Tuesday, December 2, 2025

OTD 100th Anniversary Red Grange-Bears Tour - St. Louis Game

 LOOKING BACK
By Chris Willis, NFL Films

Red Grange at Cubs Park, Nov. 1925, Chicago Bears
     After playing two games in Chicago against the Cardinals (Thanksgiving Day) and the Columbus Tigers (Sun. Nov. 29th) Red Grange and the Chicago Bears were ready to hit the road. The barnstorming tour was just getting started with a trip to St. Louis.

    The St. Louis team was organized by Art Donnelly, a local mortician and sports promoter, who helped fellow promoter Bud Yates with the $2,000 guarantee (some news reports say it was $5,000) to get Red and the Bears to come to St. Louis. Because of the hastily put together game the squad was mostly comprised of local talent who played at St. Louis University. Yates was able to attract former Cornell All-American halfback Eddie Kaw, former Michigan star center Ernie Vick and current Detroit Panthers player-coach Jimmy Conzelman (who had starred at S.L.U.) to play for St. Louis. They only had a week to get ready.

Bud Yates, St. Louis Sports Promoter

    The Bears arrived the evening before the game at Union Station in St. Louis just after 6:00 p.m. local time, greeted by several hundred fans and the press. Conzelman also showed up to greet his former teammates with the Staleys, Halas and Sternaman, as well as meet Red for the first time. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch took a photo of the Galloping Ghost and Conzelman smiling together.

     The team was taken to the Coronado Hotel where they stayed the night. At the hotel Red gave an interview to the St. Louis Star and Times. The paper called Red “quiet and assuming,” while asking him about several topics that included his opinion of the pro game compared to the college game.

    “I like it…the professional game is different. Unhampered by the overwhelming college insensitive, the players concentrate on straight football, with the result that the player and spectator are much better pleased. Please understand, this is no disparagement of the college spirt or the very natural and healthy desire to win for his alma mater. It is a question of good football and the colleges certainly seem to inspire players to win at all and any cost.” 

      The one thing Red enjoyed about being a pro football player was that he could just concentrate on football, twenty-four hours a day- no classes, no teachers, no work, etc. The game was played on a Wednesday afternoon at Sportsman’s Park- home of the baseball’s Browns and Cardinals- on the city’s northside. Tickets were sold at the ballpark and Leacock’s, the city’s leading sporting goods stores for the past twenty-five years. Prices were set at: $4.40 (box seats); $3.20 (grandstands) and $2.20 (bleachers and pavilion) plus tax. Ads in the St. Louis Star and Times read:

“RED GRANGE

At Sportsman’s Park

Wednesday, Dec. 2

Tickets at Leacock’s (10th and Locust); and Sportsman’s Park.”

Nov. 30, 1925: Football Game Ad St. Louis Star 

    No mention in the ad of the Chicago Bears or the Donnelly’s All-Stars, just the Galloping Ghost. “For those games left on the Chicago Bears schedule the posters read ‘See the Chicago Bears with Red Grange’” recalled Grange’s friend from Wheaton “Beans” DeWolf in a 1987 interview. “But when they began the barnstorming trip, the posters were changed to read ‘See Red Grange with the Chicago Bears.”

    Kickoff was set for 2:30 p.m. Local sportswriters John Alexander of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Ted Drewes of the St. Louis Star and Times joined the Chicago writers in the press box. The press reported 8,000 fans braved the 40-degree “cold” afternoon contest. Pyle was disappointed in the crowd.

   As for the game it was a lopsided affair. With only a few days of practice the Donnelly’s (St. Louis) All-Stars looked more like duds. Red gave the small crowd plenty to cheer for while playing a little more than a half of football. On the first two drives of the game the redhead scored touchdowns. Bears fullback Earl Britton would make his professional debut by replacing Dutch Sternaman in the second quarter. The scoring continued in that quarter with another score by Red, as the Bears took a 27-6 halftime lead. In the fourth quarter Red scored his fourth touchdown of the game as the Bears cruised to an easy 39-6 victory. The Chicago American wrote Red “was in great form and ran wild early in the game.” Alexander of the Post-Dispatch wrote:

   “It is hard to describe that action. Essentially, it seems to be the ability to make tacklers miss him completely without forcing him to lose headway and to shake them loose once they catch hold…One such run as yesterday’s is worth the price of admission. One does not often see a player who can run into an apparently muddle of enemies and shake them from his shoes like so much mud. Grange does that. His footwork is deft and artful and when he breaks loose in an open field, he resembles nothing so as Eliza skipping over the ice floes with the bloodhounds baying at her heels and a child tucked under one arm, changing pace and varying her course slightly each successive hop.”


Red was a success on the field this time, albeit against an inferior team, but it was the first time he was a failure at the box office. Shortly after the game the gate receipts “officially” came out. Promoter Yates announced the paid attendance at 5,032 with a total gate receipt of $13,657. Based on the report, the Grange-Pyle-Bears got $7,834 while the local team got $1,547. Irving Vaughn of the Chicago Tribune was more cynical, writing, “The highly polished Grange did his act to the extent of four touchdowns, and it was to see him in his traveling togs that 8,000 people paid in the neighborhood of $20,000, so nobody was gypped.”

      The Bears left St. Louis early Thursday morning (Dec. 3rd) around 9 a.m. to head to Philadelphia to play the NFL’s Frankford Yellow Jackets. Dutch Sternaman paid $1,183.36 for 27 train fares that included 20 players plus Pyle, Coolley, Lotshaw, and Harry MacNamara of the Chicago Herald-Examiner. On the train headed east the Bears passed their time playing cards. Frank Hanny and Jim McMillian held court at the card table, while Johnny Mohardt “lectured Red and George Trafton in the observation car on the human anatomy.” After his football career ended Mohardt would go on to become a doctor and one of Chicago’s leading brain specialists.

     The tour was now headed east.

 

Chicago Bears Railroad Expense Sheet, St. Louis to
Philly (Pro Football Hall of Fame) 

NEXT:

Dec. 5th Grange-Bears at Frankford Yellow Jackets (Philadelphia)

TUESDAY TIDBITS: "MY HUSBAND WAS A WARRIOR"

By TJ Troup 
Ralph Heywood (L) and Bobby Layne (R)
Today I'm going to take all of you back in time to the late 1940's; yeah, yeah, coach TJ every week takes us back in time. 

While playing football at USC in 1943, Ralph Heywood played so well he would receive acclaim as an All-American, though he did not finish the season since he served our country during World War II. Though drafted to play for the Lions in 1944 (19th overall pick), he first played for the Chicago Rockets of the AAFC in '46 and joined the Lions in 1947. 

After two games in '48 with Detroit, he was sent to the Boston Yanks. His first game as a Yank was memorable as he returned a Cifers fumble 14 yards for a touchdown. Late November against NYG, Conerly & Roberts fumble the exchange and the rangy end scoops up the ball and dashes 56 yards for a score. Thus, he has tied Frank Maznicki's record of returning two opponent fumbles for a touchdown in a season! 

The Boston Yanks became the New York Bulldogs in 1949 under the direction of former Philadelphia Eagle backfield coach Charley Ewart. There is no doubt after winning a title in Philadelphia in '48 with a very talented team that the season of '49 was going to be a long one for Ewart. 

The NFL will again attempt two-platoon football in '49, yet there were so many roster changes with the Bulldogs that many of their players went both ways. The running game was ineffective for the Bulldogs, yet as the season wore on Bobby Layne was seen pitching the pigskin all over the field. 

During one four-game stretch, Layne threw 129 passes, and the Bulldogs even won a game as they beat the Giants! A handful of men attempted to play right offensive end for New York, but late in the season Ralph Heywood took over. He caught 8 passes during the first nine games of the season with his best game against the 'Skins on October 16th, with four catches. Halfback Paul Shoults fumbled the ball on the Washington five-yard line, and in the mad scramble for the ball Ralph recovered the loose ball for a Bulldog touchdown. 

Thus, he is the first player in league history to score three touchdowns on recovered fumbles! Almost 76 years ago to the day the Lions are at home to take on the Bulldogs in one helluva battle on December 4th! Left end Bill Chipley has been the main target for Layne all year (ranked amongst the leaders all season), and against the Lions he latches onto 8 passes for 85 yards(seven in the first half). While Chipley has a strong game he pales in comparison to Heywood as he grabs 14 for 151 yards! 
Layne completes to Heywood for 19
Having the play-by-play and game film will allow me to take you, folks into the strategy and key plays of the game! Heywood is split end right some of the time, flexed some of the time, and of course tight end much of the time. Though he runs a variety of routes he was very successful running inside routes and tight end middle screens! 
After being sacked, Layne hits Heywood with a middle screen
Detroit leads at half-time 21-7. Third quarter and we see Layne zipping a pass to Chipley who laterals to Heywood. The Bulldogs are now on the Lion twenty-seven but cannot advance. 
Layne to Chipley to Heywood for 21 yards
Late in the 3rd quarter and New York begins to march starting at their own thirty-seven. The drive continues into the 4th quarter and with the ball on the Lion eight-yard line the Bulldogs call the old "sleeper" play. Heywood is right at the eastern sideline and though the Detroit fans see him, none of the Lion defenders do, thus an easy pitch and catch from Layne for the score. 
Layne to Heywood on the "sleeper"
Bill Dudley fumbles on first down for Detroit, and the Bulldogs will begin on the Lions sixteen-yard line. Heywood's smooth route, sure-handed catch and hard running put him in the end zone. 
Layne to Heywood for a touchdown
Detroit is behind 27-21 (Scollard of New York had a PAT blocked in the 3rd quarter). New York forces a punt. Could the Bulldogs win their second game of the season today? Excellent rookie safety Don Doll pilfers a Layne aerial and the Lions parlay excellent field position into the winning touchdown and extra point.

Final Detroit 28 New York 27. 

The final game of the season is a loss to Pittsburgh as the undermanned Bulldogs might have had only 19 players suit up. Heywood continues his late-season surge as he catches 9 passes for 98 yards. While I am not a Northwestern math major, can add up that Ralph Heywood caught 29 passes for 410 yards over those last three games! 

No player had ever caught this many passes the last three games of the season! Tom Fears established a new league record in '49 with 77 receptions (he had 25 over the last three games). Fears will break his own record in 1950 and also surpass Heywood's three-game achievement with 36 for 367! 

Since then until the merger, the league has had many receivers who were productive in a season, yet none of them caught as many as 29 in the last three games of a season. Not Howton in '52, Phillips in '61, Parks in '65, and over in the AFL, Taylor of the Broncos and Hennigan of the Oilers also catching everything in sight, could not equal Heywood (Hennigan got close in '64 with 27). 

 Ralph Heywood retires from Pro Football, but his life is just transitioning back to the military as he serves with distinction in the Korean conflict, and later in Vietnam as a Colonel. He is one of only two men to play pro football and serve our country in three wars! 

His story is very well written & documented by Bill Begley in his article on April 15th, 2007. His marriage and love story with Suzie should have been made into a movie. Am quoting her in the title of this saga. Ralph Heywood at the end of his life battled dementia & alzheimer's. Just one man's opinion; the NFL should have an award named in his honor! 

Quoting Bill Begley, "Ralph Heywood didn't want to be John Wayne, he WAS John Wayne!" To close out this week's column, RC Nazemi stated online that the last time Chicago Bear teammates both gained over 100 yards rushing was in 1985 with Payton & Suhey. Not sure why he did not also list Payton & Harper on November 26th, 1978 and Casares & Watkins against Green Bay on November 6th, 1955? 

This coming Sunday, the Bears actually will play a meaningful game as they journey to Green Bay to take on the Fox River studs! 

See ya next week.

Friday, November 28, 2025

Fourth Down Spurs Packers Past Lions on Thanksgiving

 By Eric Goska

Matt LaFleur's Packers have converted 77 fourth downs since 2019.
(photos by Eric Goska)

Once considered a last resort, going for it on fourth down has gained widespread acceptance in the NFL.

That Green Bay thrice succeeded on that down while Detroit twice failed is one reason the Packers knocked off the Lions 31-24 on Thanksgiving Day. That two of those conversions yielded touchdowns meant the Green and Gold never trailed as they dispatched their longtime rival for a second time this season.

Some of the greatest names in Packers history surface when diving into fourth downs. Sure, some lesser-knowns appear as well thanks to the occasional trick play, but much of the heavy lifting over the years has been carried out by the best the team had to offer.

Packers coach Matt LaFleur’s resume on fourth down is in line with many of his predecessors. He owns the third highest conversion rate since 1954 and trails only Mike McCarthy in total conversations.

LaFleur and his team were certainly on the money in Detroit. Green Bay went three for three on fourth down for the third time on his watch, with the Packers having previously beaten the Bears 41-25 in 2020 and the Saints 34-0 in 2024 when doing so.

Dontayvion Wicks converted two
fourth downs with pass receptions.

For the record, here are the three times Green Bay went for it on fourth down at Ford Field, and the two times Detroit tried and failed.

  1. Dontayvion Wicks accepts a 22-yard pass from Jordan Love on fourth-and-three from the Detroit 22-yard line early in the second quarter as the Packers go up 10-0.
  2. Romeo Doubs snags a short throw from Love on fourth-and-one from the Detroit 2 late in the same quarter as Green Bay moves in front 17-7.
  3. With just under two minutes remaining, Wicks clutches a 16-yard throw from Love on fourth-and-three from the Detroit 45, a catch that allows the Packers to run out the clock with a pair of kneel-downs.

  1. Micah Parsons greets Jahmyr Gibbs in the backfield after shedding the block of Kayode Awosika on fourth-and-three from the Green Bay 47 early in the third quarter. Isaiah McDuffie joins Parsons as the two team up to tackle the Lions running back for minus-2.
  2. Jameson Williams drops a short throw from Jared Goff on fourth-and-three from the Green Bay 21 early in the fourth quarter.

In honor of fourth downs, here are Packers fourth-down records going back to 1923.

Team Records

  • Most TDs one season – 7 in 1926 (Verne Lewellen 2, Cully Lidberg 1, Eddie Kotal 1, Jack Harris 1, Dick Flaherty 1, Rex Enright 1)
  • Most TDs one game – 3 on Oct. 20, 1963 (Jim Taylor 2, Tom Moore 1)

Individual Records

  • Most TDs career – 13 Verne Lewellen, 1924-1932
  • Most TDs season – 3 Verne Lewellen, 1928; 3 Don Hutson, 1937; 3 Ted Fritsch, 1946; 3 Jim Taylor, 1962
  • Most TDs game – 2 Verne Lewellen vs. Bears, Sept. 30, 1928; 2 Jim Taylor vs. Cardinals, Oct. 20, 1963
  • Most Rushing TDs career – 10 Jim Taylor, 1958-1967
  • Most Receiving TDs career – 8 Don Hutson, 1935-1945
  • Most TD passes career – 13 Aaron Rodgers, 2005-2022
  • Most TD passes season – 3 Aaron Rodgers, 2022; Jordan Love, 2023
  • Most TD passes game – 2 Bart Starr vs. Browns, Sept. 18, 1966; 2 Jordan Love vs. Lions, Nov. 26, 2025
  • Longest TD – 68 yards on a pass from punter Ron Widby to wide receiver Dave Davis in a 23-10 win over the Oilers in 1972.

Go For It!
Since 1954, Packers head coaches and their conversion rates on fourth down (min. 8 atts.)

Rate       Made-Attempt      Coach                         Years
62.34              48 of 77               Vince Lombardi         1959-1967
53.52              38 of 71               Mike Sherman            2000-2005
53.10            77 of 145               Matt LeFleur               2019-2025
52.56              41 of 78               Mike Holmgren         1992-1998
51.85              28 of 54               Lindy Infante             1988-1991
48.41            61 of 126               Bart Starr                     1975-1983
47.40            91 of 192               Mike McCarthy          2006-2018
46.67              35 of 75               Lisle Blackbourn        1954-1957
43.18              19 of 44               Dan Devine                 1971-1974
43.10              25 of 58               Forrest Gregg            1984-1987
40.00              10 of 25              Phil Bengtson            1968-1970
35.71               5 of 14                 Scooter McLean        1958
22.22                2 of 9                 Ray Rhodes                1999

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Keith Lincoln's Outstanding 1963 Season

 by Jeffrey J. Miller

Nineteen sixty-three was a pivotal year for the upstart American Football League. In its fourth year of existence, it was finally coming close to being on a competitive level with the senior NFL.  Don’t misunderstand me … I am not saying the leagues were on equal footing just yet, but I believe the best AFL teams could finally have competed well against the average NFL squads and maybe even eke out a victory or two if inter-league play existed at the time.  It was probably the first year in which the AFL champions—the San Diego Chargers—would not have embarrassed themselves in a matchup against the winners of the NFL crown—the Chicago Bears.
 
One of the reasons for the AFL’s ascension was the fact that so many very good players were developing within that league, many of whom would never have been given an opportunity in the limited roster allowances of the NFL.  A case in point is San Diego fullback Keith Lincoln. 
 
Lincoln played his college ball at Washington State University.  Though he started out as a quarterback, he eventually moved to halfback and also handled the Cougars’ punting.  He earned second-team All-America honors in 1959 along with being chosen first-team All-PCC that year and second-team All-PCC in 1960, his senior year.  He was selected by the Chicago Bears in the fifth round (61st overall) of the 1961 NFL draft, but opted to sign with the AFL Chargers, who tapped him with their second-round pick (16th overall).
 
He enjoyed a decent rookie season, which included a 91-yard touchdown reception, the longest in the AFL that year.  An All-Star-Game berth followed in 1962, though the Chargers missed the post-season for the first time in the league's existence.  

But Lincoln really hit his stride in ‘63.  Though he was not a 1,000-yard rusher (only two AFL runners reached that level that year--Oakland’s Clem Daniels and Lincoln's San Diego runningmate Paul Lowe), when viewed in its totality this might be the finest individual single-season performance ever posted in the American Football League.  As part of a dynamic backfield tandem with Lowe, the Chargers led the league in total offense (eclipsing the next closest competitor by 350 yards!) and points scored, and were third in total rushing yardage.  Lincoln’s 76-yard touchdown run against the Chiefs on October 20 was the league’s longest that year.  He led the league in yards-per-carry with an eye-popping 6.5 (128 attempts for 826 yards) while also leading the league in yards-per-touch (rushing and reception yardage) with 7.6!
 
That high-powered offense vaulted the Chargers to the Western Division pennant and their third post-season berth in four years.  In the championship game, Lincoln ran wild as the Chargers routed the Western Division champion Boston Patriots, 51–10.  In the game, Lincoln lugged the leather 13 times for 206 yards (15.8 yards-per-lug!) and one touchdown and had seven receptions for 123 yards (17.6 yards-per-catch) and a score, amassing a total 329  yards from scrimmage that stood as the record for both the AFL and NFL until Kansas City running back Ed Podolak gained 350 yards in a double-overtime playoff game against the Miami Dolphins in 1971.  Lincoln’s 206 on the ground stood as the standard until 1985, when Los Angeles runner Eric Dickerson rushed for 248 yards against the Dallas Cowboys.  (By the way, Lincoln also passed for 20 yards in the championship game … just thought I’d mention that).   For his outstanding performance in leading the Chargers’ blowout victory, Lincoln was selected the game’s Most Valuable Player.
Lincoln scampering 67 yards for a touchdown 
against Boston in the 1963 AFL Title Game
at Balboa Stadium, San Diego, January 5, 1964
Lincoln’s regular-season performance also earned him a trip to that year’s AFL All-Star Game, played January 19, 1964, at the Chargers’ homefield of Balboa Stadium.  Once again, Lincoln was brilliant, rushing for 121 yards and tearing off a 64-yard touchdown run to spark a come-from-behind win for the Western squad.  For the second straight week, Lincoln was on the receiving end of a Most Valuable Player award, marking the first time a player from either league won the MVP of the championship game and Pro Bowl in the same year. 
Keith Lincoln being introduced before the
1963 AFL All-Star Game at Balboa Stadium,
 San Diego, January 19, 1964.
Highlights of Lincoln’s 1963 Season:
Led AFL in yards-per carry – 6.5
Led AFL in yards-per-touch – 7.6
Longest touchdown run in AFL regular season – 76 yards
Professional record for most rushing yards in post-season game – 206
Professional record for most yards from scrimmage in post-season game – 329
First-Team All-AFL
AFL Champion
Most Valuable Player – AFL Title Game
Most Valuable Player – AFL All-Star Game

Though 1963 was his greatest season, Lincoln enjoyed a fine eight-year career primarily with the Chargers and later with the Buffalo Bills.  His versatility drew comparisons to Green Bay Packer Hall-of-Famer Paul Hornung.  In addition to his offensive exploits, Lincoln filled in as the Bolts’ place kicker in 1964 and led the team in kick scoring, making good on 5 of 12 field goal attempts and 16 of 17 extra-point tries for 31 points.  He was adept at passing as well, throwing for 5 touchdowns during his tenure in San Diego.  Chargers’ coach Sid Gillman also used his star fullback to return kickoffs and punts, with Lincoln registering at least one of each for touchdowns.  
 
For his career, Lincoln was named first-team All-AFL twice (1963 and 1964) and appeared in five All-Star Games (1962, ’63, ’64, ’65 and ’67).  As an aside, I was shocked to see he has not been enshrined in the Professional Football Researchers Association’s Hall-of-Very-Good … what the heck?  He was inducted into the Washington State University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1979, and the State of Washington Sports Hall of Fame in 1980.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

OTD: 100th Anniversary Red Grange Pro Debut

 LOOKING BACK
By Chris Willis, NFL Films
Game Program for Red Grange's Pro Debut on Nov. 26, 1925

     On this day - November 26th - back in 1925 Harold "Red" Grange made his professional debut at Cubs Park in Chicago. Just four days earlier he left the University of Illinois to play pro football with the Chicago Bears. On Thanksgiving Day he played against the Chicago Cardinals and begin a barnstorming Tour that would change pro football and the NFL forever. 


     Over the next month or so PFJ will take a look back at one of the NFL's greatest events with articles on the famous Red Grange-Chicago Bears barnstorming tour. First will look at Red's pro debut. 

    Red Grange played his last collegiate game in Columbus, Ohio against Ohio State. After the game he took a train overnight to Chicago to sign with the Chicago Bears and play pro football. 

    On Sunday morning (Nov. 22nd) Red would make his way to the Morrison Hotel. Located downtown in the Loop, the Morrison was a high-rise hotel at the corner of Madison and Clark. The recent expansion of the hotel was just completed in 1925 to give the hotel a 46-story high-rise and nearly 2,000 rooms. It was just the stylish hotel that made the perfect headquarters for C. C. Pyle. In rooms 1739-1941 “Cash and Carry” was ready for the morning show. Red, wearing a light-colored suit and vest, a striped tie, white collard dress shirt, and his auburn hair slicked back and parted down the middle, knocked on the door of room 1739. Red entered the suite and greeted Halas and Sternaman for the first time. Red was quickly impressed by George Halas. 

    “I was impressed with him because he did everything himself. George was a one-man gang. He was his own press agent, his own coach, he played right end, he ran the ball park, looked out for security, he signed the players, he did his own scouting, he did everything there was to do around the football team.”

    After a few pleasantries Pyle got the circus going. The eager promoter brought in the press and photographers. The moment everybody was waiting for, had arrived. In the suite the four men sat down at a round glass table. The contracts and several pens were sitting there ready to make history. Red, sitting in the middle, had Pyle to his left and Halas to his right, with Sternaman sitting next to Halas. The foursome posed as Red held pen in hand ready to sign his first pro contract. Through a haze of smoke, following a broadside of flashlight powder from photographer’s cameras, Red signed his name. With the press surrounding him, Red said a few words:

    “Why I can’t see that there is any difference between the game as it is played on college gridirons or on the fields used by men who turn their attention to the sport for financial rewards. I am at a loss to comprehend all the fuss that has been made in my case simply because I propose to capitalize on such success as I have attained while playing at the University of Illinois.

    There are scores of baseball players who were mighty good men on college diamonds who upon leaving their universities have entered professional baseball and are now earning comfortable livelihoods through their skill at pitching, fielding or batting. No one ever criticized those fellows for signing pro baseball contracts.

    I have always loved football and when I play the game I want to play with and against the best teams possible. The closer the battle and better I like it. There isn’t any particular thrill in taking part in a one-sided contest. I have associated with the best men in the Western Conference for three years and learned much about football. In the professional circuit I expect to be pitted against seasonal players- the best men the various clubs offer. Here the competition should be of a keen order.”
Red Grange signs pro contract with Bears. L-to-R, Dutch Sternaman, George Halas,
Grange, and Pyle.
 
    Red then released a more complete statement (dated Nov. 22nd, Chicago, Illinois) to the press on why he choose to play pro football:

    “Yesterday I played my last college football game. Today, I am looking forward to my future. I alone must determine my career of tomorrow. No longer can I turn my eyes to those sterling American gentlemen and sportsmen, Huff and Zuppke, for the assistance they contributed so wholeheartedly in my development as a football player. My teammates who stood by me in the thick of conflict are now separated. No longer can they join with me with their splendid cooperation in the execution of the play as they did when we held aloft the colors of our beloved University of Illinois. No more will the liberal and generous press feature my deeds as a college football player. The plaudits of the student body and the public can no longer acclaim me for exploits upon the campus. 

    No one will gainsay I did my best on the football field. I put forth every ounce of energy into my playing and I feel as though I have now discharged a part of my obligation to the University of Illinois, to the student body, and to the traditions of that splendid institution. I say I have discharged in part my obligations. It will never be possible for me to repay in full measure all my obligations to that institution and its students.

    There remains uncharged my obligation to my father. Possessed of a scant supply of this world’s goods, he has given me an opportunity for an education at a great sacrifice. Then there is still imposed upon him the burden of my brother’s education.

    In what manner can I best perform my duty to my father and my brother? This is the question I have been turning over in my mind and seeking for an answer in my conscience for many days.
Trained and developed in the game of football and achieving some success as a player, there is where my best talent has been revealed.

    I have received many alluring offers to enter fields of enterprise in which I have had no training or experience. But I believe the public will be better satisfied with my honesty and good motive, if I turn my efforts to that field in which I have been most useful, in order to reap the reward which will keep the homes fires burning.

    There are countless thousands interested in football who seldom have an opportunity to see a college game. These devotees of the sport cannot take Saturday off and make a long trip to Champaign or some other point, in order to witness a college game. Many are excluded from college games, too, because of the limited number of tickets available to the public. These people in order to satisfy their desires must perforce attend professional football games which are held on Sundays, when and where it is convenient for them to go.

    Therefore, I have resolved that I will play professional football. I will play with the Bears because they are a Chicago team, many Zuppke trained at Illinois University- some of them predecessors as captains of the team.

     I signed a contract today to play with the Bears on Thanksgiving and other days. This is the first contract I have ever signed to play professional football. I preserved my amateur standing spotless until my college career as a football player ended.

    Mr. Pyle has acted within the recent few weeks as my good friend and adviser. Today he is my manager. Owing to the need of sufficient time in which to catch up with my studies, I am leaving college, temporarily, but will return later.

    To Messers. Huff and Zuppke and my teammates, to the student body and alumni, to the public and to the press I give my thanks out of the depths of a grateful heart for the splendid support and encouragement extended to me throughout my college football career.”

    Simultaneously with the Grange’s statement Manager Pyle issued a few words of his own:  

    “Considerable speculation and misinformation have been going the rounds during the past several days as to my relations with Harold Grange. As his friend, I undertook to act for him as an advisor and emissary.

    With all the numerous offers being made to Mr. Grange, it was necessary to reduce them to a sensible selection. Recognizing this need, I visited the managers of professional football teams in Florida advised with promoters and schemers, as well as bona fide producers of motion pictures, interviewing them by scores, ascertained their offers and ability to make good and in every way I attempted to ferret out the good prospects from the worthless ones.

    I traveled a great deal, spent much time and defrayed all my own expenses, in order to make this investigation. After considerable work and examination, I came to certain conclusions as to what Harold Grange’s future course should be. I laid my conclusions before him and he is now making his decision in respect to them.

    He has appointed me his manager. Today we have entered into several contracts for professional football to be played in Chicago and other cities.

    Mr. Grange has at no time sullied his pure amateur standing by any act of professionalism. He waited until his last game was played and today the contracts for his future services were drafted and entered into. I believe Harold Grange has made a wise decision in following up his splendid spectacular college career by engaging in professional football while his popularity is at its zenith.

    There is a large body of the public clamoring for an opportunity to see him play, who never had a chance during his college days.

    Joining the Chicago Bears, Mr. Grange will be continuing to play under the same teaching he received at the University of Illinois. He will give the lovers of the professional football game the same sterling efforts he gave to the followers of the college game. He is destined to be great as a success in his newly chosen field as he was in the one just brought to a very successful conclusion.”

    Both Red’s and Pyle’s full statements would be used by newspapers all across the country.

    The photo of Red sitting next to Pyle (with Halas and Sternaman) at the Morrison Hotel signing his pro contract was featured in newspapers across the country, usually with a bold headline announcing the big news. The Chicago Herald-Examiner headline read “Red Grange Signs Fat ‘Pro’ Contract.”

     But there wasn’t much they could do about Red’s decision. He recalled:  

  “You see, all the college coaches and athletic directors, they were 100 percent against professional football. They thought anybody connected with it was going to hell, you might say. When I joined the Chicago Bears, as far as the University of Illinois was concerned, I would have been more popular if I had joined the (Al) Capone mob.”

    Red heard all the criticism about his decision to turn pro. Sensitive to the talk he knew deep down he made the best decision for himself, as he had to live with his choice. The only person he had to answer too, was his best friend- his father. Lyle Grange trusted his son to make a good decision and was relieved his son had finally accepted one of the lucrative offers made to him. But he wasn’t happy with the choice of a business manager that he chose to help guide him. Speaking to the Chicago Herald-Examiner, Lyle was quoted as saying:

    “I’d rather that my boy had turned to something that would have allowed him to stay in school, if that was possible…I want to say here and now, though, that I want my boy to have nothing to do with that Pyle, and you can go as strong as you like about that.”
Right before playing his pro debut Red spent time with his father Lyle, 
in Wheaton. 
     Eventually Lyle Grange would come around. The day (Nov. 23rd) after Red signed his pro contract he woke up early for his first practice with the Bears. Accorded to his contract Red was to practice in the morning then be allowed to travel to Champaign to attend the football banquet at Illinois. Around 11:00 a.m. Red walked into Cubs Park as a pro football player. He greeted his teammates, as well as a host of newspaper men, photographers and newsreel cameramen. Halas placed Red at left halfback on offense. Red was joined on the field by no less than seven former Illini players- Halas, Dutch and Joey Sternaman, Jim McMillian, Oscar Knop, Vern Mullen and Laurie Walquist. He was in familiar surroundings.

Grange at first Bears practice at Cubs Park. L-to-R; Verne Mullen, Grange, Duke Hanny
    The Bears made sure a number 77 jersey was ready for him to wear. “Seventy-seven was awfully good to me in college and I do not wish to change my luck at this time,” said Red to the press. Harold Johnson attended the practice for the Chicago American, reporting that “Red was usually frisky and consumed with learning and mastering all the plays and formations.” Halas was pleased with how quickly Red was picking up everything. “Gee, he is a wonder at mastering plays,” said Halas to Johnson after Red grabbed a pass from Joey Sternaman. “Let me explain this to you in detail,” suggested Halas to Red during one play from scrimmage. “That’s all right George, I got it the first time,” responded Red. After running the play again, Red swept through the play in perfect fashion.

    All of the major Chicago daily newspapers covered Red’s first practice. In the afternoon edition of the Chicago Daily News the paper recapped practice, as well as publishing three photos: Red in full football uniform (no helmet); Red posing with the whole Bears offense; and a posed shot of Red in a huddle with Halas and Sternaman. The Chicago American ran an exclusive photo of Red as a ball carrier behind lead blocking by Dutch Sternaman and Laurie Walquist, with Joey Sternaman calling the signals, and George Trafton who had just snapped the ball to Red, while the Chicago Evening Post wrote:

    “Red absorbed some of the Bears signals and plays today and went thru a snappy workout. In passing the ball around the players, there were plenty of comments on the heaving of Grange…Grange went at his new job as if he meant business.” 

    Ever since Red announced he was signing with the Chicago Bears, tickets to his debut game against the Chicago Cardinals on Thanksgiving Day were a hot commodity. Tickets were sold at Cubs Park and A. G. Spalding’s & Company sporting goods store at South State and Adams Streets. The Bears owners decided not to raise ticket prices, which turned out to be a smart move. From the start they sold like hot cakes. Prices were $1.75 for a reserved seat and $2.00 for a box seat. Standing room seats started to sell too.
Game Ticket, Cardinals at Bears, Nov. 26, 1925
   That Monday fans lined up for blocks to get their ticket to see the Galloping Ghost. As the Daily Illini wrote, “Nobody wanted a ticket because it was the Bears or Cardinals playing- they all wanted tickets for ‘the Grange game’.”  Fifteen police officers were called in to calm “the riot” as reported by the Chicago Herald & Examiner. Jimmy Corcoran of the American wrote: “The panic is on! Pandemonium has broken loose. The town has gone NUTS in Harold Redhead Grange, the flaming phantom of the greensward. Everybody wants tickets, tickets, TICKETS!” The Herald-Examiner ran on the front page of the paper (not just the sports section) the big bold headline: “RIOT FOR GRANGE GAME SEATS: Ticket Line Fights Keep Police Busy.” Within the first three hours all 20,000 tickets were sold. Halas got busy printing more tickets.

    Red turned his focus to prepare for his first pro game. He had the support of his Bears teammates. “We want the redhead to go, and you can bet every last one of us will see that he gets every chance.” declared Bears tackle Ed Healey to the Chicago Daily Journal. As game day approached scalpers were having a field day. News reports came out that the $1.75 grandstands seats were fetching up to twenty dollars. The crowd at Cubs Park was looking to be a record-breaking crowd for a pro football game. The city assigned nearly 300 police officer and 100 private detectives to help with the massive turnout. Automobiles were parked for ten blocks in every direction of Cubs Park.

    On the day of the game Irving Vaughn of the Chicago Tribune wrote that “Grange is the man who has stood the town on its beam end as no other athlete ever had done and he’s the man those 35,000, most of whom have never cast eye on him, want to watch.” The Tribune also wrote:

    “No previous sporting event in the history of the Midwest has stirred up a city as Chicago has been stirred since the roaming red head broadcast word that he had hung up his hat alongside those of other stars who had deemed it fitting to turn their varsity fame and ability to the making of an honest dollar…No event here ever caused a ticket turmoil such as broke loose when Red was formally received into the ranks of those who draw pay for their play.”
    The whole city of Chicago, and the sold-out crowd at Cubs Park, was now ready to see Red Grange. The gates opened at 9:00 a.m., with kickoff at 11:00 a.m. Fans filled the park by the thousands, while outside programs, featuring Red smiling in his Bears uniform on the cover, were sold for ten cents. In the press box was all the big Chicago sportswriters, including Irving Vaughn (Tribune), Harry MacNamara (Herald & Examiner), W. V. Morgenstern (Herald & Examiner), Robert McBroom (Evening Post), Harold Johnson and Jimmy Corcoran (American). Newspaper accounts reported a crowd of 36,000 to 40,000.

    Wearing his famous number “77” jersey Red Grange jogged out onto the field at Cubs Park as a member of the Chicago Bears for the first time. He would be starting at left halfback with Laurie Walquist at right halfback, Dutch Sternaman at fullback and Joey Sternaman at quarterback. On the line would be Frank Hanny (LE), Ed Healey (LT), Bill Fleckenstein (LG), All-Pro George Trafton (C), Jim McMillian (RG), Don Murry (RT) and George Halas (RE).
Red Grange sits on bench of his pro debut vs Cardinals. From R-to-L; CC Pyle, Grange, Murry, George Halas. 
    Lost in the excitement of Red’s pro debut was their opponent. The Chicago Cardinals, led by All-Pro halfback Paddy Driscoll, were 8-1 and at the top of the NFL standings. They were fighting for a championship, but on this day, they were taking a backseat to the greatest football player on the planet.

    As for the game, it was nothing to write home about, but tons of sportswriters tried their best in describing the action. The five major Chicago daily newspapers- American, Daily Journal, Daily News, Herald-Examiner and Tribune- wrote plenty of Red’s daily actions to their nearly two million readers in 1925. The game quickly became a defensive battle, with neither team giving an inch. Red was able to have a few good kick returns, three of them going for more than twenty yards, but that was all of his highlights for the game. Throughout the contest when Red retired to the bench, he took a seat next to Pyle who was trying to stay warm bundled up in his overcoat and fedora. You could see, several times, Red and Pyle chatting away. In the Chicago Tribune the next day a photo was published in the sports page of the two talking below the caption “Were They Counting The Crowd?” Maybe for Pyle, but not Grange. He was focused on the game.

    In the third quarter the usually reliable Paddy Driscoll missed two field goals from 43 and 50 yards. Red continues to plug along with few chances to succeed. This day he wouldn’t give the fans a big reason to cheer. He did have an interception in the red zone to help stop a Cardinals drive. The game ended in a 0-0 tie. While leaving the field Red was surrounded by a huge rush of fans. “He was almost carried off his feet by the rush after the final whistle, and it took a flying wedge of bluecoats (police) to get him off the field.”
Red Grange, ball carrier, against the Cardinals in pro debut. To the left on 
the ground is George Hala
s. 
   Red finally arrived at the Bears locker room, only to be greeted by newspapermen. Sporting a large red bump under his left eye Red was exhausted as he talked to the press: “They are two great teams, the Bears and Cardinals. They are better than any college team I ever played against…this was the hardest game that I was ever in, but it was clean. It was much cleaner than most college games. I got this bump when I ran into a player. Red was then asked about the interference he was giving by his teammates:

“The best I ever got. The Bears did all they could for me today, but it’s different blocking out these players than it is in college. It is a lot harder to do. I knew what this game was when I went into it, and it was just about as I expected. But I like it, as I expected to like it, and I intend to keep on going.”

    The main storyline in most game recaps was Driscoll’s decision to punt away from Red. The future Hall of Famer became the villain. Jimmy Corcoran of the Chicago American wrote, “Paddy Kicks’ Em O.K. but Not Towards Red- Head; Paddy Driscoll- shame on you!” Fans might’ve been disappointed in the play of Grange and Driscoll in the scoreless tie, but none of that mattered to one spectator at Cubs Park- C. C. Pyle. He was overjoyed with seeing a sold-out crowd. “Charlie Pyle, after a while, saw a fella coming through the gate with the gate around his neck, and he said, ‘I knew we’d sold out. They broke the gates to get in’,” recalled Red in a 1978 interview. 

    As for the Chicago Bears, Dutch Sternaman was in charge of supplying the Red-Pyle group the exact box office statements. He would provide the figures to them on typed-up stationery, whether it was in Chicago or on the road. These statements- as well as the game contracts- Sternaman kept his entire life. The documents were eventually donated by the Sternaman family to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2011.

    Although Red might not have been a success on the field, he sure was a winner at the gate. Pyle, Red, Coolley, and Moore received a typed-up letter on Chicago National League Ball Club stationery with the gate numbers for Red’s pro debut against the Cardinals. The numbers were staggering:

 Cardinals at Bears
(Tickets)                              (Gate Receipts)                       (War Tax)
9,237   @ 1.61                    16,718.97                                 1,755.03
13,503 @ 1.59                    21,469.77                                 2,160.46
8,440   @ 1.36                    11,478.40                                  1,181.60
Ex   5   @  .45                             2.25                                          .25
=         31,180                      49,669.39                                 5,097.36
          Cubs 20%                      9,933.88
                                               39,735.51
Bears expense sheet from Red's pro debut, from Dutch Sternaman Collection
(Pro Football Hall of Fame) 
   Based on the gate receipts the actual paying crowd was 31,180- a record for a pro game. Free passes and gate crashers probably pushed the crowd to over 36,000 which was reported in the newspapers. The total gate amounted to $49,669.39, which $9,933.88 was paid to the Cubs for use of the ballpark and expenses. Based on the contract he negotiated with Halas-Sternaman two weeks earlier, the Red-Pyle group received $9,007.43 for the game (getting 15 percent of the first $10,000 and 20 percent of everything after). Halas-Sternaman paid the duo with two checks (check numbers #3029 and #3030). The Bears also paid the guarantee for each club (total of $14,000); the 3 game officials (total of $120.00) and tickets to be printed (total of $114.44). Based on the contract written up between them, the total split of $9,000 for Red’s first pro game would’ve been:

Red ($4,500)
Pyle ($2,250)
Coolley ($1,125)
Moore ($1,125) 

   Halas was also ecstatic. “There had never been such evidence of public interest since our professional league began in 1920. I knew then and there that pro football was destined to be a big-time sport,” Halas recalled. The attendance figure was a record for a pro football game. The record wouldn’t last very long. The only person who was a loser in the money department after the game was Cardinals owner Chris O’Brien. Not expecting the massive crowd O’Brien decided to take the ($1,200 guarantee) instead of a piece of the gate. A move that backfired big time.

    Shortly after the game Red sat down with Harold Johnson of the Chicago American to give him an exclusive interview on his opinion of his first pro game.

    “Collegiate football is one thing, but I have just discovered that the sport as played by the Bears and Cardinals is something else together.

    The Bears certainly are swell fellows and tried all through the game to help me along. I thought I had mastered most of the play they had taught me during the limited time I had to practice with them, but believe I will be able to give the boys a better performance in the next game.

    There wasn’t a single bit of unnecessary roughness on either side, despite the traditional rivalry between these two teams. Of course I felt a bit strange in there during the first quarter, but soon shook off that nervousness and was just as much at home as if I were playing with my old mates at Illinois.

    I am sorry some of the rooters criticized Paddy Driscoll as they did because of his kicking. It was the first time I had the pleasure of playing against him and he impressed me as one of the greatest men I ever saw on the gridiron.

    It was the hardest, toughest game in which I have played in my career…It was a clean game from start to finish, and this beautiful bump under my eye is just one of the tokens of battle. There wasn’t any rough stuff and no attempt was shown to get me.”

On this day (Nov. 26th) Red Grange made his professional debut and pro football was never the same. 

NEXT: Red Grange and the Chicago Bears Embark on Football's Greatest Barnstorming Tour

Dec. 2nd - Bears at St. Louis All-Stars