Former Green Bay Packers quarterback Bart Starr donated his Super Bowl II championship ring and other items to the Hall of Fame during, what his family says, was his last trip to Green Bay on Oct. 23, 2017. Sarah Kloepping/USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin
“That’s the sign of a champion,” Cowboys tackle Ralph Neely told the Green Bay Press-Gazette after the Ice Bowl. “They needed a score, and Starr got it for them.”
Starr’s jersey No. 15 is one of only six numbers retired in Packers history.
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Go to the link for the complete article with more pictures and videos of Starr’s fabled career.
Growing up in Milwaukee, I was fortunate to see Starr and the Lombardi-era Pack play “live” on several occasions. In those days, unlike now, the Packers played three “home” games at Milwaukee County Stadium. While we didn’t have season tickets, my parents had a few friends who did, so occasionally two tickets would come our way.
While Starr’s most famous play was the successful quarterback sneak against the Cowboys in the “Ice Bowl,” he was also noted for crossing up defenses on third down plays. I remember sitting with my Dad, feet freezing, at County Stadium for a late season game between the Pack and the Cleveland Browns, who at that time had “all world” running back Jim Brown and a stout defense.
The Pack had a third and one in their own territory in tight game. In those days, most offenses were focused on running, rather than the wide-open pass-oriented game of today. That was particularly true of the Pack under Lombardi. “Grind it out” and punish your opponents with tough physical play was more or less the “Lombardi culture.” With future Hall of Fame running backs Jimmy Taylor and Paul Hornung, and one of the premier offensive lines ever, everyone in the stadium, including the Browns, expected a run up the middle or maybe one of the famous “Packer Sweeps” with “pulling guards” leading the way for Taylor or Hornung.
Starr changed the play at the line. On the a snap, he took three streps back and hit his receiver (probably Boyd Dowler, but perhaps Max McGee) with a strike resulting in an untouched trip down the field into the end zone. Classic Starr! It changed the momentum of the game, allowing the Pack eventually to prevail.
I think Starr’s relationship with the legendary Vince Lombardi was the key to Packer success. While Lombardi was undoubtedly a coaching “genius,” he also was a “larger than life figure” who “sucked the air” out of any room he was in. Additionally, he was known for being rather frank and brutal in assessing failures to perform up to his high expectations.
I doubt that most of today’s “top tier” quarterbacks could have existed in Lombardi’s system. And, without somebody like Starr, who understood the “big picture” of what Lombardi was doing, and always delivered under pressure, I don’t think Lombardi and the Pack could have reached the heights of football dominance in the 1960’s as they did.
R.I.P Bart! Thanks for the memories, the excitement, and the inspiration of a life well-lived.
PWS
05-26-19
I also highly recommend ESPN’s Ian O’Connor’s moving tribute to Starr “The Toughest Football Player Who Ever Lived” that shows how Starr’s greatness went far beyond statistics and on field successes. http://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/26826288/bart-starr-was-toughest-football-player-ever-lived
PWS
05-26-19
Bart Starr, small hands, relatively short, last round NFL Draft pick. Coolest QB in NFL History. Beats Montana, #2. Me? Came to the Midwest 1966 already a Johnny Unitas Man Crush. Their Wesern Division late season decisive games.
Starr won the respect of everyone who paid any attention to sports for being the Greatest Gentleman combined with Perfect Performance under Pressure than any one else. As PWS noted, the “Ice Bowl” finale says everything you kneed to know.
Except that when I moved to Iowa in 1966 I wish my tiny TV reception would have given me the Packers, instead of just the Bears! I would have been a much happier sports TV watcher because I started watching NFL games as the hotel desk clerk in Clinton, Iowa, on Sundays. But I don’t regret watching the Kansas Tornado Gale Sayers playing for the Bears, before he hurt his knee. Those Black and Blue Division games.
Gale Sayers was something special, even for a die-hard Pack fan like me. Just loved to watch that guy run.
Another Packer all-time great, running back Jimmy Taylor died within the last year. Totally different type of runner than Sayers. They used to say, “Jimmy Brown (probably all-time greatest mentioned in my post) would show you a leg and run around you; Jimmy Taylor would show you a leg and run right over you.”
The “Lombardi era” Packers were one of my greatest memories of “Wisconsin in the 60s.” They were a prime example of “greatness through teamwork.” Looking at some of the old pictures and rosters of those days, I’m amazed at how “small” they were compared with today’s players. Not a 300 pounder on the team — nobody ever close.
PWS
05-30-19