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Jon Kendle: Forgettable ‘days’ for football legends

Team tributes for Sammy Baugh, Jack Butler and Alphonse “Tuffy” Leemans end in varying degrees of misfortune.
By Jon Kendle / Special to GateHouse Ohio Media
Throughout the years, pro football has becomeMichael Hoomanawanui Jersey one of the most marketable sports in the world. Advertising and promotions are a large source of revenue for the National Football League and its 32 clubs. That being said, it makes perfect sense that when a franchise wants to honor a great, longtime player or coach for his service, a local company steps up and sponsors the celebration.
Commonplace in the 1940s, ’50s and early ’60s was for local auto dealers to provide cars to star players. The football greats would be showered with a variety of gifts as well as having their pictures splashed across the game’s program cover. For three Hall of Famers — Sammy Baugh, Jack Butler and Alphonse “Tuffy” Leemans — being honored with their own special day had both memorable highlights and a few subsequent low points to follow.
“Sammy Baugh Day” occurred on Nov. 23, 1947, when the Washington Touchdown Club honored the legendary quarterback with a new 1948 Packard station wagon during a ceremony before the Washington Redskins’ game Mike Purcell Jersey against the Chicago Cardinals at Griffith Stadium. “Slingin’ Sammy accepted the $3,000 gift, then proceeded to put on a performance that justified the pre-game tribute. He completed 25 of 33 passes for 355 yards, tossed a record-tying six touchdown passes and led his team to a commanding 45-21 victory during that unforgettable day.
Four days later, Baugh was driving his shiny new vehicle home from a celebrity appearance in Philadelphia. Baugh crashed into a culvert near College Park, Md., when he tried to avoid a car that had swerved into his lane. Baugh was shaken up and suffered a cut on his forehead and knee, but was otherwise uninjured and didn’t miss any action on the football field. His car didn’t fare as well, with significant damage to both passenger-side doors and the rear fender that required several hundred dollars in repairs.
Although Baugh wrecked the automobile he was given, he at least got to drive away in his gift. The same wasn’t true for Butler during his finalhttp://www.authenticbillsstore.com/shop-by-players-e-j-manuel-jerse... season with the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Class of 2012 Hall of Fame great was honored with a “Jack Butler Day” by a local promoter during a game against the New York Giants on Oct. 25, 1959 at Forbes Field. Butler was presented with a car at halftime but since he had a second half to play, the promoter took back the keys and the car for safe keeping.
Coming out of the locker room, the Steelers trailed 14-10, but moved to within one point on a third-quarter field goal by Hall of Famer Bobby Layne. The game, however, was put on ice by another Hall of Famer when Giants’ linebacker Sam Huff recovered a Pittsburgh fumble in the fourth quarter and returned it for the game-winning score. As if losing wasn’t bad enough for Butler, imagine his shock when after the game he learned that there were no keys nor car waiting for him to drive home. The car presentation at halftime had been all for show, and he never saw the car again.
For Leemans, things had started well on “Tuffy Leemans Day.” A crowd of 55,051 showed up to honor the halfback/fullback at the Polo Grounds in New York as his Giants took on the crosstown-rival Brooklyn Dodgers on Dec. 7, 1941. The Giants’ star was presented with a $1,500 defense bond, a silver tray and a watch during a 10-minute presentation before kickoff. “Tuffy” then delivered a sincere speech in which he thanked all the fans in attendance, everyone who presented him with gifts and praised his teammates and all associated with the Giants organization.
The celebration ended and things went downhill once the game began. The Dodgers handed the Giants a one-sided 21-7 defeat and Leemans managed to gain a meager 18 yards rushing. To taint “Tuffy Leemans Day” further, it was noticeable throughout the game that the stadium’s public address announcer was continually paging military personnel to contact their offices. Immediately following the game there was a mad scramble to get all men from the Army and Navy out of the stadium and report to their stations. It was at that point that everyone at the venue was made aware that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor and the United States was under attack. Unfortunately for Leemans, his “day” wasn’t ruined only on the field but is forever marred by being associated with one http://www.authenticcowboyssale.com/shop-by-players-tyrone-crawford... of the darkest days in U.S. history.
Jon Kendle is archivist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In a countdown to the NFL’s Centennial celebration on Sept. 17, 2020, Kendle will share unique and interesting stories starting from the league’s founding in downtown Canton to the present day.

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