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Earl "Curly" Lambeau

Curly Lambeau  

  • Born April 9, 1898,in Green Bay, Wisconsin
  • Died June 1, 1965,at age of 67.
  • 1919-1949 Green Bay Packers
  • 1950-1951 Chicago Cardinals
  • 1952-1953 Washington Redskins

As a fullback at Notre Dame in 1918, Lambeau was the only freshman to win a letter. However, he had to leave school because of tonsillitis and he got a job with the Indian Packing Corporation in Green Bay.


1918

1918 Notre Dame football team
Lambeau Back Row 3rd on right
(All American Sports Library)

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Back in Green Bay, he was offered $250 a month to work for the Indian Packing Company. A year later in 1919, Lambeau talked his employer into putting up $500 to buy uniforms and equipment for this semi-professional football team that became known as the "Packers". Lambeau became the team's coach and playing captain.

1919

The players held their first practice on Sept. 3, 1919 and played their first game on Sept. 14, against the Menominee North End A.C. Green Bay won that game, 53-0. Green Bay's one-sided victory over Menominee in its first game was the first of 10 consecutive triumphs in a season that saw Green Bay out score its opponents 565-6. Green Bay's only loss in that first season came in its last game, on Nov. 23, at the hands of a team that curiously called itself the Beloit "Fairies". The Green Bay Gazette reported the next day "Capt. Lambeau's team was robbed of victory by Referee Zabel of Beloit." Apparently, Lambeau scored three touchdowns that were called back on illegal motion penalties by Mr. Zabell.



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The team in 1921 entered the American Professional Football Association, which became the National Football League the following year. Green Bay's first year in the 'big league' was more humbling than previous seasons, finishing with a 3-2-1 record, against better-organised squads from larger cities.

Lambeau was the first pass-minded coach in the NFL and his teams were like their leader, impatient and explosive. An excellent passer in his own right, Curly flew in the face of common practice.As player-coach, Lambeau emphasised the forward pass much more than most professional coaches of the time. Despite rules that made it difficult to use the forward pass, Lambeau's Packers were a team whose main offensive weapon was the pass; at any time, on any down, from anywhere on the field.



1927
Curly Lambeau featured
in the photo Back Row (R)

 

By 1927 Curly began devoting more time to coaching and managing the team and less time to playing halfback. He signed a number of players in 1927 who would contribute greatly in the championship years ahead. From the dissolved Milwaukee Badgers, he picked up end LaVern Dilweg and quarterback Red Dunn. All of these additions helped bring the Packers to a 7-2-1 record which allowed them to come in second to the New York Giants.




Packers 1929
Featured in the photo Front Row (L to R): 20 Curly Lambeau

In 1929, after retiring as a player, Curly replaced himself with future Hall of Fame quarterback, Arnie Herber.who became the NFL's first great long-distance passer.

Curly Lambeau's gift for recognising and obtaining talent reached new heights this season when he acquired three future Hall of Famers.

Over the summer, the New York Yankees had folded and Lambeau plucked guard Mike Michalske, from Penn State, from the remains. From the Giants, Lambeau signed disgruntled tackle Cal Hubbard, a giant of a man at 6-5 and 250 pounds.

His most colorful addition, however, was halfback John 'Blood' McNally who he away from the Pottsville Maroons. Blood's off the field exploits rivaled his on the field accomplishments. He could run, pass, and punt with the best of them, but perhaps more importantly, he was the best pass catching back in the league.


The Packers won the first of three consecutive championships that season. From 1929 through 1931, they won 34 games, lost only 5, and tied 2. During the 1931 season, the Packers played in front of 107,000 spectators on the road. Under Lambeau's leadership they had become one of professional football's first great dynasties.


After signing future Hall of Fame receiver Don Hutson in 1935, they won three more titles in 1936, 1939, and 1944. 


So advanced were Lambeau's coaching theories and Hutson's abilities that many of Hutson's records stood for four decades or more. After he retired as a player, the Packers remained a powerhouse for almost three decades.

A sometimes-hot headed disciplinarian, Lambeau always got the most out of his players.  Lambeau resigned from the Packers following the 1949 season and later coached the Chicago Cardinals and Washington Redskins.


He left football after the 1954 season with an overall record of 229-134-22. For many years his 229 career victories ranked second only to George Halas.


Lambeau was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963. City Stadium was renamed in his honour in 1965.


earl 'curly' lambaeu


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In the 38 years since the death of Earl Louis "Curly" Lambeau,Green Bay Packer co-founder, player and coach, two generations of football fans have followed the fabled exploits of the team he created. Each and every time they've passed through the turnstiles of their hallowed stadium, they see his name emblazoned on the walls: Lambeau Field.


But how many football fans actually know who he was? What kind of man was Curly Lambeau? What were his personality traits? How did he put tiny Green Bay, Wisconsin on the map by building and transforming a town team into a six-time NFL Champion?


The answers to these and many more compelling questions are now contained in a brand new book, Lambeau: The Man Behind the Mystique by David Zimmerman (Eagle Books). Surprisingly it's the first in depth biography of the man who had such an influence over the NFL that people have come to know and enjoy today.


 

SOME LAMBEAU LINKS

 

  Playing & Coaching Stats
  Lambeau House - Birthplace of Curly Lambeau
  Green Bay Hall of Famers
  Pro Football Hall of Famers
  Green Bay Hall of Famers
  Lambeau Field
  Lambeau Statue unveiled
  Lambeau Leap the Movie

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