In 1964, Finks was named the general
manager of the Minnesota Vikings, a team that had entered the NFL in 1961 and
had won only 10 games in its first three seasons. Through shrewd use of the
draft and a series of beneficial trades, the Finks-led Vikings soon began to
take on a new look.
Finks' building program began
to
pay dividends in 1968,
when Minnesota won its first NFL Central Division championship.
That season marked the start of a dynasty that produced 11 divisional
championship teams and four Super Bowl appearances in the next 14 years. In
1969, the Vikings won 12 of 14 games and claimed the NFL championship before
losing to the Kansas City Chiefs 23-7 in Super Bowl
IV.
The Vikings team that Finks put together was powered
by a dynamic defensive front four popularly known as "The Purple People Eaters."
The first member of the unit, defensive end Jim Marshall, came to the Vikings in
a 1961 trade before Finks arrived. In 1964, the new general manager added
two
potential stars to the
line -- end Carl Eller as a first-round pick in the draft and tackle Gary Larsen
in a trade. He completed his fabled front four in 1967 by picking Alan Page No.
1 in the draft.
When inevitable controversies arose,
Finks always had the answer. Late in 1966, quarterback Fran Tarkenton became
embroiled in a feud with Coach Norm Van Brocklin. Finks solved the problem
by trading the crowd-pleasing scrambler to the New York Giants for two
first-round and two second-round draft picks, which he used to add more young,
quality talent to the fold.
A few months later, Van Brocklin resigned and Finks
immediately tapped Bud Grant, a comparative unknown, as his new field
leader. Grant had been a successful coach of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the
CFL for 10 seasons. "I saw Bud in good times and bad times in
Winnipeg while I was in Calgary," Finks explained. "I know him as a man who knows
how to win and how to retain his composure when he loses. And he isn't exactly
obscure around here; he was an outstanding college athlete at
Minnesota."
That same year, Finks brought in a new quarterback,
Joe Kapp, from the CFL. Kapp, a rough-and-tumble but charismatic figure, quickly
became the Vikings' leader. In the 1969 NFL championship season, he passed
for a record seven touchdowns against Baltimore and was a major contributor to his team's
success.
But in 1970, Kapp sat out some early games because of
a salary dispute. Once again, Finks had the answer. He simply sold Kapp to
New
England and turned over the
quarterbacking chores to Gary Cuozzo, who had come to
Minnesota in a 1968 trade with
New
Orleans. The
Vikings kept right on winning with another 12-2 season and a third straight
Central Division championship.
In 1972, Finks made another daring trade
with the New York Giants, this time to bring back Tarkenton, the
quarterback he had dismissed five years earlier. In 1973, they defeated the
Dallas Cowboys for the NFC Championship but lost to the Miami Dolphins 24-7 in
Super Bowl VIII. It turned out to be the last game with the Vikings for Finks,
who that season was named the NFL Executive of the
Year.
Finks, who had been named a club vice-president in
1972 as a reward for his brilliant work, resigned in May 1974. His
departure came as an outgrowth of a dispute among the team's five principal
owners over the location of a new stadium in downtown
Minneapolis. Finks supported the minority conviction that the
stadium should belong to the entire state rather than be just a
Minneapolis-oriented operation. "They knew right where I stood," Finks said.
"Our fans didn't want the stadium to go downtown."
On to
Chicago
For a brief period, Finks' future was uncertain, and
there was some concern that he might cast his lot with the new World
Football League. That was a needless concern, however, for Finks'
loyalty to the NFL was as always, throughout his career, beyond question.
He soon was named a special consultant to the NFL Management Council in its
dealing with the NFL Players Association.
After the dispute was over, Finks
reflected: "It was a real growth experience. One of pro football's problems is
that it has 1,400 potential salesmen in our players who haven't been
salesmen. That is one of the things we have to recognize and
remedy."
During the spring and summer of 1974, Finks pondered
whether he should get involved with potential ownership groups in
Seattle or Tampa, both of which were scheduled to get new NFL
franchises in 1976. But just before the start of the 1974 season, Finks
abandoned those thoughts to join one of the NFL's oldest franchises, the
Chicago Bears, as general manager and executive
vice-president.
Finks spent the remainder of the 1974 season studying
the Bears player talent as well as opposition players from all around the NFL.
The next year, he began employing the same formula he used so well in
Minnesota to improve the Bears' talent pool. There was no
quick fix to Finks' methods, however. He preferred to build for the long haul,
capitalizing on opportunities as they arose. As one Bears' staffer noted: " Jim
Finks does not build teams. He builds organizations. Then the good teams follow
naturally."
Perhaps no pro football executive knew the abilities of as many
NFL players so completely as Finks did. He used this knowledge to bring
Alan Page to the Bears in 1978. When Finks noticed Page's name on the waiver
list, he promptly claimed the All-Pro defensive tackle. Finks was aware of
Page's problems with Coach Grant and his recent loss of weight. But he also knew
he was an experienced winner. Page played as a regular in
Chicago for the next four
years.
The Bears under Finks slowly but surely improved. By
1977, they reached the playoffs for the first time since 1963. They were a
playoff team again in 1979 with a 10-6 record, best-ever for the Finks-led
Bears. But Finks' tenure in Chicago ended suddenly in 1982 when he resigned because
George Halas did not consult him in the hiring of Mike Ditka as
coach.
Just as he had done in
Minnesota, Finks left behind one of the most dominant NFL
teams of the 1980s. Nineteen of the 22 players who started in
Chicago's 46-10 win over New England in Super Bowl XX were drafted during the Finks
regime. That 1985 team went 15-1 in regular season and shut out both the New
York Giants and Los Angeles Rams in playoff games leading to the Super
Bowl.
Bears President Mike McCaskey lauded
Finks as he departed: "Jim moved us from a family-run business to one that is
still a family business but includes a lot more elements of professional
management."
After leaving the Bears, Finks joined the Chicago
Cubs as president and chief executive officer in September 1983. This was not
Finks' first journey into baseball because he played minor league baseball in
1949 and 1950 just as he was beginning his pro football career with
Pittsburgh. He remained through the 1984 season when the Cubs
captured their first title in modern times by winning the National
League East Division championship. He resigned from the
Cubs when that team and then baseball commissioner Peter Ueberroth undercut
his promise to Chicago fans regarding lights for night games at Wrigley
Field.
For a while, Finks worked with the
Chicago public relations firm of Hill and Knowlton as a
part-time consultant. But he grew restless being away from the professional
sports scene and the NFL in particular, and that uneasiness led him to Owner Tom
Benson and his Saints.
Saints: Preserve Us!
On Jan. 14,
1986, Finks, then 59, took
charge of a New
Orleans team that
never had experienced a winning season in its 19-year history. His first move
was to hire a new coach, Jim Mora, who, like the coaches Finks hired in
Minnesota and Chicago, had led teams in a different league and had not
developed high public profiles. Some questioned whether Finks sought coaches who
would not overshadow him, but the bottom line was that his coaches almost always
won.
Off the field, Finks distanced his new organization
as far as possible from the vestiges of the losing past. The Saints of 1986 wore
new uniforms with patches of the state of Louisiana on their hips and sleeves. Always acutely aware of
the needs and interests of fans, he moved the team training camp closer to
New
Orleans and
invited fans to come out for practice any time. He conducted a good-will tour of
players, coaches and front-office personnel around a three-state area to spread
the story of the new Saints.
Happily, success came more quickly for Finks in
New
Orleans than it
had in either Minnesota and Chicago. In just his second season, the Saints won 12 of 15
games for their first winning season ever. Finks was named NFL Executive of the
Year for a second time.
In the next five seasons from 1988 to 1992, the
Saints went over .500 four times and settled for an 8-8 year in 1990. In their
last six seasons under Finks, the Saints were 62-33, a .653 winning percentage.
Six players drafted by Finks -- linebackers Sam Mills, Vaughan
Johnson and Pat Swilling, running backs Rueben Mayes and
Dalton Hilliard and special teams player Bennie Thompson -- made 16 Pro Bowl
appearances during that period.
When Commissioner Pete Rozelle retired in 1989, Finks
was the odds-on choice to replace him. He was unanimously endorsed by the first
committee of owners but eventually another ownership group prevailed with their
choice of Paul Tagliabue. Finks graciously accepted the defeat: "I
am proud that I was voted on by 19 of the 28 NFL teams. That makes me feel
good." Tagliabue, in turn, named Finks to the key position of chairman of the
league's competition committee.
So for the next three seasons, Finks
split his time between building the Saints and serving the league that already
owed him so much. As the leader of the competition committee, he had a special
interest in playing rules. He urged a sensible curbing of prolonged celebrations
and made it clear he didn't like the "in the grasp" rules that protected passers
when defenders first made contact. "When I see a play blown dead, when some of
those great quarterbacks have a chance to break away and make an even more
exciting play, I don't like it," he announced.
But before Finks' work with the Saints and the
competition committee could come to fruition, he was diagnosed with cancer.
On July 15, 1993, he stepped down as president and general manager of
the Saints. Within a year, he was dead.
Meaningful eulogies poured in from the
entire sports world but Ed McCaskey, chairman of the board of the Chicago Bears,
may have summed it up best: "I know most of the NFL owners rather well. Some are
fine men, capable men, rich men and some are lucky men. But for one reason or
another, they have all achieved membership in what has proven to be a very
exclusive club. Jim Finks stood head and shoulders above them all -- in all
areas."
HE LOVED THE SPOTLIGHT
By Jim Campbell
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Ray Mansfield -- ironman, risk-taker, raconteur,
outdoorsman, "historian," adventurer and all-around good guy -- left us much,
much too early while hiking the Grand Canyon in the fall of 1998.
As tragic as his death was, the former
Steelers' center didn't miss much in life -- nor on the field. He played in 182
consecutive game. But now we will miss him. No more voice of reason. No more
"Old Ranger" tales. No more cameos on NFL Films' shows. No more friendly tips on
immortality to young players.
A remnant of the bad, old days of
Pittsburgh's SOS (Same old Steelers),
Mansfield, and long-suffering teammate Andy Russell, rejoiced
in the team's newly-found success under Chuck Noll in the
1970s.
The Steelers' first brush with winning, after 40
years of futility, came with an AFC Central Division championship, clinched in
San
Diego on the last
day of the 1972 season. Seizing the moment, if not the day, at the final gun
Mansfield turned to young Jim Clack, and said, "Hey, kid, you
wanna be immortal? Come with me."
Clack, a second-year center/guard out of
WakeForest, heeded the advice. He and Mansfield each took a leg
and hoisted a jubilant Noll onto their shoulders for a ride out of
San
Diego's Jack
Murphy Stadium. Photographers recorded the historical event. And until the
Steelers started winning Super Bowls with regularity, the resulting photo was
often used to illustrate Steelers success. Beaming
Mansfield and joyful Clack are as evident in that photograph
as their Pro Football Hall of Fame coach.
Scarcely a week later "history" struck again.
Mansfield was up to the moment
again.
He and a
game-day sideline worker were standing by glumly as the clock ticked down on the
Dec. 23, 1972 Steelers-Raiders AFC Divisional Playoff
game. After leading most of the day on Roy Gerela's two field goals, the
Steelers were suddenly Snake-bitten when Ken Stabler broke contain and scored a
touchdown. Oakland led, 7-6.
Fourth down. Terry Bradshaw rushed. He unloads.
John "Frenchy" Fuqua downfield. Jack Tatum unloads. Ball
ricochets. Franco Harris reaches, plucks, and rambles into the end zone.
Mansfield and others didn't know they had just been eye-witnesses to "the
Immaculate Reception." Mansfield, however, knew he had just seen something
special.
His sideline companion exclaimed, "I
(bleeping) saw it, but don't (bleeping) believe
it!"
Mansfield said, "Me neither," paused, and then said, "Hey, we
better get down to the end zone and get in the
pictures."
Somewhere in Mt. Laurel, N.J., in the
vaults of NFL Films existsfootage
of a trundling Ray Mansfield making his way down the sideline toward an end zone
packed with celebrants, but looking back every so often to see where the cameras
are.
It was history. It was
Mansfield. It was
great.
ALL ALONG, A FAMILY AFFAIR
By Joe Horrigan
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Since its inception in 1933, the
Pittsburgh Steelers franchise has been under the watchful leadership of just two
men. The first was team founder Art Rooney, who was a guiding light during the
early years of the National Football League when teams struggled just to
survive. His selfless dedication to the Steelers and the NFL for more than four
decades earned him pro football's highest honor, election to the Pro Football
Hall of Fame.
However, despite Rooney's
never-ending dedication to his team, the Steelers during that period, except for
brief respites, suffered through repeated losing seasons. It wasn't until the
1974 season that the team won its first league title, and by that time, "The
Chief," as Rooney was respectfully known, had passed the leadership torch to his
eldest son, Dan.
Dan Rooney, who literally grew
up with the Pittsburgh Steelers, blended his father's vision and loyalty with a
smart and effective management style. The result was a transformation of the
Steelers from perennial basement dwellers to a model organization and 35-plus
years of unprecedented prosperity that continues today.
Considered one of the most
influential voices in team and league operations, Dan Rooney, like his father
before him, has been recognized for his lifetime of dedication and unparalleled
successes with election to the Hall of Fame.
The oldest of five boys, Dan was born in
Pittsburgh on July 20,
1932 and grew up on
the city's North Side. A good athlete, Rooney played quarterback for
NorthCatholicHigh
School. In his senior year he was chosen as the
second-team quarterback for the city's Catholic All-Star team, an honor that at
the time left him feeling somewhat slighted. "Some of my teammates told me I was
better than that quarterback from St. Justin's who was chosen the first string
quarterback on the All-Star team, " he recalled. In retrospect, however, he
admits with a smile that the junior from St. Justin's –
Johnny Unitas – may have been better.
Life with the
Steelers
Dan's entire life, it seems,
has been involved with the Steelers. Coincidentally, the playground where he and
his brothers once played football became a parking lot at Three Rivers Stadium,
the team's home from 1970-2000. He began attending training camps when he was 5,
and by the time he was 13 he was handing out equipment and running errands. For
several years he served as the team's water boy. His first serious job was as
training camp manager.
Rooney went on to attend
Duquesne, graduated in 1955 with a degree in accounting. Following his
graduation, he returned to work full-time with the Steelers. Although the son of
the owner, Dan did not start out as a senior executive as one might have
expected.
"When I graduated from college,
the first thing I got into was player personnel. But then in 1957, we hired
Buddy Parker as our coach. It was a big break for me because Parker didn't want
anything to do with the front office," Rooney said. "Because I was in the office
every day, the league people would call for me. If they wanted something done,
they knew I'd be there, so I got to know the people in the league office and
with the other teams. So I just grew into doing more and more things because of
the contacts I made."
If there was a single event
that marks Rooney's ascension to day-to-day manager of the Steelers it was the
day in 1965 when he accepted Parker's resignation as coach. "That put me on a
new basis," he recalled. "Parker often used to say he was going to quit. I had
talked to my father and said that we couldn't be cutting players because Parker
was upset with one game's performance, or couldn't be trading players because he
was angry with them. We had to deal with some kind of continuity and with a
basis of reason."
So, when Parker called Rooney after a
preseason loss to the San
Francisco 49ers, to inform him of a
less-than-sensible trade he wanted to make, Rooney drew his line in the sand. He
told Parker to calm down and that he would talk to him in the morning about his
proposed trade. Parker, upset by Rooney's challenge to his authority, threatened
to quit, to which Dan replied that he would also discuss that the next morning.
"I called my father and told him that we were going to accept Parker's
resignation if he gave it the next morning, and my father agreed. And the next
morning, Parker stuck with it." After Parker left, Dan continued to run the
front office. Although Art Rooney still retained veto power, the younger Rooney was clearly the man
in charge.
To the public, however, the low-key Rooney
was largely unknown. His years of involvement and intimate understanding of the
organization's operations were not a matter of public record. So, as the team with a
woeful past continued to frustrate its fans, they began to question whether Dan
Rooney, the team's vice president, was the right man for the job or just the
benefactor of nepotism. As the public looked for someone to blame for the team's
state of affairs, Rooney, quite unfairly, became the
target.
Not only was Dan being held
accountable for the team's present situation, he was being blamed for the past.
In a 1971 interview he related an example of the sometimes-ridiculous way in
which he was expected to answer for some of the organization's past
sins.
"A reporter called me
yesterday, and the first thing he asked was, 'What happened with Luckman?'"
Rooney said. "I told him, 'Just hold on a minute.'" The Steelers had in fact
given away the draft rights to Sid Luckman, a future Hall of Fame quarterback,
but that was in 1939, the year Rooney started grade
school.
While there was nothing Dan
Rooney could do about the failures of the past, he was determined not to repeat
them in the future.
Following the departure of
Parker, the head coach position was filled first by Mike Nixon, and then by Bill
Austin. Rooney dismissed Nixon after one losing season and Austin after three.
The message was clear. No longer was the team going to be mired in mediocrity. A
new era was about to dawn in Pittsburgh, "The Dan Rooney
Era."
The Dan Rooney
era
In 1970, the Steelers moved
into a new home, Three Rivers Stadium. Here Dan demonstrated his wide range of
organizational skills as he drew up a complex of offices and team facilities
that became a model for new stadiums throughout the league, not to mention the
envy of every team owner. "It's enough to give our players an inferiority
complex," said then-Cleveland Browns owner Art
Modell.
Another important element in the Steelers'
successful transition was Dan's decision to separate scouting from coaching,
recognizing that no coaching staff, no matter how hard-working or competent, has the
ability to search out and evaluate college football players. The results were
immediate. The Steelers from 1969 to 1974 drafted seven future Hall of Fame
players, but perhaps Rooney's most significant move came when he hired Chuck
Noll as head coach.
"I interviewed Chuck Noll the
day after his team, the Baltimore Colts, lost Super Bowl III to the New York
Jets," he recalled. "It was right after the game, so there was no way he could
have prepared for the interview. It struck me right then. Here is an extremely
bright person who has his feet on the ground, knows what he is
doing."
Noll was immediately put on
Rooney's short list. "When I came back to Pittsburgh," he recalled, "I said to
my father, 'Chuck Noll is a guy we have to keep on the list. Chuck Noll is a guy
you have to meet.'" After meeting Noll, the senior Rooney agreed with his son's
assessment and a deal was made. During Noll's 23-year career with the Steelers,
the team won four Super Bowls and never went more than four years without making
the playoffs.
As significant as it was for
Rooney to hire Noll, it was equally significant that he was confident enough in
his pick that he didn't fire him after he began his tenure with three losing
seasons. Rooney had showed no such confidence in either Nixon or Austin.
In 1973, after the Steelers posted a
10-4 record and earned a Wild Card berth in the playoffs, Rooney was named The Sporting News NFL Executive of the
Year, an honor voted on by the NFL's general managers. Dan's response upon
learning of the honor was, "You're kidding," as he thought someone was pulling
his leg. Suddenly, the reserved "behind-the-scenes guy" was front and center and
being acknowledged by his peers for the near miraculous turnaround of the
Steelers' franchise. "I think it was a combination of things, people, and
timing," he said. "It was Chuck Noll coming at the right time, Artie's (Art
Rooney Jr.) work with personnel, the new stadium. It might have happened with
any one of them – but it did happen with that combination."
The turnaround continued in
1974 as the Steelers won the first of six consecutive AFC Central titles and the
first of four Super Bowls.
Elevated to team
president
In 1975, after 20 years of
working in nearly every conceivable capacity, Dan Rooney was "officially" named
president of the Steelers. "When I became president in 1975, not much changed,"
he claimed, still trying to deflect credit. Rather than accept the
responsibility for the team's successes, Dan preferred to remind people of his
father's accomplishments.
"From day one until this day,"
he told an interviewer in 1987, "my father set the tone on how the Steelers
operate. He is a people person. He has always said that what the people think is
important, and that we have to think that way. He very much felt that everyone
was his equal and that they should be treated that way -- players, coaches,
office staff, everybody. You must treat people with respect. Hopefully, some of
that has rubbed off on me and I follow that."
At the same time Rooney was
using his formidable skills to mold a model sports franchise, he also emerged as
one of the most active figures in NFL operations. His league functions have
included membership on the board of directors for the NFL Trust Fund, NFL Films,
and the Scheduling Committee.
In 1973, he was appointed
Chairman of the league's Expansion Committee that added Seattle and Tampa Bay to
the NFL in 1976. He was named Chairman of the Negotiating Committee in 1976, and
in 1982 he contributed to the negotiations for the Collective Bargaining
Agreement for NFL owners and the Players Association. Recognized by both sides
for his patience and reasonable voice of moderation, he again played a key role
in the labor agreement reached in 1993 between the NFL owners and players.
"They put him in areas where
they need a little leadership, and he seems to have the ability to get people to
cooperate," New York Giants general manager George Young once said. "He has
great credibility."
A humble family man who shies away from
attention, Dan Rooney has not let success change him or influence his values.
Although he may not be as publicly outgoing as his father,
who
passed away in
1988, Rooney remains one of Pittsburgh's most involved executives in civic
affairs. He serves on the boards of the United Way of America, the American
Diabetes Association, the Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation,
Presbyterian University Hospital, Duquesne University, and The American Ireland
Fund.
Dan Rooney's contributions
to
pro football,
the Steelers, and the city of Pittsburgh are many. Although he is proud of his
accomplishments he rarely sites them. Still, his false modesty has not prevented
the civic and sports communities and in particular, the Pro Football Hall of
Fame's Board of Selectors, from recognizing his innumerable achievements. With
his election to the Hall of Fame, Dan Rooney joined not only his father, but
also an elite fraternity of men who individually and collectively represent the
best the sport has offered.
CARD-PITT: THE CARPITS
By James Forr
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Pittsburgh Steelers owner Art Rooney
called it the worst team in NFL history. Steelers co-owner, Bert Bell, said,
"The season couldn't have turned out any worse then this one."
They were referring to the
infamously lamentable wartime amalgam known as Card-Pitt.
For the Steelers, joining forces
with the Chicago Cardinals was repayment of a debt, of sorts, to the NFL.
Pittsburgh found itself in particularly dreadful shape prior to the 1942 season,
with the death of all-league guard Bill Simington and the loss of NFL rushing
leader Bill Dudley, and a number of others to the armed services. The league
assented to the Steelers' request to join forces with the Philadelphia Eagles
for the 1943 season. The "Steagles," as they were known, posted a respectable
5-4-1 mark.
The
KeystoneState teams agreed to go their separate
ways following that season. However, NFL Commissioner Elmer Layden had a
problem. With the Boston Yanks joining the league, and the Cleveland Rams
re-joining the league after finding themselves unable to field a team in 1943,
the NFL had 11 teams. The league found it impossible to come up with a schedule
that would meet the approval of all teams. So Layden called in his marker with
Rooney and Bell and requested that their team merge
again in 1944.
Rooney apparently wasn't thrilled
with the idea but felt obligated to Layden. He agreed to join forces with
another club on the condition that at least half of the team's home games were
played in Pittsburgh (during the 1943 season, the
Steagles played just two games at Pittsburgh's Forbes
Field).
Finding a merger partner proved
challenging. Prior to the NFL's annual meetings in April 1944, rumors had
Pittsburgh joining up with either Cleveland or
the Brooklyn Tigers. Cleveland would have been a logical
geographic choice; however Layden didn't think it was fair to the Steelers to
ask them to merge with a team that had been defunct a year earlier. Rooney
rejected a proposal to team with Brooklyn, and he also was cool to the idea
of merging with the new kid on the block, Boston. Finally, on April 22, Rooney
agreed to combine his Steelers with the Cardinals, who had gone winless in 1943.
The jointure would compete in the tougher Western Division, which included
perennial powerhouses Green
Bay and the Chicago
Bears.
Training camp began Aug. 15 in
Waukesha, Wisconsin, under the direction of the team's
co-coaches, Walt Kiesling of Pittsburgh and Phil Handler of
Chicago. The two men quickly found that
they had something in common beyond football—a fondness for playing the horses.
Rooney, who was known to place a wager or two himself, sometimes wondered which
sport his coaches considered more important. In his later years, Rooney recalled
that Kiesling, specifically, "carried the Racing Form more than the
playbook."
Prior to the start of camp, the
coaching staff made the questionable decision of going with a T-formation
offense. Some of the Steelers players had been exposed to the 'T' a year earlier
with the Steagles; but the Cardinals had used it very little. Moreover,
Card-Pitt lacked a solid quarterback, which the coaches recognized. "We'll sink
or swim with the 'T,'" insisted Kiesling, "and if we don't come up with a
quarterback soon there's a chance that we might just sink." But, betting men
that they were, Kiesling and Handler were willing to take that
chance.
Walt Masters, then 37, went into
camp as the No. 1 quarterback. Masters was an interesting man. A fine pitcher,
Masters enjoyed brief stints in the major leagues with the Washington Senators,
the Philadelphia Phillies and the Philadelphia Athletics. His NFL career had
consisted of two games with the Eagles in 1936 and seven games with the Bears in
1943. In the interim, he had played and coached both baseball and football in
Canada. Oddly, in the offseason between
1943 and 1944, Masters managed to age four years. "No one believed me last year
when I said I was 33," joked Masters in training camp, "so I might as well tell
the truth."
Despite the unsettled quarterback
situation, those close to the team were not without optimism, at least on the
surface. Rooney promised a solid, competitive team. Ed Prell of the Chicago Tribune predicted that
Card-Pitt's huge line, led by 260-pound Chet Bulger and veteran Conway Baker,
would be among the best in the league. And Card-Pitt also boasted a promising
young running back named John Grigas from Holy Cross, who had enjoyed a fine
rookie season for the Cardinals in 1943.
That optimism lasted until the first
quarter of the first exhibition game. In a quagmire at
ShibePark, with Babe Ruth in attendance, the
Eagles ripped off three first quarter touchdowns and slogged their way to a 22-0
victory. In the aftermath of the debacle, co-owner
Bell must have wondered what he had
gotten himself into. Not mincing words, Bell told the press that Card-Pitt was
the worst team he had ever seen. The following week, with Steelers veteran Coley
McDonough emerging as the team's top quarterback, the new T-formation offense
continued to sputter as Card-Pitt lost 3-0 to Washington. However, it was an impressive
performance by the Card-Pitt defense against a team that had been favored by
nearly three touchdowns.
On the heels of that competitive
showing against the Redskins, Card-Pitt opened the regular season portion of its
schedule Sept. 24 at Forbes Field against the Cleveland Rams, led by former
Steelers coach Buff Donelli. A crowd of nearly 21,000 watched the Rams jump out
to an early 16-0 lead. But Card-Pitt struck back in spectacular fashion just
before the half. Bobby Thurbon fielded a Cleveland kickoff on his own 20 and raced 65
yards to the Cleveland 15. As he was being tackled,
Thurbon lateralled to tackle Eberle Schultz, who was trailing the play. Schultz
took it the rest of the way for Card-Pitt's first score of the
season.
Those first Card-Pitt points opened
the offensive floodgates. As if by magic, the 'T' started to click in the second
half. In the third quarter, McDonough fired a 35-yard touchdown pass to Eddie
Rucinski to cut the Rams' lead to 16-14. On Cleveland's next possession, Johnny Karrs
fumbled on his own 13. That set up a short seven-play drive, capped by a Grigas
1-yard touchdown run to give Card-Pitt its first lead,
21-16.
Early in the fourth, the Rams
responded, as Jim Benton (who would finish with 108 yards receiving and three
touchdowns) made a tumbling catch of a Tommy Colella pass in the end zone to put
Cleveland back on top, 23-21. However,
Card-Pitt showed some resilience of its own on the next drive, as McDonough
eluded pressure and hit Johnny Butler with a 67-yard touchdown pass for a 28-23
lead. It was a moment to remember—Card-Pitt would hold a lead only once more the
rest of the season.
With four minutes left, Card-Pitt's
Bernie Semes intercepted a Colella pass at the goal line and fell forward to the
1-yard line. At this point Card-Pitt, seemingly in command of the game, had
several options. They simply could have run their offense and taken time off the
clock. Or, worried about operating in the shadow of their own goalpost, they
could have taken a safety and backed up the Rams with a free kick. However,
Handler and Kiesling made the fateful decision to punt immediately, on first
down. Apparently, they didn't want to risk a turnover near their own goal
line.
But what happened next was just as
bad. In what would become a recurring theme of the season, Johnny Martin shanked
a 9-yard punt, and the Rams took over first-and-goal. Three plays later Albie
Reisz found Benton for the winning score.
Cleveland won the game 30-28, and Card-Pitt
had blown what would be its best chance all year to win a
game.
The next week featured another
exhibition game, this time at Forbes Field against the Giants.
New
York took command early and built a 16-3
lead (one of the Giants' touchdowns was set up by a 12-yard punt by the
beleaguered Martin). But Card-Pitt again showed resilience, mounted a comeback,
and pulled off a surprise 17-16 victory against the eventual Eastern Division
champs.
The win was almost solely
attributable to a Herculean effort by John Grigas. He rushed 22 times for 238
yards, which would have set an NFL record had it occurred during a regular
season game. With 2:20 to go, he carried Giants tacklers
along on a 14-yard run that tied the game. Conway Baker's extra point won it.
Nonetheless, with the exception of Grigas, the offense was stagnant. McDonough
struggled as Card-Pitt completed just two of 17 passes. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette sports editor
Harry Boyle labeled the Card-Pitt passing game "putrid." He might have been
right. But it would get even worse.
On Oct. 6, two days prior to
Card-Pitt's second regular season game at Green
Bay, McDonough was inducted into the
army. Although his performance had been less than stellar, he was the best
quarterback Card-Pitt had. According to Kiesling, McDonough was just beginning
to master the T-formation. "I'd rather lose two players than McDonough at this
point," sulked Kiesling. McDonough was replaced in the lineup by a prematurely
gray, pint-sized 155-pound rookie named Johnny McCarthy from
St.FrancisCollege near
Pittsburgh.
The Pittsburgh Press predicted that
Card-Pitt stood "little chance of winning" against the Packers. The accuracy of
that forecast quickly became apparent. The Card-Pitt defensive secondary was
helpless against one of the greatest receivers of all time, Don
Hutson.
Green
Bay took a quick 7-0 lead on Irv Comp's
55-yard touchdown pass to Hutson. Soon after, Comp and Hutson hooked up four
times on an 83-yard drive, capped by Ben Starrett's one-yard run. Another
touchdown pass to Hutson, who leaped over three defenders to make the catch,
made it 21-0. Card-Pitt would score a meaningless touchdown late on a 34-yard
option pass from Grigas to Butler, although even that play was
something of a gift (the Packer defense quit on the play because it expected a
motion penalty to be called against the offense).
The 34-7 pasting dropped Card-Pitt
to 0-2. Hutson dissected the Card-Pitt defense with seven receptions for 117
yards. McCarthy, however, provided a glimmer of hope, managing at least to keep
his head above water at quarterback despite his inexperience. "I thought I'd be
so scared I wouldn't be able to throw the ball," McCarthy said. "But I felt so
calm I surprised myself." Furthermore, his 35 yard-per-punt average against
Green
Bay emboldened Card-Pitt to release
poor Johnny Martin.
Next was a Wrigley Field showdown
against an unlikely fellow-denizen of the Western Division cellar, the defending
champion Chicago Bears. Injuries and war had ravaged the Bears' roster by
depriving them of MVP quarterback Sid Luckman, not to mention Coach George
Halas. Chicago's starting quarterback was
35-year-old Gene Ronzani, who had retired six years earlier. At least the Bears
had history on their side. They had never lost to the Steelers and were 34-7-6
versus the Cardinals.
The Bears had superior talent on
their side, too, despite their patchwork roster. It was a pitiful showing by
Card-Pitt, described by the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette as twice as bad as their performance against
Green
Bay. The defense did make some big
plays early. It forced a Bob Margarita fumble, which ended a drive deep in the
Card-Pitt territory. Later in the first, Bill Perko fell on another Margarita
fumble at the Bears 24-yard line, but a holding penalty pushed the offense back,
and Marshall Robnett's 43-yard field goal attempt was no good. Still in the
first, Johnny Butler picked off a Ronzani pass and returned it to the
Chicago 35-yard line. But three penalties
and George Wilson's sack of McCarthy ended that threat.
Meanwhile, the Bears took advantage
of their opportunities. With McCarthy momentarily shaken up, Walt Masters came
in at quarterback and promptly threw an interception, which was returned to the
Card-Pitt 36. Moments later, Scooter McLean's 8-yard run put the Bears up 7-0.
Then, after a McCarthy fumble, Johnny Long and end Connie Berry hooked up on a
50-yard scoring pass to make it 14-0 late in the first quarter. Following
another botched Card-Pitt punt, this one by McCarthy, Ronzani connected with
Berry on a 20-yard touchdown, making it
21-0. Card-Pitt was finished. The offense eked out just four first downs and 115
total yards in a 34-7 embarrassment.
Irate over the woeful display in
Chicago, Kiesling and Handler fined Butler, Grigas, and Schultz $200 apiece
for "indifferent play." The players, already fed up with the coaches' strict,
dictatorial style, rallied around their teammates and basically went on strike,
refusing to practice on Tuesday until the fined players received a fair hearing.
That evening, players and coaches met in the team offices in
Pittsburgh. Butler didn't attend, Grigas told his side
of the story then left, and Schultz stayed throughout.
Conway Baker, appointed as a team
spokesman, argued that the fines were unjust, but Kiesling was having none of
it. According to the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette he suggested that anyone who didn't want to practice could
leave. Some took him up on that offer. Those who remained suggested a meeting
with Art Rooney. Six players, including Schultz and Grigas, met with Rooney the
following afternoon to air their grievances.
Exactly what was said in that
meeting isn't clear, but the upshot was that Grigas and Schultz agreed to pay
their fines and returned to practice. The recalcitrant
Butler was suspended indefinitely, and
eventually waived, to be claimed by Brooklyn. Later, Rooney would agree to
rescind those fines (except for Butler's), despite his spirited public
statements to the contrary.
That week, PittsburghPost-Gazette sports editor Al Abrams
helped slap the team with a fitting, memorable nickname. In his column, Abrams
quoted a disgusted fan as writing, "Why don't they call themselves the Car-Pits?
I think it's very appropriate as every team in the league walks over
them."
In the wake of the off-field chaos,
Card-Pitt headed to the Polo Grounds to meet the Giants, whom they had defeated
in an exhibition game just three weeks earlier. It was a good game for a while.
In the words of the Pittsburgh Press,
"For one quarter and almost one half, [Card-Pitt] looked like
professionals."
At the half, the Giants led 9-0,
thanks to a safety on (what else?) a blocked punt, and a touchdown run by
defending NFL rushing champion Bill Paschal. Card-Pitt threatened in the second
quarter when Coley McDonough, making a cameo appearance while on furlough from
the army, led the offense to the New
York 5-yard line. But the Giants' Ward
Cuff dashed those hopes when he intercepted a McDonough pass in the end
zone.
New
York salted it away in the third quarter
by recovering a Bernie Semes fumble at the Card-Pitt 4-yard line and scoring on
another Paschal scamper. Twice in the second half, Card-Pitt got inside the
Giants 35, but they could move no further. The final was 23-0, as Card-Pitt fell
to 0-4.
Following the game, the quarterback
shuffle continued. McDonough went back to the military, while Walt Masters was
given his pink slip, which left McCarthy with no real backup. Days later, the
team signed former Pittsburgh-area college standout halfback Johnny Popovich,
just back from the army following a medical discharge, and grabbed halfback
Frank Martin from Brooklyn. But they were either unable or
unwilling to sign another competent passer to back up
McCarthy.
Card-Pitt, which had been wearing
Chicago Cardinals uniforms for the entire season, inexplicably unveiled blue
jerseys for what would be a bizarre and violent Oct. 29 game in
Washington. Following the obligatory partially
blocked punt on Card-Pitt's opening possession, the Redskins took a 7-0 lead
when the NFL's leading passer, Frank Filchock, connected with huge end Joe
Aguirre on a 57-yard touchdown.
With McDonough back in the army,
Johnny McCarthy was back at quarterback, and he was the central figure in a
bizarre first quarter sequence that would typify Card-Pitt's tragicomedy of a
season. After the offense marched deep into Redskins territory, McCarthy's pass
was intercepted by Wilbur Moore at the 13-yard line.
But on the next play, Cliff "Cactus
Face" Duggan blocked Sammy Baugh's quick kick, and suddenly the Card-Pitt
offense was again threatening to score. McCarthy promptly dropped back to pass,
looked for an open receiver in the end zone -- and fired another interception
into the waiting arms of Andy Farkas, who downed it for a
touchback.
In the second quarter, McCarthy led
the offense deep into Washington territory once again, but again his
pass was intercepted, this time at the 3-yard line. At this point, the
frustrations of a terrible season perhaps began to boil over. On the ensuing
drive, with two minutes left in the first half, Card-Pitt's Duggan brawled with
Washington's Jim North. Both players were
ejected. Moments later Filchock, undeterred by the mayhem, would come up with
another big play when he found a wide-open Aguirre for a 48-yard touchdown and a
14-0 lead.
After Card-Pitt got the ball back,
end Tony Bova squared off against the 6-foot-4, 230-pound Aguirre after, Bova
claimed, Aguirre tried to sucker punch him. Both Bova and Aguirre were ejected.
As the dust was settling from that tussle, McCarthy dropped back to pass, only
to be drilled on a brutal hit by Redskins' rookie Doug Turley. The Card-Pitt QB
was hauled off the field on a stretcher with what were thought to be two broken
ribs.
Although McCarthy's numbers on the
day were nothing terribly special (7 of 14 for 81 yards and three
interceptions), he was the only remaining player on the Card-Pitt roster with
significant quarterbacking experience. Card-Pitt pressed Grigas into service at
quarterback for the remainder of the game.
With five seconds left in the half,
Moore intercepted a Grigas pass and was
hit out of bounds along the Washington bench.
Moore's irate Redskin teammates
immediately began to beat on the handful of Card-Pitt players who were in the
vicinity, prompting the Card-Pitt bench to race across the field in an attempt
to protect their teammates.
Soon,
WashingtonD.C., police stormed the field to break
up what had become a near-riot. Coaches Kiesling and Handler found themselves in
the middle of the brawl, while Rooney (who had made the U.S. Olympic boxing team
as a younger man), dashed about halfway across the field, apparently ready to
mix it up, before it dawned on him that for an NFL owner to get into a fight
with opposing players would be a breach of protocol, not to mention potentially
hazardous to his health.
With decorum finally restored,
Card-Pitt attempted to mount a third quarter comeback. They recovered
Moore's fumble of the second half
kickoff, leading to a 1-yard touchdown run by Grigas, which cut the Redskins
lead to 14-7. But Moore would make amends a bit later. On
third-and-17, he took a handoff from Filchock, shed several tacklers, and raced
75 yards to the end zone (a run described by Washington Post scribe Al Costello as
"scrumptious") to put Washington back up by two touchdowns at the end of the
third quarter.
Card-Pitt blew another great chance
when it lost the ball on downs at the Washington 4-yard-line, but they would regain
possession and cut into the lead when Grigas passed 10 yards to Don Currivan for
a touchdown. Conway Baker's extra point was no good, and Card-Pitt was within
21-13. But that was as close as they would get. Despite another Grigas touchdown
run late, Washington would win, 42-20. The final scoring
play came when Sammy Baugh came off the bench and threw a 35-yard touchdown pass
to Turley with two seconds left.
Not only did that play rub salt in
the Card-Pitt wound, but also it likely made some gamblers happy (the betting
line on the game ranged from 18-20 points). The seemingly tireless Grigas ended
the day with 100 yards rushing on 30 carries. He also completed 6 of 16 passes
for 99 yards, with three interceptions. On the day, the Redskins would pick off
six Card-Pitt aerials. Card-Pitt actually out-gained
Washington, 367-359, and also had the
advantage in first downs, 19-8. But the turnovers were more than they could
overcome.
NFL Commissioner Elmer Layden fined
Duggan a hefty $200 for his role in the first fight. But Rooney, irate at the
officials he claimed had lost control of the game, volunteered to pay Duggan's
fine for him. Far from being disappointed with his team's loss of composure,
Rooney believed the brawls augured well for his team and said, "If we display
that spirit next Sunday we will lick the Detroit Lions for
sure."
Wishful thinking. With McCarthy on
the sidelines and no other competent passing quarterbacks on the roster, the
coaches opted for a radical midseason overhaul of the offense. The T-formation
was out. The Notre Dame Box was in.
"McCarthy was coming along fine…so
we figured the 'T' was finally going to click," said Kiesling. "But when he got
those ribs broken, there was nothing to do but make a change." In the new
offense, the ball would be snapped directly to halfback Grigas. Walt Rankin took
over the quarterback position, but he would merely serve as a blocker for
Grigas.
Almost 18,000 fans attended the Nov.
5 game against Detroit at Forbes Field, a game the Pittsburgh Press called "Chapter Number
6 in the not-too-thrilling saga of How to Lose Football Games." While the Press was acerbic, the Chicago Tribune barely even noticed; it
devoted a mere two paragraphs to the game in the Monday
edition.
The Lions' main weapon was Frank
Sinkwich, the NFL's leading rusher [at that moment], who had been excused from
military service because of his flat feet. But it was the Lions' air attack that
quickly put the game out of reach, as Card-Pitt took what Kiesling called "a
nine-minute nap" in the first quarter.
Art Van Tone made a one-handed grab
of a Bob Westfall 19-yard pass to stake Detroit to a 7-0 lead. After Van Tone
intercepted Grigas, Westfall was on the receiving end of a touchdown pass, a
19-yarder from Sinkwich, which made it 14-0. The Card-Pitt special teams woes
continued when Dave Diehl blocked a Bobby Thurbon punt to give the Lions
possession on the Card-Pitt 18. Sinkwich took it into the end zone from 2 yards
out, and Detroit took a 21-0 lead after the first
quarter.
Card-Pitt was competitive the rest
of the way, again out-gaining the Lions, 384-277. Grigas rushed for 117 yards to
move into second place in the league ahead of Sinkwich, who was held to just 30
yards. But that first quarter "nap" was too much to overcome. Despite a Grigas
touchdown pass to Bova in the fourth quarter, the Lions would win, 27-6.
In a scheduling quirk, that was the
first of back-to-back games against the Lions. Card-Pitt got some good news on
the eve of the following week's game, when Thurbon was rejected for military
service, which enabled Kiesling and Handler to hold on to one of their few
offensive weapons. The Nov.11 game at Briggs Stadium was one that, with a couple
of fortuitous bounces, could have gone Card-Pitt's way. But as would be the case
all season, Card-Pitt was to get no breaks of any kind.
Detroit took a 7-0 lead on a 1-yard Van
Tone touchdown run. In the second quarter, a Grigas pass caromed off the hands
of Thurbon and into the waiting arms of Bob Westfall, who returned the
interception 31 yards to the Card-Pitt 9-yard line. Moments later, Sinkwich's
touchdown made it 14-0.
In the second quarter, Card-Pitt
drove to the Detroit 28, and again to their 15, but lost
the ball on downs each time. They also thought they had scored when Bova scooped
up a blocked punt and lateralled to Bill Perko, who took it 15 yards into the
end zone. But, they were ruled offside.
Card-Pitt finally broke through in
the third quarter when Thurbon's 1-yard run, on the heels of a 70-yard drive,
cut the lead to 14-7. But on their possession, Sunny Liles intercepted a pass
deep in Card-Pitt territory to set up another Sinkwich touchdown run. Final
score: Detroit 21, Card-Pitt 7.
It was a big game for Grigas,
though. He rushed 25 times for 123 yards to take over the league rushing lead.
He also was 13-for-30 as a passer for 177 yards and accounted for all but 38 of
Card-Pitt's yards. The Card-Pitt defense held Detroit to just 119 total yards, but again
the turnovers (five of them) did them in.
Although McCarthy returned to action
against Detroit (his ribs weren't broken, after
all), a return to the T-formation was apparently out of the question. After the
game, Card-Pitt sent Frank Martin (who had been injured since joining the team)
back to Brooklyn, which left the team with 23
players, just one over the NFL minimum. An assistant coach named Buddy Parker,
then 31, reportedly was prepared to suit up in an
emergency.
Next, Card-Pitt took its 0-7 record
to Chicago for one of its two
ComiskeyPark home games. Against the Rams, as
Carl Hughes of the Pittsburgh Press
put it, Card-Pitt "abandoned the one thing they had been doing
right—running." The Rams jumped out to a 6-0 advantage courtesy of a 46-yard
touchdown pass from Mike Kabealo to Tom Colella. Then the Card-Pitt punting game
suffered yet another meltdown, when McCarthy shanked one that gave the Rams
possession on the Card-Pitt 21. Lou Zontini would run it in to make the score
12-0 at the half.
Card-Pitt mounted a nice drive in
the third quarter, but Zontini thwarted it when he picked off a Grigas pass.
That led to a 35-yard touchdown pass from Kabealo to Steve Pritko, and a 19-0
advantage. Card-Pitt would cut it to 19-6 on a 54-yard scoring pass from Grigas
to Bova, but a 58-yard touchdown run by Jim Gillette put the game out of reach.
The Rams, who survived a close call against Card-Pitt early in the season, won
comfortably, 33-6.
Grigas was awful. He completed only
10 of 31 passes with five interceptions. He was also limited to 35 yards rushing
on 17 carries (which included 40 yards lost on sacks).
Card-Pitt looked much better during
a Thanksgiving weekend game against division-leading
Green
Bay at Comiskey, played before just
7,158 fans, the NFL's smallest crowd of the season.
For the first time in two months,
Card-Pitt held a brief lead. Lineman Marshall Robnett intercepted an Irv Comp
pass and returned it 48 yards to the Packer 2. Three plays later, Bobby Thurbon
sneaked into the end zone, and Card-Pitt was up, 7-0,
early.
But
Green
Bay wasted little time asserting
itself. Later in the first quarter, Hutson picked off Grigas' pass at the
Card-Pitt 45 and took it back to the 2-yard line. Paul Duhart's touchdown run tied the
game at 7-7. In the second quarter, Duhart dashed 11 yards to give the Packers a
14-7 lead. Then just before halftime, after taking over on downs in
Green
Bay territory, Grigas would loft a
37-yard scoring pass to Thurbon. However, Conway Baker misfired on the extra
point, so Card-Pitt had to settle for a 14-13 deficit at the
intermission.
In the third quarter, Comp and
Hutson teamed up on a short touchdown pass (a familiar refrain from Week 2 of
the regular season), which made Green
Bay's lead 21-13. The Packers' Don
Perkins put it out of reach when, on the first play of the fourth quarter, he
intercepted Grigas and returned it 40 yards for a touchdown. Card-Pitt would
strike again on a 72-yard pass play from Grigas to Don Currivan, but another
Comp-to-Hutson touchdown set the final at 35-20.
Although his team was headed for a
winless year, John Grigas nonetheless had a lot at stake during the season
finale against the Chicago Bears. He still had an outside shot at winning the
league rushing title. He trailed New
York's Bill Paschal, 625-610; however,
Paschal still had two games to play.
But the taciturn, insular Grigas
apparently had a lot more than the rushing title on his mind. This was a man who
had gone 0-for-two years in the NFL, and the losing had taken its toll. Early in
the week prior to the Bears game he told teammates Baker and Lou Marotti that if
the Forbes Field turf was frozen on Sunday morning, he wasn't going to play.
Baker and Marotti figured Grigas was just joking, so they didn't bother
reporting his comments to the coaches.
On the eve of the Bears game, Grigas
and roommate Currivan had plans to attend a hockey game, but Grigas said he
didn't feel like it. When Currivan got back to their room at the Webster Hall
Hotel later that night, Grigas met him and told him that he was going to leave
the team and go home to Massachusetts. Currivan tried to talk Grigas out
of it, then encouraged him to sleep on it and make a decision in the morning.
But Grigas already had crossed the Rubicon. Currivan awoke Sunday morning to
this farewell note from his roommate, quoted in the Pittsburgh Press:
Dear Don:
Did not want to wake you
up.
Funny thing, everything seems so
mixed up. I'm gone now. Can't change my plans. Take care of my
bags.
Best of
luck,
Johnny
Grigas also left Currivan with a
vague, rambling letter to be delivered to the Card-Pitt
management.
Dear Management and
Coaches:
My action, for what I just did, may
not be the best in regard to good, ethical business. Think what you may of me,
but I sincerely believe in all justice that it is for the
best.
I had that desire which you so often
mentioned in your lectures but how long a person can have any desire depends
upon the frame of mind under which he plays. The human mind is the faculty of
the soul, which is influenced by the human body. When your mind is changed
because of the physical beating, week in and week out, your soul isn't in the
game. My mind has been influenced this past week and I tried to stick it out but
it has reached the stage where the mind is stronger than the will. In all
justice to the management and myself I am leaving because I couldn't play the
whole game.
I played every
game from start to finish and never said a word because it was my job to justify
my salary. Money was not my primary aim, but to play ball as a sport and have a
little fun in a succ
A GEM AMONG GEMS
By JOE
HORRIGAN
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
In 1974, the Pittsburgh Steelers
recorded the most successful talent grab in the history of the National Football
League's annual college draft. With four picks over the first five rounds, the
Steelers chose four players who went on to be elected to the Pro Football Hall
of Fame, including fourth-round pick, wide receiver John
Stallworth.
Joining Stallworth were wide receiver
Lynn Swann, selected in the first round, linebacker Jack Lambert, a second-round
pick, and center Mike Webster, who was tapped in the fifth.
"I'd like to say the draft was the
result of horse sense and intelligence," joked Art Rooney Jr., then the head of
the team's scouting department. "But it was just good luck. We got some great
players."
Rooney's humility aside, the Steelers
had done their homework, particularly as it pertained to Stallworth. The
Pittsburgh scouting department knew that Stallworth was a blue-chip prospect
worthy of being selected in the first round. But the Steelers scouting
department was willing to gamble that certain circumstances would cause other
teams to overlook the talented receiver.
It was a gamble that Coach Chuck Noll
had to be convinced to take. Noll and his staff actually considered selecting
Stallworth in the first round. The "circumstances" the Steelers felt might work
in their favor began with the belief that some scouts had failed to recognize
Stallworth's talents since he played at a small school, Alabama
A&M.
Add to that, scouting combines had timed
him at a somewhat unimpressive 4.8 in the 40-yard dash. And finally, the coaches
in the 1974 Senior Bowl played him at defensive back, rather than at wide
receiver.
"We got real lucky when Stallworth came
to the Senior Bowl and they put him at defensive back," recalled
Rooney.
"We knew we were going to take Lambert
in the second round, and we had no third-round pick," remembered Bill Nunn, then
the Steelers' assistant director of player personnel. "So we discussed
Stallworth strongly in the first round. We also knew you either took Lynn Swann
in the first round, or you wouldn't get him. So now it gets down to Chuck
(Noll). He asked if we thought Stallworth might last. Lionel Taylor, our
receivers coach at the time, and I both said yes."
Nunn knew Stallworth's scouting combine
times were misleading. He had timed Stallworth prior to his junior season and
the slender receiver ran the 40 in 4.5 seconds. A painful hip pointer, it turns
out, was the cause of the discrepancy. Taylor, who agreed that Stallworth might
be available in a later round, also felt that the scouts overlooked Stallworth's
"soft hands."
Whether it was good scouting, luck, or
more likely a combination of the two, John Stallworth went on to become the most
prolific receiver in Pittsburgh Steelers history. Fourteen years after his
retirement, he still leads the team in receptions over a
career.
A native of Tuscaloosa, Alabama,
Stallworth was born on July 15, 1952. Like every kid at Tuscaloosa High, he
dreamed of playing college football at the University of Alabama. So in 1970,
when he learned that a member of the Alabama football staff had asked his high
school coach for some game films he was understandably excited.
"I would defy any boy to grow up in
Tuscaloosa and not want to play for Alabama," he told a Sports Illustrated
reporter in 1986. Unfortunately, Alabama coach Paul "Bear" Bryant was
unimpressed with the tall, lanky running back who hit the holes standing too
upright.
Stallworth hadn't planned on being a
running back. Simply put, his high school team just didn't have a quarterback
who could throw the ball with any consistency. Thus, Stallworth, with his
coach's encouragement, opted to play running back.
Even before his high school days,
however, Stallworth knew his hands, not his feet, were his greatest asset. "I
was small, playing with a big group of kids," he said of his youth. "And the
only way I could play was because I could catch the football. At that time, in
pick-up games, it was three passes for a first down. A lot of times, I'd catch
all three passes. "It just came natural. I would reach out to catch the ball,
and it would just stick. It's always been a God-given talent that I possess."
After being overlooked by Alabama, Stallworth took his "God-given" talents to Alabama
A&M, the Division II school near the state's northern border. "Looking back,
I wouldn't change a thing," he said of his college experience. "Hindsight is
always 20-20, but I could have been lost in the shuffle at Alabama. They weren't
throwing the ball a whole lot in those days. They had just gone to the wishbone
offense. Anything could have happened. Anyway, I met my wife at A&M. There
was a lack of publicity, but it just made me a stronger
individual."
That personal strength would serve
Stallworth well in the coming years. He knew that when he reported to Steelers
training camp, he would not only be measured against the incumbent receiver
corps, but against the production of fellow rookie Swann. Stallworth, who
arrived in camp with none of the fanfare of the flashy first-round pick, wasn't
intimidated by Swann's résumé that included Rose Bowls and a national
championship.
"I hadn't seen that many pro football
players," Stallworth told The Sporting News in 1979. "I wanted to compare their
speed and hands. Once I saw Lynn, I thought I could play with him."
"Those two (Stallworth and Swann) came
to me and told me they would start," recalled Lionel Taylor. "They told
me."
Although neither earned a permanent
starting berth as a rookie, both impressed their position coach. Stallworth
played in 13 games that season, starting two, before an illness sidelined him.
Nonetheless, his rookie performance earned him a starter's role the following
season, but again a series of injuries kept him from permanently locking down
the job. However, starting in 1976, he began a streak in which he started all
but three games in which he played.
Stallworth had flashes of brilliance
during his first three seasons in Pittsburgh. In 1975, for instance, he started
nine games and tied Isaac Curtis for the AFC lead with a 21.2-yard average per
reception. But just as it seemed that his time had arrived, he was again
sidelined by a series of foot and leg injuries.
"It was a really tough time for me," he
recalled. "It was psychologically damaging. If it hadn't been for my wife and
friends, I couldn't have gotten through it." Though frustrated, Stallworth never
doubted that he had the necessary tools to be a star in the NFL. His strength of
character, mental toughness, and competitive nature kept him focused.
With impressive back-to-back seasons in
1977 and 1978, Stallworth's career finally seemed to have turned the corner. In
Super Bowl XIII, he dazzled a national television audience with a remarkable
first half act in which he snagged three Terry Bradshaw passes for 115 yards,
including 75- and 28-yard touchdowns. As it turned out, it was just a prelude of
things to come.
Stallworth could no longer be viewed as
an emerging star. He had arrived. And in 1979, his star shined brightly when he
set a team record with 70 receptions for 1,183 yards. As if to add an
exclamation point on the season, he again capped it off with playoff
heroics.
In Super Bowl XIV he caught three passes
for 121 yards and a touchdown. The touchdown - a 73-yard beauty in which he
picked the ball off his facemask while falling backwards - proved to be the
game-winning score. His outstanding season-long performance earned him All-Pro
and All-AFC honors and the first of four Pro Bowl berths. It also earned him the
ultimate recognition from his teammates as they selected him their Most Valuable
Player.
In addition to finally earning
well-deserved national recognition, Stallworth had also clearly earned the
respect and confidence of his teammates, including Bradshaw. Early on, while
Stallworth was sharing time at wide receiver with Frank Lewis, Bradshaw tended
to look more often in Swann's direction. But that all changed as Stallworth
emerged from the shadows of both Lewis and Swann. His emergence, however,
inevitably caused observers to compare Swann and Stallworth.
While competitive, the two receivers
developed a good rapport with each other. "The rivalry doesn't get to the point
where it's a jealousy type thing," Stallworth explained in 1979. "I think we
both have big egos, but we're able to subdue them a little bit for the team
effort."
But the two definitely competed. "A lot
of times we weren't competing against the opposing team," he once confessed. "We
were competing against each other to see who'd catch the most passes. To see
who'd make the great move to get open, that we could look at later (on film) and
say 'Oooooh'."
Getting open was something Stallworth
seemed to do with ease. The Bradshaw-to-Stallworth combination grew as the two
All-Pro performers developed a strong comfort zone. Stallworth's blend of
deceiving speed, soft hands, and perfect pass patterns made him a Bradshaw
favorite. He even perfected a new move - the hook slide catch - a move he used
frequently in pressure situations.
"It's my own invention," Stallworth told
a reporter. "I don't know why I started to do it, it just sort of happened." As
rewarding as the 1979 season was for Stallworth, the 1980 season brought only
angst and disappointment when injuries (a cracked fibula and later a broken bone
in his foot) limited his play to just three games.
Still hobbling at the start of the 1981
season, there was some question as to how effective he might be. When he opened
the season with a three-catch, 82-yard performance that included a 56-yard grab
and a 5-yard touchdown reception, Noll was all smiles. "He's good," laughed
Noll. "Even when he limps." Stallworth finished the season with 63 receptions
for 1,098 yards.
Just as Stallworth had emerged an elite
receiver in the NFL, his peers recognized him for his leadership and dedication
to the game. At times, his on-the-field accomplishments were overshadowed by his
inspirational hard-fought comeback battles from nagging leg injuries. His most
impressive demonstration of his work ethic and determination to succeed came in
1984.
After missing much of the 1983 season
due to injury, some observers began to suggest that Stallworth's most productive
days were behind him. "A remnant of an empire, an artifact from kingdoms past,"
was how one writer described him prior to the start of the 1984
season.
"I knew better than that," Stallworth
said. "I knew that I could come back and have a very good season if I was
healthy."
That year, at age 32, he had his
greatest season, with 80 catches for an AFC-leading 1,395 yards and 11
touchdowns - and all without Bradshaw, who had retired. It was a banner year,
one in which he shattered five team records and was named the NFL Comeback
Player of the Year.
Stallworth's performance may have been a
surprise to some observers, but not for the future Hall of Famer. "I felt I had
the talent and could still play the game," he professed. "As you get older you
have to do more things to maintain your health. The key to returning to form was
good health."
For Stallworth, returning to good health
meant altering his workouts, concentrating on leg strength. It was an adjustment
that worked, and he ran the fastest 40 time since his rookie year.
Stallworth's "comeback" continued for
three more seasons, during which he averaged 50 receptions per year. Finally,
following the 1987 season, the soft-spoken former fourth-round pick out of
Alabama A&M announced his retirement.
"My goal when I came to the NFL was to
gain the respect of my peers and a certain amount of self respect," he once
remarked. "I was never really interested in publicity."
THE DEFINITION OF ‘OLD SCHOOL’
By Jack Ziegler
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Arthur Daley,
famed "Sports of the Times" columnist, called him "one of the greatest coaches
who ever lived." Art Rooney, the Steelers' owner, credited him with putting
"Pittsburgh on the professional football map." Pop Warner, legendary coach from
the early part of this century, said simply: "He was one of the best I ever
coached."
Largely forgotten today, John Bain
"Jock" Sutherland was, from 1919 to 1948, a coaching colossus who bestrode the
college and professional football worlds. Born in desperate poverty in 1889 in
Cooper-Angus, Scotland, Sutherland emigrated to
America in his early teens. In a young
manhood reminiscent of an Horatio Alger story, Sutherland worked his way through
OberlinAcademy waiting tables and shoveling snow.
In 1914 he entered the University of Pittsburgh's School of Dentistry.
Unfamiliar with American football (he'd played soccer in Scotland) until he saw
it played at Pitt, Sutherland quickly took to the game. At 6-foot-1, 200 pounds,
Sutherland became an All-American guard at Pitt under the tutelage of Pop
Warner. He also found time to excel as a collegiate heavyweight boxer and hammer
thrower.
World War I found Sutherland an
officer in the Army and coaching his first football team at Camp Greenleaf. With
the end of the war, Sutherland briefly opened a dental practice in Duquesne,
Pennsylvania, but then accepted a head coaching post at Lafayette College. From
1919 to 1923 Sutherland directed Lafayette to a 33-8-2 record, including an
undefeated season in 1921. When Warner left Pitt in 1923, Sutherland seemed the
obvious replacement (perhaps many on the Pitt campus remembered that
Sutherland's Lafayette squads twice had shut out strong Panthers
teams).
At Pitt,
Sutherland earned a reputation as one of the country's great college coaches.
Against tough opposition from 1924 to 1938, Sutherland compiled an astounding
111-20-12 record. Sutherland produced four unbeaten teams, two national
championships, and four trips to the Rose Bowl (the Panthers only defeated
Washington, 21-0, in 1937). Recruiting mainly from the mines and mill towns of
Western Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio and northern West Virginia, Sutherland
acquired tough, physical players well suited to his driving single-wing
offense.
Twenty-four of
his players became All-Americans. But in the late 1930s, Pitt de-emphasized
football and Sutherland felt pressured into leaving the university he loved and
saw as symbolic of his success in America. Years later Sutherland revealed his
frustration to Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette columnist AI Abrams:
"Why, why [didn't] they want me? Everything was done to make things unpleasant
for me. I could do little else but resign."
Sutherland
spent 1939 out of football. Despite offers from Navy, Ohio State, and Yale,
Sutherland went to the pros in 1940 and signed with the lackluster Brooklyn
Dodgers. The Dodgers, who had finished 4-6-1 under Potsy Clark in 1939, became
new men under Sutherland's leadership.
As a result of
Sutherland's authoritarian direction, rigorous conditioning routines and
blackboard drills, the Dodgers challenged Washington for the 1940 Eastern
Division title. Brooklyn finished 8-3-0, just one game behind Hall of Fame coach
Ray Flaherty's Redskins.
Especially
effective for Sutherland was league MVP Ace Parker at tailback, who rushed for
306 yards and passed for 817 more (Parker's 10 touchdown passes were second only
to Sammy Baugh's 12). Other Dodgers stars included Pug Manders and Banks
McFadden in the backfield, Bruiser Kinard on the line, and All-Pro Perry
Schwartz at end.
Football fans in Flatbush hoped that
1941 finally would be their year. But alas, as so often in Brooklyn sports, it
was not to be. The Dodgers almost beat the championship Bears in preseason, but
stumbled when the bell rang by losing three of their first five games. Though
Brooklyn played well over the last half of the season by winning five of their
last six, including both games with Steve Owen's New York Giants, they still
wound up one game behind, in second place.
One bright spot for the Dodgers was
Pug Manders winning the league's rushing title with 486 yards. Sutherland spent
World War II in the Navy, not returning to pro football until 1946 when he
signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers. Sutherland performed miracles in
transforming a club that was 2-8 in 1945 into a respectable 5-5-1 in
1946.
Aside from a better on-field
performance, owner Art Rooney was further cheered by increased attendance as
fans flocked to Forbes Field in homage to the popular Sutherland. The one sour
note in Steelers fortunes was Sutherland's deteriorating relationship with star
tailback Bill Dudley, who rushed for a league leading 604 yards. Dudley proved
too headstrong and independent for Sutherland, and the coach responded with
whip-like sarcasm. Dudley especially was angered by Sutherland's insistence that
he play the last four games of the season despite his injured
ribs.
The following
season, 1947, proved the finest year in Steelers history to that point. Dudley
had been traded to Detroit and Sutherland molded the remaining players into an
8-4 club. The "starless Steelers" were led by tailback Johnny "Zero" Clement
(670 yards rushing, 1,004 yards passing), end Val Jansante (35 catches, 599
yards, five touchdowns) and linemen like Ralph Calacagri, Bill Moore, and Paul
Stenn.
The Steelers
appeared to have the Eastern division locked up but late season losses to the
Eagles and Bears forced a playoff with Philadelphia. In an uncharacteristic act
of rebellion for a Sutherland-coached team, the Steelers "struck." The players
demanded extra pay for the additional week of practice before the playoff game.
Sutherland exploded, differences were not smoothed over, and a demoralized
Pittsburgh team lost to Greasy Neale's Eagles,
21-0.
Hopes ran high
in the Steel City in the spring of 1948. At last the Steelers seemed poised on
the edge of greatness. Things began smoothly enough when Sutherland left in
March for his annual vacation/scouting trip through the South. After visiting
coach Wallace Wade of Duke over Easter, Sutherland dropped out of sight for 11
days. He finally surfaced near the small western Kentucky town of Bandanna,
mumbling that he had come south to attend his son's wedding (Sutherland never
married).
At first,
doctors in Cairo, Illinois, diagnosed Sutherland as suffering from nervous
exhaustion. Flown back to Pittsburgh by private plane, the Steelers' coach was
examined by doctors at West Penn hospital. Exploratory surgery revealed two
brain tumors. Sutherland died at 4:15 a.m. on April 11,
1948.
The city's shock
at the apparently healthy Sutherland's sudden illness and death was best summed
up by a Pittsburgh Press headline:
"CITY'S FOOTBALL HEART, SOUL DIE WITH JACK SUTHERLAND." Over 3,200 mourners
filed by Sutherland's casket at Sampson's funeral home while several hundred
crowded the services at Calvary Episcopal Church in East
Liberty.
On a windy,
rainy April 13, a day much like autumnal days when Sutherland-coached teams ran
roughshod over opponents: Dr. John Bain Sutherland was buried in Homewood
Cemetery as a Highland piper skirled a last farewell. His pallbearers, fittingly
enough, were eight members of the 1947 Steelers: Chuck Cherundolo, Bill Moore,
Jack Wiley, Val Jansante, Ralph Calacagri, Charlie Mehelich, Steve Lach and John
Mastrangelo.
In tributes to
Sutherland, Arthur Daley and Al Abrams penetrated to the essence of the man.
Both writers noted that it took them over 15 years to break down
Sutherland's glacial aloofness. Once past what Abrams called Sutherland's
"iron mask of reserve," both writers found Sutherland extremely sensitive, a man
cut to the quick by his forced resignation at Pitt and the "player vs. coach"
controversy with Bill Dudley.
Sutherland
found the more independent players emerging after World War II difficult to
understand and manage. By 1947 Abrams noted that Sutherland felt "bewildered and
unhappy." In an off-the-record conversation with Abrams, Sutherland confided
that "I've felt like quitting. I'm too old to take this any more. All I demand
from my players is respect to their coaches and to play their best on the
field." Sutherland's relationship with Dudley and the "striking" Steelers of
1947 proved much different than his own relationship as a player with Pop Warner
back in 1916.
An extremely
self-contained man, Sutherland's idea of warmth was to shake each player's hand
in the locker room after a hard-fought victory. Once, after Johnny Clement had
played exceptionally well in a close game, Sutherland actually spoke to him:
"There was a lot of football played out there today. Eh, Johnny?" From
Sutherland, this qualifies as an emotional
outpouring.
In some ways,
Sutherland was a dinosaur and his legacy proved reactionary (Johnny Michelosen,
a Sutherland protégé and his successor, kept the single-wing in Pittsburgh until
1951). Sutherland believed in fundamentals – hard-blocking, hard tackling,
precise execution – and almost won a division championship in 1947 with
single-wing basics while most other pro teams were converting to the
T-formation. Perhaps Arthur Daley best summed up Sutherland's thinking: "His
football was almost exclusively power football. He'd rather knock a man down
than throw a pass over him."
Seemingly
gruff, conservative and demanding, the "Silent Scot" still commanded respect and
admiration. When Sutherland died, flags all over Pittsburgh flew at half-mast.
Even Hall of Fame tailback Bill Dudley, who had feuded so bitterly with him just
two years before, had high words of praise for Jock Sutherland: "He was the best
coach I ever played for."
EVEN HIS NAME WAS GRACEFUL
By Joe Horrigan
Reprinted, Courtesy of
PFRA
Lynn
Swann was more
than a great athlete. He was a performing artist whose stage was a football
field. His weekly Sunday recitals were showstoppers that left audiences
awestruck and cheering for more. His leaping fingertip catches were made with
the grace of a ballet dancer. His pass patterns across the middle were run with
the fearlessness of a circus high wire walker. And, like other great
entertainers, his finest performances often came in the final act, when he had
everyone's attention.
Although truly a performing artist,
Swann's performances didn't earn him Oscars or Emmys; he was instead rewarded
with his profession's equivalent – All-Pro, Pro Bowl, and Most Valuable Player
accolades. And topping the list of his career honors, one bestowed upon him in
January 2001 – election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Born on March 7,
1952, in
Alcoa, Tennessee, Swann grew up in
San Mateo, California. His father, Willie, was an
aircraft maintenance worker and his mother, Mildred, worked as a dental
hygienist.
It was Mildred Swann who encouraged
"Lynn the performer," who as a youngster had a seemingly endless source of
energy. His mother enrolled him in dance classes in an effort to harness some of
his exuberance.
"When I was in grammar school," he
recalled, "I felt more comfortable on the dance floor than the football field."
From the age of 4 until his senior year in high school Swann studied various
forms of dance including ballet, modern dance, and tap.
While it was his mother who
introduced him to dance, it was older brother Calvin that nurtured
Lynn's interests in sports. Always
willing to try whatever sport his older brother was playing, Swann was
invariably one of the smallest participants. He quickly learned, however, not to
be intimidated by his smallish size.
"I was always smaller and younger
than the other kids," he remembered. "My game had to be a mental one. I had to
out-smart and out-quick the other kids and take advantage of mistakes." He later
realized it was that attitude combined with many of the skills he learned from
dance and then gymnastics that helped develop "Lynn
Swann
the athlete."
Swann, a Baptist, won an academic
scholarship to the Catholic all-boys SerraHigh
School. There, Swann set a school record
for the long jump, played on the basketball team, and starred on the football
team as a wide receiver for two seasons and as a quarterback in his senior
year.
While Swann had many good
experiences in high school, not all were pleasant. As one of just nine
African-Americans in a school of 900, he found some white classmates treated him
differently outside of athletics. At the same time, some of his black friends
ostracized him for attending a white school and for taking on what they
considered white airs. It was a perplexing situation for the good-natured Swann.
"I learned very young the games people play," he said in a 1979 Sports Illustrated
interview.
Swann earned high school All-America
honors and was recruited by several colleges and universities. He even visited
Notre Dame, where Coach Ara Parseghian talked about making him a quarterback.
His first choice, however, was UCLA, but unfortunately, it wasn't one of the
schools that called. When UCLA didn't offer a scholarship, Swann decided on the
school's cross-town rival, USC.
UCLA's oversight was a blessing for
USC because the slender wide receiver went on to set a then-school record of 96
receptions and was second in receiving yardage with 1,562 and finished as the
third leading punt returner in the school's history. He also played in two Rose
Bowls, on a national championship team, and in 1973 was a unanimous first-team
All-America choice.
Still, even with all his successes,
Swann really didn't consider the pros until after his junior season when the
Trojans won the 1972 national championship. When it became apparent to him that
he was going to be a high draft pick, he hoped to be selected by a West Coast
team. He thought at the time that the Oakland Raiders might call his name. "I
figured they were going to have to replace Fred Biletnikoff eventually," he
said.
But
Oakland took offensive tackle Henry
Lawrence as the nineteenth choice of the first round. The Pittsburgh Steelers
chose two picks later and grabbed Swann, the first wide receiver selected. About
the only thing he knew about Pittsburgh was that "they had a guy named
Franco (Harris), and how cold it would be."
When Swann joined the Steelers, he
joined a team that was already well into its transformation from cellar-dweller
to one of the NFL's dynasties. Already in place were defensive stars and future
Hall of Fame members Joe Greene, Mel Blount, and Jack Ham, as well as Terry
Bradshaw, Mike Webster and Harris on offense. What the team seemed to lack was a
true game-breaker at the wide receiver slot. Swann was the answer to their
prayers.
By most accounts, Swann had a great
rookie season. His gutsy play, particularly as a punt returner, established him
as a tough competitor. He led the NFL in punt returns with 577 yards on 41
returns, which at that time was a club record and fourth best in league history.
He called for a fair catch just three times, and his 64-yard return against the
New Orleans Saints was the Steelers' longest scoring play of the season.
As a receiver, he shared playing
time with veteran Ron Shanklin, but did earn a starter's berth in two games. In
the AFC Championship Game against the Oakland Raiders the rookie receiver scored
the go-ahead touchdown as the Steelers advanced to their first Super
Bowl.
"I didn't catch a pass that day as a
wide receiver," Swann recalled of Super Bowl IX. "But late in the game, Terry
Bradshaw called a reverse with me as the ball carrier. Franco Harris was on his
way to rushing for 158 yards … as a team we had already set a rushing record.
When the reverse was called, Franco stared at me. 'Don't lose any yards,' he
said. When we broke the huddle and lined up, an official stopped play
momentarily to change the ball. Standing there, I heard Carl Eller of the
Vikings yell, 'Look out for the reverse.' Franco and Terry looked at me and
laughed. Somehow I got back to the line of scrimmage."
The next year, Shanklin was traded
and Swann was inserted into the starting lineup. Even though the Steelers were a
running team, Swann managed 49 catches for 781 yards and a league-high 11
touchdown receptions.
In the 1975 AFC Championship Game, a
rematch against the Raiders, Swann suffered a concussion after being whacked by
Raiders' safety George Atkinson. Although the Steelers went on to win, it
initially appeared unlikely that Swann would be able to play in the Super Bowl.
But with two weeks off before the big game, a well-rested Swann recovered
sufficiently to play.
Not only did he play, he grabbed
four passes for 161 yards, scored one touchdown and set up another. Three of his
catches, as one veteran reporter noted, were of the "break-out-the-thesaurus
variety." The first was a 32-yarder down the sideline with tight coverage. Three
plays later the Steelers scored. On his second reception, a circus grab, he
dived, tipped the ball, did a mid-air twist, and caught it while lying the
ground – a 53-yard gain. His biggest catch of the game, however, came with just
minutes remaining, when he burned the Dallas defense with a 64-yard touchdown
catch that put the Steelers ahead, 21-10.
"My big catches that day are what
people remember," Swann said. "But in coming back from my concussion, my biggest
catch occurred on the first pass that Terry threw to me. I went up for a high,
graceful reception that gave me the confidence I needed to make the other
catches later on." The Steelers went on to win, 21-17, and Swann was named the
game's MVP.
"I'd like to say that we developed
Lynn
Swann," said Coach Chuck Noll. "But the
truth is he was perfectly developed as a football player the first time he
stepped on our practice field."
The following season began with the
assumption that Swann would continue his assent into the limelight as one of the
game's premier wide receivers. But in the first game of the season, disaster –
or rather George Atkinson – struck again.
In a now notorious play, Atkinson
walloped an unsuspecting Swann in the back of the head with a forearm smash.
Swann, who was clearly not involved in the play, lay motionless with another
concussion. The concussion caused Swann to miss two games, and that coupled with
a foot injury sustained later in the season, resulted in a statistically
disappointing season for the him.
Despite his injuries, Swann still
led the team in receptions and finished strong down the stretch. He caught 12
passes and scored three touchdowns in the last three regular season games,
including a remarkable five-reception outing in the snow in
Cincinnati. In the postseason, he added to his
growing reputation as a big-game performer by hauling in eight receptions for
two touchdowns in two games.
Swann, however, concerned about his
concussions, seriously considered retiring from the game after just three
seasons. Ultimately, he decided that he still enjoyed playing too much to call
it quits. He did decide, however, to take a vocal stand against the unnecessary
violence that existed in the game. His sometimes unpopular and courageous stance
against unsportsmanlike play eventually resulted in rules changes.
In 1977, Swann returned to full
form. His 50 receptions again led the Steelers. His outstanding play earned him
Pro Bowl and All-Pro honors for the second time in three years.
While 1977 was a terrific season for
the fourth-year veteran, 1978 was a breakout year. That season Swann had 61
catches for 880 yards, both career highs, and consistently demonstrated an
uncanny ability to deliver in the clutch. He also had his best postseason
performance with 13 catches for 274 yards and three touchdowns. His per catch
average in the playoffs was 21.1 yards. The Steelers, like Swann, also had a
great season and again advanced to the Super Bowl.
Super Bowl XIII was a déjà vu game
for the Steelers. Just as they had in Super Bowl X, they faced the Dallas
Cowboys. It was the same teams in the same Orange Bowl, the same coaches, and
many of the same players. Happily for the Steelers, their star receiver again
turned in a sterling performance with seven catches for 124 yards and a
touchdown.
John Stallworth, the Steelers other
outstanding receiver, caught two touchdown passes in Super Bowl XIII. The first
was on a pass play that Swann convinced Bradshaw to call, assuming his
quarterback would call his number.
"People tell me that John
(Stallworth) caught two touchdowns in the Super Bowl, and I only got one. But if
they want to nitpick, I got one-and-a-half because I put that play in," Swann
joked. "Terry called it in the huddle and looked at me and smiled and then
called it to John's side. We were doing things like that all year."
Swann and the Steelers pressed on to
a record fourth Super Bowl in 1979, a 31-19 victory over the Los Angeles Rams.
Swann caught five passes for 79 yards, including a 47-yard touchdown grab that
put the Steelers into the lead in the second half.
At the time of his retirement from
pro football, Swann, who was named to the All-NFL Team of the 1970s, held five
Super Bowl records, including career receptions, career receiving yards, career
touchdown receptions, yards in a game, and the highest punt return average in a
game. In 1991 he was named to the NFL's Super Bowl Silver Anniversary
Team.
Swann's career portfolio shows that
he recorded 336 receptions for 5,462 yards and 51 touchdowns. It also shows that
at the time of his retirement, he was the Steelers career leader in receptions,
receiving yards, and touchdown receptions. What it doesn't show is the
tremendous impact those receptions and yards had on the fortunes of one of pro
football's all-time great teams.
For nine seasons there was simply no
such thing as a Lynn
Swann-dropped pass. "I don't care if they
only throw one pass to me the whole game," Swann once said. "I'll make sure that
I catch that one."
THE STEAGLES, A TEAM THAT FIT THE TIME
By William Ecenbarger
Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
It was the worst of times, and it was the strangest
of times in 1943. Homemakers went from store to store looking for a stick of
butter. The Hit Parade included, "He's 1-A in the Army and He's A-1 in My
Heart." Night baseball was canceled to save electricity, the
Indianapolis 500 was canceled to save
gasoline and the U.S. Open was canceled to save rubber (used to make golf
balls).
And for the struggling National Football
League, it, too, was the strangest of times. The Eagles had just become the
Steelers and the Steelers had just become the
Eagles.
And then they became the Steagles.
Historically, the two Pennsylvania franchises, both in
their 11th seasons, were among the weakest in the league, and as the wartime
draft took more and more professional football players, it became clear that
neither could survive alone. And so in 1943, they merged. Officially, the team
was named the Phil-Pitt Eagles- Steelers, but to fans and headline writers
everywhere, they were the Steagles.
Ironically, the two teams joined forces just one year after
they had traded cities in one of the most complicated and little-known
transactions in the history of American sports. But let's go back to the
beginning:
It is no coincidence that the Steelers
and Eagles franchises began in 1933. It was in that year that voters in both
cities repealed the law banning professional sports on
Sundays.
In Pittsburgh, Art Rooney gave his team a strong local flavor by
recruiting players from the University of Pittsburgh and other area colleges. He
initially called his team the Pirates, after the city's big-league baseball
team.
In his first eight years of operating the
Pittsburgh franchise. Rooney estimated he lost
$100,000.
Meanwhile, the Eagles were owned by a syndicate
headed by Bert Bell, but the team lost $80,000 and 21 games in its first three
seasons. One by one, the investors dropped out, and by the end of the 1935
season Bell had the Eagles to himself. The
following year, the Eagles were shut out six times.
Bell became the coach, general manager, scout and public
relations director, and took to hawking tickets on downtown
Philadelphia
street
corners. Because the rent was cheap, the team played in the 102,000 seat
Municipal Stadium before at least 100,000 empty seats. One rainy Sunday, 50
people showed up for a game against the inept Brooklyn Dodgers;
Bell invited them up to the covered
press box, where he provided free coffee and hot dogs.
In 1940, the Pirates were so bad that Rooney sold
them at the end of the season to Alexis Thompson, a 26-year-old steel heir from
Boston frequently described in the press as a well-heeled
New
York playboy.
Thompson renamed the Pirates the Ironmen, but he planned to move the franchise
to Boston and play games in
FenwayPark.
Rooney and Bell had become close friends during the early NFL years,
and so, soon after he sold the Pittsburgh franchise, Rooney bought a half interest in the
struggling Philadelphia operation. The plan was to
field a combined Philadelphia- Pittsburgh team called the Keystoners that would
play home games in both cities.
But Thompson's planned move to
Boston was blocked by Redskins owner George Preston
Marshall, and so a switch was engineered. The Philadelphia franchise, now owned by Rooney and
Bell, moved to Pittsburgh, and the Pittsburgh franchise, owned by Thompson, moved to
Philadelphia.
After the deal was made, Rooney told a reporter for
the Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph: "The
original proposition was that Thompson would buy the franchise and take the
Pittsburgh club to Boston, and Bell and I would pool our interests
in a Philadelphia-Pittsburgh club, splitting the home games between two
cities.
"But then Thompson changed his mind and said he'd
keep the club in Pittsburgh.... Then I got an idea. I asked him if he'd like to
make a switch and let me stay in Pittsburgh and take over the Philadelphia territory himself. That suited him because
Philadelphia is so much closer to his
New
York headquarters, and that's how it worked
out."
Before the 1941 season, Rooney emphasized the break with
the past by sponsoring a contest to give the new team a name, and the Steelers
emerged.
Bell began the season as the Steelers' coach, but after
two losses, Rooney hired Buff Donelli. Bell
continued his part-ownership of
the Steelers until 1946 when he was elected NFL
Commissioner. He held that post until 1969 when he
died of a heart attack at Franklin Field in Philadelphia during a game between two teams
he had helped form -- the Steelers and the Eagles.
Donelli tried to coach the Steelers and the
DuquesneUniversity team at the same time. Five
losses later, Commissioner Elmer Layden ordered the Steelers to get a full-time
coach, and former Steelers (Pirates) player Walt Kiesling was hired. The
Steelers won one of their last four games.
The 1942 Steelers had their best year in history,
7-4, mostly because of the presence of Bill Dudley, who was their best runner,
best punter and best defensive player. But Dudley was drafted into the military right after the 1942
season, and there was considerable doubt that either of
Pennsylvania's professional football
franchises could field a team in 1943.
On Jan. 18,
1943, the Office of Price
Administration abruptly banned all pleasure driving, and almost overnight,
private automobiles disappeared from the nation's roads. Restaurants folded up,
and not a single one of the 15,000 thoroughbred racehorses in
America was running.
Railroads were still the keystone of the national
transportation system, but they had not recovered from the Depression. Rolling
stock was scarce, and the transportation of troops and military supplies took
precedence.
The Office of Defense Transportation announced in July that
professional football teams would reduce their travel by 37 percent in 1943 by
cutting the size of rosters from 33 to 28 and by revising their
schedules.
President Franklin D. Roosevelt never
firmly declared a policy on professional sports during the war. But FDR was
explicit on one point: No professional athlete subject to the draft would be
deferred.
Fathers were being drafted by 1943, and
the pool of quality players dried up. NFL owners found themselves fielding teams
composed of 4-Fs, inexperienced youths and overripe
veterans.
At the league's meeting, a motion to suspend the 1943
season was narrowly voted down. One of its advocates was Eagles owner Thompson,
who was now an Army corporal.
Because of the manpower shortage, the NFL instituted one of
the most profound rule changes in its history: free substitution. Purists had
opposed the idea for years on the theory that real football players ought to "go
both ways," i.e., play offense and defense. Although the depleted NFL rosters
prevented the development of platoons until after the war, free substitution
paved the way for today's separate offensive and defensive teams and the various
specialists.
The NFL allowed the Cleveland franchise to suspend operations because of heavy
losses to the war effort. And to complete the reduction from 10 to eight teams,
the league authorized the merger of the Philadelphia and Pittsburgh franchises.
Thompson, Bell and Rooney required all of the Steagles to work at
least 40 hours a week in defense plants. The team wore the Eagles'
green-and-white uniforms and trained at the
University of Pennsylvania's River Field for three hours, Monday through
Saturday, at 6 p.m.
"You worked all day, and you practiced all night, and
by the end of the day you were tired as hell," remembered Jack Hinkle, the
team's offensive star. Hinkle, who had been discharged from the Army Air Force
because of stomach ulcers, worked at the Bendix Aviation plant in
North
Philadelphia along with several teammates.
Hinkle recalled being paid $135 per game, or $1,350 for the
season, which he said was about average for 1943. "Most of us played because we
loved the game."
Even though the player limit had been reduced to 28 per
team, there were usually only 25 Steagles on the roster for games. Hinkle
recalled that the Steelers and Eagles got along very well during the 1943
season, but the coaches were another matter.
From the beginning, Philadelphia coach Earle "Greasy" Neale and
Kiesling were at each other's throats over strategy and personnel. A major point
of contention was where the new players would go after the merger was dissolved.
"There was a big blow-up about halfway through the season when Neale called one
of the Steelers a statue of (excrement)," said Hinkle. "Kiesling pulled all of
the Steelers off the practice field."
The Steagles started out like champions. In their
opening game at ShibePark on Oct. 2, they defeated the
Brooklyn Dodgers, 17-0, as the defense, led by former Steelers, held the
visitors to minus-44 yards rushing. The following week at Shibe, the Steagles
upset the mighty New York Giants, 26-14. On the downside, the Steagles fumbled
10 times to set an NFL record.
The bubble burst the following week at
Chicago's Wrigley Field where the big,
bad Bears crunched the Steagles, 48-21. On Oct. 24, the Steagles lost to the
Giants, 42-14, before 42,481 fans at the Polo Grounds.
In all, the Steagles played four games at
ShibePark, where they attracted crowds of about 33,000 each
time. There were smaller attendance figures for the two games played at Forbes
Field. They finished the season 5-4-1, which made it the first
winning season ever for the team named the Eagles and only second for the
Steelers.
With Neale and Kiesling increasingly at
each other's throats, the Steagles were dissolved after the
season.
HE EARNED HIS NICKNAME
By JOE HORRIGAN Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
He was the last
piece of the greatest draft in NFL history. The sturdiest piece, for sure, but
also the final piece.
Mike Webster, who was born March 18, 1952, in Tomahawk, Wisconsin, played
more seasons (15) and more games (220) than any other player in Pittsburgh
Steelers' history. He joined the Steelers as a part of that 1974 draft class
that netted the team four future Hall of Famers.
In order of their selection in that draft, those Hall of Fame players are:
Lynn Swann, Jack Lambert, John Stallworth and Mike Webster.
Since
Webster, an All-Big Ten center, stood just 6-foot-2 and weighed a mere 225
pounds -- a bantam weight by pro football standards -- there was considerable
doubt that he could handle opposing NFL Goliaths. However, he quickly
demonstrated that he could hold his own against the game's
best.
Always in top condition, Webster maintained an unswerving
dedication to excellence, and a quick learner, he was able to play in every game
during his first two seasons with the Steelers by splitting time at center with
veteran Ray Mansfield. Additionally, he was the long-snapper on all punts and
kicks.
However, in the final game of the 1975 season, Coach Chuck Noll decided to
insert Webster into the starting lineup. It was the beginning of a remarkable
string of 150 consecutive starts that lasted until 1986, when he missed the
first four games with a dislocated elbow, an injury that might have kept a
lesser man out twice as long.
Those were the only games "Iron Mike"
would miss during his first 16 seasons. From his rookie season through 1985,
Webster played in an amazing 177 consecutive games. As one veteran writer put
it, "nothing short of an Act of Congress" would keep Webster from taking his
place in the Steelers starting lineup.
"That's the toughness I
like," said Mansfield. "Not a macho toughness, where you've got to strut it
around, but an inner toughness, the John Wayne type who doesn't complain." The
com¬parison to the popular actor was no accident, since Mansfield knew his
former understudy was a big fan.
Noll put it another way. "John
Wayne may have been fiction in heroics. Mike's not fiction. Mike's real."
In 1976, Webster showed his versatility when injuries to the
Steelers' offensive line forced Noll to shuffle his linemen. Webster started the
first two games at center, the next six at guard, and the final six at center.
"Mike gives us versatility," said Steelers offensive line coach Dan Radakovich
prior to the start of the 1977 season. "He's got the quickness, strength and
intelligence to play center, guard or tackle. Mike was the best center in the
league last year. He's the best because he has great self
motivation."
Like most players, Webster found life in the NFL to be
a continuing education. And, like most offensive linemen, he quick¬ly realized
that fan recognition came primarily for mistakes.
Although Mike was snapping on punts since 1974, many fans weren't even aware
of his special teams role until a nationally-televised Monday night game in
1976, against the Minnesota Vikings. In that game, Steelers' punter Bobby Walden
was unable to handle a high snap from Webster, and the result was a botched
kick. That set up the Vikings second and clinching touchdown. Suddenly the
little-noticed center was the talk of the town.
Webster even
received a call from his father who suggested that his son wasn't looking
through his legs at the punter before lifting his head and snapping the ball.
Humbly, Webster had to acknowledge that his father's observation was on the
mark. "I hadn't been looking all year," Webster recalled. "I guess I got too
cocky. Rad (Radakovich) told me I was acting too much like a pro player. Now
they (the fans) know who I am. I'm not just a number," Webster added with a
smile.
Quickness, strength, intelligence and motivation were just a
few of the weapons found in the Webster football arsenal. Intimi¬dation was
another. "Watch any other lineman in the league; they all saunter up to the
line," former Steelers' offensive line coach Bill Meyers once observed. "But
Mike sprints to the line on every play. That's intimidating. He whipped your
butt on the last play and here he comes sprinting up to do it
again."
A natural leader, Webster played in 19 playoff games with
the Steelers and was the team's offensive captain for nine sea¬sons. "Webbie"
was considered the strongest Steelers player by most of his teammates and in the
1980 offseason he gave credence to that belief by winning the NFL's Strongman
Competition.
"I always felt the best way to be able to do my best
was to just get going and keep going for as long as I could," Webster said. "I
had a coach tell me one time, `You'll play much better if you just relax a
little more between plays.' Well he just doesn't understand. That guy over there
on the other side of the line is trying to beat me up on every play. I'm not
real calm about that. I do much better if I just keep a steady pace for as long
as I can."
Webster's steady play earned him All-Pro recognition six
straight years from 1978 to 1983, and he was named to the All-AFC team five
times from 1978 through 1982. Nine times he made the Pro Bowl. That's more than
any offensive lineman in NFL history. "Mike has been the thing you work around,"
explained Noll. "It's the one position we never had to concern ourselves
with."
Although individual recognition came fast and furiously for
Webster, he was the consummate team player. "I was very, very fortunate to have
been a part of a collective group of people who accomplished something that's
very, very rare in any profession," he once said about the Steelers' four Super
Bowl wins. "There's just no feeling like collectively doing something to be the
best, and sharing that feeling with others."
Throughout his career,
Webster maintained a work ethic -- report early, leave late and play hurt --
that earned him the respect of everyone who ever played with him. He credits his
strength and conditioning as the primary reason he was able to avoid serious
injury during his career. As a part of his condi¬tioning, Webster maintained a
weight room in his home and for a period of time even had a blocking sled in his
front yard.
"I'm not a very good athlete," he offered. "I don't run very well, and I'm
not very agile or nimble. The only chance I have to be suc¬cessful is if I'm in
better condition than the other guy."
Mike's dedication and work
ethic didn't go unnoticed. In 1985, following an early-season game with the
Houston Oilers, his teammates awarded him with a game ball for his courageous
play. Not only did he start that game, but he played every offensive down
despite having missed the entire week of practice with an extremely painful back
injury.
"Every offensive lineman wants to grow up to be Mike
Web¬ster," former Steelers' guard Craig Wolfley once said of his teammate. "But
when God made him, he used a different kind of material. There will never be
another one like him."
On Feb. 1, 1988, the Steelers announced that
they were leaving their long-time star unprotected under Plan B, the NFL's
modified form of free agency. Twenty-three days later, Webster, the last active
member of the Steelers to have played in all four Super Bowl championships,
announced his retirement. Five days after that, the Kansas City Chiefs announced
that they had hired Webster as an assistant line coach.
But within
a few weeks the 15-year veteran realized that he still had the desire to play.
Together, Chiefs' President/General Manager Carl Peterson and Coach Marty
Schottenheimer, convinced "Iron Mike" to return to the field.
"Playing is the best way I can contribute to this organization right now," he
said in an¬nouncing the continuation of his playing career. "I still feel
strongly about playing, and I believe I can contribute in a positive fashion. It
will be a tremendous challenge, and that excites me."
At age 37,
Webster was a little uneasy about starting over, but after six weeks in the
weight room he knew he was up to the task. Along with his considerable talent,
Webster brought some¬thing more to the Chiefs -- experience and a winning
tradition. "When opportunity comes along, you have to be ready in this business
-- in any business," Webster told a reporter. "There are 46 people trusting me
if I'm called upon. I get a certain satisfaction knowing that I'm a dependable
guy."
And dependable he was. Webster was the Chiefs' starting center in 1989 and
played in all 16 games.
In the 1990 season, his 17th in the NFL,
Webster was used more as a spot player, as relief for rookie Tim Grunhard.
Put¬ting it in perspective, Grunhard was 6 years old when Webster began his pro
career. Once again demonstrating his long-standing belief that the team success
far out-weighed individual recogni¬tion, Webster accepted his new role with
typical stoic dignity.
"It doesn't matter to me who starts," he
commented. "There are lots of ways for me to help the team. We've all got to
commu¬nicate and work together and do what is best for the
team."
Following the 1990 season, Mike Webster officially ended his
245-game career when he again announced his planned retirement. "It's been 17
wonderful years, but one thing you learn in this game is reality," he explained.
"It's time."
CHANDNOIS HAD IT ALL
By JIM SARGENT Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
Lynn Chandnois may be remembered today only by the older generation of pro
football fans, but a look at his career and his statistics illustrates that for
a few years he was one of the National Football League's top halfbacks.
Jerry Nuzum, a standout halfback and defensive back for the Steelers during
1948-1951, said this about Chandnois at a 1979 old-timers reunion.
"Lynn had everything: size, speed, and shiftiness," Nuzum said, "but Walt
Kiesling was our coach, and he didn't know how to deal with players. Those
coaches today do a lot of teaching. Back then we were expected to know how to
play."
What is Chandnois' story?
After his parents died, Lynn, who was born on Feb. 24, 1925, in Michigan's
upper peninsula, moved to Flint to live with an aunt and go to school. He was a
talented natural athlete who loved competing in all sports.
At Flint Central High he earned All-State honors in both basketball and
football. But after graduating in 1944, he joined the Naval Air Corps and served
for two years.
At 6-foot-2, 195, when he entered Michigan State in 1946, the 21-year-old
freshman started at forward and lettered in basketball. But after one season he
got married and concentrated on football. One year later Lynn and Mary, living
in a campus apartment, had their first daughter, Lynda, and Suzanne came a few
years later.
A Physical Education major, Chandnois became the right halfback for four
years, the last three under Coach "Biggie" Munn. In 1947 Munn's team switched to
a complex multiple offense, which included the T-formation, and Chandnois
usually played the blocking back.
The fastest man on the team, Chandnois could run the 100 yards in uniform in
10 seconds. Often he ran the quick reverse, plus he returned kickoffs and punts.
A bruising straight-ahead runner, "Chad" was most dangerous in the open field,
where he had an instinctive sense of when to cut, shift speeds, and sprint.
Although Chandnois prefers not to talk about his achievements, his name still
graces Michigan State's record book. For example, from 1946 through 1949 he
averaged 6.52 yards per carry, which ranks second all-time at the school. His
1948 average of 7.48 yards per carry is the all-time single-season record, while
his 1949 average of 6.86 yards ranks third.
Following his senior season, Chandnois starred in the East-West Shrine game,
played on New Year's Day in 1950, at San Francisco's Kezar Stadium. Playing for
the East squad, which won, 28-6, Chandnois gained 44 yards on six carries,
caught five passes for 116 yards, and scored two touchdowns -- after playing the
first quarter as a defensive back.
While Eddie LeBaron, the 5-8 quarterback from College of the Pacific, was
voted game MVP, Notre Dame coach Frank Leahy told reporters, "Chandnois was
easily the most outstanding player on the field."
Chandnois had already signed to play for the Cleveland Browns of the
All-American Football Conference, but the AAFC merged with the NFL in December
1949. The merger came after Chandnois signed with Cleveland -- one of three AAFC
franchises to join the NFL. Commissioner Bert Bell supervised the reorganized
NFL's draft, and Pittsburgh took Chandnois first.
"Art Rooney and Bert Bell were buddy-buddy," Chandnois recalled, "and they
told me I had to go with Pittsburgh. We didn't have any lawyers or anything like
that. So I said, 'If I have to go to Pittsburgh, I want a bonus.'
"They said, 'We just paid to the Cleveland Browns the bonus they paid
you.'
"'I don't care,' I said. 'I want an additional bonus.' So they said, OK, and
I got a bonus, and that's how I ended up with Pittsburgh."
Chandnois made the adjustment, and today he has mostly fond memories of his
years with the Steelers.
While he had a good rookie season, Chad was sometimes slowed by injuries,
including knee and rib problems. Pittsburgh, coached by John Michelosen, was the
only NFL club still using the single wing offense, and the passing attack,
triggered by triple-threat tailback Joe Geri, a 36 percent passer in 1950,
sputtered. The Steelers scored 180 points, lowest in the NFL.
Pittsburgh finished 6-6, and Chandnois placed third among Steelers in
rushing, but he didn't score a touchdown.
Still, he excelled on kickoff returns, where his great broken-field running
allowed him to elude defenders. He topped the Steelers with 351 yards on 12
returns, a 29.3 average. "Vitamin" Smith of the Rams led the NFL with a 33.7
average.
In 1951, Chandnois, despite a broken toe, became a regular in the Steelers
backfield. While Michelosen kept the single wing, the defense held opponents to
two touchdowns or fewer in six games. Tough defense characterized the team,
including linemen Ernie Stautner and Bill McPeak, and Jack Butler and Jerry
Shipkey.
But the Steelers finished 4-7-1, fourth in the six-team conference largely
because their passers threw 26 interceptions. Chandnois, for example, completed
16 of 43 passes with two touchdowns but four interceptions.
Pittsburgh's up-and-down 1951 season is best illustrated by a tough loss to
the Green Bay Packers on Oct. 7. With three minutes gone in the second quarter,
quarterback Tobin Rote plunged 1-yard for the touchdown that gave the Packers a
28-0 lead.
Inspired by Chandnois, Pittsburgh caught fire on the damp, chilly day. He
scored twice within four minutes, first on a touchdown reception covering 34
yards, and again on a 2-yard end sweep, which cut the deficit to 28-14. End
Charlie Mehelich tackled Green Bay's Jack Cloud for a safety, and Rogel plowed 2
yards to score, just before halftime, and the deficit was cut to 28-23.
Early in the third quarter, Pittsburgh moved ahead, 30-28, when halfback Jim
Finks returned an interception 50 yards for a touchdown, and then Joe Geri's
field goal upped the lead to 33-28.
At that point Pittsburgh had made the greatest comeback in NFL history. But
with less than five minutes in the game, Rote put together the winning drive and
capped it with a 16-yard touchdown pass to Bob Mann, and Green Bay won,
35-33.
The 1952 season looked promising, however, when Art Rooney went back to Coach
Joe Bach, who had led the Steelers in 1935-1936. Bach switched to the
T-formation and installed Jim Finks as quarterback. While the new system
generated more offense and fan excitement, Pittsburgh's record improved only to
5-7.
Still, Chandnois performed so brilliantly in 1952 that, in addition to being
named All-Pro, he became the second Steelers player to be voted NFL Player of
the Year by the Washington Touchdown Club. Triple-threat halfback Bill Dudley
had won the award in 1946.
Chandnois rushed for 298 yards, second on the club. He placed third in
receiving yards, catching 28 passes for 370 and two touchdowns. In kickoff
returns Chandnois again led the NFL with 599 yards on 17 returns, a 35.2 yard
average -- still the top single-season average in franchise history. He ran back
two kickoffs for touchdowns.
There was one kickoff Chandnois had to return twice for a touchdown. On Nov.
30 at Forbes Field against the New York Giants, Chandnois, despite falling snow
and frigid temperatures, ran back Ray Poole's opening kick to the end zone. But
an offside violation nullified the score. After a five-yard penalty, Chandnois
returned the second kick 91 yards for a touchdown.
The inspired Steelers turned the game into a rout and won, 63-7. It was the
most points scored by the Steelers and the worst defeat suffered by the Giants.
Said Art Rooney, also owner of the Shamrock Stables, about the scoring return by
Chandnois: "If my horses could go that fast I'd be a wealthy man!"
Walt Kiesling, the assistant coach since 1949, wasn't overly impressed by
Chandnois, double-touchdown effort.
Chandnois: "Art Rooney always used to have a story. He said, 'Lynn, I know
Walt Kiesling didn't like you,' and I told Art that was O.K. because I didn't
like Kiesling either. See, I was the Steelers' representative to the NFL Pension
Plan. I used to give Walt a bad time. I would say, 'We want this, and we want
that.'
"But Art's story was about the game against the New York Giants in 1952. I
took the opening kickoff back for a touchdown. But one of our guys was offside,
so the play was called back. They kicked it again, and I ran it back again for a
touchdown.
"Walt Kiesling told Art Rooney after the game, 'Isn't Chandnois the luckiest
guy you ever saw in your life?'
"That was one of Art Rooney's favorite stories about me."
Chandnois, other touchdown runback covered 93 yards against the Philadelphia
Eagles at Shibe Park on Oct. 12, 1952. He made the run in the second quarter,
cutting the Eagles, lead to 10-7. Film highlights show a dazzling play:
Chandnois caught Chuck Bednarik's kick on the 7-yard line, angled right, then
left. Behind good blocking, he turned up the speed near the 30, cut right near
the 45, and sprinted past the remaining Eagles into the right corner of the end
zone.
Chandnois produced another fine season in 1953, but the Steelers finished
fourth at 6-6 only after winning their last two games – 21-17 over the Cardinals
and 14-13 over the Redskins. Once more the Steelers defense proved more
consistent than the offense. Chandnois tied Fran Rogel for club rushing honors
with a 3.8 yard average. He gained 470 yards and scored three touchdowns. He
also caught 42 passes for 412 yards, but none for touchdowns.
Chandnois scored on a return for the third time in his career to help
Pittsburgh topple the Giants, 24-14, on Oct. 3, 1953. But statistics do not
measure the value of Chandnois to the Steelers, because numbers cannot show big
plays. As Pittsburgh sportswriter Pat Livingston observed in 1953, "It's in the
clutch that the long-legged, 205-pound Chandnois is most likely to come through.
In the matter of kickoff returns, Chandnois has no peer." During his first four
years in the NFL, Chandnois averaged 30 yards per return while the average NFL
return was 22 yards.
Chandnois performed brilliantly during his first four seasons, but injuries
hindered him thereafter.
Throughout his seven-year NFL career, Chandnois was the Steelers back most
likely to make the big play, catch a crucial pass, or spark the offense with a
fine kick return. When that threat was removed, however, Pittsburgh's offense
often misfired.
"Chandnois' value was never more apparent," wrote Livingston on Dec. 6, 1955,
as the former All-American was awaiting knee surgery, "than in the last two
games when, playing without him, the Steelers were unable to get any kind of a
running attack going."
With his knee fully recovered before the 1956 training camp, Chandnois, now
31, played superbly.
Consider these 1956 highlights:
Against Washington in the Forbes Field opener on September 30, before 27,718
happy fans, Chandnois scored twice on short runs, caught a 17-yard pass from Ted
Marchibroda for a third touchdown, returned a kickoff 91 yards to set up
the fourth score, and Pittsburgh won, 30-13.
At home against Cleveland on Saturday, Oct. 6, Chandnois scored the lone
Steelers touchdown with a 1-yard plunge in the second quarter. The Browns
finally won, 14-10, but only after a last-second Marchibroda pass from the
4-yard line was batted down in the end zone.
After being hampered by a twisted knee during two defeats, Chandnois scored
one of three Steelers touchdowns against Cleveland on a dive play. But he was
helped from the field in the final minutes with "a possible right shoulder
separation."
In fact, Chandnois had suffered a fractured shoulder. After five games, his
season, actually his career, was over.
Before he left football in 1957, Chandnois switched from his offseason
insurance business to a brokerage firm that he co-owned with Pirates pitcher Bob
Friend. Two years later he sold out to Friend and entered the steel business. He
also moved his family back to Flint, and in 1960 he was divorced.
Despite his injuries and some tough times, Chandnois enjoyed an impressive
career with Pittsburgh.
"Pittsburgh is a great sports-minded town, long before they won the Super
Bowls in the 1970s. I can remember the day we beat the New York Giants, 63-7. We
had about three inches of snow that fell the night before the game. When the
game started, we had only about 5,000 fans. But at halftime, we had 25,000 or
30,000 in the stands. They heard it on the radio, and they came out to the
ballpark.
"Also, Art Rooney was just a wonderful president. He always called me
'star.'
"Football was terrific for me, and Mr. Rooney and Pittsburgh were always
kind," Chandnois said in 1995. "Steelers fans always treated me extremely well
and I was really pulling for them to go all the way to the Super Bowl and win
it. Art Rooney and Biggie Munn are the two men I admire most. They were great to
me."
Added Jerry Nuzum, "If Chuck Noll had coached Chandnois, he'd be in the Hall
of Fame."
KEMP WAS PITTSBURGH’S PIONEER
By BOB BARNETT Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
For black athletes, the integration of American sport and the struggle for
acceptance by white teammates, coaches, and fans has never been an easy task.
When Jackie Robinson integrated major league baseball in 1947 with the Brooklyn
Dodgers, he faced verbal abuse, dirty play, and hostile fans. Bill Willis and
Marion Motley of the 1946 Cleveland Browns in the then-new All- American
Football Conference were prohibited by state law from playing against the
Seahawks at Miami, Florida, and were the targets of death threats.
Even Roberto Clemente, one of the first Spanish-speaking black Pirates, was
vilified early in his career in the press and by the fans as being lazy and a
malingerer. And every black athlete who integrated formerly all-white college
teams had to deal with social ostracism and discrimination. Yet each faced these
ordeals knowing that their actions would hold the door open for other black
athletes to follow. Many were suc¬cessful and have subsequently been honored for
the price they paid.
For Ray Kemp, the struggle was more difficult, the price higher, and the
tangible rewards have been practically nonexist¬ent. Kemp was a charter member
of the Pittsburgh Steelers (then Pirates) when they entered the NFL in 1933. He
was the only black Pirates player and only one of two black players in the
entire NFL. His struggle took place in the heart of the Depression when economic
conditions stimulated a rising tide of racism, and blacks and whites tended to
separate into their own worlds.
Worse yet, Kemp's battle to maintain a foothold for black players in the NFL
was a lonely struggle with few rewards in sight.
Ray Kemp graduated from Cecil High School in 1926. He worked in the coal
mines around Cecil for one year before enrolling at Duquesne University.
Kemp's arrival at Duquesne coincided with that of Elmer Layden, one of Notre
Dame's legendary four horsemen, who had been hired to resurrect the Iron Dukes'
struggling football program. Looking back at the first day of practice, Kemp
recalled seeing only two other black players. Kemp said, "They were gone after
my first year so I was the only black on the team. In fact, I can't remember
even playing against another black player the whole four years I played at
Duquesne."
Kemp, hardened and matured by his year in the mines, became a starter during
his sophomore year, and by the end of his senior season received honorable
mention on some All-American lists. Layden's coaching also succeeded beyond
expectation. His 1928 team won eight of nine games, and his 1929 team finished
the season undefeated. By 1931, Kemp's senior season, the Dukes had progressed
to the point that they played national power Carnegie Tech in a postseason
charity game.
Kemp's entry into the NFL came about because of his success at Duquesne. "Art
Rooney came up to me at our athletic banquet following my senior year at
Duquesne and told me that he would like for me to play for his J.P. Rooney
semi-pro team, if I was going to stay around Pittsburgh," Kemp recalled.
The following year Kemp enrolled in graduate school at Duquesne and served as
the line coach for Layden. In his spare time he did play for both the J.P.
Rooneys and the semi-pro Erie Pros, again as the only black player.
The following year, the Rooneys became the nucleus of the Pittsburgh team
that joined the NFL and eventually would be named the Steelers. Art Rooney Sr.,
once described the transition this way: "I had teams which compared favorably
with most of the teams in the NFL. But we had the Blue Laws in Pennsylvania and
the Blue Laws were such that you couldn't play football on Sunday and belong to
an organized league. In 1933, they voted the Blue Laws out and I just took my
team and went into the National Football League."
That year, when Kemp and some of his Rooney teammates were joined by a
collection of NFL cast-offs to form the team then known as the Pirates, there
was only one other black player in the NFL -- Joe Lillard -- a tailback with the
Chicago Cardinals. From the founding of the league in 1929 through 1931, 11
black athletes played in the NFL, but by 1932 Joe Lillard was the only black
player remaining.
The Pirates opened the season on Sept. 20 vs. the defending Eastern Division
champion New York Giants before a crowd of 25,000 in Forbes Field. As expected,
the Giants rolled over the expansion team 23-2, but for Kemp it was a
bittersweet experience.
"I can recall it as if it were yesterday, the tremen¬dous ovation I received
when they announced that I was going in at tackle," Kemp once said. "I had my
hands taped heavily because that's what we did in those days for linemen. On
about the third or fourth play I was in, I broke through and their passer threw
the ball right into my hands, but I couldn't hold it because of the tape. Also I
remember that my style of defense didn't quite harmonize with my teammates
because I stood up and used my hands, and they were very critical. I talked it
over with Elmer Layden after the game and he said, `They're crazy, Ray. I saw
the game and you were tremendous.'"
The following week, the Chicago Cardinals with Joe Lillard came to Forbes
Field. Lillard, a triple-threat back, played a tremendous game. He completed a
touchdown pass and kicked one of two extra points.
The Pirates did stop Lillard in the fourth quarter when he and a Pirates
defensive player were ejected from the game for fighting, a problem that
followed Lillard throughout the season. Kemp said, "Joe (Lillard) was an angry
young man and the players on the other teams knew what would set him off. I
could take care of myself pretty well in the line so I never had those kind of
prob¬lems." With Lillard out of the lineup the Pirates stormed back for a 14-13
victory, their first in the NFL.
The next week however, the Pirates lost 21-6 to the Boston Redskins and the
Monday after that game, Ray Kemp was released from the Pirates.
"I received a letter saying I had been dropped from the roster," Kemp said.
"I talked with Art Rooney and I can recall his exact words. He said, `Ray, I
feel you are as good a ballplayer as we have on the club, but I am not going
over the head of the coach. You know how I feel about you personally.'
"I didn't talk to Douds personally, but he was a player-coach at my position
-- tackle -- and he had a lot of cronies on the team," added Kemp. "I just think
it was a combination of things."
Kemp went back to his job in the steel mill, and the Pirates went 2-5 over
the next seven games. But on Dec. 1 he received a phone call from the Pirates
asking him to return to the team.
"I guess I could have felt humiliated about being cut earlier and said no. I
didn't need the money -- I only got $60 a game. But I felt someone had to keep
the door open. You have to pay a price for being a pioneer," Kemp said.
Strangely enough, Kemp was named to the starting lineup after only two days
of practice and played the entire game at tackle against the New York Giants.
Unfortunately for the Pi¬rates, the Giants were on their way to the Eastern
Division championship and romped over the Pirates, 27-3, at the Polo Grounds. It
was before this game in New York that Kemp paid more of that price he spoke
of.
"We arrived in New York very late Friday evening and the hotel was jammed
with fans looking forward to attending the Army-Navy game the next day. They
assigned the Pirates players to their rooms and I was standing there. The
traveling secretary said, `Ray, I want to introduce you to the assistant manager
of the hotel.' We were in New York and my guard was completely down. This man
said, 'Ray, it seems we have a problem. We're sorry, we just don't have any
room. We were wondering if you could stay at the YMCA, the Harlem branch of the
YMCA.'
"Well I had no alterna¬tive but to say, 'Yes, I imagine I can.' That was one
of the longest walks or my life -- to walk from that desk to the front door of
the hotel."
The following morning Kemp was contacted by Walter White of the NAACP who
suggested he file a discrimination suit. Kemp re¬calls, "I told him I wasn't
being an Uncle Tom or anything, but I didn't want to file a suit that might hurt
Art Rooney. He had given me a chance."
That game in New York was the final game of Kemp's brief career in the NFL.
The next season he was hired as the head football coach at Bluefield State
College in West Virginia. "The Pirates didn't ask me to come back," said Kemp,
"but I wouldn't have anyway because I really wanted a coaching job."
In Kemp's first season at Bluefield State he led the Blues to an 8-0-1
record. That year was the first of a 39-year career as a successful coach and
athletic director at Bluefield, at Lincoln University in Missouri and at
Tennessee A&I College.
Joe Lillard did not return to the Cardinals in 1934 nor were any black
rookies signed. The 1935 season began a string of twelve seasons in which the
NFL had no black players. In 1946, the Los Angeles Rams reintegrated the NFL
with the signings of Woody Strode and Ken Washington. The brand new All-American
Football Conference opened its first season with black players Bill Willis and
Marion Motley of the Cleveland Browns.
Ray Kemp, a soft-spoken, articulate, and gentle man, once said, "It wasn't
too bad in the sense that every¬where I went I had white people befriend me --
like Elmer Layden and Art Rooney. I always felt that someone had to pay the
price for being a pioneer, and I tried."
For black pioneers like Jackie Robinson, there is a postage stamp in his
honor and a place in history books. For other black pioneers like Ray Kemp,
there are only bittersweet memories of a price honorably paid.
FROM THE FIELD TO THE COURT
By ED KIELY Ed Kiely, a long-time Steelers publicity director, wrote this
about U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron "Whizzer" White in 1981 for PRO Magazine.
The room is so high-ceilinged and spacious that you could shoot baskets in it
– though, of all the high-ceilinged, spacious rooms in this particular complex
of offices, this might be the only one that would prompt such a thought.
The reason sits behind the desk, a plain mahogany desk that holds an
old-fashioned upright typewriter and a space-age computer terminal. Scattered on
the floor nearby are legal books and papers. It looks like the kind of mess a
college sophomore makes at finals time.
For the man behind the desk, it always is finals time. Only his deadlines are
set, not by some professor, but by the pressures of history and the conflicting
claims of power-brokers. His "term papers" command the attention of the nation –
sometimes, of the world. Oh, and one other thing: He never has to worry about a
grade.
But then, some college jocks never do, right?
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White, a college jock who did worry about
his grades, has gone on to achieve non-athletic excellence that – in at least
some people's minds anyway – far transcends the significance of his rushing
statistics. But he never has been able to outlive the fame that his first career
brought him. For instance, he is the only Supreme Court justice with a
nickname.
At 64, "Whizzer" still is trim and athletic-looking. The handsome,
square-jawed face that made all the sports pages in 1938, when White signed a
contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates Football Club for the sum of $15,800
(munificent for the period), has aged into the high-domed, finely chiseled face
of a no-nonsense Presbyterian elder. But his voice is soft, his sense of humor
unexpected – and, to an observer who is inclined to be struck solemn inside the
Supreme Court, so is his behavior.
Immediately upon sinking down into the big chair behind his desk, White
swings his long, lean legs up in the air, bringing them to rest squarely on the
top of his modern desk. The unexpected sight of a Supreme Court justice's soles
makes an observer wonder: Could a similarly talented pair of feet, starting from
the same line of scrimmage today, carry its owner to such a remote goal as this
– the top of a mahogany desk in one of the most important institutions in the
world?
The Justice, a man of humble origins who parlayed his athletic and academic
skills into a successful career in law and politics and power, thinks it could
happen. But he also thinks that maybe it wouldn't be as much fun today as it was
back at the University of Colorado, playing three sports and making straight
A's.
"I don't know whether I would have ever put up with what these college guys
go through now," says the Justice. He thinks the new rules of the game have made
a lot of student-athletes a little schizophrenic. "I would think it would be
terribly difficult these days, balancing. There weren't anywhere near the
pressures on people those days to devote your heart and soul to athletics."
The life White remembers, on the other hand, was idyllic. "I played three
sports and I loved it," he says.
But White thinks his memories of the fun he had playing ball in college are
just that – memories. "I don't think you could do that anymore," he says. "I
don't think a football coach, especially if you were on scholarship, ever would
let you do that. You wouldn't have the time. They wouldn't let you lay off
spring football."
Obviously not above sowing sedition in the ranks of student-athletes, the
Justice says, "If I were on my own, if I were just a walk-on, I would either run
it my way or I wouldn't put up with it. It isn't worth it."
Ironically, White may have played a big part in the genesis of some of the
pressures he now decries. Many club owners date the beginning of a new trend in
professional football to 1938, the year Arthur J. Rooney of the Pittsburgh
Pirates (now the Steelers) signed White, an All-America and a legend at
Colorado. Earlier in the decade, football salaries were about equal with
salaries offered young collegians entering the business world. Many of the major
college football stars opted for desk jobs upon graduation.
White's signing changed all that. Because of Rooney's generous salary, and
because of his own scholastic and athletic abilities, he became an important
role model. The prototypical All-American boy, he encouraged other college stars
to investigate the NFL by making college football respectable.
Initially, he refused Rooney's offer. A college senior at the time, he wanted
to play, but he felt he had a more pressing engagement. White had received a
prestigious Rhodes Scholarship and was due in England that October to begin his
studies at Oxford. Still, it rankles White that he had to refuse Rooney. He
thought it would have been rewarding – in more ways than one – to have played a
year and then gone to Oxford. An athletic star in the days before athletic
scholarships were readily available, White had worked his way through school as
a hash-slinger. It would be nice not to have to do that sort of thing in
England, White thought. It would be nice to go with a little money – and time to
travel. He wrote to his brother.
There are a lot of ambitious parents these days who spend thousands of
dollars on prep schools, guidance counselors, tutors, child psychologists, and
testing coaches, all to get their children into the right institutions of higher
education. Albert and Maude White, two Coloradoans who never went beyond high
school, never did any of that, but they obviously did something right. They had
two Rhodes Scholars.
The older son, Sam, already was at Oxford when he received Byron's letter
about the football contract he had turned down. In typical big-brother fashion,
Sam immediately concluded that the kid was crazy. He told him so – and then told
him he would talk to the Rhodes Scholarship officials at Oxford about an
extension. Finally, they agreed.
"I never would have played if I had not been able to get the deferment,"
White says. "The Rhodes people had never given one before as far as I could find
out."
During the next two years, moving between two very different worlds, White
was to make two friends who would continue to pop in and out of his life at odd,
unexpected moments. One was Johnny "Blood" McNally, player-coach of Rooney's
football team. The other was John F. Kennedy, son of the U.S. Ambassador to
Great Britain.
Though they were very different personalities, it is not surprising that
Blood and White became friends. Blood possessed idiosyncrasies calculated to
delight White, a rookie who read law books on the team train while everyone else
was playing cards. White quoted Shakespeare and liked to play the professor.
Blood, on the other hand, cultivated a kind of flamboyance that would be lost
today, when the outward signs of sports superstardom are big cars, fancy
clothes, big houses and gold jewelry. It wasn't, however, lost on White, a man
who says he had to work hard and give up a great deal in order to be a
successful scholar-athlete. White nonetheless appreciates a good con artist. The
justice smiles broadly and the eyes behind the glasses twinkle with mischief
when he talks of Johnny "Blood."
"Blood was a coach, a player-coach," White deadpans. "And of course, people
wished he'd do more – do more of each. Every now and then, he just wouldn't show
up." For White, Blood's antics provided some much-needed comic relief. "We had a
miserable season and Art (Rooney) had miserable luck financially. We didn't have
a good team. The regular season wasn't so bad, but those warmup sandlot games
really killed you. Go down to Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and play in the
gravel."
Small wonder then, that White's first reaction was to thank the young man who
came to his door about a year later with a polite but firm warning. It was one
of the first days at Oxford for White, who had just retired – as it turned out,
temporarily – after a year in pro football. The visitor, White recalls, "was
some very pleasant English lad who wanted to let me know that they understood I
was a professional and would appreciate it if I didn't attempt to play any
athletics.
"Which suited me fine," White says. "I thanked him. I said, 'Thank God.' I
was so tired of athletics. It was just like coming out into the sunshine, to go
to school and not have to go out and knock your damn brains out at three o'clock
every day. I had a marvelous time, just riding bicycles and learning how to play
squash and tennis."
However, there was at least one group in England that did not share the
anti-professional attitude – the children of America's ambassador to England,
members of a family that later would bring touch football to the White House
lawn. White says he first met John F. Kennedy at one of the receptions Kennedy's
father, the ambassador, regularly held for Rhodes Scholars. And though White
does not say this, it probably is safe to assume that young JFK, accustomed to
seeing America's best and brightest parade through his home, probably would have
been more inclined to sit up and take notice of the one who played in the gravel
at Johnstown for such fabulous sums of money. Whatever the reason, Kennedy
looked up White the following summer when the two of them – they were almost
exact contemporaries – were in Munich. "We gave Munich the once-over," White
says with a smile, but with a Presbyterian elder look that indicates he has no
inclination to reveal the youthful indiscretions of a national leader – whether
a former President or a sitting Justice.
White's and Kennedy's Munich summer came on the eve of World War II. By fall,
England was in the fight, and all the Rhodes Scholars were sent home. White's
youth was not quite over yet. He resumed his dual student-athlete identity,
playing autumns and studying the rest of the year at Yale Law School.
Rooney's team dealt the rights to negotiate with White to the Detroit Lions
while White was studying at Oxford. Whizzer signed with the Lions in 1940 when
he returned to the United States.
As he had done in his rookie year with Rooney's Pirates (567 yards in 1938),
White led the NFL in rushing (with 514 yards) in 1940, his first season with
Detroit. But after two years of that, America was getting ready to go to war,
and so was Whizzer White.
"I signed up for the Navy," he says. "I went in and applied for a commission
in Naval intelligence and ended up in the Pacific, afloat." There, he again
crossed paths with John F. Kennedy. White wrote the official report of Kennedy's
heroic actions in command of the PT109. When the survivors were brought in, his
old Munich running mate was among them.
After the war, White finished his studies at Yale Law School – still using
money had had earned with the Steelers – and began looking for work of a
non-athletic nature. He landed what probably would count as the most prestigious
apprenticeship in his field, serving as law clerk to Supreme Court Chief Justice
Fred Vinson. White and his new bride, Marion, moved to Washington, D.C. "And
guess who was here … a freshman congressman by the name of John Kennedy," White
says. "He was right down the street here in the old House office building. So we
got acquainted again."
It didn't last long. The Whites soon were off to Denver, where he set up a
law practice and lost touch with Kennedy. "I didn't ever really follow him, or
hear anything except what I read about him every now and then," White says,
"until about 1958 when he began running for president." White was active with a
University of Denver group that sponsored lectures, and one of the speakers they
scheduled was Kennedy. "He drew a full house and a good many of his people were
there," White says. "We had a good chat then, and it was soon after that I began
becoming a little more interested in perhaps doing some work on the presidential
campaign.
"I'd always been in politics," White says. "Local politics. I was a party
hack and board chairman for years and always had gotten involved in every
political campaign for somebody, maybe a judge or a congressman or a senator or
a state legislator or somebody. But this time I hooked up with this campaign.
And of course, that's the reason I'm here now."
Nominated to the Supreme Court by President Kennedy, White was sworn in as
its 93rd justice on April 16, 1962. So he returned to Washington.
White's status now is, in a way, not so different from what it was back in
the 1930s when United Press International had to send its top sports columnist,
the late Henry McLemore, to Colorado to see whether this kid called Whizzer was
"the real stuff." There is something very collegiate about Washington, D.C.,
with its many transients, its pristine landscaping, its competitive pace, and
its proliferation of critics on all subjects.
It is not the sports writers, but the court reporters who now are
scrutinizing White's performance to see if he has the real stuff. And apparently
they think he does. In all the criticism of the Supreme Court that has become
fashionable since publication of the book, "The Brethren," no one ever has
questioned the credentials, or the work of White.
A genial man with a ready, self-effacing sense of humor, he has handled his
latest encounter with fame and fortune with unassuming grace – the same way he
handled it the first time around. Art Rooney said that the young White fit into
the NFL scene, the bus rides and train rides punctuated by card games and
practical jokes, very well – even though he was a Rhodes Scholar and even though
he was paid so much more than his teammates. Today, White – who would rather
talk about a painting he saw at the National Gallery during his lunch hour than
about himself – fits into the tony, high-brow Washington scene very well, too.
Even if he sometimes is apt to bring an old teammate to the White House for
dinner.
At least, that's the way some of White's old NFL friends tell it. The story,
according to them, is that one day White's former coach, Johnny Blood, showed up
at the door of the White's Washington home – unannounced as usual. The Whites
were on their way to attend a reception at the White House. The Justice never
hesitated an instant. He brought Blood along. Kennedy was President then, and
the mythmakers have it that when he was introduced to Blood, the President
recognized the name immediately and made Blood the hit of the evening.
White won't say whether the story is true. It might have happened that way,
he says, but he really can't remember. He smiles enigmatically. "That's the way
newspapermen would like it to have been," he says and begins to laugh.
Blood never would have put the kibosh on such a good story, but White is
incapable of roguishness – albeit charming roguishness. He is a man who likes
facts and fine distinctions, and he sticks to them religiously – even if they
don't do wonders for his ego.
"I'm not sure it's fair to call me a scholar," the former Rhodes Scholar
says. "All I ever did was go to law school. And hardly any intellectual thinks
lawyers qualify as intellectuals."
DUDLEY WAS A DO-IT-ALL
By JIM SARGENT Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
"Bullet Bill" Dudley, the former ace running back from Bluefield, Va., who
became the University of Virginia's first consensus football All-American,
fondly recalls his final college game.
In 1941, for the first time
in nine years, Virginia beat North Carolina, 28-7, and Dudley scored three
touchdowns, passed for another, and kicked all four extra points.
"I was tremendously honored to make the All-America team," Dudley
told sportswriter Lawrence Elliott in 1954, "but I don't feel I have to strain
to live up to some mythical something. Yesterday's sports hero is a lot like
yesterday's newspaper -- you always know there's a fresh one coming
tomorrow."
But Dudley's football career went well beyond his honors
at Virginia. He became an outstanding running back, defensive back, and
placekicker in the National Football League, starring three years each for the
Pittsburgh Steelers, the Detroit Lions, and the Washington Redskins. In between,
he spent two years in the Army during World War II Later, he was enshrined in
1966 as part of the fourth class of Pro Football's Hall of
Fame.
Ironically, Dudley, who played in the NFL at 5-foot-9 and
170-175 pounds, was considered too small for football until he was a 110-pound
junior at Bluefield's Graham High School. An intense competitor, Bill grew up
playing sandlot ball. He taught himself to drop-kick, pass, and run the ball,
and he seldom missed an opportunity to watch and study football.
As a senior under first-year coach Marshall Shearer, who taught
Bill to placekick, Dudley won fame as the "Bluefield Bullet" and led his team to
a winning record. Although not blessed with great speed, Bill started quickly,
ran elusively, changed directions almost intuitively, maneuvered behind
blockers, and often spun away from would-be tacklers. Graham High School's 1938
highlight came when the "Bullet" kicked a 35-yard field goal late in the
season's finale to beat favored Princeton High, 10-7.
Dreaming of
playing college football, Dudley got only one scholarship offer. Shearer helped
persuade Virginia coach Frank Murray to recruit his determined protégé as an
extra-point specialist. As a result, Dudley received a $500 grant, out of which
he paid for room, board, and books.
Dudley, then 16, launched his
college career as a 150-pound tailback in 1938. The next season he began as a
fifth back, but played in several games because of injury. In 1940, as a junior,
he started every game at tailback and led the South in total offense, but
Virginia struggled to a 4-5 record.
But in 1941, after switching
from the single wing to the T- formation, the Cavaliers finished 8-1, with the
only loss being to Yale, 21- 19. Dudley's play won him recognition as a
consensus All-American. Also, he received the Washington Touchdown Club's Camp
Memorial Trophy as the outstanding college football player of the
year.
His best game effort against North Carolina and earned him
praise from famous sportswriter Grantland Rice. Playing in Chapel Hill, Dudley
accounted for all 28 points by connecting on a 67-yard pass play for the first
touchdown, running around end for more than 60 yards to score another touchdown,
running 89 yards for another touchdown on a fake punt and driving 3 yards up the
middle for his fourth touchdown. Also, he called the offensive signals, averaged
42 yards on his punts, passed for 117 yards, rushed for 215, and while playing
defense he made several important tackles and added an
interception.
In 1994, reflecting on his greatest collegiate day,
Dudley said, "That was kind of the 'big game' of the year because we hadn't
beaten North Carolina in nine years. That was the ninth year, and they had a
good football team.
Overall in 1941, Dudley topped the nation's
major colleges with 134 points (18 touchdowns, 23 extra points, one field goal)
and in total yards gained with 2,441, which included rushing, receiving,
interception returns, and kick returns. He also completed 57 passes for 856
yards and scored almost half of Virginia's 279 points.
"I scored a
lot of points," Dudley recalled, "but a lot of people forget that we only
allowed something like 40-some points all year. And 21 of those points were
scored by Yale in one ball game. We had a very good defensive football team.
North Carolina only scored once, VMI scored twice, and I think that was
it."
After the season, Dudley traveled to New Orleans and starred
in the East-West Shrine game where he intercepted four passes and passed for his
team's touchdown in a 6-6 tie.
HAPPY, DARK DAYS By the time he graduated in June 1942, World War II was
underway and Dudley aspired to be a Navy pilot. He never planned to play pro
football.
"The Pittsburgh Steelers drafted me No. 1. Of course, I knew about the
University of Pittsburgh, but I didn't know a thing about the Steelers. I knew a
little bit about the Washington Redskins. We used to go up and see them play.
But I never knew anything about the rest of the league, basically, because it
just didn't enter my mind. College football, and the bowl games, were the big
thing."
Dudley also said, "I was originally going to go into the
Naval Air Corps. I was sworn in the Naval Air Corps in late May or early June of
1942. But when they started checking my papers, they found out I had to have my
parents' consent, because I wasn't 21.
"So in the meantime, I went
out to play in the College All-Star game in Chicago, and I signed a professional
football contract. I played with the Steelers mainly for the money. They signed
me for $5,000, because I was the No. 1 draft choice."
As a rookie with the Steelers in 1942, Dudley played in All-Star games
against the Bears in Chicago and the Eagles in Philadelphia. He injured both
ankles against the Eagles, but he was ready to play against Philadelphia on the
NFL's opening day.
On a trap play up the middle, "Bullet Bill" ran
55 yards for a touchdown to give the Steelers a 7-0 lead. The Eagles won, 24-14,
but Dudley established himself as a tough big-league athlete.
His
first game foreshadowed his NFL career. He always played all-out and he would
not hesitate to criticize a player who didn't give his best
effort.
"I can't stand a ballplayer who doesn't put out," Dudley
later explained. "There's no reason for a ballplayer to hang back at any
particular time, particularly when they're getting beat. That drives me up a
wall."
Pittsburgh lost its second game to Washington, 28-14.
Inspired by Dudley, however, the Steelers bounced back and won seven of their
last nine. Art Rooney's club, coached by Walt Kiesling, finished at 7-4, the
franchise's first winning record, and placed second in the Eastern Division
behind the 10-1 Redskins.
Reflecting further, Dudley added, "We had
a lot of fun. Pittsburgh in 1942 was probably one of the most 'fun' years I ever
had. I didn't know anything about Pittsburgh, the sun, it's dark. All the steel
mills were in full blast. You couldn't see the sun for the smoke. Probably we'd
work out from one to three o'clock in the afternoon, and it was just overcast
all morning long."
Running out of the single wing, Dudley led the
league with 696 yards, averaged 4.3 per carry, and scored five touchdowns on the
ground. He also completed 35 of 94 passes for 438 yards and two more touchdowns,
averaged 32 yards on 18 punts, returned 20 punts for 271 yards (14.0 average)
and 11 kickoffs for 298 yards (27.0 average) with another
touchdowns.
Said Dudley about that season, "I was Rookie of the
Year, and All-League, and I was just beat out for MVP, coming in second to Don
Hutson."
ARMY DAYS AND A FAMOUS BATTLE
Facing the draft in Lynchburg,
Dudley had enlisted in the Army Air Corps in September 1942, but the high number
of recruits resulted in a three-month delay, which allowed him to finish his
rookie season.
Along with thousands of other young Americans,
Dudley spent the next two years in the service. He went through basic training
in Florida and various flight schools in Texas. At Randolph Field he was asked
to play football, which was deemed "essential" to the war effort as a "morale
booster." Bill agreed. In 1944 his team went 12-0, he was named MVP, and he made
the All-Service squad.
Dudley was shipped to the Pacific near the
war's end, and he was able to fly two supply missions. Upon his return to
Hawaii, the Army's top brass co-opted him to play in three football games
against All-Star teams. His reward: he could fly home in two days, as opposed to
enduring a six-week voyage by troop-ship.
That fall Dudley returned to Pittsburgh, shared an apartment with center
George Titus, and played the last four games of the 1945 season. Against the
Chicago Cardinals at Forbes Field, "Bullet Bill" flashed his pre-war form by
running for two touchdowns and kicking two extra points in a 23-0 victory,
Pittsburgh's second win in a 2-8 season under Coach Jim Leonard. By tallying
20 points in that game, Dudley scored more than any other Steelers player in
1945.
His explosive performance in 1946 is still remarkable.
Pittsburgh, now coached by the austere Jock Sutherland, tied Washington for
third place with a 5-5-1 record, and Dudley accounted for the biggest chunk of
the club's offense.
Playing tailback and safety, Dudley scored 48
points and led the league in three different categories: rushing, with 604 yards
(4.1 average); 10 interceptions, which he returned for 242 yards; and 27 punt
returns on which he picked up 385 yards, a 14.0 average. For his outstanding
season, Bill was named All-Pro as well as the NFL's Most Valuable
Player.
In the meantime, a rift had developed between Dudley and
Sutherland. During one passing drill at preseason camp, Sutherland, who made
sarcastic comments about Dudley's sidearm passing motion, criticized his star
for suggesting that it would be easier to complete passes if the defensive squad
wore different color jerseys than the offense. Words were exchanged, Dudley
later apologized, but after the season, he announced his
retirement.
Dudley recollected, "Playing the single wing, I
figured, particularly in 1946, that I played about three years of football in
one year. I was on the field almost 60 minutes, and doing everything. But that's
what I was capable of doing, and that's probably one of the reasons I was able
to stay in the league. But I did have a good head on my shoulders. You see, you
play as much with your brains as you do with your body."
Dudley,
who had endured a back injury in 1946, suffered a knee injury in the season
finale, a 10-7 loss to the Eagles. Consequently, he secured a position coaching
the backfield for the University of Virginia in 1947. At that point, Pittsburgh
traded him to Detroit.
LIONS AND REDSKINS
When the Lions offered him a guaranteed
three-year contract at $20,000 a season, Dudley decided again to give football
his best shot. A player's player, he was unanimously elected captain by his
teammates for each of his three seasons in Detroit, where his determined play
became the heart of the Lions. Although the team did not have enough talent to
fashion a winning season during Dudley's tenure, he led the club in scoring each
year.
On Oct. 19 during Dudley's first year with the Lions, he had
an 84-yard punt return for a touchdown against the Bears, still the
fourth-longest in franchise history. But during an up-and-down season, Detroit
averaged 31 points in three victories and 15 points in nine
losses.
Under Coach Bo McMillin in 1948, Detroit remained in last
place for the third year in a row. Nagged by injuries, Dudley accounted for six
touchdowns, but Camp Wilson led the club in rushing. In 1949, again under
McMillin, Dudley led Detroit in scoring for the third year. With more talent all
around, Detroit won three of the last four games to take fourth place with a 4-8
mark.
"When I went to Detroit, I had a contract that was guaranteed
for three years," Dudley said. "At the end of the three-year period, if I didn't
play, I was guaranteed one year of coaching. Bo traded me to the Redskins,
feeling that I might want to exercise that contractual right, you see, as a
coach. I was just getting ready to work for the Ford Motor Company. I worked for
them one year in the offseason."
Dudley moved to Lynchburg, Va.,
and drove to Washington, where he played for three seasons, 1950-51 and 1953.
Each year he led the Redskins in scoring. By that time, however, his knees were
giving him more problems, notably with bursitis. Partly as a result, he spent
1952 as the backfield coach for Yale University.
Quarterback Sammy
Baugh was the Redskins' leader, but Dudley, as always, made important
contributions. On Dec. 3, 1950, he again proved his big-play ability after a
60-yard punt by Pittsburgh's Joe Geri.
The "Bullet" believed in
always returning a punt. After running more than 30 yards to get to the kick, he
reached out of bounds to catch and kept both feet in-bounds at Washington's
4-yard line. Running straight up the sideline, Dudley startled the Steelers, who
thought they saw the ball go out of bounds. Step-faking a would-be tackler, as
if to cut to the middle, Dudley hustled down the sideline, behind gathering
blockers, and scored untouched on a 96-yard run.
When he returned
for one more season with the Redskins in 1953, Bill performed part-time while
coaching the backs, his favorite assignment. Mainly, however, he played defense
on passing situations. He also handled the place-kicking and kicked a
career-high 11 field goals.
At the end of the season, physical wear
and tear had accumulated to the point where the "Bullet" decided to retire. He
had entered the insurance business in Lynchburg with his brother Jim in 1951.
During those years he also coached and scouted for, first, the Steelers and,
later, the Lions.
Writing for "Sport" in 1954, Robert Smith
summarized Dudley's greatness: "Despite his lack of breakaway speed, Bill was
the most feared kickoff returner in the game .... He passed sidearm, like a kid,
yet he had a fine completion average. He was 'too small,' but he was hardly ever
hurt too badly to play. He was the league's top ground gainer, yet he was also
one of the fiercest defensive tacklers and the best in the game at
interceptions. As one of the men who faced him ruefully admitted, Bill could not
throw a pass correctly and 'ran as if he was staggering,' yet he could always
find a way to beat you."
That clutch ability explains why Dudley
was able to lead his club in scoring during every one of his nine NFL seasons.
Today he is enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, the college Football
Hall of Fame, and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame.
Since 1990 the
Downtown Club of Richmond has sponsored the Bill Dudley Award, which is given
each year to the top college football player in Virginia. That honor is a
fitting tribute to Dudley's outstanding dedication, performance, and work
ethic.
"BLOOD" WAS ONE OF A KIND
By JACK HENRY Reprinted, Courtesy of PFRA
Most graybeard football fans are now willing to concede that the caliber of
play in the National Football League has improved over the span of the past six
decades. However, some continue to contend that the present-day performers are
not as colorful as those in earlier
years.
An illustra¬tion
to prove such a point would be the former Steelers player-coach, Johnny Blood.
In more modern times there have been such characters as Tim Rossovich, Dick
Butkus, and Joe Don Looney but none really matched the eccentric Blood, who was
one of a kind.
They called him the Vagabond Halfback and the
Magnificent Screwball, but actually he was the one and only genuine Peter Pan of
pro football. He put in 15 years in the NFL, was chosen for the Hall of Fame in
1963, and even attempted a comeback as a player when he was 42 years of
age.
Johnny Blood's real name was John V. McNally, and
he came from such a wealthy family of newspaper publishers and paper mill owners
that he never needed to play football for a living. But that didn't stop him. In
fact, when he still had a year of eligibility at St. John's College in Minnesota
he decided along with his buddy, Ralph Hanson, to sneak in some pro activity
with the East 26th Street Liberties of
Minneapolis.
Both
McNally and Hanson knew the custom of the day was for college players to dabble
in pro football under such assumed names as Smith or Jones. Young McNally varied
the routine. He spotted a theater marquee billing Rudolph Valentino in the film
"Blood and Sand" and immediately picked Blood as his name and induced Hanson to
switch his to Sand. From that day forward, Johnny signed all documents, Johnny
Blood.
Veteran
Pittsburgh fans never will forget when Blood arrived in 1937 to be player-coach
of the Steelers (then known as the Pirates) to succeed Joe Bach. The season
opener was against the Philadelphia Eagles and on the opening kickoff Blood
galloped 92 yards for a touchdown. No player-coach in NFL history ever had a
more spectacular debut than that.
Blood had been with Pittsburgh
earlier as a halfback for Coach Luby DiMelio in 1934, but his tenure was short
and he returned to Green Bay where he became a big factor in Curly Lambeau's
championship years.
It
was back in 1929 that Lambeau had figured he had a squad that could win the NFL
title if he could add Blood, Cal Hubbard, and Mike Michalske. Curly lured Blood
away from the Pottsville Maroons, induced Hubbard to leave the New York Giants,
and picked up Michalske when the New York Yankees franchise began to dissolve.
Lambeau's judgment was correct and he went on to coaching glory.
Prior to service under Wilbur (Fats) Henry at Pottsville, Blood
had played for John Bryant with the Milwaukee Badgers and Ernie Nevers with the
Duluth Eskimos. His biggest days, though, were at Green Bay, and it was on the
basis of his exploits for Lambeau that he became a charter member of the Pro
Football Hall of Fame.
Blood was a scrawny kid in high school and
disappointed his father by not excelling in athletics at that time. The
explana¬tion should have been obvious since Johnny graduated from high school at
14 and was not sufficiently mature to hold his own physically with his
contemporaries. However, by the time he hit the NFL he was 6-foot-2, 198
pounds.
In his prime Blood was a superb runner, excellent kicker and
passer, a better than average blocker, a sure tackler and the best pass catcher
in the professional league until Don Hutson came along. Some observers still
argue that not even the brilliant Hutson could make more difficult catches than
Johnny.
Blood held all the major NFL
pass-receiving records until Hutson joined him on the Packers roster. When
Hutson arrived, Blood was 32 years old, but the young rookie from Alabama could
only beat him by a foot or so in the 100-yard dash. Blood in his 20's would have
outrun Hutson by yards to spare.
Green Bay fans remember a game
against the Providence Steam Rollers when the Packers had the ball on their own
15-yard line. One play -- called "69" -- was one in which the fullback would
take a handoff from Blood while the end faked taking a handoff on an end-around.
Another version was "69-X" in which Blood would fake a handoff to the fullback
and instead give the ball to the end on the reverse.
In the huddle
Blood called, "69-XX." His teammates quickly reminded him that they had no such
play. "You do now," said Johnny. "Just go through with the 69 sequence and I'll
do the rest."
The play worked when Blood faked
to the fullback and then faked to the end on the end-around. Blood then tucked
the ball under his arm and whirled his way 85 yards for a touchdown. During his
career with the Packers, Blood reached pay dirt 37
times.
Once when the Packers clinched a league championship, a victory
party was held on the train back to Wisconsin. Blood reeled off some antics that
enraged the team's towering end, LaVern Dilweg. LaVern chased Blood from the
club car through all the other cars and figured he had him trapped on the rear
platform. Football's Peter Pan then hoisted himself on top of the moving train.
Dilweg sensibly gave up pursuit and Blood made his way back on the top of the
train and dropped into the cab to startle the engineer and fireman. They
were entertained by him for the remainder of the
trip.
Although Blood never had the need to make money from football he
was not against turning a quick maneuver. For example, late in the 1932 season
he figured an American professional team would be an attraction in Hawaii. He
cabled the sports editor of the Honolulu Star-Advertiser and suggested a New
Year's Day event matching Green Bay with a Hawaiian All-Star
outfit.
Meanwhile, Blood delivered a sales pitch to Lambeau, who said he
would be in favor of a postseason game as long as Green Bay received a $9,000
guarantee. Blood then sent a second cable to the Honolulu newspaper explaining
that the Packers would perform for a $10,000 guarantee or 50 percent of the
gate, whichever was higher.
The offer was OK'd
and the game was played. Blood turned over $10,000 to Lambeau, who was delighted
to pick up more than he had bargained for. The 50 percent of the gross brought
in $1,200 additional, which Blood cheerfully
pocketed.
The story is often told that on one occasion Blood, while the
player-coach for Pittsburgh, attended a Sunday game between the Bears and the
Packers. Friends in the press box questioned Blood as to why he was in the
Midwest, and Blood replied that the Steelers had an open date. The scoreboard
showed otherwise. Pittsburgh was in action without the boss being present. Such
curious memory lapses or nonchalance frequently kept Johnny in hot
water.
Getting back to collegiate days, Blood, at the close of his
junior year at St. John's, suddenly decided he would like to become a Knute
Rockne protégé at Notre Dame. Reasoning that Notre Dame officials knew nothing
about him, he enrolled as a freshman and eventually reported for the yearling
squad handled by George Keogan.
Keogan, who became better known in later years as the varsity
basketball coach of the Fighting Irish, believed Blood could be useful but
wanted him to be a tackle. Blood insisted he was the fastest man on the South
Bend campus and wanted no part of an assignment in the line.
Keogan tossed Blood off the squad, but he remained for a time at Notre
Dame, where he played basketball at the South Bend YMCA and helped quarterback
Harry Stuhldreher with his poetry
assignments.
After World War II service in the China-India-Burma theater, Blood
returned to pro football. He was 42, but he finally became convinced that he was
too long in the tooth and returned to St. John's College to earn his degree 26
years late.
His mind evidently returned to the closing days
of his player-coaching tenure at Pittsburgh. It was then his habit to inject
himself into the lineup in the late stages of a game, annoying his teammates who
wished to reject him as an incoming
substitute.
In retrospect, few members of the Hall of Fame can show better
credentials than Blood did when he was honored in 1963. Certainly no other
member was as unpredictable. Probably his wife Marguerite Streater McNally, put
it best when she said, "Even when Johnny does the expected, he does it in an
unex¬pected
way."
This was true even when publishers convinced him to write a book.
Everyone figured it would be a saga on football. Instead, it was a highly rated
effort on the Malthusian theories of
eco¬nomics.