* Friday, September 4, 1 970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine j Friday, September 4, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Players, By The Associated Press Vince Lombardi's death struck deep for many people of various professions. But it was the players whose grief ran deepest. Bart Starr, the Green B a y quarterback tapped for the No. S 1 job by Lombardi when he took over for the Packers, expressed itN to his wife before leaving f o.r practice.I "I told my wife before I leftI the house this morning that it! was like losing a fathei" a sol- Mo emn Starr explained. "I felt that strongly about" him. Fellows who had the pleasure of playing under after I ca him are better people for it. ed winnin . "One thing that was character- second p istic of him was the pursuit of ex-. Carroll D cellence. He said the pursuit of our chur excellence would /make your a -first with better person than you otherwise Green Ba might be content to be. I think it order. was the most valuable thing he "He ha left with us. personal "I remember in his first talks said veter coaches dailly bports. NIGHT EDITOR: ERRI FOUCHEY re sports, see page 7 me here that he stress- ng - that there was no place," recalled receiver Dale. "He always told us ch and God should come us, then our family and ay Packer football in that ad a big influence on my approach to football," ;ran tackle Forrest Gregg, "and also had a ,big influence on my personal life. There have been a lot of coaches who have had an influence on football players and other coaches. "I thinic Coach Lombardi was the greate'st, most complete coach I've ever come in contact with," linebacker Dave Robinson stated. "I think his influence on this team, even now, is immeasurable. "I don't think he ever taught me any football," said former Packer All-Pro defensive tackle Henry Jordan. "What he"d do three times a week was preach on life." Similar feelings were expressed by members of the Washington Redskins. Despite the fact he only coached the Redskins for one year, Lombardi apparently left the same lasting impressions with t h o s e players. / "I ' just can't believe it," s a i d receiver Charley Taylor. "It seems uourn like all the people whom I loved~ and admired and gained so much from in my life aren't with us any- more - John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and now Coach Lom- bardi. "All the things a man searches for all his life I found in Coach Lombardi," said tight end Jerry Smith. "He gave me a deeper" meaning of life. He justified hard work, dedication, pride and love. His teachings and ideals, which he gave us all, both in football and life, will stay with us forever." It also was a great shock to. the coaches who succeeded him - Phil Bengtson at Green Bay and Bill Austin, who took over at Washington when Lombardi was stricken. Bengtson, who succeeded Lom- bardi .as both head coach a n d general manager of the Packers said, "several men have had a great influence on my life and my profession. These include coaches whom I have played under and coached with." Bill Austin, interim Redskins coach, added in a statement: "Words are inadequate to' express my deep sorrow and regret at the passing of Coach Vince Lombardi, a great leader and a greater man. Those who tried to beat him at football likewise were touched by the man. Dallas coach Tom Landry, who lost two National Football League title battles with Lombardi when Lombardi was coaching at Green Bay, said "professional football has lost its greatest coach." "Lombardi will no doubt go down as the greatest coach in pro- fessional football history." George Halas, 75-year-old own- er and former coach of the Chi- cago Bears, lauded the "unforgett- able personality" of Vince Lom- bardi and said his former Green Bay coaching rival's death "is a great loss not only to football, but to the entire country." "I regret that I really became Nixon lauds Vince closer to Vince only within the last five years," said Halas. "That was all too short a time to enjoy and admire his great qualities. We understood each other. I loved him as a friend and as a man. "He taught me that you get out of life exactly what you put into -it, no more, no less. "Vince Lombardi was a rare man who possessed to a marked degree the most priceless commo- dity in the world today - force- ful, intelligent leadership based upon the love of God and respect for his fellow man." Hank Stram of the Kansas City Chiefs. "He was an inspirational leader and earned the right to be regarded as one of the great coaches of our time. "He was a very emotional man of high standards and strong prin- ciples. He demanded excellence not only from his people but also from himself. Football and our country have suffered a severe loss." Government and state officials also talked about the man they knew. "Vince Lombardi was a good man, a man for the discipline, de- dication, self-sacrifice this coun- try needs today," said Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis). "We in New York State have a special sorrow," said Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. "It was as a line- man, one of the famed Seven Blocks of Granite at Fordham University,that he first came to prominence: And he figured prom- inently as an assistant coach in the success of the Giants., "Vince was more than a giant in the world of athletics. He was a leader in every sense of the word. Fin Green Bay eulogize man who built Packer dynasty By The Associated Press GREEN BAY, Wis.-It rained in to Green Bay yesterday. It was as if the steel-grey skies we'e in mourn- ing, too. Shrouds of rain obscured Lam- beau Field, the site of many of Vince Lombardi's triumphs, and also adjoining Lombardi Avenue. Lombardi's d e p a r t u r e from 4 Green Bay slightly' more than a year ago under less-than-perfect circumstances helped ease the pain of his death early yesterday morning. But it didn't ease the hurt of losing a friend. St. Norbert College, where the Packers hold their preseason training camp, in nearby West Depere, immediately established a Vincent T. Lombardi Scholarship. The very Rev. D. M. Burke, col- lege chancellor, will be the prin- cipal concelebrant at a memorial mass today in St. oJseph Chal on the campus. The chapel is where Lombardi used to serve mass every morning when the Packers were housed- on campus.. I Don Tilleman, Green Bay may- or, said the city would take some action to h o n o r Lombardi's memory. "He will be sorely missed not' only here in Green Bay, his second home, but throughout the nation whefe his example provided in- spiration for millions," Tilleman said. Dominic Olejniczak, president of the Green Bay Packers, said Lombardi left him with "a sense of great personal grief at the loss of a warm and close friend." Olejniczak s a i d Lombardi's "genius as a coach was in/ no small degree the result of the many attributes of his personal character." "Vince Lombardi will forever be identified closely with the golden period in the history of the Green Bay Packers,,'! Olejniczak said. "For it was here that his career as a head coach began and blos- somed into universally recognized greatness until both the man and WASHINGTON Redskin players and personnel pause before the start of yesterday's practice in Tampa, Fla., for the official team announcement .- of the death of Redskin coach Vince Lombardi. The Redskins pro- ceeded to hold normally sched- uled practice. Michigan Coach Bo Schem- be 'hler asked his players to ob- serve a moment of silence yes-, terday at the end of practice in memory of Vince Lombardi. "Lombardi always worked his players hard Schembechier said, "but he really cared about them." Buy Books at i STUDSNT 900K SGRVICh The Noisiest Place in Town III i. 1215 South University 761-0700 =?t r YINCE LOMBARDI once said, "I believe a man should fight. for his country,- but he should also stand up and say, 'let's do it right.'" Judging from the acclaim he received after it became apparent his days were numbered, as well as the plaudits heaped upon him now that he is dead, you would have thought that Lombardi had said, "A man should fight for his country" and nothing more. The beauty of the total remark, like the beauty of the total man, has been lost, buried beneath a sea of laudatory words, words that fail to capture the man. Sports are fickle, and it is sadly ironic that Lombardi's greatness was not realized until after he passed the pinnacle of his suedess. He was a great coach, perhaps the greatest of all time, but during Green Bay's glory years in the mix-sixties, no one really loved the Packers or Vince Lombardi. JERRrY KRAMER loved the Packers and he loved his coach, and when Kramer told of his loves in Instant Replay, the 'world suddenly found a man named Lombardi where before there had been only an automaton. Lombardi has pased- away amidst accolades heaped upon him by sports writers, congressmen and other hacks. He pro- bably would have preferred to have been buried rather than praised, but avoiding your own obituary may be death's greatest blessing. Lombardi will not have to endure eulogies from those who never really knew him. I never knew Vince Lombardi, so no words of mine could do him justice. Perhaps no one could sum up the. essence of Lombardi better than Jerry Kramer. Instant Replay is an intensely personal book. and should be read in full. It is a wonderful book, and the agony and ecstacy in it gives football a dimension far beyond the sidelines. Instant Replay also removes Vince Lombardi from the bounds of mere mortals. "The man is," according to Kramer, "a very emotional man. He is spurred to anger or to tears almost equally easily. He gets misty-eyed and he actually cries at times, and no one thinks less of him for crying. He's such a man." He will be missed. --LEE KIRK Associate Sports Editor his team became synonymous with ; T invincibility. The sports world will never forget that it was at Green Bay that Lombardi established a CORONADO, Calif. W) - Pres- r e c o r d of achievement never ident Nixon said yesterday t h a t equaled in all the annals of sports, Vince Lombardi, Weshington Red- a record that probably will never skin football coach who died in be surpassed.kthe national capital, was tops "To those of us who were pri- in his field "because he was able vileged to know him well, his loss to help others discover the best is a deep one." that was in themselves." "Like the power sweep which 'the game has trademarked," Nixon Titkets go on sale today for said in a statement, "the power the New York Knicks-Detroit of Vince Lombardi's personality Pistons exhibition game at swept the world of sports and Crisler Arena on September made a lasting impact on the life 24 at 8 p.m. of all it touched." The price of the tickets, Nixon called Lombardi an im- which will be sold at the ticket posing, inspiring figure whose office in the athletic adminis- very presence was commanding on tration building at the corner the field and off. He said as he of Hoover and State streets, thinks of Lombardi that way he will be $1 for students with ID knows that Lombardi always will cards; $1 for faculty and staff hold a commanding place in the with athletic cards; and $2.50 nation's memory. ''The lesson all Americans can for adults. learn from Coach Lombardi's The tickets will be on sale life," Nixon said, "is that a man from 8:30 until 5. 1 can become a star when he be- comes an apostle of teamwork." l0 --5JA . 11-6 DOWNTOWN HONDA mq TENT-IN The University now claims that no housing shortage exists in Ann Arbor. But those who are living on -the Diag in tents know better. Those who are crashing "temporarily" with friends know better. And those who are crowded into "economy" doubles and triples meant for fewer occupants know better. As in the past, the University has refused to respond to the needs of its students and employees. Housing will be built ,only if we take action. Help us plan the next step. 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