Monday, December 8, 2014

Guy Chamberlin Celebrated Anew

Guy Chamberlin won his NFL championships in the 1920s and he also was a player-coach for championship teams that no longer exist: The Canton Bulldogs, the Cleveland Bulldogs, and the Frankford Yellow Jackets.  He has a fan base in Nebraska where the University of Nebraska Chamberlin Award has been given out each year since his death, but his NFL reputation has grown somewhat dim over the years because he had no NFL base like coaches whose teams have carried on to this day.  He is one of the ten coaches whose football lives we examine in our new book, Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships

Recent efforts to recognize or at least renew his recognition as one of the NFL's greatest coaches have been building.  The University of Nebraska has been recognizing great players with the annual Chamberlin Award since the great man's death. The award is presented to the senior player who has shown by the play and contributions to the team that he has the qualities and dedication of Guy Chamberlin to the Cornhusker tradition.  Folks back home at the Gage County Historical Society, the Wymore Library,  and now his home town, Blue Springs have worked to see Chamberlin recognized and remembered.  A monument in Chamberlin's honor was recently constructed and placed on ground near where the High School that Chamberlin attended once existed.

 On August 8, 2014, at Aunt Mary’s Center at 111 South 8th, Beatrice, Nebraska, a special evening included a book signing and Sunday meal with Patrick McCaskey, 40-year veteran and senior Director of the Chicago Bears. McCaskey is the Chairman of Sports International, an initiative that recognizes people who are successful in sports while leading exemplary lives. He is a speaker known for his moving and humorous presentations on sports, community and faith. This fundraiser is for the Nebraska Baseball Hall of Fame and the Gage County Historical Society.

In his new book, Pillars of the NFL, McCaskey takes a look at interesting important coaches who have won three or more championships in their career including Blue Springs, Nebraska, native and Nebraska Cornhusker All-American, Guy Chamberlin. Patrick McCaskey’s grandfather, George Halas and Guy Chamberlin were starting ends for the Staleys in 1920 and 1921 and early organizers of the National Football League.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Pillars of the NFL Entertains and Informs Fans on the 10 Greatest Coaches in NFL History

Patrick McCaskey Author
Ten NFL coaching heavyweights are covered in Patrick McCaskey's Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships.  This is an important project because it entertains and informs--plus it helps keep the memory of many great coaches alive.

ESPN offered a great service to fans with their Greatest Coaches in NFL History series in which some of the best and the brightest in sports writing and analysis selected their 20 top coaches.  In Pillars of the NFL our selection of the top ten was made strictly by NFL championships won.



Our book covers the football lives of:


  1. George Halas

  2. Guy Chamberlin

  3. Curly Lambeau

  4. Paul Brown

  5. Weeb Ewbank

  6. Vince Lombardi

  7. Chuck Noll

  8. Bill Walsh

  9. Joe Gibbs

  10. Bill Belichick



Weeb Ewbank
Guy Chamberlin
We've gone to bat recently to try to call attention in particular to two great coaches who get much less attention these days than the others: Guy Chamberlin and Weeb Ewbank.  Chamberlin played for teams that have gone out of existence and he won his championships in the first decade of the NFL.  Ewbank was a team builder who started out with teams that needed complete overhauls.  He also had two great quarterbacks playing for him and most give credit for the championships his teams won to those two individuals:  Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath. 

Pillars introduces readers to each coach first with a "your are there" present tense feature that takes the reader to the coach's surroundings.  Each coach's early life is examined and then his school days and playing career is described.  The coaching life focuses on the professional venue, the key players, and the seasons.  A highlights and contribution to the game section ends each coach's individual coverage.  At the end of the book, championship tables are provided and a thorough index helps make the book most useful.  Readers have a book that distills the character and achievements of each man. 

Friday, September 5, 2014

Pillars of the NFL and Notre Dame Connections --Second in a Series

Chicago Lithograph Image of Notre Dame-Library of Congress
Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships is published by Sporting Chance Press and written by Chicago Bears Senior Director Patrick McCaskey.  The Pillars themselves are the greatest coaches in NFL history--determined strictly by the number of championships.  Ten coaches have won three or more championships: George Halas, Guy Chamberlin, Curly Lambeau, Paul Brown, Weeb Ewbank, Vince Lombardi, Chuck Noll, Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, and Bill Belichick.  

This is the second post in which we recall the greatest coaches in the NFL connections to Notre Dame. It is taken from Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships. 

Chicago Bears Training Camp at Notre Dame, 1933 Season



George Halas picked up Notre Dame graduates early and often in his career coaching and managing the Chicago Bears.   In the last post, we discussed Hunk Anderson and George Trafton.  In 1933, Halas had a very good team and he held the Bears Training at Notre Dame in 1933.  That year the Bears won the West Division with a 10–2–1 record and played the Giants in the first scheduled championship game. It turned out to be the most spectacular game of the season featuring a trick play by the Giants early on and one by the Bears late in the game. It would also feature six lead changes.   

On a damp cool foggy December 17, 26,000 fans showed up at Wrigley Field to see the championship battle. In the early goings, the Giants center Mel Hein reported as an eligible receiver. Harry Newman took the ball under center from Hein and handed it right back to him with a slight of hand. While the defense watched Newman fall back as if he was going to pass, Hein hid the ball under his jersey and quietly started to make his way up field. Not a particularly good actor, Hein got anxious and began to run. The Bears tackled him on the 15-yard line and although the play worked beautifully, the Bears held and the Giants did not score on that series.

The contest swung back and forth and late in the game the Bears found themselves behind 21–16.  It was time for the Bears’ trick play.  Fullback Bronko Nagurski faked a run and threw a 14-yard jump pass to Bill Hewitt who was attracting Giants.  Hewitt lateraled to Bill Karr who then made his way to the end zone.  The Bears won 23–21 to take top honors in 1933. 

Chamberlin’s Big Day at Notre Dame, Knute Rockne


In at least one way, the Notre Dame connections to the Pillars of the NFL even predated the NFL! 

Perhaps the most obscure Pillar is Guy Chamberlin.  Chamberlin came off a Nebraska farm and played tremendous football for two Nebraska schools –Nebraska Wesleyan for his first two years and then the University of Nebraska to finish off his college years.  In the 1915 season, Chamberlin and the Huskers started out strong by clobbering Drake, Kansas State, and Washburn on their way to a showdown with a strong Notre Dame team coached by Jesse Harper.  On staff for Notre Dame was Assistant Coach Knute Rockne who would go on to a legendary head coaching career starting in 1918.  Rockne had famously scouted the Huskers.  Notre Dame’s defense was instructed on apparent weaknesses in Chamberlin’s running game that Rockne had discovered.  Rockne also noted that Chamberlin licked his fingers before any passing play.  Rockne’s scouting report did not help—Chamberlin displayed no weaknesses at all.  Long after the game, Rockne laughed when he recalled his predictions on Chamberlin’s play.  Chamberlin joked that he licked his fingers regardless of what he was going to do with the ball, but on that day, he fingered a wet sponge that he somehow affixed to his uniform to fight off the dryness. The Nebraska-Notre Dame game was a tight match from beginning to end, but Nebraska prevailed 20–19.  

During the game, Nebraska fans across the state gathered at railroad stations to hear the latest game news read by telegraph operators coming over the wires while the contest was being played.  Chamberlin scored on two end-around plays and he passed for another touchdown.  Notre Dame missed two extra points while Nebraska made two of three.

Chamberlin moved on as a player-coach in the pro ranks where he won two championships with the Canton Bulldogs and one with the Cleveland Bulldogs, and one more with the Frankford Yellow Jacketsall in the 1920s.  None of Chamberlin’s teams have survived into the modern era, which may be why most modern sports analysts rarely mention him in debates about the greatest coaches. 

Copyright 2014, Sporting Chance Press


 

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Pillars of the NFL and Notre Dame Connections --First in a Series



Patrick McCaskey

The Pillars of the NFL is published by Sporting Chance Press and written by Chicago Bears Senior Director Patrick McCaskey.  The Pillars themselves are the greatest coaches in NFL history--determined strictly by the number of championships.  Ten coaches have won three or more championships: George Halas, Guy Chamberlin, Curly Lambeau, Paul Brown, Weeb Ewbank, Vince Lombardi, Chuck Noll, Bill Walsh, Joe Gibbs, and Bill Belichick.  

In this post,  we recall here the Pillars connections to that great school taken from Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships.  

The first Pillar is George Halas,  who coached for 40 seasons and accumulated 324 wins, 151 losses, and 31 ties. The Bears won six NFL Championships with Halas as coach. He had two more championships as owner for a total of eight. He was enshrined in Pro Football Hall of Fame’s charter class of 17 members on September 7, 1963. Halas was named AP Coach of the Year, the Sporting News Coach of the Year, and the UPI NFL Coach of the Year for the 1963 and the 1965 seasons.  If anyone could be called the Father of the NFL, it would be George Halas. In this way, his nickname, Papa Bear says it all. He loved the fans and was dedicated to his friends, family, and faith.

There are many professional football associations with Notre Dame football and its coaches and players. The Bears have often added Notre Dame graduates to their roster and Halas started the practice very early on. Two of Halas’s favorite Fighting Irish were George Trafton and Hunk Anderson.

George Trafton
By most accounts, players in the early days of football were very rugged men.  Hall of Famer George Trafton certainly fits this descriptionhe was a 6-foot-2, 230 pound bull who loved to mix it up. Hated by opposing teams for his aggressive play and loved by his teammates for his winning contributions, Trafton played center for the Staleys/Bears right from the start, 1920-1932.  He was known around the league for his aggressive style of play.  According to Trafton’s Pro Football Hall of Fame biography:


Trafton was strongly disliked in every NFL city, with the exception of Green Bay and Rock Island. In those places, he was hated.


Hunk Andersen
A contemporary of George Halas, Notre Dame alum Hunk Anderson played guard and center for the Bears from 1922-1925. When his playing days ended, he became one of the most innovative coaches in football.  His blocking techniques and schemes helped modernize football and power the modified T formation that the Bears used so successfully when it dominated the league in the 1940s.  He was also creative with defense and an early proponent of the blitz.  Halas said, “When it came to line play or defense, Hunk was a genius.”

Copyright 2014, Sporting Chance Press.  

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Guy Chamberlin Gets New Home Town Recognition with Monument in His Honor

Pillars of the NFL Includes Coverage of Guy Chamberlin's Career
Guy Chamberlin won his NFL championships in the 1920s and he also was a player-coach for championship teams that no longer exist: The Canton Bulldogs, the Cleveland Bulldogs, and the Frankford Yellow Jackets.  He has a fan base in Nebraska where the University of Nebraska Chamberlin Award has been given out each year since his death, but his NFL reputation has grown somewhat dim over the years because he had no NFL base like coaches whose teams have carried on to this day.  He is one of the ten coaches whose football lives we examine in our new book, Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships

Recent efforts to recognize or at least renew his recognition as one of the NFL's greatest coaches have been building.  The University of Nebraska has been recognizing great players with the annual Chamberlin Award since the great man's death. The award is presented to the senior player who has shown by the play and contributions to the team that he has the qualities and dedication of Guy Chamberlin to the Cornhusker tradition.  Folks back home at the Gage County Historical Society, the Wymore Library,  and now his home town, Blue Springs have worked to see Chamberlin recognized and remembered.  A monument in Chamberlin's honor was recently constructed and placed on ground near where the High School that Chamberlin attended once existed.

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Book Model Applied to Pillars of the NFL

Pillars of the NFL Offers a Great Sports Book Model

Being in publishing for almost 40 years now, when we began work on Pillars of the NFL, I put to use some ideas that I had in book models over the years.  The one that Patrick McCaskey, the author, and I settled on was one that would be bring the most value to the product.  Of course, it might seem almost laughable to people who hear book model approaches to a sports book, but I can't let go of things that I have learned over the years. 

Chicago Bears Senior Director Patrick McCaskey is outstanding on sports history, especially when it comes to history of the early NFL and the Bears.  When he speaks at events, he recalls dates and championship games and other events chapter and verse.  This was an extraordinary leg up on the project and we put it to good use.  In fact, it helped settle the biggest issue of the book composition: who are the Pillars of the NFL.  Patrick's answer was simply that the greatest coaches in the NFL are those who have won the most championships.  I like this very much.  

Patrick had put together a series of tables that we can use an appendix that looks at championships by teams and coaches.  

Next in terms of the book model, we wanted to grab the reader's attention very quickly and get him or her into the book.  We knew that we wanted to provide a certain level of detail on the coaches and teams, so we wanted to get readers involved emotionally early on.  What we came up with a brief kind of "your are there" section that starts off each chapter.  We place the reader on the field, in the locker room, or up the stands witnessing the coach in action or with others in a way that gives the reader at least some sense of who each man was as a person.  I suspect this kind of things is not new, but I think in a book on as many subjects as we were covering, it is a great challenge, but one worth doing.  

The next part of our model was the coach's early life.  In some cases, this was very brief and in others this part represented a good amount of research.  Patrick's focus is always on the football lives of his subjects as opposed to anything even close to some kind of judgement about their morals, foibles, and faults.  Again, like the championship decision on the selection of coaches, Patrick's approach streamlined the coverage of the coaches.  So this part of the book gave readers more insight into the coaches without going into odd twists and turns that lose readers in the weeds.  I love biographies, but in many there is just too much information.  I think for example that when a writer comes up some obscure fact on a subject's personal eating habits, they often feel compelled to put it into their work.  We were not compelled in that way--Pillars would focus on the football lives of the subjects.

Coaching Careers


The coaching careers of course would be the focus of any book on the greatest coaches in NFL history.  High school and college coaching was insignificant to the story of the top NFL coaches so that part of the story was very brief.  In some cases, the information was also so obscure, Patrick could not cover it anyway.  For example, there might be several sources of information on a coach's high school coaching career, but each one may only have one sentence.  If the school no longer exists and the coach had not written a biography, there may be nothing to report.  

Once Patrick got into the Pro career portion, the road to the championships, the seasons, and the coaches and players associated with the teams also became more important.  If you have read much on football books that describe coaches or players, you find that they normally focus on a couple incidents and more or less highlight events.  Some books on a 20 or 30 year coach may seem complete, but often you really only hear about a few games.  For Pillars we had ten coaches, but we also had some coaches who coached multiple teams to championships.  Weeb Ewbank coaches both the Colts and the Jets to championships.  Guy Chamberlin coached the Canton Bulldogs, the Cleveland Bulldogs, and the Frankford Yellow Jackets to championships.  Our ten coaches also were assistants of championship teams as well. Worried that we would write about championship season and still miss even mentioning most of the top players that fans would remember, we added another feature that we used fairly liberally, a list of top players with short descriptions.  In this way, when Patrick wrote about Lombardi for example, we knew there was a way to at least mention most of his HOF players even if their play did not make the book in a game or championship description.  We thought this was a way to honor both the great coaches as well as the players who were responsible for carrying out the coaches program.  

To round things out we also added a "Life After Football" section and a "Contributions to the Game" feature.  Following that we had a "Timeline" and "Highlights"right at the end of the chapter.  All these things helped Patrick's presentation offer a more complete history of our coaches and teams.  Granted, Pillars of the NFL was a kind of project that might have led both Patrick and I spend the remainder of our lives on.  Both of us are too busy for that and I am trying to make a living in this business, so we enforced a schedule on the project.  

There were a few other elements to the model.  We introduced each chapter with a Bill Potter drawing of each Pillar.  Bill is an illustrator whose old school style really appealed to me.  I love those old biographical montages that you used to see in the newspaper--one big spread with several drawings that provide a concise history.  For example an image of  Ernie Banks with an armful of books in high school in Dallas is followed by Ernie is in a military uniform giving a salute--then he's in a Kansas City Monarch's cap up to the plate--the next image shows him as a Cubs shortstop with his early home run stats written underneath and then in as a first baseman saying let's play two and finally he stands in a suit being inducted into the Hall of Fame.  We couldn't do those montages and fit them into a book, but Bill worked in a feature that helped us present the coaches visually in more than one situation.  

We also added an index, which in sports books is generally skimpy at best.  A good index can a take over a week and cost several thousand dollars.  Pillars has a good one. 

Perhaps one of the most difficult parts of our model was the inclusion of extensive endnotes.  Most sports books don't use endnotes or footnotes.  Some authors just list their book collection as a kind of bibliography.  In most books you have no idea of where the author got his or her informaton. Using endnotes/footnotes is not fun and it takes a tremendous amount of time.  There are also a lot of judgments that need to made.  We did the best we could and we hope it helps readers understand how a book like this is built off the work of hundreds of other people--writers-researches and reporters. 

We hope Pillars catches on with sports fans and we have an opportunity to create other books like it.  Our model was created to provide the best book for our readers to whom we are deeply in debt.  We also wanted to provide a kind of book for readers to put in their bookshelves and save for a long time--something that might outlive an ebook file.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Curly Lambeau Outline Against the Sky of Notre Dame Football

Pillars of the NFL, Sporting Chance  Press Publisher
Chicago Bears Senior Director Patrick McCaskey's Pillars of the NFL, examines the football lives of the 10 greatest coaches in NFL history--those who won three or more championships.  One of the most interesting "Pillar" is Curly Lambeau.  Many football fans do not realize that Lambeau had interesting connections to some of the Notre Dame legends although he only attended the school for one year. 

In 1918, Lambeau shared the backfield with George “Gipper” Gipp, the storied back who would lead the team in both rushing and passing from 1918-1920.  Lambeau played under new head coach, Knute Rockne.  Like Lambeau, Rockne was a fan of the pass and in South Bend, Lambeau learned the Notre Dame box, a formation based on the commonly used single wing.

During Lambeau’s stay in South Bend, World War I was raging, but it was a flu epidemic that shortened the football season.  Notre Dame posted a 3–1–2 record.  In one tough game against the Great Lakes Naval Station, Lambeau faced future rival and Chicago Bears founder, George Halas, who played end.  The teams tied.  

As a freshman, Lambeau had a supporting role in the Notre Dame backfield.  He was no threat to superstar Gipp who among other astonishing feats, held the ND rushing career mark of 2,341 yards for more than 50 years.  Tragically, after his senior season, Gipp developed a strep infection and died.  On his deathbed, Gipp’s last conversation to Rockne was quoted as:

I've got to go, Rock.  It's all right.  I'm not afraid.  Some time, Rock, when the team is up against it, when things are wrong and the breaks are beating the boys, ask them to go in there with all they've got and win just one for the Gipper.  I don't know where I'll be then, Rock.  But I'll know about it, and I'll be happy.

Rockne would famously use the deathbed story to motivate his underdog Notre Dame team against Army in 1928.  The quote would also make its way into movies and politics. 
 
The Fighting Irish player roster described Lambeau as flamboyant, an excellent blocker, and a good short-yardage runner. After the football season, Lambeau had a bout of tonsillitis.  Recuperating at home, he decided not to return to South Bend, and subsequently quit school for good.  Although Lambeau had a brief career at Notre Dame, he would be called an “ex Notre Dame Football star.”  He was proud of the connection.  Lambeau did not forget Rockne.  The two corresponded and Lambeau occasionally recommended a high school player to the Notre Dame coach and he encouraged the student to head to South Bend.  

Lambeau’s practice of recommending Green Bay players to his old coach created yet another Notre Dame legend.  One player who would go to Notre Dame on Lambeau’s recommendations was Jim Crowley.  Crowley would become one of the fabled Four Horsemen of Notre Dame—christened and made famous by Grantland Rice, a poetic sportswriter for the New York Herald-Tribune in an era when such craft was appreciated.   


Four Horsemen of Football, Library of Congress Photo


After Notre Dame's 13–7 victory over Army on October 18, 1924, Rice penned one of sports journalism’s favorite passages:

Outlined against a blue, gray October sky the Four Horsemen rode again. 
In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death.  These are only aliases.  Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden.  They formed the crest of the South Bend cyclone before which another fighting Army team was swept over the precipice at the Polo Grounds this afternoon as 55,000 spectators peered down upon the bewildering panorama spread out upon the green plain below.
Notre Dame student-publicity aid, George Strickler, who would become the sports editor of the Chicago Tribune, had a photo shot of the four ND players on horseback, which was picked up by newspapers across the country.  The photo memorialized the passage, the players, and the team.  

Crowley “recovered” from the notoriety and later coached at Fordham University.  At Fordham, Lambeau’s work would come full circle.  One of Crowley’s players by the name of Vince Lombardi would go on to coach the Packers in one remarkable decade.  

Copyright 2014, Sporting Chance Press

Comparing Chuck Noll and Vince Lombardi

Chuck Noll Hall of Fame
On the surface, Chuck Noll and Vince Lombardi were very different coaches.  Lombardi was hard as nails on his players and he motivated his team with emotional talks and take your breath away rants and raves on the practice field.  Noll was direct and a man of few words.  When Noll did elaborate, sometimes he lost the thread of his message and his players lost the meaning.  Mostly, he kept it simple.

But both coaches spent endless amounts of time to reach the same two objectives: 1. Creating the toughest team in  the NFL.  2. Creating the most fundamentally sound team in the NFL. 

Who could argue that Noll's Steelers and Lombardi's Packers were not both tough and fundamentally sound.  

Vince Lombardi Hall of Fame
Lombardi's catch phrase, "winning is everything,"  has often been misunderstood to mean that
winning by any means is acceptable.  But his players would likely tell us that the "any means" had more to do with their training than things they would do to opposing teams.  By sacrificing their bodies and routinely using every ounce of energy in practice, they became a formidable team on the field.  Lombardi sought to have his players better prepared than any other team.

Noll's catchphrase was "whatever it takes." Again, it's easily misunderstood.  Noll expanded on the notion to say that "whatever it takes"  to become the best team  was his meaning.  For Noll, like Lombardi, it was all about sacrifice for the team, work for the team, playing your role for the team.  

For both Lombardi and Noll, their objectives of toughness and fundamentals was demonstrated and forever remembered in two of pro football's greatest highlights.  



Packers' 1967 NFL Championship Game

Ice Bowl Program
The Packers played the Dallas Cowboys for the NFL Championship on the last day of the year in 1967.  The Packers had a secret weapon—Mother Nature.  Few NFL games have been so well celebrated and memorialized.  The Packers had seen plenty of cold weather before this game, but the so-called “Ice Bowl” was the start of much of the lore and legend surrounding Lambeau Field.  From this game forward, Green Bay fans would not just tolerate the cold at Lambeau, they would relish their “frozen tundra.”

The Cowboys were leading, 17–14, on the Packers’ frigid home field in the fourth quarter.  With only 4:50 on the clock, Lombardi’s offense looked 68 yards downfield to the goal and began a 12-play drive for the win.  They would need almost every second.   

A determined Starr completed a pass out in the flat to Donny Anderson for a 6-yard gain.  Chuck Mercein found enough running room outside for a first down.  Starr tossed one down the middle to Dowler over the 50-yard line and Cornell Green who was struggling with his footing was able to grab and throw Dowler down hard on the tackle to the frozen ground.  It was nip and tuck all the way.  Anderson received a handoff from Starr, but was tackled in the backfield.  It was second down and 19 yards to go for a first on a field that was quickly becoming an ice skating rink.  Starr looked around and tossed Anderson an outlet pass that the halfback turned into another 12-yard gain.  Starr followed with another short pass to Anderson who gained the first down.  Chuck Mercein was targeted next and after the catch he ran the ball down to the Dallas 11-yard line.  Mercein had the hot hand and took a handoff from Starr and ran it up the middle to the 2-yard line.  Anderson rushed to within inches of the goal and a first down.  The tough, determined Cowboys’ defense stuffed two Donny Anderson drives.  Starr went to the sideline and told Lombardi since the backs were slipping, he would take the ball himself on a wedge play, which normally goes to the fullback.  Lombardi famously responded, “Then do it and let’s get the hell out of here.”  As Starr jogged back on the field, the tension in the stands was almost unbearable.

Starr stood behind center with 13 seconds remaining at the 1-yard line with no time outs.  He raised his hands to quiet the crowd and the ball was snapped on a quick count.  Jerry Kramer jumped out at Jethro Pugh, hitting him low, followed by Packer center Ken Bowman hitting Pugh high.  Cleats scratched on ice and Pugh was driven backwards.  Starr shadowed Kramer and plunged into the end zone for the score.  Mercein, who thought Starr was going to hand off to him, trailed the play and raised his arms in the air so the officials knew he was not pushing Starr into the end zone—an infraction that might have caused the Packers the game.  Millions watching thought Mercein was signaling a score! The fans realized that Starr had scored and in the midst of an arctic field of dreams came the deafening roar of the crowd.  Chandler kicked the extra point. 


Defining Moment for Noll’s Steelers

Immaculate Reception Commemorative Football
The defining moment that ended the string of frustration and put the Steelers into a new winning way came at the very end of the divisional playoff game on December 23, 1972.  Pittsburgh had the ball on its own 20-yard line with just 1 minute 20 seconds to go trailing the Oakland Raiders 76.  Bradshaw was no miracle worker in those days and five plays later, the Steelers were still 60 yards from pay dirt with only 22 seconds remaining.  Bradshaw threw over the middle to “Frenchy” Fuqua, but Raiders’ defensive back Jack Tatum crashed into Fuqua and the ball with such force that the ball flew backward like it had been redirected by some unknown hand.  Franco Harris grabbed the ball off his shoelaces in stride and eluded tacklers on his way to the end zone for the score and the win.  The play was called the “Immaculate Reception.”  Although the Steelers went on to lose the AFC Championship to the Dolphins, they made an impression with football fans, their competitors, and most importantly, themselves.  They had arrived.  Noll’s Steelers were winners and now with the Immaculate Reception, it seemed like they had fans in high places.

Harris personified what it meant to play fundamentally sound and give it everything he had.  Although he was apparently out of the play, he kept his head in it and when the ball bounced off Tatum  he was able to pick it up and run for the score.  The extra point gave the Steelers a 137 victory.

In the waning moments of both games, the players took stock of themselves and played solid fundamental football as a team.

Chuck Noll, the great Steelers' coach and one of the greatest coaches in NFL history died this past week. 


Copyright 2014, Sporting Chance Press

Sporting Chance Press is the publisher of Pillars of the NFL: Coaches Who Have Won Three or More Championships that is available at select bookstores, Amazon, and the publisher's web site.