From "Out of
Bounds"
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Gipp still holds
the record for the second longest field goal ever kicked, 62 yards
in 1917. |
The
Gipper. Put him right up there on the pedestal reserved for our god-almighty
American sports legends, where fact and fancy mingle until The Man is finally
washed away and only The Hero remains, glowing like gold mined from a mountain
creek. Who was The Gipper? And why are they winning all those football games
on his account?
Have you known anyone so naturally talented at sports that he felt obliged to
participate, even though he wasn't motivated by traditional values of the
game? That was Gipp.
Have you known anyone who loved to bet large sums of money, especially on
himself? That was Gipp.
Have you known anyone who could drop-kick a field goal from sixty yards, slam
a baseball 360 feet, and run sixty balls in straight pool?
Probably you haven't, but that too, was Gipp.
George Gipp hailed from Larium, Michigan, a mining town on Lake Superior's
shore. He came to Notre Dame shortly after his twenty-first birthday. Billy
Gray, a catcher for the White Sox who had played at Notre Dame, wangled a
partial baseball scholarship for him. George liked baseball well enough, and
the town of South Bend promised a few years of adventure - the two reasons he
appeared on campus in the fall of 1916.
Prodded by Rockne, he went out for football, which soon became his first
sport. Studying, however, remained his least favorite pastime. Gipp had an
extremely quick mind and could have done well in the classroom, but he
preferred to catch the Hill Street trolley into South Bend to play some stud
poker at the Oliver Hotel, or flush a pigeon at Hullie and Mike's Pool Hall.
"Hell, that's how half the team earned their spending money," says
Norman Barry Sr., now a judge in Chicago. "We'd cover Gipp's bets at
Hullie and Mike's and he'd divvy up the winnings with us."
Gipp spent so much time in the dark, smoke-filled haunts of itinerant sharpies
in low-brimmed hats and two-tone shoes, that for four years at Notre Dame his
skin remained a pasty complexion; it seldom saw the light of day.
He usually wagered a bundle on Notre Dame's games, once betting he would
outscore the entire Army team (he didn't). If he couldn't bring himself to do
it for the glory of old Notre Dame, Gipp could nevertheless summon
extraordinary powers when money was on the line. In the 1920 Indiana game he
choreographed what Rockne later termed the greatest play he'd ever seen:
The Hoosiers were ahead 10-7 with sixty seconds in the game. Notre Dame had
the ball, fourth and goal on Indiana's one-yard line. Naturally the defense's
attention was riveted on Gipp - who was having trouble with his helmet. He
fiddled with it, then pulled it off. When he did, the ball was snapped to Joe
Brandy, who tip-toed across with the winning score. The Gipper, aware that he
was a potent decoy, had arranged for the ball to be hiked when he popped his
lid.
The repetitive nature of football practice irked George, so he seldom bothered
to attend, at least until late in the week. When he did show, Rockne would
bury him on the fourth team, where he'd stay until Saturday - when he would
always get boosted into the starting line-up. Rock was no dummy.
To get his star to make up for lost practice time, the coach resorted to
special tactics. The Irish were comfortably ahead of Kalamazoo in 1917. Rockne
called a referee to his side. "When Gipp makes a long run, I want you to
call a penalty on us, whether we've committed one or not," he instructed.
Refs were more accomodating in those days. Gipp made runs of eighty and
sixty-eight yards in the first half; both were nullified. In the second
period, the halfback grabbed a punt and cruised seventy yards untouched across
Kalamazoo's goal line. "Bring it back!" called the referee.
"Clipping, Notre Dame."
The Gipper had no fondness for frivolous exercise. He sauntered up to the
official who'd been calling the penalties and dropped the ball at his feet.
"Next time," he said, "give me one whistle to stop, and two to
keep going."
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