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November 4, 2017 at 7:47 pm #76893
zn
ModeratorThe Cleveland Rams head West
After winning the NFL title, they wanted out of ClevelandBarry Shuck
https://www.bigblueview.com/2017/11/4/16602256/the-cleveland-rams-head-west
What did the Cleveland Rams do after winning the 1945 NFL Championship? They up and moved.
After a stellar 9-1-0 campaign and a Western Division crown, the Rams were pitted against the Eastern Division champion Washington Redskins in the NFL title game. On-the-field, everything was roses for the Rams. Away from the gridiron was an entirely different matter.
The Rams’ owner, Dan Reeves, served in World War II until just before the 1945 season. Gas rationing was widespread all across the United States. The Rams had a rookie quarterback and unknown pro talent in Bob Waterfield. Their home field, the cramped 30,000 seat League Park, was built in 1921 and still equipped with wooden seating. It was more famous for being the home field of the Negro League World Series Champions Cleveland Buckeyes rather than the Rams’ home turf.
The Rams had only one winning season (1936) and that was a member of another pro football entity with the second American Football League. Since joining the NFL, the only thing Cleveland fans were accustomed to were bad squads, a coaching carousel, abandonment of the entire 1943 season (due to World War II) and horrid draft choices.
But for 1945, the franchise took a turn for the best. Adam Walsh, who had developed under Knute Rockne, was named head coach. The club introduced the league’s very first logos on helmets. Waterfield was an elite college athlete albeit just a rookie. The offensive line had finally gelled. The roster had two excellent offensive weapons in wide receiver Steve Pritko and halfback Fred Gehrke.
1945 was also the year that the hash marks were brought in 3 1/2 yards closer to the center of the field which gave the offense more room to maneuver. Touchdowns had dropped considerably the past few seasons while defensive units were larger and with better athletes than decades before so the owners decided to give the offensive units more area in which to work.
And more room for the offense to operate was exactly what the Rams needed.
After capturing the Eastern Division crown, the Rams were set to host the NFL Championship Game against the 8-2-0 Redskins. The Rams decided to move the game to the 80,000 seat Cleveland Stadium, home of the baseball Indians in anticipation of the prospect of Waterfield, who won the league MVP award, vs. Sammy Baugh, Washington’s flashy quarterback better known as Slingin’ Sammy.
But there were several huge issues with the title game. For starters, a massive cold front dropped on the city of Cleveland all week with a forecast of snow and ice. The Rams brought in 9,000 bales of pine straw to cover the playing field to keep it from freezing. On the day before the game, 18 inches of snow descended upon the city.
The Rams were responsible for the field while the City of Cleveland was accountable for the stadium and parking lots. On game day, Reeves gathered 275 workers to remove the pine straw from the playing field, but the trucks that were to be loaded with the straw could not reach the stadium because of snow-blocked roadways. So, the ocean of pine straw was pushed against the walls all around the stadium. Also, none of the parking lots were shoveled or cleared by the City for patron vehicles.
Another disadvantage was that none of the taxi services were running that day; and not because of the eight below zero temperature at game time. The Yellow Cab Company was owned by Mickey McBride, the owner of the infant Cleveland franchise in the newly formed All-America Football Conference (AAFC) slated to begin play in 1946. Only a paid crowd of 32,178 braved the weather to watch their hometown Rams win its first NFL title by a 15-14 score.
Reeves’ 60% home team revenue share did not even cover the pine straw, the delivery of the chaff nor the workers hired to remove it. But the Rams had their championship and at least the bars and restaurants that were nearby had warmth and comfort.
Every season in Cleveland, Reeves had lost money. Even in the championship season, his Rams lost a little over $64,000. And the following year, a new pro football team was about to hit the field, this one coached by Ohio legend Paul Brown. Reeves knew he could not keep going like this and break-even – much less prosper.
A change was needed. And Reeves knew exactly what that change should be.
For almost a decade, the NFL had received several applications for a franchise to be located in Los Angeles, but the league was based mainly in the Northeast and Midwest states and the owners liked it that way. Back then, all travel was done via railroad or bus. Many an off day was spent on a train either headed towards or coming back from another NFL city. The last thing the owners wanted was a week-long trek to the West Coast.
But one event changed the landscape of the United States forever in 1946: air travel.
At the annual owner’s meeting at the Commodore Hotel in New York City on January 11, 1946, the first thing on the agenda was to vote on a new league commissioner. The second item on the day’s itinerary was the fact that the NFL Brooklyn Dodgers was about to leave the league to join the AAFC as a charter member club because of disputes with the Giants and home dates. Next up was Dan Reeves’ motion to relocate his Cleveland Rams to either Dallas, Texas or Los Angeles, California.
His arguments detailed how much money he had lost in Cleveland (including the championship season), the new AAFC entry which was in all likelihood set to be the best team in the new league, plus Cleveland’s fan base would not financially support two pro football squads. Another reason was that the AAFC was placing franchises in San Francisco and Los Angeles; both were large west coast cities that the NFL should not ignore as potential club regions that another league would suddenly have a foothold in.
Eight votes were needed for the relocation. The first vote was six yes votes, three votes no, and one abstention. The NFL gave Reeves the reason was the added costs of the travel. Even though air travel was now a viable option, the cost to fly was considerably more than traveling by rail.
At that point, Reeves stood up and told the owners that his club was no longer a member of the National Football League. If the Dodgers could leave and join that other new league, what was stopping him?
In the past, owners have said things that were eye-popping and controversial, but only one had actually taken their club and joined another rival league, and that was the Dodgers earlier in the same meeting.
That fact was freshly toxic in the minds of the other owners.
At Reeves’ hotel later that day, he told the trio of owners that had gathered to calm him down that it was either a relocation to Dallas or Los Angeles or his Rams would not be a member of the NFL any longer. Imagine the publicity hit that the NFL would suffer knowing their league champion had blessed that new rival league.
The following day at the owner’s meeting, they discussed how feasible the travel costs would be if the Rams did indeed relocate to Los Angeles. The owners did not want to concede virgin territory to another upstart league and decided the West Coast, and especially California, was the best vehicle to begin their “national” expansion. They presented Reeves with an offer to relocate with the stipulation that all visiting teams would receive a $5,000 stipend over and above the visitor’s gate revenue cut.
And with that, the Los Angeles Rams were born. Well, sort of.
The only place big enough to play football in the Los Angeles area was the Los Angeles Coliseum, a 75,000-seat venue which was also home of the USC Trojans and the UCLA Bruins football squads. Plus, the newly-formed Los Angeles Dons of the AAFC had applied to play there for their maiden season of 1946.
The Coliseum was owned by the city, county and state governments. And the governing board of the Coliseum had only one question for the Dons as well as the Rams: why do your franchises not have any black players.
At the time, the NFL was devoid of ANY black players. Not that the NFL had not had any black players before. But at this time, since 1934 there was an unwritten rule where none of the owners would hire any nor invite any to camps regardless of their college accolades and achievements. And the Coliseum wanted to know why.
At the meeting attended by representatives of the Dons and Rams, the question was raised. The Coliseum, you see, was owned by municipalities which are owned by the public. All races of the public. So the use of the facility should be for, and used, by all people. Although the Dons were just forming and may have had a built-in excuse, the Rams already had a decade of rosters devoid of black players; and a public facility was not going to be rented by an entity which excluded a certain race of people. Period.
Rams’ GM Chile Walsh then told the commission that former UCLA standout Kenny Washington was invited for a Ram’s tryout as well as Illinois star running back Buddy Young; who incidentally was considered to be one of the best collegiate athletes about to graduate. The Dons also made proclamation that several black players had been invited to their training camp in order to make the roster.
The Rams did indeed sign Washington to a three-year contract along with Illinois WR Woody Strode. Two weeks later, both the Dons and Rams were approved for play at the Coliseum and both played their home games there.
One year later, baseball’s Jackie Robinson would integrate the Major Leagues.
Did you know?
The Rams invented logos on helmets. With leather helmets, most teams painted colors on the helmets but were devoid of any logos. Halfback Fred Gehrke played for both the Rams’ teams in Cleveland and then Los Angeles. He was an art major from the University of Utah. He had played around with ram horns on a helmet to which Ram’s head coach Bob Snyder liked the idea and told Gehrke to show it to Dan Reeves, the club’s owner. Reeves loved the idea and asked the NFL for a ruling on whether his franchise could paint logos on helmets. The NFL responded that it was his club and could do what he wanted. With that, Reeves commissioned Gehrke to paint 75 helmets for $1 each during the summer of 1948. The helmet’s debut occurred in a pre-season game against the Washington Redskins. The sellout crowd of 105,000 gave the team a 5-minute ovation. The following season, the plastic helmet was standard issue and Riddell used baked on paint for the Ram horns. One of the original 75 helmets now resides in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
November 4, 2017 at 10:35 pm #76900wv
Participant“…Another disadvantage was that none of the taxi services were running that day; and not because of the eight below zero temperature at game time…”
An ice-bowl? I did not know that. How cold was it in Green Bay for the well-known ice bowl?
w
vNovember 4, 2017 at 10:44 pm #76901wv
Participant“..At the time, the NFL was devoid of ANY black players. Not that the NFL had not had any black players before. But at this time, since 1934 there was an unwritten rule where none of the owners would hire any nor invite any to camps regardless of their college accolades and achievements. And the Coliseum wanted to know why…”
Thats confusing. So those two ram players were ‘not’ the first black NFL players.
Who was?
w
vNovember 4, 2017 at 11:09 pm #76903zn
ModeratorThats confusing. So those two ram players were ‘not’ the first black NFL players.
Who was?
==
Kenny Washington paved way for black players in NFL
A UCLA running back was first African American to play in modern NFL. His story is not widely knownLots of kids know about Jackie Robinson and how in 1947 he became the first African American to play Major League Baseball.
Not as many kids — or adults — know about Kenny Washington. But Kenny Washington was the Jackie Robinson of the National Football League (NFL).
When the NFL started, in the 1920s, a handful of African Americans played in the new league. But from 1934 to 1946, there were no black players in the NFL. There wasn’t an official rule against them, but there was an unwritten understanding among the teams. The teams would not allow African Americans into the league.
Some owners and coaches claimed that African Americans were not good enough for the NFL. That’s hard to believe, especially considering that nine African American college football players were named all-American stars during those years. Still, none were drafted, even though the NFL had 10 teams in 1940 and each team drafted 20 players.
Washington was one of the college stars who went undrafted. He was a running back who set rushing and passing records at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA). In 1939, Washington led the nation in total yards while also playing defensive back. (Players played both offense and defense in those days.)
Washington also played baseball for the UCLA Bruins. He hit .454 and .350 during his two varsity seasons. His teammate on the UCLA football and baseball teams was … Jackie Robinson. The head coach at UCLA’s top rival, the University of Southern California, said Washington was a more skilled baseball player than Robinson.
Despite Washington’s incredible college career, no NFL team drafted him in 1940. For the next few seasons, Washington played in the smaller Pacific Coast Football League, where he earned all-league honors every year.
Washington finally got his chance to play in the NFL in 1946. The Cleveland Rams had relocated to Los Angeles. The Rams agreed to allow African American players on the team after local black newspapers and the city’s stadium commission pressured the team to integrate (mix black and white players).
Washington was 28 years old and had undergone five knee surgeries when in March 1946 he became the first African American in years to sign a contract with an NFL team. He was not as fast as he had been at UCLA. Still, Washington was among the leading rushers in the NFL during the second of his three seasons.
Like Robinson, Washington had to endure dirty plays and mean name-calling throughout his football career. Washington might have had it even harder than Robinson. After all, Washington had to carry the football with tacklers smashing into him.
Since 1946, thousands of African Americans have played in the NFL. They all followed in the footsteps of Kenny Washington.
November 4, 2017 at 11:24 pm #76905zn
Moderatorfrom the wiki
…
Black players in professional American football
Charles Follis is believed to be the first black professional football player, having played for the Shelby Steamfitters from 1902 to 1906. Follis, a two sport athlete, was paid for his work beginning in 1904.
From its inception in 1920 as a loose coalition of various regional teams, the American Professional Football Association had comparatively few African-American players; a total of nine black people suited up for NFL teams between 1920 and 1926, including future attorney, black activist, and internationally acclaimed artist Paul Robeson. Fritz Pollard and Bobby Marshall were the first black players in what is now the NFL in 1920. Pollard became the first (and until 1989, only) black coach in 1921; during the early-to-mid-1920s, the league used player-coaches and did not have separate coaching staffs.
1927 through 1933
After 1926, all five of the black players that were still in the subsequent National Football League left the league. Several teams were kicked out of the league that year, and with a large number of available, talented white players, black players were generally the first to be removed, never to return again. For the next few years, a black player would sporadically pop up on a team: Harold Bradley Sr. played one season with the Chicago Cardinals in 1928, and David Myers played for two New York City-based teams in 1930 and 1931.
In contrast, ethnic minorities of other races were fairly common. Thanks to the efforts of the Carlisle Indian School football program, which ended with the school’s closure in 1918, there were numerous Native Americans in the NFL through the 1920s and 1930s, most famously Jim Thorpe. The Dayton Triangles also featured the first two Asian-Americans in the NFL, Chinese-Hawaiian running back Walter Achiu and Japanese-Scottish quarterback Arthur Matsu, both in 1928, and the first Hispanic players in the NFL, Cuban immigrant Ignacio Molinet of the 1927 Frankford Yellow Jackets and Jess Rodriguez of the 1929 Buffalo Bisons, played in the NFL during this time frame.
1934 to 1945
In 1933, the last year of integration, the NFL had two black players, Joe Lillard and Ray Kemp. Both were gone by the end of the season: Lillard, due largely to his tendency to get into fights, was not invited back to the Chicago Cardinals despite in 1933 being responsible for almost half of the Cardinals’ points, while Kemp quit on his own accord to pursue a coaching career (one that turned out to be long and successful). Many observers will attribute the subsequent lockout of black players to the entry of George Preston Marshall into the league in 1932. Marshall openly refused to have black athletes on his Boston Braves/Washington Redskins team, and reportedly pressured the rest of the league to follow suit. Marshall, however, was likely not the only reason: the Great Depression had stoked an increase in racism and self-inflicted segregation across the country, and internal politics likely had as much of an effect as external pressure. Marshall’s hostility was specifically directed at the black race; he openly allowed (and promoted) Native Americans on his team, including his first head coach, Lone Star Dietz, widely believed to be a Native American at the time. The choice of Redskins as his team name in 1933 was in part to maintain the native connotations that came with the previous team’s name, the Boston Braves. Another reason for Marshall’s anti-black sentiment was to curry favor in the Southern United States; Marshall’s Redskins had a strong following in that part of the country, which he vigorously defended, and he stood up against the NFL’s efforts to put expansion teams in the South until Clint Murchison, Jr.’s successful extortion attempt (Murchison acquired the rights to the Redskins’ fight song and threatened not to let Marshall use the song unless he got an expansion team in Dallas) led to the establishment of the Dallas Cowboys in 1960.
By 1934, there were no more black players in the league. The NFL did not have another black player until after World War II.
Most black players either ended up in the minor leagues (six joined the American Association and several others found their way into the Pacific Coast Professional Football League) or found themselves onto all-black barnstorming teams such as the Harlem Brown Bombers. Unlike in baseball, where the Negro Leagues flourished, no true football Negro league was known to exist until 1946, and by this time, the major leagues had begun reintegrating.
Post-WWII
In 1939, UCLA had one of the greatest collegiate football players in history, Kenny Washington,a senior. Washington, an African American, was very popular, and his team had garnered national attention in the print media. After he played in the College All-Star game in August 1940, George Halas asked him not to return to Los Angeles immediately because Halas wanted to sign him to a contract with the Chicago Bears. After a week or so, Washington returned to Los Angeles without an NFL contract. Washington spent the majority of the early 1940s in the Pacific Coast League with the Hollywood Bears, even during World War II, during which he managed to avoid military service, thanks in part to a timely injury that forced him to miss the 1942 season but likely rendered him ineligible for service. Washington, after his injuries were healed, was a rarity in that he was a healthy, available athlete during a time when the NFL was resorting to using partially handicapped players ineligible for service, but received no interest from any NFL teams at the time. (Washington would ultimately serve a tour of duty in the armed forces in 1945.)
In 1946, after the Rams had received approval to move to Los Angeles and Washington returned from the war, members of the African American print media made the Los Angeles Coliseum commission aware the NFL did not have any African American players and reminded the commission the Coliseum was supported with public funds. Therefore, its commission had to abide by an 1896 Supreme Court decision, Plessy v. Ferguson, by not leasing the stadium to a segregated team. Also, they specifically suggested the Rams should give Washington a tryout. The commission advised the Rams that they would have to integrate the team with at least one African American in order to lease the Coliseum, and the Rams agreed to this conditionSubsequently, the Rams signed Washington on March 21, 1946. The signing of Washington caused “all hell to break loose” among the owners of the NFL franchises. The Rams added a second black player, Woody Strode, on May 7, 1946, giving them two black players going into the 1946 season.
Even after this incident, racial integration was slow to come to the NFL. No team followed the Rams in re-integrating the NFL until the Detroit Lions signed Mel Groomes and Bob Mann in 1948. No black player was selected in the NFL draft until 1949 when George Taliaferro was selected in the 13th round; Taliaferro signed instead with the rival All-America Football Conference. The AAFC, which formed in 1946, was more proactive in signing black players; in 1946, the Cleveland Browns signed Marion Motley and Bill Willis, and by the time the AAFC merged with the NFL in 1950, six of the league’s eight teams had signed black players, most by the league’s second season in 1947. In comparison, only three of the ten NFL teams (the Rams, Lions and New York Giants) signed a black player before 1950. The Green Bay Packers followed in 1950, but the bulk of NFL teams did not sign a black player until 1952, by which time every team but the Washington Redskins had signed a black player.
Marshall was quoted as saying “We’ll start signing Negroes when the Harlem Globetrotters start signing whites.” The Redskins had no black players until Interior Secretary Stewart Udall threatened to evict them from D. C. Stadium unless they signed a black player. The Redskins first attempted to comply by drafting Ernie Davis, who refused to play under Marshall; the Redskins in turn traded Davis to the Cleveland Browns. The Redskins eventually signed Bobby Mitchell and two other African American players by 1962.
Quotas limiting the number of black players were commonplace, and black players were often stacked into the same positions to allow them to be eliminated as a matter of competition. Reportedly, black players routinely received lower contracts than whites in the NFL, while in the American Football League there was no such distinction based on race. Position segregation was also prevalent at this time. According to several books, such as the autobiography of Vince Lombardi, black players were stacked at “speed” positions such as defensive back but excluded from “intelligent” positions such as quarterback and center. However, despite the NFL’s segregationist policies, after the league merged with the more tolerant AFL in 1970, more than 30% of the merged league’s players were African American.
The American Football League had the first black placekicker in U.S. professional football, Gene Mingo of the Denver Broncos (Mingo’s primary claim to fame, however, was as a running back, and was only secondarily a placekicker); and the first black regular starting quarterback of the modern era, Marlin Briscoe of the Denver Broncos. Willie Thrower was a back-up quarterback who saw some action in the 1950s for the Chicago Bears. In 1954, running back Joe Perry of the San Francisco 49ers became the first black player to be recognized as NFL Most Valuable Player, when United Press International named him pro football’s player of the year.
Today
At the start of the 2014 season, NFL surveys revealed that the league was approximately 68% African-American and about 28% white, with the remaining 4% comprising Asian/Pacific Islander, non-white Hispanics, and those preferring a Mixed Race category.
These statistics are in contrast to the general population of the United States, which is about 28% non-white (white including Hispanic whites) although among the demographic that plays in the NFL (men approximately 21 to 35 years of age), the proportion of the American population that is non-white is somewhat greater.
Scout.com national recruiting analyst Greg Biggins said: “I honestly think it’s harder for a white wide receiver than it is a black quarterback to get recruited at a high level in this day and age,” Biggins said. “Unless you have an extreme skill set that jumps out.”
In recent decades the cornerback position has been played exclusively by black players, and the halfback/tailback position overwhelmingly so. There are currently no white cornerbacks in the NFL and there have not been since New York Giants cornerback Jason Sehorn played his final season for the team in 2002. Since the 2010 season, only six white halfbacks have seen regular playing time: Toby Gerhart, Danny Woodhead, Peyton Hillis, Brian Leonard, Rex Burkhead and Zach Zenner.
No white running back rushed for 1,000 rushing yards in a season between Craig James in 1985 and Hillis in 2010. Gerhart alleged race was a factor in why four running backs were drafted ahead of him in the 2010 NFL Draft. There are also allegations that racial profiling exists at the lower levels of the game that discourages white players from playing halfback.
At the quarterback position, 23 of the 32 starting quarterbacks in the NFL were white at the start of the 2013 season. Whites slightly outnumber blacks in the makeup of offensive linemen (49% vs 46%) yet the center position is 82% white.
In contrast, of the 32 starting kickers in the NFL in 2013, only one was black. Also, there were two African American punters, Reggie Hodges for the Cleveland Browns and Marquette King for the Oakland Raiders.
Outside of playing, the first black head coach in the NFL since the end of the player-coach era did not come until 1989, when Art Shell took over the then-Los Angeles Raiders; he was followed three years later by Dennis Green of the Minnesota Vikings. An affirmative action policy known as the Rooney Rule was implemented in 2003 requiring teams to interview racial minorities for head coaching positions and, since 2009, other senior management and player personnel positions. (Such minorities need not specifically be black; Hispanics of any race and persons of any nonwhite race are also eligible to qualify under the rule.) The league has never had a black franchise owner (it rejected the opportunity to do so in 1974 when it chose the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an expansion franchise over Rommie Loudd’s Orlando Suns), and only two of the league’s owners (Korean-born Kim Pegula of the Buffalo Bills, and Punjabi Shahid Khan of the Jacksonville Jaguars) are of non-European descent.
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