1
     PRELIMINARY  SKIRMISHES
FEBRUARY 10
I drove downtown to the Packer offices today to pick up my mail, mostly fan  mail about our victory in the first Super Bowl game, and as I came out of  the building Coach Lombardi came in. I waved to him cheerfully--I have  nothing against him during the off-season--and I said, "Hi, Coach."
Vince Lombardi is a short, stout man, a stump. He looked up at me and he  started to speak and his jaws moved, but no words came out. He hung his  head. My first thought--from force of habit, I guess--was I've done  something wrong, I'm in trouble, he's mad at me. I just stood there and  Lombardi started to speak again and again he opened his mouth and still he  didn't say anything. I could see he was upset, really shaken.
"What is it, Coach?" I said. "What's the matter?"
Finally, he managed to say, "I had to put Paul--" He was almost stuttering.  "I had to put Paul on that list," he said, "and they took him."
I didn't know what to say. I couldn't say anything. Vince had put Paul  Hornung on the list of Packers eligible to be selected by the Saints, the  new expansion team in New Orleans, and the Saints had taken him. Paul  Hornung had been my teammate ever since I came to Green Bay in 1958, and he  had been Vince's prize pupil ever since Vince came to Green Bay in 1959, and  it may sound funny but I loved Paul and Vince loved Paul and everybody on  the Packers loved Paul. From the stands, or on television, Paul may have  looked cocky, with his goat shoulders and his blond hair and his strut, but  to the people who knew him he was a beautiful guy.
I stood there, not saying anything, and Lombardi looked at me again and  lowered his head and started to walk away. He took about four steps and then  he turned around and said, "This is a helluva business sometimes, isn't it?"
Then he put his head down again and walked into his office.
I got to thinking about it later, and the man is 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.     
JUNE 15
Practice starts a month from today, and I'm dreading it. I don't want to  work that hard again. I don't want to take all that punishment again. I  really don't know why I'm going to do it.
\I must get some enjoyment out of the game, though I can't say what it is. It  isn't the body contact. Body contact may be fun for the defensive players, the ones who get to make the tackles, but body contact gives me only cuts  and contusions, bruises and abrasions. I suppose I enjoy doing something well. I enjoy springing a back loose, making a good trap block, a good solid  trap block, cutting down my man the way I'm supposed to. But I'm not quite  as boyish about the whole thing as I used to be.
A couple of months ago, I was thinking seriously about retiring. Jimmy  Taylor, who used to be my roommate on the Packers, and a couple of other  fellows and I have a commercial diving business down in Louisiana. Jimmy,  who comes from Baton Rouge and played for Louisiana State University, is a  great asset to the business; he's such a hero in Louisiana I wouldn't be  surprised if he ended up as governor. We've been building up the company for  three years now, and this year, with Jimmy playing for the Saints--he played  out his option here and jumped to New Orleans--we should really do well.  He'll be able to entertain potential customers, wine them and dine them and  take them to the Saints' games.
I thought of retiring so that I could devote more time to the company. And I  would have retired, I believe, or at least tried to shift to the New Orleans  team, if a deal hadn't come through with a man named Blaine Williams, who's  in the advertising business in Green Bay. We're getting portraits made of  all the players in the National Football League, and we're selling them to  Kraft Foods to distribute on a nationwide basis. It can be a very lucrative  thing for me, so I decided I'd better stay here in Green Bay and keep an eye  on it.
Coach Lombardi heard that I was thinking about retiring--he hears  everything--and he suspected I was going to use this as a wedge to demand  more money. That wasn't what I had in mind, not this time.
Still, I haven't heard a word from Lombardi about a contract for this year.     
JULY 5
Pat Peppler, the personnel director of the Packers, phoned today and asked  me if I wanted to discuss my contract. I told him I wanted $27,500, up from  $23,000 last year, and I said it isn't as much as I deserve, of course, but  I'll be happy with it and I won't cause any problems, any struggle.
I mean it. I know I'm worth more than $27,500, but I don't want a contract  fight over a few thousand dollars. I can remember what happened in 1963.
That was the year after I kicked three field goals in the world championship  game against the New York Giants, and we won the game by three field goals,  16-7. During the 1962 season, I kicked extra points and field goals, and I  was named All-Pro offensive guard, and, in general, I had a pretty good  year. I came in wanting a sizable raise, and Coach Lombardi started out with  the standard 10 percent he offers when he wants to give a guy a raise. I  said I wanted nearly 50 percent, from $13,000 up to $19,000, and he hit the  ceiling and said absolutely not. He said he'd give me $14,500 or maybe  $15,000.
In the back of my mind, I was thinking about playing out my option--the  one-year professional football contract allows a man to play out a second  year at the same salary and then become a free agent, the way Jimmy Taylor  did last year--and jumping to Denver in the rival American Football League.  Denver wanted me badly.
Coach Lombardi, with his spy system, found out what I was thinking about. He  has a real thing about loyalty, and he got doubly upset. He called me into  his office and offered me $15,000 and said, "Look, I'm going to give you  fifteen, but you have to take it today. Tomorrow, it'll be down to  fourteen." I didn't take it.
I started training camp without a contract, and Vince made practice almost  unbearable. Every block I threw, every move I made, was either slow or wrong  or inadequate. "Move, Kramer, move," he'd scream, "you think you're worth so  damn much." And the contract negotiations weren't kept at any executive  level. They were held at lunch and dinner, at bedtime and during team  meetings, and the rest of the coaches joined in, all of them on my back,  sniping at me, taking potshots at me. I got bitter, I got jumpy, and then a  lot of the other guys, my teammates, began to tease me, to ride me, and the  teasing didn't sound like teasing to me because I was getting so much hell  from all angles.
And then I almost exploded. We have a ritual the day before a game. The  offensive linemen get together with the defensive linemen and throw passes  to each other. We take turns playing quarterback, and you get to keep  throwing passes until one of them is incomplete. It's a silly little game,  but it loosens us up and it's fun. Every lineman's dream, of course, is to  be a quarterback. So, in 1963, the day before an exhibition, we were playing  this game, and I stepped up for my turn to play quarterback and Bill Austin,  who was our line coach, yelled, "No, get out of there, Kramer, you can't be  a quarterback."
I said, "Why not?"
And he said, "Just 'cause I said so."
There was no reason, except for the contract, and this burned me up. Later,  Austin approached me in the lobby of the hotel we were staying in, and he  said, "Jerry, I want to talk to you."
I said, "Look, you sonuvabitch, I don't want to talk to you at all. I don't  have a word to say to you. I don't want to have anything to do with you.  Stay away from me."
I was out of my head a little bit.
Bill said, "Now, now, don't be like that."
"I mean it, Bill," I said. "Stay away from me." I stopped just short of  punching Austin.
That night, Coach Lombardi put me on the kickoff team, the suicide team,  which is usually reserved, during exhibition games, for rookies. "The  kickoff team is football's greatest test of courage," Lombardi says. "It's  the way we find out who likes to hit."
I knew how dangerous the kickoff team could be. In 1961, when I was kicking  off for the Packers, I had to be on the kickoff team, of course. I kicked  off once against the Minnesota Vikings, the opening play of the game, and  when I ran down the field, I ran straight at the wedge in front of the  ballcarrier. The wedge is made up of four men, always four big and mobile  men, more than 1,000 pounds' worth. One of the guys from the Minnesota wedge  hit me in the chest and another scissored my legs and buckled me over  backwards and then the ballcarrier stumbled onto me and pounded me into the  ground and a couple of other guys ran over me and stomped me in deeper, and  the result was a broken ankle. I missed eight games in 1961.
And then in 1963, for that exhibition, I found myself on the kickoff team again. I took out all my fury on the field. I was the first man down the  field on every kickoff, I hit everyone who got in my way, and after the game  Lombardi came up to me and said that he wasn't the vindictive type, that we  could get together and settle the contract. I signed the next day for $17,500.
    ***
Pat Peppler told me today he would check with Coach Lombardi about my demand for $27,500.     
JULY 7
Pat Peppler called back. "You can have $26,500," he said.
"If I wanted $26,500," I told him, "I would have asked for $26,500. If I'd  said $44,500, I suppose Lombardi would have come back with $43,500. I want  $27,500 without any fuss, without any argument."     
JULY 10
"OK, it's $27,500," Pat Peppler said today. "Stop by and sign."
I'm going to forget that I ever thought about retiring. I'm going to forget  that I've got a lot of money coming in. I'm going to forget that I don't  really need football anymore.
I've decided to play. Let's get on with it.     
2     
BASIC   TRAINING     
JULY 14
Practice began officially yesterday for everyone except the veteran  offensive and defensive linemen. We don't have to report until 6 p.m.  tomorrow, Saturday, but I couldn't wait. I had to go over to the stadium  this morning. It's not that I'm anxious to start the punishment, but I  figured one workout today and one tomorrow would help me ease into training.  Monday, we start two-a-days, which are pure hell, one workout in the morning  and one in the afternoon, and if I don't get a little exercise, the  two-a-days'll kill me.
Naturally, I saw Vince this morning. He asked me how I was, and, before I  could tell him, he said, "You look a little heavy."
I guess I am. I was up around 265 a few weeks ago, and I'm 259 now, and I'd  like to play somewhere between 245 and 250. I'm not too worried about my  weight. I know I've got the best diet doctor in the world. His prize patient  right now is a rookie tackle named Leon Crenshaw, from Tuskegee Institute,  who reported to training camp a week ago weighing 315 pounds. Dr. Lombardi  has reduced him to 302.
I started off the day by trotting three laps around the goal posts, a total  of almost half a mile, not because I love running, but because Coach  Lombardi insists upon this daily ritual. As long as he's been here, we've  had only one fellow who didn't run his three laps, a big rookie named Royce  Whittenton. When Green Bay drafted Whittenton during the winter of his  senior year in college, he weighed about 240. When the coaches contacted him  in the spring, he weighed 270. They told him they didn't want him to come to  camp any heavier than 250, and he reported in the summer at 315 pounds. He  made one lap and half of another around the goal posts and then he couldn't  go any farther. Lombardi cut him from the squad before he even took  calisthenics.
We had one of our little "nutcracker" drills today, a brand of torture--one  on one, offensive man against defensive man--which is, I imagine, something  like being in the pit. The defensive man positions himself between two huge  bags filled with foam rubber, which form a chute; the offensive man, leading  a ballcarrier, tries to drive the defensive man out of the chute, banging  into him, head-to-head, really rattling each other, ramming each other's  neck down into the chest.
The primary idea is to open a path for the ballcarrier. The secondary idea  is to draw blood. I hate it. But Coach Lombardi seemed to enjoy watching  every fresh collision.
Lombardi thinks of himself as the patriarch of a large family, and he loves  all his children, and he worries about all of them, but he demands more of  his gifted children. Lee Roy Caffey, a tough linebacker from Texas, is one  of the gifted children, and Coach Lombardi is always on Lee Roy, chewing  him, harassing him, cussing him. We call Lee Roy "Big Turkey," as in, "You  ought to be ashamed of yourself, you big turkey," a Lombardi line. Vince  kept saying during the drill today that if anyone wanted to look like an  All-American, he should just step in against Caffey.
"Look at yourself, Caffey, look at yourself, that stinks," Lombardi shouted.  Later, Vince added, "Lee Roy, you may think that I criticize you too much, a  little unduly at times, but you have the size, the strength, the speed, the  mobility, everything in the world necessary to be a great football player,  except one thing: YOU'RE TOO DAMN LAZY."
During the nutcracker, Red Mack, a reserve flanker for us last year who  weighs 179 pounds soaking wet, lined up against Ray Nitschke, who weighs 240  pounds and is the strongest 240 pounds in football. Ray uses a forearm  better than anyone I've ever seen; when he swings it up into someone's face,  it's a lethal weapon. Red should have lined up against someone smaller.  Ray's used to beating people's heads in, and he enjoys it, but he looked  down at Red Mack and he said, "Oh, no, I can't go against this guy."
Red looked up at Ray and said, "Get in here, you sonuvabitch, and let's go."								
									 Copyright © 2006 by Jerry Kramer. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.