10 Packers You May Have Forgotten Were Once Packers

From former stars to big-name busts, many players had short stints in green and gold.

Ever run across a Packers-related YouTube video or an old photo online and think, “Hey, I forgot THAT guy was a Packer.”

Me too. Even when I started compiling this list, a couple of them hit me that I had totally forgotten about, players with big names who spent a season, or in some cases less, in Green Bay. 

Anyway, I just thought it would be fun to meander for a moment down memory lane. I’m going to keep most of these to within the past 40 years or so. Additionally, this list isn’t meant to be complete or even scientific. Consider it off-season entertainment.

So, some loose parameters: We won’t include Kurt Warner since his oh-so-brief cup of coffee with the Packers has been widely discussed over the years. And Andre Rison had too big of a play in Super Bowl XXXI to include him, even if he was a late-season rental. Desmond Howard? What he did speaks for itself. Meanwhile, Sammy Watkins is way too recent.

Also, will Mecole Hardman’s name appear in a list like this in 20 years? 

(Sigh. The draft is less than a week away.)

All that said, here, in roughly chronological order, is the Top 10 list:

Ted Hendricks 

This one goes back the farthest (at least for this post), and I include Hendricks mostly because I remember getting a Ted-Hendricks-as-a-Packer football card as a kid. Next thing I knew, he was squishing ball carriers’ heads as an Oakland Raider. And he was initially drafted as a Baltimore Colt in 1969, where he enjoyed five dominant seasons.

In 1974, he was traded to the Packers, where he had one of the best campaigns of his career, racking up 75 tackles, seven blocked kicks, a safety, two sacks and more. Rough to lose a player of that caliber after just a season, one who would go on to notch four Pro Bowls and two All-Pros in Oakland, but when Al Davis offers you two first-round picks, you have to listen. 

Um, you also have to make the most of those picks. And remember, this was just after the Packers had given AWAY two firsts, two seconds and a third to acquire Packers legend John Hadl. Oh, the irony.

Those two picks in exchange for Hendricks ultimately turned into oft-injured offensive tackle Mark Koncar and defensive end Ezra Johnson, who had a serviceable to solid career in Green Bay for a decade, even if he was no Hendricks. (An aside: Johnson might still be best known for getting fined by Head Coach Bart Starr for eating a hot dog on the sidelines. Memories.)

Jim Zorn 

Following a distinguished career in which he was the first-ever Seattle Seahawks quarterback, Zorn became a Packer in 1985, a season in which the team went a humdrum 8-8. It was during a time in which it seemed Green Bay was perennially 8-8 for years running. (That was, until Randy Wright became the starter in 1986, and he helped break the monotony with a 4-12 stinker.)

The lefty Zorn was actually known as much for his legs as his arm, as he racked up more than 1,500 yards rushing and 17 rushing TDs over his career. Seattle embraced him, and he wound up in the team’s Ring of Honor. In Green Bay, as the backup to Lynn Dickey, he made 13 appearances and started five games for the Packers in ‘85, going 3-2 in those games. Zorn posted 794 passing yards, four passing TDs, and six picks that year, although his legs had aged out by then, and he tallied just 9 yards on 10 carries during that season. 

Vince Ferragamo 

Speaking of Randy Wright, Ferragamo came in to be Wright’s backup in that aforementioned stinker of a 1986 season. The veteran had started his career in 1977 with the Los Angeles Rams, led the Rams to a Super Bowl appearance in 1979, then departed for the Canadian Football League. His one year with the Packers, in which he made three appearances in relief of Wright, apparently was enough to convince him to retire. (Trivia: He wore Paul Hornung’s No. 5 during his lone season in Green Bay and was one of the last Packers to do so in the regular season.)

Ken O’Brien

O’Brien was one of the touted signal-callers in the legendary 1983 draft, being drafted ahead of Miami Dolphins legend Dan Marino in Round 1 and then spending nine seasons as the New York Jets’ starter. By 1985, he was on fire, leading the Jets to an 11-5 season, was twice a Pro-Bowler and he came out on top in a memorable 51-45 shootout against Marino and the Dolphins in 1986. O’Brien ultimately was replaced by Boomer Esiason in 1993.

Tapping O’Brien as Brett Favre’s new backup, the Packers gave up a mid-round pick to New York Jets for the veteran, only for him to come in, don the ‘G’ and play miserably during the pre-season. He was soon shipped off to Philadelphia for pennies on the dollar and never played a regular-season down for the Pack.

Mark Clayton 

Speaking of Dan Marino, one of his favorite targets, also drafted in 1983, was Clayton, who racked up five 1,000-yard seasons over 10 years with the ‘Fins. The 5-foot-9, 185-pounder came to Green Bay with high hopes, saying he felt like a rookie again, adding, “I have a lot to prove -- not just to myself but to some people who really doubted my career and doubted I still had it in me to play.”

Unfortunately, he was in the last season of his career, and it showed, as Clayton tallied 32 catches for 331 yards and 3 touchdowns over 16 games in the green and gold. 

Steve McMichael

Yes, that Steve McMichael. This is one I had completely blanked on – but Packers fans sure can’t forget how he terrorized opposing offenses during his 13-year Chicago Bears career. The highly-decorated defensive end was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame last year, and he certainly earned it. However, by the time he pulled on a gold helmet, he was pretty well washed, finishing that 1994 season with 2.5 sacks and 19 solo tackles.

McMichael, rubbing it in, circa 2019: "For 13 years, I helped the Bears beat the Packers every year. I whupped their ass, right? So then last year, I went up there on my last leg and I wasn't any good anymore. So I stole their money and whipped their ass again."

Thanks, Steve.

 

Eugene Robinson 

Following a successful 11-year career with the Seattle Seahawks, the veteran free safety Robinson landed in Green Bay just at the right time: 1996. He became one of several veterans the team signed during that era to make the push to the Super Bowl, and Robinson got to play in two of them for the Packers, who had traded for him.

He racked up 193 total tackles as a Packer, including a whopping 112 in 1997. He also picked off six passes during that championship 1996 season, on a dominating defense that included the likes of Reggie White, LeRoy Butler, Gilbert Brown and other Packers legends. He left for Carolina in 1998 and, improbably, ended up going to a third straight Super Bowl that season.

Steve Bono 

Bono (pictured at top) played for seven teams over his 15-year quarterbacking career, which essentially constitutes the definition of “journeyman.” He spent most of his time in his stint with the San Francisco 49ers as the third-stringer behind Joe Montana and Steve Young, starting six games (and going 5-1) when Montana and Young were injured in 1991.

He became a Packers backup in 1997, and played only mop-up duty behind the Iron Man Favre. But by far his best season was in 1995 with the Kansas City Chiefs, when he threw for 3,121 yards and 21 touchdowns as the team went 11-5.

Rashaan Salaaam

Heismann Trophy winner Salaam, who played college ball at Colorado, was drafted in the first round of the NFL Draft by the Chicago Bears, bursting onto the scene with over 1,000 yards rushing in this rookie season. He also fumbled a lot. Things went downhill fast, and by 1998 he was looking for work. He played in two games for the Cleveland Browns in 1999 and also had a brief stint that season with the Packers, but didn’t put up any stats. He then had a short stint in the XFL. Salaam would die of suicide in 2016.

Ki-Jana Carter

Here’s another one that probably escapes the memories of most Packers fans. It’s no wonder, as the former Penn State Nittany Lion saw his NFL career quickly fizzle after being drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in 1995. Plagued by injuries, he spent four mostly fruitless seasons with the Bengals before having yet another in Washington in 2001. In 2002, he was picked up by the Packers, played in the pre-season and failed to make the final squad.

Cedric Benson

Ew. I remember that run, when the desperate Packers saw their running game beset by injury and reached for a heaping helping of Benson, the powerful running back who was not the success story the Chicago Bears hoped he would be (sound familiar?). Benson wore out his welcome quickly in Chicago for a variety of reasons, and he ended up in Cincinnati, where he became the starter a few games into the 2008 season and had three straight 1,000-yard seasons.

He signed with Green Bay in 2012 at the start of training camp, and got some run with the Packers to the tune of 278 yards and a score while starting the first five games of the season over James Starks. Unfortunately, Benson would suffer a Lisfranc injury that season in Week 5, an injury that would ultimately end his pro career. Benson died in a motorcycle accident in 2019. 

Honorable Mentions:

 

 

 

Keith Jackson 

Jackson is included here solely because he’s a big name who seemed destined to finish his career as a Dolphin (and only partly because he's the namesake of a famed sports announcer). But in 1995, he suddenly found himself catching passes from Favre, reeling in a meager 13 catches in 9 games. Had it ended there, he would have been ideal for the Top 10 on this lineup, but he came back for one last season in 1996. That year, he caught 40 balls for 505 yards and a whopping 10 touchdowns. Hard to forget that kind of production. Jackson retired as a Super Bowl champion with the Packers.

Jim McMahon

McMahon was the ultimate irony as a Packer – a dreaded rival in the 1980s with the Chicago Bears who would switch sides to back up Brett Favre for a partial season in 1996 and ultimately get a freebie Super Bowl ring, essentially for holding a clipboard. He then showed up to the team’s White House visit in his Bears jersey. More power to him, I guess.

Don Beebe 

Another unlikely 1996 alum, Beebe was well known for his six seasons with the outstanding yet ill-fated Buffalo Bills. He also landed with the Packers in ’96 and ended up being a top target for Favre, racking up 699 yards receiving and four touchdowns. Included in that was a game in which he racked up 220 yards against the San Francisco 49ers. He managed just two receptions the following season before retiring. Enjoy that Super Bowl ring, Don. One out of five ain’t bad. (Also? Scott Norwood owes you a beer.)

Terry Glenn

Glenn had a one-and-done season with Green Bay in 2002, acquired for a Round 4 pick, sandwiched between six productive seasons with the Patriots and four more in Dallas. He landed in green and gold mostly because he had fallen out of favor with the Patriots due to his well publicized antics, but he put up 817 yards and two touchdowns as a Packer.

Jeff Saturday

Saturday makes the honorable mention list simply because he’s a big name with a big resume, having hiked the ball to Peyton Manning for 13 seasons as a Colt. He then signed one last contract with the Packers as a stopgap replacement for the departed Scott Wells, where Saturday fizzled out and ultimately was relegated to the bench. His one memorable highlight from that ill-fated 2012 campaign was being voted into the Pro Bowl on name recognition, and then switching sides mid-game to snap one final football into Manning’s waiting hands.

 

 

Seneca Wallace 

Wallace flashed at times during his stints with the Seattle Seahawks and Cleveland Browns, but his destiny was as a journeyman. He landed with the Packers in 2013 during the famed season in which Matt Flynn returned, which is part of why many probably still remember him in green and gold. Wallace replaced Packers legend B.J. Coleman on the roster just before Week 1. In Week 8, Rodgers suffered his infamous broken collarbone, and Seneca mopped up in a 27-20 loss.

The following week, Wallace started and suffered a season-ending – and ultimately career-ending – groin injury on the Packers’ opening offensive series. Scott Tolzein struggled in relief (even though he scored one unforgettable touchdown, as seen above), so re-enter our hero Flynn to keep the season alive.  

 

 

PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHEESEHEAD NATION WEEKLY NEWSLETTER HERE.

__________________________

Kevin Gibson is a professional writer and author based in Louisville, Ky. He's also a former sports writer who covered high school, college and professional sports, a Packers shareholder and a fan since 1975. Even John Hadl couldn't break him. Follow him on Twitter: @kgramone

__________________________

 

NFL Categories: 
0 points
 

Comments (45)

Fan-Friendly This filter will hide comments which have ratio of 5 to 1 down-vote to up-vote.
LambeauPlain's picture

April 18, 2025 at 06:49 am

Eugene Robinson is the good. He was a perfect wingman for LeRoy.

Jeff Saturday is the bad. He never showed up on Sunday. He was clearly washed up trying to replace Scotty W.

McMichael is the ugly. Just a complete jerk, and as expected, an ill fit as a Packer.

0 points
0
0
egbertsouse's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:34 am

Didn’t Robinson get pinched for solicitation of prostitution the night before the Super Bowl for trying to pick up an undercover police officer? What, an NFL star, good looking, and he couldn’t get a free one?

0 points
0
0
Cheezehead72's picture

April 18, 2025 at 08:52 am

Yes he did but that was after the Packers when he was a Falcon. It is interesting that the night before he received the Athletes in Action/Bart Starr Award, given annually to a player who best exemplifies outstanding character and leadership in the home, on the field and in the community. He did return it.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:08 pm

Yes indeed. A little surprised he left that out of the article.

0 points
0
0
TheKanataThrilla's picture

April 18, 2025 at 10:20 am

Jeff Saturday getting a Pro-Bowl nod when he was a Packer was the point when I knew it was more of a popularity contest than about the best players.

0 points
0
0
MitchAnthony's picture

April 18, 2025 at 11:46 am

I think that was my tipping point as well. Whenever I hear/read about someone getting the Pro-Bowl nod I'll always think back to the last season of a benched Jeff Saturday getting his last Pro-Bowl appearance. He was a great player, but that year - not so much.

All-Pro matters. Pro-Bowl, yeah not so much.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:09 pm

Kind of like Gary getting a pro bowl nod last year.

0 points
0
0
LambeauPlain's picture

April 19, 2025 at 09:20 am

I was thinking Myers, another Center, was the perfect comparison.

0 points
0
0
TKWorldWide's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:07 am

Great idea for an article! Fun to remember these guys.

0 points
0
0
mrtundra's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:10 am

Koren Robinson, WR/STs, could be on this list, too.

0 points
0
0
T7Steve's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:17 am

Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

I remembered only a few of those as Packers. Must be getting old. Wait! I am lucky enough to have lived so long, whereas so many I've known haven't been so lucky.

Again, those bleak years of the 70s and 80s were great for us non season ticket holders. They used to give the tickets away especially after it got cold, just to see them get used. Even when we offered to cover the cost, they usually said it didn't matter. I'm sure these costly tickets are now sold online to opposing teams' fans.

0 points
0
0
Spock's picture

April 18, 2025 at 08:33 am

T7S, "I'm sure these costly tickets are now sold online to opposing teams' fans." Actually, I remember reading that this year the Packers put in a new policy for season ticket holders who were routinely/always selling them to other teams' fans and basically told those offenders they had lost their rights to season tickets, and that those seats were going to go to those on the waiting lists. I haven't heard much more about it since then.

0 points
0
0
T7Steve's picture

April 18, 2025 at 09:37 am

Yes, I'd heard that too. The old tickets weren't expensive. These I'd have to sell too, if I couldn't make the game. I would, however, be able to easily find a Packer backer who'd snap them up.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:16 pm

Most of the time that I went to games as a kid in the '80s it was because someone had given the tickets away. Could be because the 1st five or six games I went to were in Milwaukee. The time I went to Lambeau was to a preseason game and as soon as I walked when I thought "this is glorious" and didn't really want to go to games in Milwaukee anymore. I was too young to understand people didn't give away tickets to Packers games in Green Bay as easily as they did to ones in Milwaukee. It wasn't to the best games either. I saw Tampa twice, the Bills when they were horrible, etc etc.

0 points
0
0
HarryHodag's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:57 am

Reporters had a story at Packers practice after McMichael signed with the team. He came down to practice in his street clothes but took little time to make himself known. He said he could whip any of the Packers offensive linemen in his street shoes and had to be restrained from going out on the practice field without pads or spikes. Don't you wish the current Packers had this little bit of crazy?

Randy Wright's name was mentioned a few times. Randy did well at Wisconsin but looked completely lost in the NFL. I clearly remember a picture in the newspapers after the Raiders buried Green Bay. The shot was of Howie Long picking Wright up and tossing him around like a rag doll. That clearly summed up the 'bad old days' from 1970 until Ron Wolf arrived.

0 points
0
0
EricTorkelson's picture

April 18, 2025 at 02:00 pm

In his defense Harry, Randy Wright was also a victim of terrible offensive line blocking back then, the Raider game you mentioned the Raiders were in the backfield almost as fast as the center snap... I also remember going to a game at County Stadium were the Giants and Lawrence Taylor beat Wright to a pulp not to mention what the Bears did to him also. So my guess is you look lost some times when playing football when your not sure when the pain and how much off will come ...

0 points
0
0
HarryHodag's picture

April 18, 2025 at 05:53 pm

You are correct about the Packers have lousy offensive lines in the era. What ticked me off the most was how the team caved into them each year. While they all lacked All-Pro credentials almost always one or more of them would hold out. This was in the era before free agency. They nearly got the quarterback and the backs killed but had the gall to ask for more money.

0 points
0
0
dblbogey's picture

April 18, 2025 at 03:38 pm

Did well at Wisconsin? Career stats at Wisconsin are a 53% completion percentage, 31 TD with 57 interceptions.

0 points
0
0
HarryHodag's picture

April 18, 2025 at 05:46 pm

Back check your numbers. The database said he threw 34 touchdowns and 32 interceptions at Wisconsin, not 57. The Packers drafted him in the fifth round. Not even the Packers would have drafted a QB with 57 college interceptions.
32 is more than enough.

Sorry.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:25 pm

I didn't remember Wright playing vs the Raiders and had to look it up. I didn't think he played in '85 but I was in Basic Training and AIT, 1st game I saw that year was the Fridge vs Cumby game. Dickey, Campbell and Wright all played in the game against the Raiders. Even though Wright was just a 2nd year player it looks like he went in after Dickey got hurt and was replaced by Campbell after he threw 2 Ints. Probably Campbell's best game, he went 4 for 8 for 37 yards.

0 points
0
0
Cheezehead72's picture

April 18, 2025 at 08:05 am

Good article but should have stopped before listing the Honorable Mentions. I agree that most of the main ones I either had forgotten about or not realized they played for the Packers espcially the Favre backups.

The one Honorable Mention that caught my eye was Don Beebe. I loved watching him play for Buffalo because he played the game the way it should be played. He was fearless going up over the middle. I nicknamed him Timax because he took a licking and kept on ticking.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:18 pm

I wonder how he's ticking today, he took some brutal headshots catching hospital balls from Favre.

0 points
0
0
Cheezehead72's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:25 pm

He is HC at Aurora University so he must be doing ok.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:29 pm

That is great to hear! I vividly remember him taking a hit and losing control of his limbs. I think it happened again later on that season.

0 points
0
0
Ferrari-Driver's picture

April 18, 2025 at 08:36 am

I remember when Atlanta traded Eric Dickerson to the Packers in 1993 (I had to look up the year) when he was about 33 years old and the burst had left his legs. He failed the physical so he never had a chance to play for the Packers. If he had been a Packer about 10 years earlier, he would have been a difference maker.

0 points
0
0
LeotisHarris's picture

April 18, 2025 at 08:42 am

That was a fun read. Tolzien breaking ankles made me laugh out loud. Well done, Kevin!

Took the fam to training camp when the kids were little. Leotis Jr was about 6 years old, and his sister 9 or so. Sis was given a ticket by security to allow her to go thorough the autograph line at the end of practice. The rest of us were allowed onto Nitschke Field to stand along the fence line. Vaughn Booker saw Leotis Jrs' angst over his sister's good fortune and pulled up a chair away from the autograph tables and motioned him over. Nice gesture. So, in the family shrine downstairs, we have a 5x7 of Leotis Jr in his Packer uni with Vaughn Booker.

0 points
0
0
RedRight49's picture

April 18, 2025 at 09:12 am

Glad you mentioned " The Stork", he was a great player for the team even if it was just for a year!

You included some great and some very good players Kevin as well as some others quite a long way past their prime.

An interesting and fun read!

0 points
0
0
EricTorkelson's picture

April 18, 2025 at 09:53 am

Ted Hendricks was the most memorable player on the list for me I saw him play at county stadium in what i believe was his only year playing for the Packers ... He was a great kick blocker and had one in that game. The Packers as I remember were starting to build something on there defense that year, But Bart Starr foolishly let Hendricks get away. I believe Hendricks wanted to stay in GB at a time when many players wouldn't but wanted guaranteed money. So off to the Raiders he went and win all those super bowls.

0 points
0
0
jannes bjornson's picture

April 18, 2025 at 11:58 am

The Hendricks non-move and the 3 times draft whiff on Joe Montana put Bart a notch below sherman on the GM
Wall of Shame.

0 points
0
0
barutanseijin's picture

April 18, 2025 at 02:57 pm

Bruce Clark told the Packers he would never play for them even if they picked him in the 1980 draft. Ol’ Bart thought he was bluffing and used his #4 pick on Clark anyway. Sure enough, Clark went to Canada rather than play for the Packers.

I think that was Bart’s worst moment. To be fair, he also struck draft gold with James Lofton and acquired Lynn Dickey, who was the best Packer QB between Bart & Favre.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:51 pm

Gonna have to disagree with you there sir. Yes Clark was the 4th overall pick and Campbell the 6th but picking Campbell cost them Hush Green or Lott, either of who could have gotten them off the 8-8 schneid. There were good players taken after Clark. Curtis Dickey had a few good years but they had just taken Ivory the year before. Jacob Green or Stan Brock could have been helpful but there wasn't anyone of the caliber of Lott or Green taken right after Clark.

0 points
0
0
barutanseijin's picture

April 19, 2025 at 10:27 pm

That kind of analysis is only possible in hindsight. Lott turned out to be a HoFer and Campbell was a bum, but no one knew for certain that it would turn out that way at the time . What was known at the time of the 1980 draft was that Bruce Clark really did not want to play in Green Bay. That is what makes selecting Clark at #4 such a dumb move.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:20 pm

That wasn't to be Starr's last foolish mistake.

0 points
0
0
WestCoastPackerBacker's picture

April 18, 2025 at 02:31 pm

Forcing them to pick Rich Campbell over Ronnie Lott; that was all on Starr.

0 points
0
0
LLCHESTY's picture

April 18, 2025 at 07:52 pm

Bingo, that's 1st thing that popped in my mind. Bruce Clark right after that. Cutting half the starting defense right before the start of the season one year. Ugh.

0 points
0
0
LambeauPlain's picture

April 19, 2025 at 09:29 am

A Foolish mistake businesses often make is promoting the top salesman to be the sales manager.

The top player rarely makes the best Head Coach, either.

0 points
0
0
TheKanataThrilla's picture

April 18, 2025 at 10:25 am

Most are forgettable, but I did enjoy Don Beebe with the Packers. I was really happy for him to get a ring.

0 points
0
0
splitpea1's picture

April 18, 2025 at 11:17 am

Welcome to the club!

I also remember getting the Ted Hendricks as a Packer football card and wondering, "What's the hell is he doing there?!" As a kid in Baltimore, I didn't follow the Colts that closely yet, but I still knew he was a pretty good player for us.

A couple of decades later when I was a Packer fan, I pretty much had the same reaction when I saw McMahon in a Packers uniform, except it was more like, "Get this guy off the team!"

No way I forgot about Keith Jackson, Don Beebe, or Eugene Robinson as they were important pieces of our 1996 Super Bowl team.

The old-timers are probably familiar with this, but Emlen Tunnell spent the end of his distinguished career with the Packers, making a number of starts and snagging 5 INTs, finishing with a total of 79--good for second-most in NFL history.

0 points
0
0
splitpea1's picture

April 18, 2025 at 12:45 pm

Here's another slightly more recent one: LT Bruce Wilkerson, who spent most of his career with the Raiders. A veteran was needed in late 1996 as our rookie was struggling, and Wilkerson did a fine job throughout the playoffs and also appeared all of our games the following season.

0 points
0
0
LeotisHarris's picture

April 18, 2025 at 01:15 pm

Good call. Started and played on the 1996 Super Bowl championship team.

0 points
0
0
WestCoastPackerBacker's picture

April 18, 2025 at 02:39 pm

That team had several vets from other organizations that made a huge difference and severl are mentioned in the article:

Reggie White
Santana Dotson
Eugene Robinson
Don Beebe
Keith Jackson
Andre Rison

0 points
0
0
ricky's picture

April 18, 2025 at 04:34 pm

Also, John Jefferson, who had been a very good WR in San Diego. But like Hadl before him, once he go to GB, he wasn't the same player.

0 points
0
0
lou's picture

April 18, 2025 at 05:14 pm

Very enjoyable reading that brought back many memories. I remember reading a column in the Dallas Morning News by then sports writer Skip Bayless after the Cowboys had lit up the Packers (which before that was not very often) and he talked about the failure of Randy "Wrong" and the "Seven Blocks Of Glass" Packer offensive line (alluding to Lombardi as one of the Seven Blocks Of Granite). He should have stuck to sports writing because he is hard to watch on TV. Randy Wright looked shell shocked in many games but Lynn Dickey was hurt so often they kept him out there.

0 points
0
0
Crazedcamel's picture

April 19, 2025 at 09:23 pm

Ted Hendricks season with the Packers was the best individual performance of any Packer in the 70’s , it rivals Woodson’s 2009 season.

0 points
0
0
Spanky65's picture

April 19, 2025 at 09:56 pm

I will always remember Jan Stenerud specially in the 1983 season when he kept the Packers in the playoff run with his kicking

One player easy to forget was Cleidus "ATILLA
THE" Hunt was given a big contract by Mike Sherman and was n othhing but a waste

0 points
0
0