Sayers: My Life and Times
By Gale Sayers, Fred Mitchell and Dick Butkus
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Sayers - Gale Sayers
Dedication
I dedicate this book to all the true pioneers of the National Football League, many of whom have gone withoutworldwide recognition over the years; players such as Fritz Pollard and Bobby Marshall, who were the first two African Americans to play in the NFL in the early 1920s.
I also dedicate this book to Buddy Young, a former great player whose sage advice guided a young Gale Sayers through a maze of life-changing decisions as I made the transition from college to professional football.
I offer special acknowledgment to all of the outstanding NFL players of the ’50s and ’60s who laid the foundation for the game today and made it possible for modern-day players to enjoy the millions of dollars that they do. Players such as Hugh McElhenny, Ollie Matson, Jim Brown, Deacon Jones, Merlin Olsen, Lenny Moore, Lem Barney, and many, many more.
I give special thanks and dedication to my mentor, George Halas, whose encouragement and wisdom made me a better football player and, more important, a better person.
And finally, I dedicate this book to my former teammate Brian Piccolo, who showed me the true meaning of life, love,and friendship.
Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Game Plan
1. Sometimes Life Brings You to Your Knees
2. Papa Bear and Me
3. Remembering Brian
4. The Joy of Six
5. Testing My Resolve
6. My Favorite Running Backs
7. Preparing to Quit
8. So Much More than Football
9. Omaha’s Finest
10. Those Elusive Championships
11. Land of Opportunity
12. Show Me the Money!
Appendix A: My All-Time Bears Team
Appendix B : Gale Eugene Sayers: The Essential Facts
Sources
Index
Foreword
Has it really been 42 years since Gale Sayers and I joined the Chicago Bears as first-round draft picks?
Sometimes I wish I could tackle Father Time, but he is one tough opponent I have been unable to stop, or even slow down, for that matter. The events of Super Bowl XLI in Miami reminded me that it was indeed 1965 when Gale and I entered the National Football League. As the Bears and Indianapolis Colts squared off in that Super Bowl, it marked the first time in 21 years since Chicago appeared in the title game.
There was a lot of talk about the history of the Bears franchise during the week leading up to the Colts’ 29–17 victory. And any talk about the Bears’ storied history has to include Sayers and the quick and amazing impact he had on the professional game.
We had several future Hall of Fame players on our Bears teams when Gale and I played, yet we were unable to win a championship. To this day, I hear about that from fans. Why didn’t we win a championship? How do you answer a question like that? Gale was the best running back in the league at the time. And we had some great players on defense. We just didn’t have enough to really be successful as a team. But I wouldn’t trade those years playing with him.
Gale was really something to watch. I felt I could always kid around with Gale and he was cool with it. He is just a good guy. We have always had a great relationship.
Playing defense in practice against Gale, I knew what the other teams had to go through. I had never met a guy who could stop on a dime and then go full speed in the opposite direction. I just couldn’t believe this guy. He was absolutely the best.
What I admired about Gale is that he did everything. He returned kickoffs, he returned punts, and, man, could he run from scrimmage. It wasn’t in vogue then to be sort of a specialist. He was a tough character. It had to be equally tough for him playing against our defense as it was for me playing against our offense in practice. But all of our efforts seemed to go for naught as far as winning a championship.
I remember meeting Gale for the first time in 1965 at an All-Star Game in Buffalo. It was just prior to the old College All-Star Game in Chicago. Then there were all of the All-America events that were held in New York that year, including the Look magazine session. Back in those days, you seldom saw highlight film clips of the college players the way you do today on ESPN and all the other television networks. So in New York that year I got to see a black-and-white film clip of Gale, who was known as the Kansas Comet.
I remember he was wearing high-top shoes as he returned a kickoff for a touchdown.
Then I played against him in a couple of All-Star games. Thinking back, I never faced a running back like that. He was the best. Glad we wound up being on the same team!
A lot of people do not realize how vigorously the old fledgling American Football League pursued both Gale and me in 1965. The Kansas City Chiefs also had drafted Gale that year; and the Denver Broncos selected me out of Illinois as the NFL and AFL fought for player talent.
I alsoremember that Gale and I were in New York in 1965 for the Ed Sullivan Show, and the NFL draft happened to be that Saturday. After I got back to my hotel room, there was a knock at the door. I opened the door and there was Lamar Hunt, then representing the Kansas City Chiefs. He said: Okay, now we have to try to get Gale with us.
Well, I was pretty naïve back then. So I said: Yeah, okay, whatever.
It took me a number of years to realize what Hunt was trying to get me to do. I figured out later that he thought the deal Denver was going to offer me was going to be so out of line and extraordinary that I would be stupid to turn it down. I guess he was under the assumption that I was going to go to Denver and that would help to get Gale to the American Football League with the Kansas City Chiefs. It was kind of weird. I always remember that.
Wouldn’t that have changed sports history if Gale and I had decided to play in the AFL!
My attorney at the time was Arthur Morris, and we looked at the numbers from Denver. But we had an appointment with George Halas at the Bears office, and that was the last time I ever saw or heard from anybody from Denver. And, of course, Gale turned down an offer from Kansas City.
As remarkable as Gale’s Hall of Fame football career was, I am even more impressed with what he has done since he retired. I have worked hard to take advantage of some opportunities that came my way as an actor in Hollywood and on television since my playing days ended. And Gale has succeeded as a businessman, administrator,and philanthropist. His current project involving the creation of the Gale Sayers Center in Chicago to assist youngsters really intrigues me. I think it is pretty neat that Gale is opening a center for young people that will include mentoring opportunities. He has been very successful after football and he is helping a lot of people and really getting involved.
Preparing to quit is a theme Gale continually stresses to young athletes today. Success after football has a lot to do with the makeup of the person. Gale went into what he went into, and I did my thing. I thought I would always be in football, but those doors were closed to me for a while. So I had to choose other avenues. It seems like it just worked out. A lot of people say, Oh, you were lucky,
but I think you have to work to make luck.
The problem with many oftoday’s NFL players is that with these extraordinary salaries, many guys really don’t have to worry about what they are going to do afterward. But that is shortsighted. If you blow your money or someone does not represent you properly, thatcan have a big impact on your finances.
After football, it was difficult for me to find what I liked to do second best. Football was always my first love. That certainly didn’t mean that I couldn’t find something else. And the proof of the pudding is where I have ended up today. I guess I could have been one of those guys who didn’t prepare to quit. But things happened and through hard work I found out that, hey, there are other things besides football.
So many people who are not old enough to remember seeing Gale play for the Chicago Bears know of him through the award-winning movie Brian’s Song. It depicts the story of the friendship between Gale and Brian Piccolo, who were the first interracial roommates in the NFL. The compelling story of their friendship still resonates nearly four decades later.
Gale and I had our numbers retired by the Bears on the same night at Soldier Field in 1994. It was a memorable event in many ways, including the fact that it was a rainy, cold Halloween night at Soldier Field. The Bears lost to the archrival Green Bay Packers that Monday night, but none of that diminished the pride I felt.
• • •
I am proud to count Gale Sayers as one of my really valued friends, and I am proud to have shared so many cherished memories with him. We will remain teammates forever.
—Dick Butkus
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to the Chicago Tribune Sports Department, in particular assistant managing editor of sports Dan McGrath, sports editor Mike Kellams, and assistant sports editor Ken Paxson; and to the Chicago Bears.
Thanks also to the staff of Triumph Books: Mitch Rogatz, Tom Bast, Mike Emmerich, and Morgan Hrejsa.
Introduction: The Game Plan
When I used to run with the football, I was able to accomplish so much with natural instincts and God-given talent. Sportswriters often would ask me after a game: What were you thinking when you faked out that defender and made that incredible run?
My answer was always the same: I wasn’t thinking about anything; I just did it. It came naturally.
One of my enduring quotes to NFL Films really says it all: Just give me 18 inches of daylight....That’s all I need.
My football playing days were over nearly four decades ago, and I realized right away that making long runs and scoring touchdowns in life take more than gut instinct. It takes a well-conceived plan. I was aware of that even during my playing days when people called me the Kansas Comet.
I refer to that plan for life as preparing to quit.
As I recap my childhood and many of my football accomplishments in this autobiography, I also pick up the story from the end of my playing days and focus on my subsequent life as a college sports administrator, businessman, motivational speaker, and father.
I remarried in 1973 to Ardie Agee. She is a fantastic lady, and she has a fantastic memory, which helped me piece together the many details of my life since my brief, yet memorable, days of playing for the Chicago Bears.
A big story regarding my divorce from Linda and subsequent marriage to Ardie appeared in the December 27, 1973, edition of Jet magazine, a Johnson publication based in Chicago that highlights the news and accomplishments of prominent African Americans. The article featured several pictures of Ardie and me in our new nine-room home in Kansas. At that time, Ardie was a nurse’s assistant at Watkins Memorial Hospital, based on the University of Kansas campus where I was assistant athletics director.
Ardie and I had known each other three years by then. She was very sensitive to the rumors and gossip going around at that time because of the timing of my divorce and remarriage. Ardie told Jet: I know people talk and things come up in the paper. But no one bothers to call Gale to get it from the horse’s mouth, so to speak. So far, no one has said anything to me. I don’t like a lot of publicity. I am active in civic things. I’m on the board of the YMCA, and I belong to some church groups.
When Ardie and I were first married, her four sons were 18, 17, 15, and 13. The oldest was in the Marines at the time, and the two middle sons attended school in Omaha, Nebraska. The youngest son lived with us in Lawrence, Kansas.
Ardie and I were into horseback riding and golf, as well as attending various sports events. In fact, our home in Kansas was bordered by a golf course. As Ardie told Jet: I just want to make Gale happy.
And for 35 years and counting, she certainly has.
So many people who aren’t old enough to remember watching me as a football player know of me because of the movie Brian’s Song. It is the story of my friendship with teammate Brian Piccolo after we became the National Football League’s first interracial roommates in 1967.
Brian tragically passed away in 1970 from a rare form of cancer at the age of 26, but his memory endures, not only in my mind but also in the minds of the millions who have been made aware of his legacy.
Race relations in the United States have improved dramatically in many areas since the 1960s, yet we have miles to go in terms of improving awareness and tolerance. As Brian and I proved four decades ago, racial prejudice is usually fueled by ignorance and misunderstanding. By living together as roommates, each of us became more aware of the other’s cultural background and traditions, and we discovered we had much more in common than we had differences. That was a great lesson for us and the rest of society.
One of the constant themes in this autobiography is my disdain for the showboat attitude displayed by many of today’s pro football players. During my era, the entertainment consisted of the players performing well on the football field—running, passing, kicking, blocking, tackling. It did not include players spiking the football after scoring a touchdown, mugging in front of the camera on the sideline, or celebrating in the end zone with some contrived dance. A lot of times today, a team might be trailing by two or three touchdowns, and one of its players will perform a dance and point to the sky after sacking the opposing quarterback. What has this game come to? I blame television, in part, for drawing attention to these silly antics that take away from the integrity of the game.
I am turning 64 this year as I am writing this book with the assistance of Chicago Tribune sports columnist Fred Mitchell. I guess you could call me old school
in terms of my appreciation for the game of football. That’s fine with me. I was only 27 when I penned my first autobiography. I am so much wiser, so much more experienced now. I hope you find these pages filled with candid opinions, refreshing honesty, and continued inspiration.
1. Sometimes Life Brings You to Your Knees
It was a play we had run dozens and dozens of times in 1968 with the Chicago Bears. But this time, unbeknownst to me, this play would change my football career. Ultimately, it would change the way I lived my life.
The play—49 Toss Left
—was called in the huddle by quarterback Virgil Carter and it was designed to be run to the outside of the left tackle. It called for my blocker, Randy Jackson, to lead the way, but instead of waiting a half second for the play to unfold, I instinctively ran up on the heels of my blocker.
I planted my right leg to make a cut, but San Francisco 49ers right cornerback Kermit Alexander lunged ahead and pounced on my leg like a hungry animal.
My knee buckled as my leg remained planted awkwardly in the Wrigley Field turf. Nowhere to go, no place for it to give. I screamed in pain at the moment of impact. My football life passed before my very eyes in