Introduction
Why Vince Lombardi remains not only relevant, but revered. What he meant to the team, the region around Green Bay, the NFL and the game of football. His philosophies of life, athletics, and motivation, and his approach to the Xs and Os of his sport.
Chapter 1 Making of a Coach: Lombardi before Green Bay
Born in Brooklyn in 1913, Lombardi went on to become one of the renowned Seven Blocks of Granite” at Fordham. He learned execution and organization from famed Army coach Red Blaik, the passing game from fellow West Point assistant Sid Gillman, the power sweep from Fordhams Frank Leahy and Jim Crowley, and the requirements of the NFL from his five years as a New York Giants assistant.
Chapter 2 Swept Away: Lombardis running game
The enduring image of Lombardis Packers is guards Jerry Kramer and Fuzzy Thurston leading a runner around the end, clearing out overmatched defenders on one of Green Bays signature sweeps. The simplicity of Lombardis running game was almost a return to the end runs of the old Single-Wing offense, though he added traps and weakside counters to parry the Giants defensive strategies.
Sample play: A classic counter run
Chapter 3 Short-Short-Long: Lombardis passing game
Green Bays passing attack was generally cautious and patient. But when a defense overcommitted to stopping the run, Lombardi would let Paul Hornung throw a halfback option pass, or tell Bart Starr to throw deep on third-and-inches.
Sample play: A three-receiver pattern for third-and-long situations
Chapter 4 Green monster: Lombardis defense
While Lombardi is known primarily as an offensive coach, his defense sent at least five players to the Hall of Fame defensive end Willie Davis, defensive tackle Henry Jordan, middle linebacker Ray Nitschke, cornerback Herb Adderley and safety Willie Wood. The defensive side just as often carried the day for the Packers.
Sample play: A blitz or a short-yardage stacked front
Chapter 5 From Skoronski to Gregg: Lombardis linemen
Lombardis offensive linemen werent particularly huge Hall of Famer Forrest Gregg fluctuated between 230 and 250 pounds or highly touted. But under his tutelage they formed one of the leagues most impenetrable walls. Lombardis blockers had to be quick and smart; he introduced the concept of option blocking, in which a lineman lets his opponent make a move, then uses the enemys momentum against him by driving him in that direction.
Sample play: The Lombardi sweep” or blocking diagram
Chapter 6 350 Yards a Game: Lombardis backfield
Quarterback Bart Starr, fullback Jim Taylor and halfback Paul Hornung were nobodies before Lombardi arrived. In his system they became all-time greats. Starr was the perfect game manager, quick thinking and nearly error-free. (He once threw 294 passes without an interception.) Lombardis running backs learned the run to daylight” philosophy, reading the blocks up front and then making the appropriate cuts.
Sample play: A halfback option
Chapter 7 Hired Hands: Lombardis receivers
The Green Bay receivers were never as celebrated as the backfield. But guys like Max McGee, Boyd Dowler and Carroll Dale made timely contributions, and Ron Kramer was one of the first tight ends to be targeted for receptions. Lombardi expected all of them to work the middle of the field and exploit one-on-one match-ups.
Sample play: A classic crossing route
Chapter 8 Reaching the Pinnacle: The early championships
In 1961, his third season in Green Bay, Lombardi took the Packers all the way to an NFL championship, capped with a 370 pasting of the Giants in the title game. A year later, the Pack beat down New York again, 167 on the road. And after finishing second in the Western Conference the next two years, they reclaimed the title with a 2312 victory over Cleveland in 1965.
Chapter 9 Score Two for the Old Guard: The Super Bowls
Lombardi was under tremendous pressure to win the first AFLNFL Championship Game after the 1966 season (it wouldnt be called the Super Bowl until 1969), the first meaningful game between the two merging rival leagues. His Packers delivered against the Kansas City Chiefs, just as they would a year later against the Oakland Raiders in Lombardis final game as Green Bay coach.
Chapter 10 Cold Comfort: The Ice Bowl
It may be the most famous game in NFL history. On a hard frozen field, with a wind-chill factor of minus-49 degrees, the Packers and Dallas Cowboys squared off for the right to play in Super Bowl II. Down 1714 with sixteen seconds left, Lombardi called a risky quarterback dive play, and Bart Starr followed guard Jerry Kramers block to win it.
Sample play: The Wedge [see sample text]
Chapter 11 The Buffer Zone: Lombardis assistant coaches
While Lombardi didnt sprout an NFL coaching tree” as impressive as Bill Walshs or Paul Browns, he surrounded himself with capable and innovative assistants guys such as Bill Austin, Phil Bengtson, Jerry Burns, Tom Fears and Norb Hecker. They carried out the Lombardi philosophy, and some advanced to head coaching careers of their own.
Chapter 12 The Chess Pieces: Lombardis players
The great coach had a love-hate relationship with his players. He needled them, insulted them and sometimes berated them in his rough, intimidating voice. They feared him as much as they respected him. But Lombardi could be tender or funny, too. And there was no doubting his influence. Bart Starr, Jim Taylor, Paul Hornung, Forrest Gregg, Ray Nitschke and Jerry Kramer, among others, did almost nothing for the dreadful 1958 team before Lombardi arrived.
Chapter 13 Gone, but Not Forgotten: Lombardis legacy
After stepping down as Packers coach after the 1967 season, Lombardi got itchy and took over the Washington Redskins in 1969. There he took another downtrodden team to a winning record his first season, only to be claimed by cancer the following season. Throughout the 1970s, though, before changes in NFL rules ushered in an era of unfettered passing, Lombardis play book remained the league standard.