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The Detroit Lions began their 75th NFL season yesterday in putrid fashion, with a 34-21 drubbing at the hands of the Atlanta Falcons. While it appears that William Clay Ford Sr. is hell bent on bringing Lions' fans another heaping helping of gridiron gore in 2008; we here at JackandTom.net are taking a different approach to the Lions' 75th year.
As the current Lions stink out loud, we invite all of you to come to this website and let us ease your Lions football soul - as all season we bring you the greatest players, teams, games and other assorted moments in Detroit Lions' history.
Take it from us folks, it really hasn't always been this bad. Let's begin our journey with a trip back to the Lions' inaugural year of 1934, when they began the season with a monumental winning streak and also began what was to become one of the NFL's greatest traditions.
Detroit sports fans have always
been tough on their teams and their players. When their teams win, they come
out in droves. Conversely, when their teams lose, the result usually means an
additional loss for the team at the box office. However, while Detroit
sports fans are tough, they are also loyal. That toughness and loyalty comes
from the blue collar mid-western work ethic that is embedded in much of the fan
base. While their teams may not always win, they know, and appreciate an honest
effort when they see one. Therefore, when a team or individual player comes
along that embodies that lunchpail mentality, Detroit
fans embrace them.
No other team in Detroit sports
history symbolizes that loyalty more than the Detroit Lions. In the 50 years
since the Lions last won the NFL championship in 1957, they have finished at,
or above, the .500 mark 17 times. Of those 17 times, 13 have been second place
finishes in their division. However, only 2 of those 13 second place finishes
have resulted in a playoff birth. To say that the Lions' championship drought
has been a case of "not even close and no cigar," would be an understatement.
So why have Lion fans remained so loyal for so long? How and when was that
bond created? There is little debate that the bond between the Lions and their
fans was set in stone during the Bobby Layne led halcyon days of the 1950's.
However, the foundation for the bond was set by the very first Lions team back
in their inaugural season of 1934. In the midst of this country's Great
Depression, that first Lions squad went to work in the Motor
City. In doing so, they stormed out
of the gates to establish what remains the most dominating stretch of games any
Lions team has ever produced.
The Lions opened up their first season in Detroit
with the nucleus of their 1933 Portsmouth
roster intact. Coach Potsy Clark's Spartan mainstays included, single wing
tailback Glenn Presnell; halfback Leroy "Ace" Gutowsky; guard Gover
"Ox" Emerson; tackle George "Tarzan" Christensen; wingback
Ernie Caddel; blocking back Roy "Father" Lumpkin; and ends Bill
McKalip and Harry Ebding. However, the biggest piece of the puzzle was the
return of Earl "Dutch" Clark, from his one year NFL hiatus as athletic
director and coach at Colorado School of Mines. With Dutch back in the fold, it
was clear that the new Lion franchise had the talent to compete with the
Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers for Western Division supremacy.
The Lions opened up their first season on September 23, 1934, hosting the defending Eastern
Division champion New York Giants at the 25,000 seat University
of Detroit Stadium. Before a
disappointing crowd of only 12,000, the Lions shutout the Giants 9-0. The game
was highlighted by a 20 yard Dutch Clark drop-kick, and a "Father"
Lumpkin 45 yard interception return. Week two saw Clark
score on a six yard run as the Lions prevailed with a second shutout, 6-0 over
the Cardinals in Chicago. The Lions
would win another nailbiter the following week in Green
Bay by a 3-0 tally. The winning margin was provided by
the leg of Glenn Presnell. With help from the steady placement of holder Ace
Gutowsky, the kick covered 54 yards, and became a NFL record that stood for 19
years. The record setting attempt came almost by accident as the Lions, nearing
the end of the first half, faced a punting situation on Green
Bay's 49 yard line.
Presnell still remembers that kick like it was yesterday: "It was just
about the end of the first half . . . so one the boys said, 'Why don't you try
a field goal?' "It was just as good as a punt from that spot, and of
course it carried through the uprights."
The Leo's continued their winning ways with a 10-0 decision over the Eagles
in Philadelphia, and a 24-0 scalping of the Boston Redskins, at the U-of-D, on
October 17th. Next, came a 21 point day by Dutch Clark, as the Lions pasted the
Brooklyn Dodgers 28-0. The highlight for the home rooters came on a 72 yard
Dutch scamper to paydirt. The Lions record stood at 6-0 when they made a
triumphant return to Portsmouth, Ohio,
on October 28th, to face the combined forces of the Cincinnati Reds and St.
Louis Gunners football squads. The Gunners were no match as the Lions posted
another dominating shutout, 38-0. The 4,800 Portsmouth
faithful on hand witnessed Dutch Clark ramble for 194 yards in his return to
his former Spartan home.
When the Lions left Portsmouth
for Detroit, to open up a five game
home stand with Art Rooney's Pittsburgh Pirates on November 4, they had not
given up a single point in their first seven games. No opponent had even
crossed the Lions' 22 yard line during the incredible stretch, as the Lions
compiled 118 points of their own. However, the shutout streak came to an end
against the aforementioned, and lowly, Pirates the next week when the
Swashbucklers scored their lone touchdown on a 62 yard punt return by Joe
Skladany, which was set up by a trans-continental-cross-field lateral from punt
fielder Harp Vaughn. It was the only time all day that the Pirates crossed
midfield as the Lions's Single Wing ground attack racked up 426 yards in a 40-7
triumph. Curiously, only 6,000 fans had shown up to see the Lions set the
team's single game rushing mark that still stands today.
The winning streak remained intact, however, and the Lions stretched it to
an NFL record tying 10 games with victories over the Chicago Cardinals 17-13,
and another over the Cincy-St. Louis Gunners 40-7, respectively. So when Curly
Lambeau and his always formidable Green Bay Packers rolled into Detroit
for their rematch scheduled for Sunday, November 25, the Detroit Lions stood
tied with the Chicago Bears atop the NFL's Western Division. The Lions and
Bears possessed identical 10-0 records, with three games to play. Both teams
knew that their collective destinies were in each other's hands, because in the
season's final two weeks, they would face each other in a home-and-home series
that would decide the Western Division championship.
However, the Lions still had the Packers to contend with, and after that
hard fought 3-0 loss back in October, the Pack was bent on revenge. The rematch
proved to be another defensive struggle, and Lambeau's boys served up the
payback. The final score was once again 3-0, with the winning Packer points
coming from future Hall of Famer Clark Hinkle's 47 yard field goal. Because of
the tough Packer defeat, the Lions would have to go into the final two contests
versus the Bears trailing their arch rivals by a game. The Bears remained
undefeated at 11-0, while the Lions now stood at 10-1.
When the Monsters of the Midway came into the University
of Detroit Stadium to face the
Lions on Thanksgiving Day, November
29, 1934, no one had any idea that they were starting a tradition.
The game was the brainchild of Lion owner George A. Richards. Being the owner
of WJR, Richards had contacts in the booming radio industry. He used those
contacts to garner the help of NBC Radio president Deke Aylesworth in setting
up a 94 station network to broadcast the Lion / Bear tussle live
coast-to-coast. Richards felt that the game would give pro football excellent
exposure, and Papa Bear George Halas agreed. Therefore, the game was on, and
both squads proved more than ready to spoil the other teams Thanksgiving
dinner.
The Lions first ever sellout crowd of 26,000 witnessed one of the great
games in Lion history on that landmark day. Detroit
got the early lead in the first quarter on a two yard Ace Gutowsky TD run that
was set up by a Buster Mitchell 27 yard interception return. Dutch Clark
provided the PAT. The Bears answered back to tie the game in the second stanza
with a 14 yard TD strike from Keith Molesworth-to-Eugene Ronzani, with Bronko
Nagurski adding the PAT. The Lions responded with nine more points before the
half. They came from a Gutowsky one-yard plunge, (the point after was blocked)
and a 34-yard boot by Presnell. The Bears cut the Lion lead to 16-13 in the
third quarter when Jack Manders kicked field goals of 15 and 42 yards. The game
remained there until late in the final period, when a Glenn Presnell pass was
intercepted by Joe Zeller, who brought it back to the Detroit
4-yard line. Two plays later, the Bears scored on a play that was all too
familiar to the Lions, a two-yard Nagurski flea flicker. However, instead of
the retired Red Grange on the receiving end, as was the case in the 1932 Bear /
Spartan playoff, this pass went to another future Bear Hall of Famer, Bill
Hewitt.
A desperate, Clark led, final drive fell short, and
the Bears prevailed 19-16.
In describing the loss, Leo Macdonell of the Detroit Times wrote, "It
was a heartbreak for the Lions and their followers, and with a heavy heart they
feast over the crumbs of a game that put the Detroit
team out of the running for the championship honors."
Times sports editor Bud Shaver added that, "Many Thanksgiving Days will
roll into eternity before 26,000 Detroiters will forget that one in which the Chicago
Bears knocked the Detroit Lions out of a chance for the National Football
League Championship at U-D Stadium."
The Lions would give another stellar effort in their regular season finale
the next week at Wrigley Field, but would fall to the Bears for the 5th
straight time, 10 to 7. Nevertheless, even with their disappointing finish,
their inaugural season in the Motor City
had to be considered a success. Over the course of the season, they had
outscored their opponents 238-59, and their three losses had been by a combined
total of nine points. Dutch Clark had finished second in the NFL in scoring (73
points), third in rushing (763 yards), and 4th in passing (383 yards). His
tailback partner Glenn Presnell, finished third in the league scoring race
behind Dutch with 63 points. In addition to their defense giving up only 59
points all year, they allowed only 2 rushing touchdowns, and 5 passing
touchdowns total. They also led the league with 33 interceptions. Top that off
with the incredible shutout streak and 10-0 start, there was little concern
that these Lions would suffer the same slip into oblivion like previous Detroit
franchises.
Detroit has always been a
blue-collar city, and those 1934 Lions played a rugged, hard-nosed, blue-collar
brand of football that symbolized the spirit of the city they represented.
Their effort against the mighty Bears that first Thanksgiving solidified their
place in the hearts of Detroit
sports fans, alongside the already established Tigers and Red Wings. In
addition, the Lions' first Thanksgiving Day proved to be such a success, both
on the field and at the box office that it became an annual event. Seventy-five years
later, it has become as big a part of America's
Thanksgiving as the turkey and pumpkin pie.
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