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Praise for Remembering the Stars of the NFL Glory Years

“I consider my era to be the glory days of the NFL, a true Golden Age, and
this book provides a detailed inside look at many of the greatest players of
that time period—of all time, actually. Wayne Stewart gives readers the
opportunity to go behind the scenes and learn so much about the game,
and in many cases, through the words of the greats themselves—men such
as Lenny Moore, Gino Marchetti, and Mike Ditka. It’s a must-read for any
pro football fan.”—Raymond Berry, Hall of Fame receiver, Baltimore Colts

“Remembering the Stars of the NFL Glory Years recalls the 1950s and
1960s, covering everything from the Hall of Famers of the day to the way
the league has changed from that era to now. Fans of superstars such as
Gale Sayers, Jim Brown, Johnny Unitas, and many more will enjoy reliving
the Golden Age of football.”—Mike Ditka, Hall of Fame tight end

“Wayne Stewart conducted exclusive interviews with a slew of NFL players


from the Golden Age of the NFL to come up with Remembering the Stars of
the NFL Glory Years. I was glad to contribute some of my memories,
including those of stars such as Dick Butkus, Sam Huff, and Paul Hornung.
As a running back for the New York Giants, Green Bay Packers, and New
York Jets, I played with and against many of the greats featured in this
excellent, nostalgic book that provides some laughs, along with a ton of
facts, stats, and inside stories. It’s a must-read for any football fan.”—
Chuck Mercein, NFL running back and Super Bowl II champion, Green Bay
Packers

“Wayne Stewart has done a fine job of capturing the glory days of the NFL,
back when I played for the Baltimore Colts with stars such as Raymond
Berry and Johnny Unitas. The book is packed with anecdotes and a ton of
inside information gained through exclusive interviews with many of us
players from that era. Anyone who watched the NFL in the 1950s and
1960s will want to read this book!”—Tom Matte, All-Pro running back,
Baltimore Colts

“I really enjoyed talking football with Wayne Stewart. He’s an All-Pro, as


they say; a class act—and so is his book.”—Don Maynard, Hall of Fame
wide receiver, New York Jets
Remembering the Stars of the NFL Glory Years
Remembering the Stars of the NFL Glory Years

An Inside Look at the


Golden Age of Football

Wayne Stewart

ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD


Lanham • Boulder • New York • London
Published by Rowman & Littlefield
A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc.
4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706
www.rowman.com

Unit A, Whitacre Mews, 26-34 Stannary Street, London SE11 4AB

Copyright © 2017 by Rowman & Littlefield

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any
electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems,
without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote
passages in a review.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Stewart, Wayne, 1953- author.


Title: Remembering the stars of the NFL glory years : an inside look at the golden age of
football / Wayne Stewart.
Other titles: Remembering the Stars of the National Football League Glory Years
Description: First Atria Books Hardcover edition. | Lanham, Maryland : Rowman &
Littlefield, 2017. | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016054867 (print) | LCCN 2017004309 (ebook) | ISBN 9781442274235
(cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781442274242 (electronic)
Subjects: LCSH: National Football League—History—20th century. | National Football
League—Biography. | Football players—United States—Biography. | Football players—
United States—Anecdotes. | Football—United States—History—20th century—
Anecdotes.
Classification: LCC GV955.5.N35 S73 2017 (print) | LCC GV955.5.N35 (ebook) | DDC
796.3320922 [B] —dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016054867
TM
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American
National Standard for Information Sciences Permanence of Paper for Printed Library
Materials, ANSI/NISO Z39.48-1992.

Printed in the United States of America


To those closest to me—
my wife Nancy, my sons and their spouses, Sean and Rachel, Scott and
Katie, and to my grandson Nathan
Acknowledgments

Sincere and huge thanks go out to the following people: Stephen Russell,
Mid Mon Valley All Sports Hall of Fame General Chairman; Ron Paglia, a
longtime newsman and writer from Charleroi, Pennsylvania; Chad Unitas;
Paige Unitas; John Ziemann, former deputy director of the Sports Legends
and Babe Ruth Birthplace Museum and president of Baltimore’s Marching
Ravens (formerly the Baltimore Colts Marching Band); Rich Erdelyi,
Carnegie Mellon University football coach; Ron Main, chairman of the Larry
Bruno Foundation at Carnegie Free Library of Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania;
Pete Fierle and Chris Schilling of the Pro Football Hall of Fame; and John
Vorperean, host and executive producer, Beyond the Game.
A final thanks goes out to all of the people who gave up their time to
do interviews with the author, with special appreciation extended to the
former players and coaches who generously did repeated and/or lengthy
interviews with the author: Chuck Mercein, Manny Fernandez, Gino
Marchetti, Sam Havrilak, Fred Cox, Myron Pottios, Doug Crusan, George
Belu, Bob Hyland, Tom Matte, Rick Volk, John Isenbarger, Lenny Moore,
Mike Ditka, Chuck Bryant, Mike Lucci, Joe Walton, Andy Nelson, Bill
Malinchak, and Raymond Berry. All of the quotes in the book, unless
otherwise noted, are from interviews conducted by the author.
Introduction

The genesis for this book is my roots in western Pennsylvania. I grew up in


Donora, which is nestled in the Mon Valley area, not far from Pittsburgh.
The town proclaims itself as The Home of Champions, and it has been a
hotbed for a slew of marvelous athletes. Donora natives proudly point to
the incredible fact that such a small town—at its peak the population hit
around fifteen thousand—produced two baseball Hall of Famers in Stan
Musial and Ken Griffey Jr. Coincidentally, the two were born on the same
date.
I happen to have graduated from the same high school class as
another great athlete, a lifetime .296 major league hitter, Ken Griffey Sr.,
who became a member of the famed Big Red Machine Cincinnati Reds.
Further, yet another native of the town, one of four to make it to the NFL,
“Deacon” Dan Towler, led the league in rushing in 1952. He also averaged
6.8 yards per carry that season, which still puts him at number fifteen all-
time in this department, even though he didn’t lead the NFL in that
category—Tobin Rote did (6.9).
At any rate, across the river from my hometown is Monessen, which
produced, according to the pro football reference website, a staggering
fourteen NFL players, despite having a population that peaked at roughly
twenty thousand. Other neighboring towns such as Monongahela
produced almost ten NFL players, including an excellent kicker, Fred Cox,
and Hall of Fame quarterback Joe Montana. The noteworthy coincidence
involving these two men is that they not only were raised in the same
town, they also grew up on the same block, though years apart.
The list of men who played their high school ball in the Mon Valley
area and then went on to play in an NFL title game, either in or before the
era of Super Bowls, includes not only Cox and Montana, who together
played in eight Super Bowls, but also Towler, Doug Crusan, Myron Pottios,
Sam Havrilak, and Bert Rechichar.
Hard to believe, but almost one-fourth of the twenty-five
quarterbacks from the modern era who are enshrined in the Pro Football
Hall of Fame hail from within a radius of about sixty miles around
Pittsburgh, a veritable football factory. The six men from this cradle of
quarterbacks are John Unitas, Joe Namath, and George Blanda, all three
featured in this book, and Montana, Jim Kelly, and Dan Marino.
Growing up in such an area inspired this book, and so did working on
my previous book, coauthoring Raymond Berry’s autobiography, All the
Moves I Had: A Football Life (Lyons Press, 2016). The western Pennsylvania
thread runs throughout this book, with many other stars, from Mike Ditka
to Joe Walton, featured heavily.
To be honest, though, I suspect that even if I had grown up in an area
that never produced a pro athlete, I still would have turned my living room
into a bunker on Sunday afternoons. I vividly remember the Glory Years as I
sat in front of my parents’ black-and-white Zenith television set (which, I
think, measured about a minuscule thirteen or fifteen inches diagonally). It
may have been difficult for me to make out the numbers of, say, John
Unitas as he launched a pass to favorite target Raymond Berry, but that
didn’t seem to matter—these guys were larger than life regardless of their
Lilliputian appearance on the screen. They were heroic figures in glorious
black and white—as for color, you can’t miss what never existed (and my
family didn’t own a color TV set until the 1970s).
Football through the eyes of a boy was wonderful. So much so that
even now the stars of that era shine with much more luminescence than
today’s.
Finally, it should be noted that this book is the first of two companion
books about the wonderful era of the 1950s and 1960s in the NFL. The
second book will be released in 2018 and will likely be titled Remembering
the Best Coaches of the NFL Glory Years: An Inside Look at the Golden Age
of Football. One part of that book will explore several select great games of
the era and examine the coaches’ roles in those games. It will include
Super Bowl III, the “Heidi” game, the “Ice Bowl” game, and the contest still
referred to as “The Greatest Game Ever Played,” the 1958 title clash
between the Baltimore Colts of John Unitas and company, and the New
York Giants of Frank Gifford and many others. The second part of the book
will look at Hall of Fame coaches such as Paul Brown, Don Shula, Tom
Landry, and Vince Lombardi.
Chapter 1
The Best Offensive Players
Fans always want to know who the experts consider to be, say, the best
quarterback ever, but Mike Ditka knows how foolish such inquiries are.
“Somebody asked me, ‘Who are the four top quarterbacks?’ And I said,
‘There is no such thing as the best quarterbacks.’ But I think when you
mention guys like Dan Marino and Johnny Unitas, and I go back to Y. A.
Tittle, John Brodie, and a lot of guys in my era, those guys were very, very
good football players.
“Now, were they the best? Was it Sammy Baugh or Sid Luckman? I
don’t know. You have to understand that the game has changed so much
today. The things based on numbers of the passing game—there was no
passing game in those days. You threw the ball, maybe, what, eighteen or
twenty times a game? And you ran. The advent of the forward pass being
really a weapon was with Johnny Unitas more than anybody. Throwing out
numbers doesn’t mean anything, and your contribution to the game is
what counts.”
To many fans, coaches, players, and members of the media, the time
period from the 1950s through the 1960s remains the Glory Years of the
NFL. A slew of all-time greats roamed the league’s gridirons, creating
history along the way.
It’s nearly impossible to determine exactly which NFL players deserve
to be labeled “great,” as opposed to those who were very good or were
borderline great players; and, without compiling a list, which would turn a
readable book into a tome, it’s impossible to cover every single one of the
greats.
With that in mind, there are three ground rules for this chapter: First,
it will cover Hall of Famers only. Secondly, this chapter will focus exclusively
on quarterbacks, running backs, wide receivers, and tight ends. Finally, it
does not attempt to cover every single player of this golden age who is
enshrined in Canton, Ohio; rather, it’s a sort of NFL Whitman-like sampler
of many of the elite of the era.
By the way, through the 2016 induction ceremonies, there were a
total of 260 players in the Hall of Fame, and more than half of them, 138, a
whopping 53 percent to be exact, come from the Glory Years. Men who
played in that time period are, for the purposes of this book, those who
played at least briefly in the 1950s or 1960s. In the book The NFL’s Top 100,
more of the players selected as the best of all time debuted in the 1960s (a
total of 21) than in any other decade. Plus, an additional 13 of them began
their careers in the 1950s, meaning more than one-third of the top 100
greats came from the golden era.

Start any list of NFL greats from this era with a name such as Johnny
Unitas or Jim Brown, and you can’t go wrong. In fact, in 2002, Sporting
News pulled no punches, calling Brown the greatest football player ever.
His credentials bear that out, especially considering he played almost half
of his career during years with schedules of twelve games and the rest of
his tenure was played in fourteen-game seasons. In addition, he put up his
unparalleled stats in just nine seasons.
Despite those drawbacks, his accomplishments still reverberate, and
some of today’s best runners, unborn when Brown departed from the
game, still agree with the evaluation of Sporting News. His rapid ascension
to stardom was a skyscraper’s express elevator ride to the penthouse. He
led the NFL in rushing and touchdowns as a rookie, led the league in those
departments in his final season, and did the same and much more in many
seasons in between.
Brown’s 12,312 rushing yards still rank number nine all-time; his 106
touchdowns on runs and his average of 5.2 yards per run are number five
all-time; and, get this, he averaged 104.3 yards per game played on runs
for his entire career—nobody else has ever averaged 100+ yards.
With Brown in the backfield, any time, anywhere Cleveland had the
ball, they were in scoring position—no need to use the term “red zone” in
connection to him. Trying to tackle Brown single-handedly was like trying
to bring down a polar bear with a popgun.
Hall of Fame defensive end Gino Marchetti looked back on some of
the toughest opponents he had to tackle. “You know who I really admired
as a back? The first two are no question—Jim Brown and Jim Taylor. Brown
was a hard hitter. He could do everything but block—he didn’t like to. He
couldn’t block a lick. Didn’t want to block a lick. Didn’t have to block a lick.
“He had great balance. He was fast; he could dodge; he could catch
the ball. They just gave him the ball thirty times.
“Let me tell you, though, when I tackled him, wow. I used to tell the
story at banquets: I played against him in a Pro Bowl and he was coming off
tackle. I was able to get rid of the tackle and there was Jim Brown and
there was me. So here he comes and I kinda grabbed him, sidearm a little
bit, and then I made the tackle. I got up and I felt pretty damned good
about it, you know. There he is, down, and there I am, my first Pro Bowl
and all that bullshit. Then I heard the announcement say, ‘Tackle by
Marchetti. Ball carrier, Jim Brown. Second and one.’ Second and one! He
dragged me for nine yards. I had been happy as hell until I heard the
announcer. And I wasn’t the only guy Brown did that to.”
Sam Huff, a Hall of Fame linebacker, once said this of trying to bring
Brown down: “All you could do is grab hold, hang on, and wait for help.”[1]
Brown carried defenders on his back like a burly camper lugs a backpack,
totally unconcerned about his load.
“I still think he’s the greatest back of all time,” opined former player
and head coach Joe Walton. “He was a powerful guy. I played against him
in college—Pitt played against Syracuse every year—and we played
together in a college All-Star game. The first time I played against him was
when I was on defense for the Redskins. The other defensive guys kept
asking me about Brown. I told them, ‘We hit him hard early in the game,
and we had to concentrate on gang tackling to make sure he knew we’re
coming after him.’ We never had any trouble with him at Pitt—he never
gained a hundred yards against our class.
“So the game starts and we’re getting after him pretty good, taking
our shots against him—and he gained 160 yards, another 50 yards pass
receiving, and scored four touchdowns. He killed us. After the game, the
guys said to me, ‘You dumb rookie.’
“If the Browns ran the ball three downs, Brown carried it twice at
least. And if he wasn’t running the ball, they’d throw to him. He had good
hands. He could do everything.”
Former NFL linebacker Myron Pottios said, “Jimmy had a knack of
running that you, as a defensive ballplayer, had a hard time getting your
arms around him because when he saw you coming, he would bend down
and shove his forearm into you. He was strong enough to keep you away. If
you can’t get your arms around him, you can’t get a hold of anything, and
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