Football
at a Small, Pastoral College; 1964
By:
Terry Donnelly
“Show
of hands please. How many have voluntarily entered a maximum-security prison to
play a game?”
“I
have! I have!” That’s me waving my arms wildly.
About
30 of my Olivet College freshman teammates and I did just that in September of
1964. The Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MIAA), the oldest
athletic conference west of the Appalachians, the conference that boasted
Michigan State University as a member until 1948 when it jumped ship and joined
the Big Ten Conference, had no other schools with a freshman only football
team. Olivet had to find competition on its own and they did that by agreeing
to play prison teams.
Our
coaches found Jackson Prison, the maximum-security facility willing to pit its
inmates’ skills against those of a bunch of 17 and 18 year olds. So too was
Ionia State Prison, a medium security prison, and more on our level, Cassidy
Lake Reform School. We played six games, two times against each prison team. Jackson
and Ionia were both away games for us. The inmates couldn’t get weekend passes
to come to our field. Does that go without saying?
The
authorities did let the Cassidy Lake boys come to us, so we had one at home.
Our
first game at Jackson Prison was the most memorable. Rattled to his soul was
this 17-year-old, brand new, college freshman.
“How
is it possible they are sending us into a maximum-security prison to play
football? Don’t prisoners make knives out of chicken bones and stale bread
sticks? I’m sure this isn’t safe.”
Our
treatment upon arrival didn’t make the issue any easier. After we got off the
bus, we had to take our uniforms and gear bags into a holding cell, be locked
in, and dump everything out on the floor to be inspected, detected, and
possibly rejected by a stony faced, all business, Bluto clone, jail guard. Then
we had to pack up and do it again for a second security guard who acted even
more stoic. I think this second one inspired Hannibal Lecter in the movies.
Nightmares
ensued.
The team blamed the double scrutiny on one of our quarterbacks. He was a star from a Detroit tech school and brought a strong throwing arm to our team. He also brought an address book of acquaintances that included several prior Motown neighbors residing within the walls. As we entered the facility, more than one inmate whistled and called out to him by name, trying to get his attention. He meekly waved back. We all went about our business, but not before logging the information that Bobby had “connections” into our memory banks, in the event we needed protection or issues settled in the future.
After we finally were allowed into the locker room and got our buttons buttoned, snaps snapped, and laces laced and tied, we headed out to the gridiron. The playing field was in the middle of the prison grounds and had bleachers. It was a privilege for the inmates to attend the games and they bet cigarettes on the outcome. Most bet on us, so we felt we owed them a good effort. It was even more of a privilege to be on the team, so they played tough but by the rules–for the most part.
After we finally were allowed into the locker room and got our buttons buttoned, snaps snapped, and laces laced and tied, we headed out to the gridiron. The playing field was in the middle of the prison grounds and had bleachers. It was a privilege for the inmates to attend the games and they bet cigarettes on the outcome. Most bet on us, so we felt we owed them a good effort. It was even more of a privilege to be on the team, so they played tough but by the rules–for the most part.
When
the game finally got started we all were a bit nervous. Not only were the
inmates watching, the coaches had eagle eyes on us to see if anyone could
qualify to be moved up to the varsity team and escape the cycle of jail-bound
road trips. At that point it seemed like the competition of other MIAA college
teams would be a tad easier than what we were facing on this stark and Spartan
field.
Yours
truly was the kicker, so I’d be the first to touch the ball on the inaugural
play of our team’s journey through four years of college football. I felt the
enormity of the situation. Translated: I thought I was going to throw up. Coach
Cutler informed me that one of the players was a former Michigan State standout
running back who had gotten in trouble and would be doing the “Jailhouse Rock”
for a number of years here in Jackson Prison.
He
casually suggested that I avoid kicking the ball to number 24.
As I
stood on the field my instincts took over. I counted the players–five to my
left and five to my right, plus myself; to be sure there were eleven. I raised
my arm indicating that I was satisfied we had the correct number of players on
the field and that I was ready to start the game. I heard the referee’s whistle
indicating he was ready for action too. I turned my attention to the football
and stared intently at the lower third of the pigskin teed up ten yards ahead
of me.
All
football players get nervous before every game, but all of that melts away
after the first good hit–it acts like a slap across the face from an insulted
date.
I
started my approach toward the ball at a trot. I was what was soon to become an
obsolete icon. I kicked the ball with my toes from directly behind the ball. My
right shoe had a square toe. The soccer style, sidewinder kickers who use the
instep of their foot to smite the ball rather than toes, would soon put us
straight on kickers out of business. They could get the ball airborne quicker
and most could kick it farther. I don’t blame coaches for getting on the side
kicking bandwagon. Michigan State had a straight on kicker from Hawaii who
could make a fist with his toes and kicked barefooted. The Detroit Lions
professional team had a straight on kicker, Tom Dempsey, who had a deformed
stump for a right foot that fit into a special shoe that looked like the
business end of a nine-pound sledgehammer. He could kick it a mile. He held the
National Football League record for field goals at 63 yards for a number of
years, and George Blanda kicked field goals and extra points for the Chicago
Bears and Oakland Raiders until he was about 100 years old. Some of us were
characters even if inferior to the soccer-type guys.
Upon
my eventual arrival at the teed up, rich brown, leather quasi orb, I swung my
leg forward and heard the satisfying thud I’ll never forget. The sound is
permanently ingrained in my memory from thousands of rehearsals and game-time,
live action kicks. Naturally, I sliced the ball, much like many of my golf
shots, and none other than the once regaled Saturday afternoon standout, number
24, received my kick-off.
He
effortlessly began his journey back toward our end of the field, gaining speed
with every step. All eleven payers whom I had just counted lined up across the
field, including me, tried to do our part in this game of strength, speed, and
deception by tackling him to the ground. We failed–miserably. My shot at him
ended with him hitting my helmet with his knee. He swiveled his hips past the
rest of our squad and sauntered into the end zone. He scored a touchdown
against us on our very first collegiate play. My first game lasted just that
one play. Any details of this game I have beyond that knee-to-helmet instant
were gleaned from teammates. My next memory is riding on the bus back to
campus. We lost that game, but were proud to go back three weeks later with two
more games under our belts, less awestruck, much more sophisticated after
nearly a month as seasoned college men, and win the return match.
The
next Friday we traveled to the western side of Michigan to the Ionia State
Prison. Even though the security level there was yellow to Jackson’s red, the
setting was even more daunting. We were ushered directly into the locker area,
which made for less stress than the double gear check to which we had been
subjected the week before. But, seeing the field was a shock. It was enclosed
inside 15-foot high, cement block walls that rendered an area not much larger
than that needed for a 100 yd x 60 yd. football field. There were no spectators
but for the armed guards on top of the brick wall surrounding the field. All
the anxiousness we felt in Jackson came rushing back with the sight of
automatic guns in the hands of, once again, stony faced, all business, grim
looking prison guards.
Any
attempt at a field goal or extra point on this field had to be kicked in the
direction of the one goal post that stood in the north end zone. The south zone
had a goal post painted on the bricks, as there was not enough room to erect a
standard goal post at both ends. Any kick would have bounced off the wall at the
end of the field like an oblong pinball.
We
lost our second game at Iona too. The bus trips back to campus were not fun. On
the first one I was still in a daze and had the headache from hell after
playing only one play. The second was spent in contemplation about whether or
not we were ever going to win a game. The games themselves weren’t a lot of fun
either and I began to reconsider my choice to play college level football at
all.
…………………………
I
graduated from a Class A high school the previous June. My high school had a
much larger student population than Olivet’s enrollment of just under 900
students. I was not a super star player, just one who loved to bang heads
around and enjoy the camaraderie of teammates who could get excited and focused
as all get out on Wednesday about an impending game on Saturday. Being on a
team was fun because of the people surrounding you.
I
incorrectly figured that being from a big high school, going to a small college
would qualify me to be a top dog on the smaller team. I have never been more
mistaken about anything in my life–before or since.
When
I arrived on campus for early practice two weeks before classes started, only
freshmen were there for the first two days. My sense of superiority was already
beginning to wane when I began talking to all-conference guards, an all-state
quarterback, several first and second team all this-and-that’s from both the
Detroit and Chicago areas, farm boys who had amassed great strength by effortlessly
hoisting bales of hay all their lives, and the occasional just plain tough guy
who loved knocking heads way more than I did.
As we
sat around in the first of many bull sessions on Sunday evening before our
first practice, scheduled for six a.m. Monday, discussing all these honors, it eventually
came to my turn.
I
said, “I was second team all-school last year in Kalamazoo.“
I was
shocked when no one laughed at my joke. They thought I was serious. I was, but
I thought it was funny too. There isn’t much that is funny about preseason football
camp.
Just
as I was getting comfortable with my freshmen mates, the upperclassmen started
to show up. In the fall of 1964 Olivet College boasted the heaviest line
average in the state of Michigan. Olivet is what eventually became a Division
III college. That is small! In 1964 there were no such division distinctions,
but that is the brand we hold today with a student population just over 1,000.
We were the smallest college in our conference and our line was bigger than
either of the behemoths, Michigan State and the University of Michigan.
Anyway,
this small school had both offensive and defensive lines that seemed to stretch
from horizon to horizon, and darken the sun when standing broad shoulder to
broader shoulder. These guys were huge! One guy was over three hundred pounds
and ended up being drafted into both the National Football League by Papa Bear
George Halas himself, and the American Football League Boston Patriots. Being
from the East Coast, George chose Boston (now New England).
Another
was a 245-pound California surfer who looked tan, lean, and ready to eat nails.
Yet another had a size eight plus head. I could put my big head into his
special order football helmet and spin it around. Another guy was six foot six
inches tall, weighed 280 pounds, and was in such exquisite condition that he
looked skinny. My size thirteen shoes and two hundred pound girth didn’t even
cause a ripple of interest.
As I
watched them come back onto campus after our first two days of practice, I just
stood in awe as one then another would first darken the door opening, come into
the dorm, and deposit their bags. When the senior quarterback finally arrived
with a nose that had more twists and turns in it than Lombard Street in San
Francisco, I began to wonder if there were a bus going back to Kalamazoo any
time soon.
I was
even more in awe the next day when I saw them in full football gear. It took
rotating my head both from side to side and up and down to take in the entirety
of our all-MIAA, 320-pound, offensive and defensive lineman, who would,
starting the next season, be playing on Sundays on television for the next
dozen years. He was monstrous! For a seventeen-year-old freshman, the sight was
frightening. I thought about my mother for the first time in weeks.
The
football team was on campus two full weeks before anyone else showed up. We
were scheduled to have three practices a day and two meals. As stated above,
the first one was at six a.m., the second for three hours starting at 11
o’clock, then an evening practice under the lights at dusk when it was cooler.
Wedged between the three were two training table meals. This didn’t sound right
to me. I was thinking more on the lines of at least three meals and two
practices, but fortunately, thought better of voicing my opinion.
I was
a bit skinny for football at 180 pounds when I graduated from high school.
After making the decision to play in college, I figured I better put on some
weight. I began to drink a powdered supplement called Tiger’s Milk and work out
on my own. I ran and lifted weights. I practiced a couple hours every day
kicking the two old, scuffed up footballs my high school coach had given me. I
hoped to be kicking shiny, brand new Rawlings specials in games that fall.
Mostly
I practiced kicking the ball alone by kicking from a tee. That was fine for
kicking off, but kicking out of the hold of a quarterback for extra points and
field goals was different. I talked my girlfriend into holding the ball for me.
It took a week for her to trust that I wasn’t going to kick her hand and that
flinching didn’t help one bit. It was a bit like a Charlie Brown and Lucy moment in reverse. I think she really would have preferred to pull the ball away just as I was about to kick it.
She finally got the hang of it, but wasn’t too thrilled about spending two or three July and August hours each day on the school lot chasing after one or another of my old footballs. So, I spent most of my practice time in solitary drill and contemplation.
She finally got the hang of it, but wasn’t too thrilled about spending two or three July and August hours each day on the school lot chasing after one or another of my old footballs. So, I spent most of my practice time in solitary drill and contemplation.
All
in all during the summer after my high school graduation, I gained 20 pounds. I
was now at a respectable six foot two inches tall and 200 pounds. My waist
measurement was 33 inches. I could run a mile in under nine minutes, which is
not in anybody’s record book but my own. I felt invincible–until I started to
meet the biggest, toughest looking individuals I had ever seen. To make matters
worse, they were all in a three-point football stance in a row across the line
from the football, which was resting innocently enough on the practice field,
about to devour me as a freshman strawberry tort.
Then,
when I heard that I was only going to be fed twice a day and was to practice
football with these behemoths three times every day for two weeks, it was a
real blow to my system. It was nearly a deal breaker.
I
have to give the cooks credit. They really knew how to feed us. During our
two-week encampment, I went from my paltry 200 pounds to 215. I kept my 33-inch
waist and loved every pound. I thought I surely was getting close to looking
like those other boys on the team.
…………………………
Football
players can get serious about playing a game, but about not a lot else. The
older guys were mostly 21 years old and could go into the local bars. A couple
of the guys had been in the military and were really old, like 23! The coaches
didn’t condone it, but I doubt they had a lot of say-so in what those guys did
when not on the field.
A
favorite hangout was a bar just outside a neighboring town. The bar was named
The Green Top. It had a green shingle roof–clever. This wasn’t the college bar
where students were the majority of clients. The patrons here were mostly
farmers local to the area. When school was in session a handful of my new, big
friends would occasionally venture in to see if there was any mischief to stir
up. There usually was. But, by now they were a known commodity and when they
came crashing in, the clatter and din of the normal bar atmosphere dulled as no
one wanted to get the boys riled up and start any sort of melee. That had been
done on several other occasions and the result was usually broken furniture and
the police shutting off the lights.
On
the Saturday night that the three-a-day practices mercifully ended, one of the
older players found me and invited me to go with some of the team for an
evening of a few beers. I was only seventeen, way under the legal drinking age,
but he assured me that there would be no questions asked if I were with them.
Craning
my neck upward to speak to him, I felt compelled to agree. I really did think
it would be fun.
The
method of their madness in inviting me was that they knew they would not be
able to start any mayhem because none of the patrons in the bar would take
their bait. So, they planned on sending me in as a front man. It turned out I
got the nod to accompany them, not because I was the coolest, most talented
frosh player, but because I was the smallest player they could find hanging
around the dorm.
“What
am I supposed to do?” I queried.
“It’s
easy. Just go in, walk up to the bar and chug down of one of the farmer’s
beers.”
“Are
you kidding?”
“No.
I don’t think so. It’ll be great. You drink his beer. He gets pissed and wants
to fight you. Then we come rushing in and we all get to have some fun.”
I
really couldn’t see an up side in this for me other than getting a free beer. I
could only think of two scenes possibly playing out. The first was that when I
drank the farmer’s beer and got him pissed at me, all my football buddies would
stay outside, looking in the windows, laughing their asses off because I’d get
the snot beat out of me as a sort of team initiation. The second was that they
would all come in and start fights with everyone in the bar and we’d all end up
in jail.
What
actually transpired was something to behold.
I
screwed up my courage and walked into the bar alone. Trying not to look
seventeen and in awe of being inside a dive tavern for the first time. I went
straight to the bar. There were several locals there with many more at tables
with wives and dates listening and dancing to the live band on the stage.
Others were playing pool. They all were enjoying their Saturday night out.
I
thought if I hesitated I wouldn’t be able to accomplish my mission. So, I
nudged past the biggest beer drinker at the bar (Why not?) and took a long swig
out of his icy cold mug. The look on his face was priceless.
“What the…?”
To my
everlasting joy, just then the seven other players came rushing into the bar
making quite a clatter. The farmer looked away, freezing in time with his huge,
work callused fist drawn back in preparation for slugging me. He turned his
attention to the ruckus going on in front of the stage.
The
six-foot-six, “skinny”, 280 pounder grabbed the microphone from the lead singer
and announced to everyone that he wanted the band to play the song “Money”. My
team liked it as a theme song because to them it meant: “here comes trouble,
hide all your money.”
“Money”
is an old Motown song, the company’s first hit single, and staple of every bar
band in Michigan, if not the whole country. So, I think the leader lied when he
responded that the band did not know the song and could not comply.
“Play
‘Money’ or we’ll break all your fucking instruments!”
I
guess the bandleader believed him and whether or not they really knew the song,
the band started in with the lead guitar riff to the tune. I never got to hear
if they knew any of the words or not because my teammates decided the rendition
wasn’t good enough and unplugged the amp cords out of two of the guitars.
The
bar din suddenly went silent–silent as being deep in a cave–silent as being in
a law school library.
That
act immediately got the locals up and a melee ensued. I just watched as no one
was paying any attention to me any longer. I worked my way over to the door, and
after a few minutes of mayhem, the players suddenly just stopped the fracas and
left the building. I was right in front of them. We got into the cars and
roared away, leaving the bar in a mess.
That
was not my finest moment as a human being. The local bar patrons were doing
nothing to deserve the assault. But, the football lineman got a huge adrenalin
rush and laughed all the way back to campus. I had passed my loyalty test and
was, from then on, exempt from a lot of the hazing some of the other players
got during practice and especially at training table meals.
Freshmen
had to fetch drink refills and carry trays of dirty dishes back to the kitchen
after each meal. I still had to do that, but, occasionally, one or two had to
stand and sing their high school fight song and then be criticized for still
thinking like a high schooler. The team would then stand and sing the college
fight song, have a good laugh and go back to devouring plates and plates of
food. I could sing a little and wouldn’t have minded, but I never had to do a
solo.
The
practices were a grind. The early morning practice consisted of drills and
conditioning activities. We ran laps, drilled on calisthenics, and did
isometric exercises. One isometric drill was specific to neck strength. We
would pair up and one player would get down on all fours in front of the other.
The standing player would press down on the back of the kneeling player's helmet
for about thirty seconds while the other forced his head back against the
pressure. The coach’s whistle would end this push/pull standoff. Then the
stander would interlace his fingers and cup his hands upward. The exerciser
would put his chin in the cupped hands and each would force against the other
as mightily as they could with hands being forced upward and chin down. I could
feel every muscle, tendon, and ligament in my neck tighten and strain during
the drill and then relax when the pressure was called to a halt. We would then
reverse positions and do it again, and again, and again.
When
I started the two-week run, I wore a size 16-inch shirt collar. When early
practice was over my shirt collars were getting pretty snug. By the time my
freshman year was over, my neck measurement was 17 and a half inches. I had to
buy all new dress shirts. That was an issue because we had to wear a coat and
tie to dinner after football season was over when we were in the general
population again, and on road trips to away games. Another problem was that
shirts didn’t often come in size 17 1/2-inch necks. I had to go to the Big and
Tall store.
After
the morning workout we went to training table breakfast. Food was abundant, varied, and plentiful. We could eat our fill of fruits, vegetables,
carbohydrates, and protein. Oddly, no milk was available. The thinking was that
milk left a film in your mouth and would make you thirsty during heavy practice–we
called it cottonmouth. This was before Gatorade, so we drank gallons of fruit
punch.
I
should clarify here that cottonmouth would make you thirstier as the coaches’
thinking included not letting us drink water for fear of players getting sick
during practice–how about heat stroke instead? Or, dehydration? That, along
with another big change in healthy training habits not done today, was the
mostly logical idea that while working so hard and sweating we would lose too
much salt from our bodies. So, we were to eat several pills the size of three
stacked quarters that were pure salt. They weren't a lot smaller than the salt-licks in a every cow barn. It is a wonder none of us went into
shock. No one did, but that practice is long gone from the more modern game.
After
breakfast and a rest, we went back out for about three hours of regular
football practice. We worked on technique for our positions and worked on plays
as a unit. The main duty of the freshman team was to be tackling dummies for
the varsity. We were to give a good battle, but not enough to get anyone on the
A-team hurt. It didn’t much matter what happened to us.
One
of our plays called for everyone to come running in one direction around one
end of the line or the other. It was simply “student-body-left” or “student-body-right” in the huddle. I was stationed in the outside defensive linebacker
position. The play was called and when I recognized it, I was to come across
the line of scrimmage and was supposed to hold my ground against 10 other
players so that someone else could tackle the lonely halfback carrying the
ball–theoretically, now defenseless with me corralling the other 10/11ths of the
team. The defensive strategy never worked. That’s why the play was so good. I’d
get one guy, two on a really good day, but that still left eight or nine to
block for the runner.
On
one occasion it had been raining and the field was muddy. It was November, late in the
season, and getting cold and dark as we were winding down practice.
I took my stance and knew full well student-body-right was coming my way as
soon as the ball was snapped. I hurried to get into my spot so that I could get
credit for trying and not running to the bench when the mass of humanity headed
my way. As I took my first step I slipped in the slop and fell face forward
into the mud. The offensive line had just as much trouble with traction, and
they began falling like dominoes over my downed body. By the end I had about
seven guys on top of me and the halfback had been tackled behind the scrimmage
line for a loss of five yards.
Freshman
Coach Cutler came running to me looking like he was about to hug me. He didn’t,
maybe because I was one big block of mud, but he was elated with my
performance.
Slapping
my helmet enough to make my ears ring and pounding on my shoulder pads he
exclaimed, “Donnelly! Great job. That’s the way to defend that sweep. Don’t let
those sissy offensive players get the better of you!” And on and on.
Now that I think about it he may not have said "sissy", but that will do for now.
Now that I think about it he may not have said "sissy", but that will do for now.
I
didn’t have the heart to tell him I slipped and fell–just couldn’t do it. He
was too happy. I was so caked with mud that I had to go into the shower with my
uniform on to rinse as much mud away as I could enabling me to find my snaps,
buttons, and laces so I could be freed from my football pads.
Exhausted
after the rigorous practice, we all went in for the second training table of
similar fare as breakfast. There was much less hazing and horseplay. Following
lunch was another, longer rest period where a lot of us napped, read, or played
cards, but nothing too strenuous. I finished a book of John O’Hara’s short
stories during that time.
About
dusk we would once again assemble, but this time in helmets, tee shirts, gym
shorts, and our football cleats for a special team practice. It is etched in
stone, a true commandment, that when on a football field, whether in full pads
or not, one must wear one’s helmet. One could choose to be naked, but for the
ever-present helmet atop one's bean. These practices were a lot of fun as we
wound down from the grueling day. The other two practices were held in an empty
lot next to the playing field, but the evening practice was under the lights on
the real McCoy–enchanting!
I wanted
to fill the duties of place kicker on the team. I knew I wasn’t as good a
player as the others, but I was pretty adept at kicking. First, I needed to
make the team and then the specialists would be chosen. I had kicked the two
scuffed up old balls around the playground at home all summer. Now, I had
someone to hold for me who didn’t flinch, and those huge teammates to block
while I tried to score points for the team with a field goal or an extra point
after a touchdown. We practiced pass routes, slow motion blocking
assignments, and kickoff and punt returns too. But, I felt like the whole
practice was staged solely for me to kick the ball.
I
must admit that even though I had been playing organized football since fourth
grade, I learned more about the game and how to play it in those two weeks than
all the rest combined. By the time three-a-days were over, football was fun
again. Plus, as of Sunday there would be coeds on campus. I had a definite edge
on the other freshmen because I knew my around campus and I was a lean, mean
defensive linebacker and kicker to boot.
…………………………
The freshmen Fighting Comets of Olivet College
(Yes, we were Comets. How fierce is a comet you may ask? Well, I think they
generate a lot of heat and that million-mile tail can do some real damage!)
finally won their first game at Cassidy Lake Reform School. These were kids our
age and younger who had gotten in trouble and were assigned by the court to
this live-in facility. Not only was this a more relaxed atmosphere, we were
getting better and better as a team as the weeks went by.
We returned to both Jackson Prison and to Ionia
Prison and won games there.
Our final game was a return match with the
Cassidy Lake team. This was a minimum-security facility and none of the boys
had done anything too heinous, so they were allowed to come play at our field.
We finally had a home game.
Our home field was small. It only held a few hundred
fans. There were about a dozen rows of bleachers with a press box on the home
side and only about five or six rows for the opposing team. I do not recall any
time when there was much of an overflow.
The stadium area was smaller, by far, than the
field I played in during high school. Reed Field had one truly odd aspect for
football fields–it faced east and west. Every other football field I have ever
seen is situated from north to south. There is a reason for this. East and west
fields have sun problems. With the sun going from east to west across the sky,
there are times when the sun would be in the eyes of players on one side and
not in the eyes of the other, giving the team looking away from the sun a
distinct advantage. On north and south facing fields, there may be sun related
problems, but it is equal for both teams. Also, prevailing winds are generally
across from west to east. This allowed a punter from, either Alma or Adrian
College, I can’t recall which, to punt the ball with the wind, 98 yards. The
NCAA record seems to belong to Pat Brady from the University of Nevada, Reno in
1950 at 99 yards, but I remember this one as if it were yesterday. The punter
kicked it over or receiver’s head by some 40 yards. My college now boasts a
more traditional north/south field in the area where we used to practice and
the old field area is gone, replaced by a fine field house, something we never
had. Ours was a no frills, block building that held showers and lockers–period.
Our weights and training equipment were on a stage in back of the basketball
court. I’ll save that story for another time.
Our final freshman game with Cassidy Lake was
not much of a contest. We won the game 77 to 7. As the kicker, I played 23
plays in that capacity alone. There were the eleven extra points, the eleven
kick-offs after the touchdowns, and one kick to start the second half. That
many plays by a kicker is unheard of.
We had worked hard, learned a lot about
football, and were now ready to join our big upperclassmen teammates for the
final two games of the varsity season.
The season ended in November about the time of
my mud caked slip and ensuing success in defending the “student body right”
play during practice. I then joined my freshman class in the regular hum of
college life. I was glad that football was over so I could participate more in
normal college functions and not be tied up with curfews and travel to away
games on Fridays or Saturdays.
That thought should have been an omen for me. There
were several others that foreshadowed the end of my football career. One was
that I never became a first-string player. Those who played for fun played flag
football with the fraternities. Another was the fact that the other players
thought it a bit strange that I was reading John O’Hara instead of
participating in bull sessions between practices. I wasn’t a square peg trying
to fit into a round hole, but close.
None of that withstanding, when sophomore year
rolled around I was excited to go back to three-a-day practices and twice daily
meals. I was no longer a freshman tackling dummy. I was going back as a known
commodity and would be treated more respectfully–or so I thought.
When we were freshmen we treated the
upperclassmen with respect. I expected the same from this new crop of young
players. Once again, I made a poor assumption about a football situation. Early
on during August practice I lined up across from a good sized youngster with
the name “Tero” written across his helmet on white first-aid tape. We all had
our names on our helmets so the coaches could yell at us without any confusion
about who was being chastised.
Anyway, I lined up across from him and made some snide remark about his status as slop-bucket runner and as soon as the whistle blew and the drill began, I found myself on my back looking into the sky around the smiling face of Gustav Tero. Gus and I became good friends and fraternity brothers later that year, but what I didn’t see coming was this South Chicago all-star who wasn’t at all excited about playing prison teams and wanted to be a factor in Saturday games from the beginning. It turned out that Gus was the role model for his younger brother, Laurence. Laurence came into fame several years later and everyone called him “Mister” as in “Mr. T”. I had insulted Mr. T’s older brother and I was the fool to be pitied.
I played through both sophomore and junior years
mostly because I didn’t know what to do with my fall afternoons if they were
not spent on a football field. When senior year arrived, I went to early
practice without a lot of conviction. After three days, I handed my uniform
over to Gary, the laundry manager, informed the coach that I wouldn’t be
playing this year, and headed out the door. I walked directly across the street
that was U.S. Highway 27. I stuck out my thumb. I had played my last football
game and was hitchhiking to Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan to see if
I could catch up with a woman I had been thinking about.
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