WHEN IT WAS JUST A GAME:
REMEMBERING THE FIRST SUPER BOWL
(Part
One, From the FrommerVault)
With the next Super Bowl
almost upon us, here is a flashback to my opus of the first one - - -and ten
things I learned researching, interviewing, writing the book. Enjoy.
1. Other rivals to the NFL through
the decades had sprung up: American Football League
(1926), American Football League
(1936–1937), American Football League
(1940–1941), All-America Football Conference
(1946–1949) None of them had the financial muscle and the organizational
skills behind them that Lamar Hunt’s American Football League, had.
2. One of Commissioner Pete
Rozelle’s suggestions for the name of the new game was "The Big One."
That name never caught on. “Pro Bowl,” did not work. “World Series of
Football.” That died quickly. It was deemed too imitative of baseball’s Fall
Classic.
3.
Quarterback Bart Starr of the Packers on Vince Lombardi: It was a fabulous experience all of us had playing for
him, being coached by him. I could hardly wait for the next morning to get into
the meeting to start that day off. He made everything so exciting, so
challenging. He was a brilliant teacher and because of it he was a fabulous
coach.
4. KC
player Ed Lothamer said of Kansas City Coach Hank Stram: There were times when
he had practices and a band playing. If an entertainer or
celebrity was in Kansas City, often they would call Hank, and Hank would invite
them to come over and watch practice. People like Muhammad Ali, Jim
Nabors, Al Hirt, Edie Gorme and Steve Lawrence, all watched us practice. You
never knew who was going to pop up.
5. Prior to
that first Super Bowl Game on January 15, 1967 – the Packers and the Chiefs has
never played against each other. Actually, no NFL team had ever played against
an AFL team – even an exhibition game.
6. The Saturday night before the game even chubby
Jackie Gleason, one of the famed comedians of that era, got into the act by
ending his CBS television urging his huge audience to make sure to tune in the
next day to CBS and watch the world championship football game.
“It’s gonna
be murder!” Gleason bellowed
There were
those who thought “The Great One” went a bit too far, that he was too much of a
shill for his CBS network that carried the NFL broadcasts.
7. Some
celebrities of the time at the game included: famed movie and TV stars Henry
Fonda, Kirk Douglas, June Allyson, Janet Leigh, Chuck Connors, Danny Thomas,
CBS TV anchor Walter Cronkite, comedian and serious sports fan Bob Hope, late
night TV host Johnny Carson.
8. Two
different footballs were used in the game. When the NFL Packers were on
offense, they used the NFL ball and when the AFL Chiefs were on offense, the
AFL ball was used.
9. Two
kick-offs incredibly took place to start the game’s second half because NBC-TV
was in commercial for the first one and a “do over” was allowed.
10.
Commissioner Pete Rozelle’s wish was that the game would one day surpass
baseball’s World Series. It would do much more than that.
With that first game history - The Super Bowl has evolved into the
grandest, grossest, gaudiest annual one-day spectacle in the annals of American
sports and culture. All of this incredibly spun off the game that was played
that January day in 1967 at the Los Angeles Coliseum, a game that for a time
lacked a name, a venue, an identity, a game that didn’t even sell out.
One of
the most prolific and respected sports journalists and oral historians in the
United States, author of the autobiographies of legends Nolan Ryan,
Tony Dorsett, and Red Holzman, Dr Harvey Frommer is an expert on the New
York Yankees and has arguably written more books, articles and reviews on the
New York Yankees than anyone. In 2010, he was honored by the City of New York
to serve as historical consultant for the re-imagined old Yankee Stadium site,
Heritage Field.
. A professor for more than two decades in the
MALS program at Dartmouth College, Frommer was dubbed “Dartmouth’s Mr.
Baseball” by their alumni magazine. He’s also the founder of www.HarveyFrommerSports.com.
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