Sammy Baugh

Sammy Baugh

Super Bowl Quiz: I tried to come up with one that is relatively

easy and one that is harder. 1) In Super Bowl IV, Kansas City 23-

Minnesota 7, name 3 of the 4 rushers for K.C. that day

(operating out of the running back slot). 2) In Super Bowl IX,

Pittsburgh 16 – Minnesota 6, name the Steelers front four which

helped limit the Vikings to 17 yards rushing on 21 carries.

Answers below.

Johnny Mac”s Football History

For those of you who grew up watching “situational” football, the

story of “Slinging” Sammy Baugh will seem quaint. Baugh was

the first glamour QB, changing the game from one of running and

defense to a more wide-open offense (although the Ravens are

doing their best to regress). But Sammy was more than a great

quarterback, he was also an excellent defensive cornerback and

possibly the finest punter to ever live. A real triple threat.

Think of it…Deion goes in for a few plays on offense and the

announcers go crazy. We have nickel packages, dime packages,

“third-down” specialists (running backs who never actually run

with the ball) and some teams actually have two place kickers;

one to kick off and another for field goals. Situational specialists

are the norm today. Granted, all things progress and the type of

game played these days doesn”t lend itself to the 60-minute men

of yesteryear, but you have to respect the overall skills of those

players. Perhaps the best of them all was Baugh.

Born in Texas in 1914, Sammy, at 6”2″ and 180 lbs., was the

epitome of a long, tall Texan. A three-sport star in high school,

he was a hot commodity for the local colleges. The University of

Texas recruited him for football, but Sammy wanted to play

baseball and basketball as well. Tiny TCU and their head baseball

coach, Dutch Meyer, won out over the more prestigious UT by

allowing Baugh to indulge his multi-sport wishes. Meyer soon

became head football coach as well.

Baugh blossomed into a star under Meyer. As a junior, he helped

TCU to a 10-1 record and a berth in the Sugar Bowl. He was the

starting tailback, but also played defensive back and punted. In

the wing formation, popular at the time, running backs often

threw the ball and Baugh developed into an outstanding passer.

The Sugar Bowl was played in a quagmire that year, making the

passing game nonexistent. Thus, field position was the order of

the day, and Baugh was called on to punt 14 times, compiling a

48-yard average. He also intercepted 2 passes and had a 45-yard

run to lead the Horned Frogs to a hard fought 3-2 victory.

Sammy continued to progress in his senior campaign, completing

109 of 219 passes for 1,890 yards and leading TCU to the first

ever Cotton Bowl. They beat a good Marquette team 16-6 with

Baugh being named a Co-MVP of the game. The following

summer he quarterbacked the college all-stars to an improbable 7-

0 win over NFL champion Green Bay.

Sammy”s baseball exploits in college were good enough for the

Cardinals to sign him to a minor league contract. But a few

months bouncing around in busses persuaded Baugh to give pro

football a shot. The Redskins had just moved to Washington

from Boston and looked to Baugh to be a marquee player for

them. He was signed to a one-year $8,000 contract, making him

the highest paid player on the team. With barely a week of

practice under his belt, he replaced an injured Cliff Battles in the

opener of the 1937 season. Baugh completed 11 of 16 that day

for 116 yards as the Skins beat the Giants 13-3. He continued as

a starter, eventually leading Washington to the NFL title game

against the Chicago Bears. That game may have changed the face

of pro football. Running and defense had been the order of the

day and the Bears, known as the “Monsters of the Midway,” were

the acknowledged leaders of that brand of play. Baugh lit ”em up

with the forward pass, throwing touchdowns of 55, 78 and 33

yards en route to a 28-21 victory. He also played every offensive

and defensive play for the entire game.

The Redskins remained a force in the NFL, meeting the Bears

three times between 1940 and 1943 for the championship. The

1940 game was the most lopsided loss in title game history, with

the Bears crushing Washington 73-0. Baugh had driven the team

downfield early in the game, only to have a sure touchdown

dropped in the end zone. Asked later what difference that catch

might have made he drawled, “I suppose we would have lost 73-

7.”

Sammy got a measure of revenge in 1942, leading the Redskins to

a 14-6 victory. The Bears were awesome that year, having gone

11-0 in the regular season while outscoring the opposition 376-

84. But Baugh threw for a TD and pinned the Bears deep in their

own end all day with some great punting, including a quick kick

for 85 yards.

Then, in 1943, Sammy had perhaps the finest all-around year in

football history. He became the first and only player to lead the

league in passing, punting, and interceptions. Remember, I mean

picking passes off, not throwing them. He once threw 4 TDs and

intercepted 4, all in one game, a 42-20 pasting of Detroit. Again,

it was Chicago who awaited the Skins in the title contest. Baugh,

on defense, tackled quarterback Sid Luckman early in the game

and suffered a concussion. Unfortunately, Sammy did not return

and the Skins lost 41-21.

Remember, Baugh accomplished all this in the old double-wing

formation, not overly conducive to a passing attack. Before the

1945 season, Washington finally switched to a T-formation and

he responded with a great year, completing an astonishing

70.33% of his passes, easily a record. [It wasn”t until 1982 that

this mark was broken when the Bengals Kenny Anderson

completed 70.55%.] That same season, Sammy led the Redskins

to the title game, a 15-14 loss to the Rams in sub-zero weather.

Washington rarely challenged from then on, but Baugh continued

his assault on the record book. On Sammy Baugh Day in 1947,

he lit up the Cardinals for 365 yards and 6 touchdowns as the

Skins routed the eventual champs, 45-21. In 1948 he set a

Redskins record by throwing for 446 yards in one game.

Before retiring in 1952, Baugh would lead the league in passing

seven times. His career punting average of 45.1 yards, and his

single season best of 51.4, still stand as the NFL standards. Plus

his 31 interceptions leave him behind only Darrell Green and

Brigg Owens in Washington history.

But, as is the case with so many greats, Sammy”s post playing

days were not as successful. He took a head coaching job with

Hardin-Simmons University in 1955, limping to a 23-28 five-year

record. That didn”t prevent the fledgling AFL from tapping him

as the first head coach for the then New York Titans, now the

Jets. Two seasons of 7-7 followed, which actually puts him

pretty high on the list of career winning percentage for Jets head

coaches. That says much more about the Jets ineptitude than it

says about Baugh”s coaching abilities. A final stint at Houston in

1964 (4-10) ended his coaching career.

Sammy was among the 17 charter members of the Pro Football

Hall of Fame and he”s also in the College Football Hall. He

remains active at age 84, tooling around the golf course regularly

and sponsoring a yearly tournament for charity. In this age of

increasing specialization, we will never see his likes again.

[Sources: “Slinging Sammy: The Man Who Would be King,”

Alicia Seymour; Game Day Magazine; Sports Biographies /

Hickoksports.com; ESPN Classic.]

Jason Kidd / Dirtball

Basketball”s Jason Kidd had seen trouble before, but once he

made his way to Phoenix he seemed to get his act together. Then

last week, police in Paradise Valley received the following 911

call from his wife, Joumana.

“There”s just a bad history here. I told him this would be the last

time, and he popped me right in the mouth.This is minor

compared to what I usually go through.”

And so it came to pass that Olympic gold medalist and NBA All-

Star Jason Kidd was arrested for misdemeanor assault, joining

backcourt mate Penny Hardaway on the All-Dirtball Team.

Hardaway had been accused five days earlier of threatening the

mother of his 8-year-old daughter with a gun, though this charge

was later dropped.

And how did the whole incident between Jason and Joumana

start? According to the AP and the police report, Joumana asked

Jason if he would watch and feed their 2-year-old son, T.J., while

she went to the gym. Kidd then took a french fry from the boy”s

plate, and his wife told him not to eat the child”s food.

“Jason then turns towards Mrs. Kidd and spits the french fry at

Mrs. Kidd, striking her in the face,” the police report said. “Mrs.

Kidd turns away from Jason. Jason then strikes Mrs. Kidd in the

face while holding a container of yogurt in his hand.” Joumana

then ran upstairs to her bedroom and locked the door but Jason

kicked it open. Unreal. Throw the guy in the slammer.

Jimmy Zambo

Who? That”s what I said when I read this wire story on Sunday.

It seems that Zambo was a pop idol in Hungary and thousands

attended his funeral on Saturday. He was 42 and died in a rather

bizarre way.

It seems that two weeks earlier, Zambo was lying in bed when a

cock”s crowing upset him. So Jimmy leaned out the window and

fired two shots with a pistol, apparently to scare the cockster

away.

So what does Jimmy do? He decides to show his wife there were

no more bullets in the weapon, put it to his head and pulled the

trigger. Dohh!

Eddie Donovan / RIP

Donovan, the architect of that great New York Knicks team that

won the NBA championship in 1970, died Saturday at the age of

78.

In the spring of 1964, Donovan was the Knicks coach but was

also responsible for the draft (along with scout Red Holzman).

That year he drafted an unknown from Grambling, Willis Reed.

Replaced as coach in January 1965, Donovan became the general

manager. The draft of ”65 brought Bill Bradley, Dave Stallworth

and Dick Van Arsdale; Cazzie Russell was picked in 1966; and

then in 1967, Donovan selected Walt Frazier and Phil Jackson.

Shooting guard Dick Barnett had been acquired from Los

Angeles in 1965, but it was in December 1968 that Eddie

Donovan pulled off one of the great trades in the history of

sports, obtaining power forward Dave DeBusschere for Walt

Bellamy and Howard Komives.

Bellamy was an outstanding center but a bit of a malcontent and

the trade enabled Reed to move from power forward to his more

natural center position. DeBusschere then became a monster at

the power slot.

So with Red Holzman at the helm (he had been named head

coach in 1967), the Knicks beat the Lakers in the dramatic Game

7 where an injured Reed hobbled onto the court, providing the

inspiration for the Knicks to persevere.

Donovan had actually left the Knicks two months before to head

up the operations for the expansion Buffalo Braves. By 1974 he

had turned the Braves into a playoff team. Then in 1975 Eddie

returned to the Knicks but the team was on a slide he couldn”t

stop. Ahh, just typing this brings back great memories of one of

the most enjoyable teams to watch of any sport. Reed,

DeBusschere, Bradley, Frazier, Barnett.and later Monroe and

Lucas for the 1973 championship edition. [Source: Richard

Goldstein / New York Times]

Alan Webb

On more than one occasion I have written of the fact that no high

school runner had broken 4 minutes in the mile since Marty

Liquori did so all the way back in 1967.

Well, this Saturday, Alan Webb of South Lakes High School in

Virginia finally did it, turning a 3:59.8 in a meet in Manhattan

where he was the only high school runner in the event.

That Webb accomplished this terrific feat is no surprise. He had

run a sub 4-minute split at the Penn Relays last spring. So let”s

quaff an ale to the Webman! [In case you haven”t noticed, we are

always looking for excuses to quaff ales here at Bar Chat.]

Top 3 songs for the week of 1/23/61: #1 “Wonderland By Night”

(Bert Kaempfert) #2 “Exodus” (Ferrante & Teicher) #3

“Calcutta” (Lawrence Welk…is that a Top Three or what?

Actually, they”re all pretty good tunes). By the way, #4 that

week was The Shirelles “Will You Love Me Tomorrow.”

Super Bowl Quiz Answers: 1) The 4 rushers for K.C. in SB IV

were Mike Garrett, Wendell Hayes, Warren McVea, Robert

Holmes.I bet if you played Strat-O-Matic Football as a kid you

got this. 2) Steelers Front Four for SB IX: Joe Greene, L.C.

Greenwood, Dwight White, Ernie Homes. While the Vikings

were only mustering 17 yards on the ground, the Steelers racked

up 249 on 57 carries; Franco Harris, 34 for 158, and Rocky

Bleier, 17 for 65, led the way. In case you forgot, Chuck

Foreman was the Vikings top rusher in those days but he picked

up only 18 yards on 12 carries.

Next Bar Chat, Wednesday.