I'm old enough to remember a lot of players in this book. I'm old enough to know the agony of a Chicago Bears' fan as Bart Starr seemingly ubuiquitously on third and short would run a play action fake and hit a McGee or a Dowler or. . . . for a good gain. This book is really about two years in the history of the Green Bay Packers--the year before Vince Lombardi arrived and the year that he did arrive. Night and day!
In 1958, plainly put, the Packers stunk. Under coach "Scooter" McLean, they just didn't have the wherewithal to play against the top teams in the league. McLean was lax in his discipline and in working his players hard to get them in shape. As the season moved along, a number of the players just "quit," not thinking that they could win. What made this so distasteful is that once the Packers had been part of the National Football League's (NFL) elite. It was also locally owned, in the smallest city in the NFL. An altogether miserable year. . . . McLean was fired. The local ownership group searched for a new coach. The likes of Bert Bell, George Halas, and Paul Brown were consulted. One of the names that came up was an assistant coach for the New York Giants--Vince Lombardi. After an interview process, Lombardi was hired. And, boy, did things change for the Packers!
The base of the 1959 team was pretty much the 1958 team. But what a difference a year made. Some of the starters were cut for bad attitudes. Some new players were brought in to provide a sense of competence and a comfort level with playing to win. And the workouts. . . . Lombardi worked his players hard so that they could outwork and outlast players on other teams. He simplified the team's offense, bringing his philosophy to the Packers. A physical running team was his goal. The previous year, players like Jim Taylor and Paul Hornung languished on the bench.
We know the story. The Packers improved dramatically. Lombardi gave players like Bart Starr, Jim Taylor, Paul Horning, Boyd Dowler, Ray Nitschke and others a chance to play. And the team slowly blossomed that year, ending up 7-5 (NFL seasons were only 12 games long then).
The work itself is scarcely great prose or unusually insightful. But it does provide a literate view of the turnaround in this storied fraqnchise in 1959, with Coach Lombardi as the catalyst.