Green Bay Packers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Packers" redirects here. For other uses, see Packer.
Year founded: 1919 | |||||
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City | Green Bay, Wisconsin | ||||
Team colors | Dark Green, Gold, and White | ||||
Head Coach | Mike McCarthy | ||||
Owner | 111,967 stockholders | ||||
Chairman | Bob Harlan | ||||
General manager | Ted Thompson | ||||
Fight song | Go! You Packers! Go! | ||||
League/Conference affiliations | |||||
Independent (1919-1920)
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Team history | |||||
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Championships | |||||
League Championships (12)†
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Conference Championships (8)
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Division Championships (12)
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† - Does not include the AFL or NFL Championships won during the same seasons as the AFL-NFL Super Bowl Championships prior to the 1970 AFL-NFL Merger | |||||
Home fields | |||||
Split games between Milwaukee and Green Bay (1933-1994)
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The Green Bay Packers are a professional American football team based in Green Bay, Wisconsin. They are currently members of the North Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL).
The Packers are the last remaining example of the "small town teams" that comprised a majority of the NFL during the 1920s. Green Bay is by far the smallest media market to be the home of a North American major professional sports league team (though their fanbase includes Milwaukee, the rest of Wisconsin, and beyond).
Founded in 1919, the Packers joined the league in 1921. The team has actually been playing since 1896. Curly Lambeau began heading the team in 1919.
Today, the team holds the record for most NFL league championships with 12: nine NFL Championships prior to the Super Bowl era; two additional titles in 1966 and 1967, after which they defeated the American Football League champion in Super Bowl I, Super Bowl II; and Super Bowl XXXI. [2] The team also holds the distinction of winning the first two AFL-NFL Championship Games that were held before the AFL-NFL Merger, later referred to as Super Bowl I and II.
The Packers are currently the only non-profit, community owned major league professional sports team in the United States. Currently, a total of 4,750,925 shares are owned by 111,967 stockholders — none of whom receive any dividend. [3]
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[edit] Franchise history
- For more details, see History of the Green Bay Packers.
[edit] Founding
The Green Bay Packers were founded on August 11, 1919 by Curly Lambeau and George Whitney Calhoun. Lambeau solicited funds for uniforms from his employer, the Indian Packing Company. He was given $500 for uniforms and equipment, on the condition that the team be named for its sponsor. Today "Green Bay Packers" is the oldest team name still in use in the NFL.
The Packers became a professional franchise in 1921. Financial troubles plagued the team and the franchise was lost the same year. The Packers found new backers the next year and regained the franchise. The financial backers, known as the "Hungry Five," formed the Green Bay Football Corporation.
[edit] Public Company
The Packers are now the only publicly owned company with a board of directors in American professional sports (although other teams, such as the Atlanta Braves [Time Warner], the Chicago Cubs [Tribune Company], New York Rangers [Cablevision] , the Seattle Mariners [Nintendo of America], and the Toronto Blue Jays [Rogers Communiations] are directly owned by publicly traded companies). Typically, a team is owned by one person, partnership, or corporate entity; thus, a "team owner." It has been speculated that this is one of the reasons the Green Bay Packers have never been moved from the city of Green Bay, a city of only 102,313 people in the 2000 census.[4]
By comparison, the typical NFL football city is populated in the millions. The Packers, however, have long had a large following throughout Wisconsin and the Midwest; in fact, for decades, the Packers played four (one pre-season, three regular-season) home games each year in Milwaukee, first at the State Fair Park fairgrounds, then at Milwaukee County Stadium. The Packers did not move their entire home schedule to Green Bay until 1995.
The reason for ending the series of Milwaukee games, according to former team president Robert Harlan, was the larger capacity of Lambeau Field and the availability of luxury boxes, which were not available at Milwaukee County Stadium. [citation needed] County Stadium's replacement, Miller Park, then being planned, was always intended to be a baseball-only stadium instead of a multipurpose stadium.
Based on the original "Articles of Incorporation for the (then) Green Bay Football Corporation" put into place in 1923, if the Packers franchise was sold, after the payment of all expenses, any remaining monies would go to the Sullivan-Wallen Post of the American Legion in order to build "a proper soldier's memorial." This stipulation was enacted to ensure the club remained in Green Bay and that there could never be any financial enhancement for the shareholders. At the November 1997 annual meeting, shareholders voted to change the beneficiary from the Sullivan-Wallen Post to the Green Bay Packers Foundation.
In 1950, the Packers held a stock sale to again raise money to support the team. In 1956, area voters approved the construction of a new stadium, owned by the city. As with its predecessor, the new field was named City Stadium, but after the death of founder Lambeau in 1965, on September 11, 1965, the stadium was renamed Lambeau Field.
Another stock sale occurred late in 1997 and early in 1998. It added 105,989 new shareholders and raised over $24 million, money used for the Lambeau Field redevelopment project. Priced at $200 per share, fans bought 120,010 shares during the 17-week sale, which ended March 16, 1998. As of June 8, 2005, 111,921 people (representing 4,749,925 shares) can lay claim to a franchise ownership interest. Shares of stock include voting rights, but the redemption price is minimal, no dividends are ever paid, the stock cannot appreciate in value, and stock ownership brings no season ticket privileges.
No shareholder may own over 200,000 shares, a safeguard to ensure that no individual can assume control of the club. To run the corporation, a board of directors is elected by the stockholders. The board of directors in turn elect a seven-member Executive Committee (officers) of the corporation, consisting of a president, vice president, treasurer, secretary and three members-at-large. The president is the only officer to draw compensation; The balance of the committee is sitting "gratis."
The team's elected president represents the Packers in NFL owners meetings unless someone else is designated. During his time as coach, Vince Lombardi generally represented the team at league meetings in his role as general manager, except at owners-only meetings.
[edit] Championships
The Packers have won 12 league championships, more than any other American professional football team. They have also won 3 Super Bowls. (One of these games decided the NFL champion, and the first two date to the era when the AFL and NFL were still two separate leagues.)
Their rivals the Chicago Bears are second, with nine NFL championships (including one Super Bowl). The historical rivalry with Chicago extends to the Hall of Fame - the Packers have the second most Hall of Famers (21, behind the Bears' 26). The Packers are also the only team to win three straight NFL titles, which they did twice (1929-1931 and 1965-67).
[edit] Lombardi era
The Packers of the 1960s were one of the most dominant NFL teams of all time. Coach Vince Lombardi took over a last-place team and built it into a juggernaut, winning five league championships over a seven-year span culminating with victories in the first two Super Bowls. During the Lombardi era, The Packers had a group of legendary stars: the offense was led by quarterback Bart Starr, Jim Taylor, Carroll Dale, Paul Hornung and Jerry Kramer; the defense was led by the likes of Willie Wood, Ray Nitschke, Dave Robinson, and Herb Adderley.
The greatness of the Packers of the '60s really began one year earlier with the hiring of head coach Vince Lombardi. In their first game under Lombardi on September 27, 1959, the Packers shut out the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field. The Packers got off to a 3-0 start but lost the next five and then won their last four games to achieve their first winning season since 1947.
The next year, the Packers, led by Paul Hornung's 176 points, won the NFL West Title and played in the NFL Championship against the Philadelphia Eagles at Philadelphia. In a see-saw game the Packers trailed the Eagles by four points late in the game. The Packers began their final drive, aiming for glory, but it was not to be as Chuck Bednarik tackled Jim Taylor just nine yards short of the goal line as time ran out. In the locker room after the game, Lombardi told his men that this would be the last time the Packers would lose the championship game with him at the helm. That prediction became fact, as the Packers would never again lose the NFL Championship game under Lombardi.
The Packers returned to the NFL Championship game the following season, as they faced the New York Giants. This time the game was no contest as the Packers exploded for 24 2nd quarter points as Paul Hornung, having recently returned from the Army, scored a NFL Championship record 19 points as the Packers beat the Giants to win their first NFL Championship since 1944.
Not resting on their 1961 Championship, the Packers stormed back the following season, jumping out to a 10-0 start en route to an amazing 13-1 season. The Packers faced the Giants in a much more brutal championship game than the previous year, but the Packers prevailed on the surprising foot of Jerry Kramer and the determined running of Jim Taylor. The Packers beat the Giants 16-7 and Titletown U.S.A. reigned supreme.
After a two-year absence from championship football, the Pack was back in 1965. They won some crucial games, including a 42-27 win over the Baltimore Colts, a contest in which Paul Hornung (coming back from a betting scandal and injuries) scored five touchdowns. The Packers would again beat the Colts in a playoff for the Western Conference title. The game would be remembered for Don Chandler's controversial field goal in which the ball alledgedly went wide right, but the official raised his arms to grant the three points. That disputed win earned the Packers a trip to the NFL Championship game, where Hornung and Taylor ran through the Cleveland Browns, helping the Packers defeat the Browns to earn their 3rd NFL Championship under Lombardi.
The 1966 season was the best ever for the Packers, as the team was a well-balanced group led by NFL MVP Bart Starr. The Packers went 12-2 and in the NFL Championship, they rose to the occasion to seal victory: with the Packers leading 34-27, the Dallas Cowboys had the ball on the Packers' 2-yard line, threatening to tie the ball game. But on 4th down, the Packers' Tom Brown intercepted a Don Meredith pass in the end zone to preserve a memorable victory. The Packers went on to win Super Bowl I 35-10 over the Kansas City Chiefs.
The 1967 season was the last season for Vince Lombardi as the Packers' head coach. His team was aging quickly and they lost four games in the regular season. One of those losses was against the Minnesota Vikings and the other was against the Los Angeles Rams, but the Packers still won the Central Division title. In the playoffs, they gained revenge on the Rams in the Western Conference Championship by beating them in Milwaukee 28-7. Then came the 1967 NFL Championship game, known universally as the Ice Bowl, perhaps the most famous football game (college or professional) in the history of the sport. With 16 seconds left, Bart Starr's touchdown on a quarterback sneak brought the Packers their third straight NFL Championship - a feat no other team has matched since. Super Bowl II was no contest as the Packers delivered a parting gift to Lombardi with a 33-14 victory over the Oakland Raiders. That game marked the end of the Lombardi era and one of the most consistently dominant teams in National Football League history.
After the death of Vince Lombardi in 1970, the Super Bowl trophy was renamed the Vince Lombardi Trophy in recognition of his and his team's accomplishments. The road that goes by Lambeau Field, which is also one of Green Bay's major thoroughfares, was named Lombardi Avenue in honor of the coach.
[edit] Lean years after Lombardi
For about a quarter century after Lombardi left the Packers, they had little success. Much of this has been attributed to the numerous ill-advised draft choices, trades and personel moves the team made during this time. To cite a few examples, in the first round of the 1972 draft, when future Hall of Fame running back Franco Harris was still available, the Packers instead chose mediocre quarterback (and Green Bay native) Jerry Tagge. 1974 saw Packers coach Dan Devine make arguably the worst trade in NFL history, sending five draft picks (two first-rounders, two second-rounders and a third) to the Los Angeles Rams for aging quarterback John Hadl who would spend only 1 1/2 seasons in Green Bay. In 1979, Packers head coach Bart Starr decided against drafting Notre Dame quarterback Joe Montana in spite of numerous pleas from members of his coaching staff to do so. Two years later in 1981, when no fewer than three future Hall of Fame defenders were still available -- Ronnie Lott, Mike Singletary, and Howie Long, the Packers chose another mediocre quarterback, Rich Campbell. Finally, in 1989, when such future legends as Barry Sanders, Deion Sanders, and Derrick Thomas were available, the Packers chose offensive lineman Tony Mandarich. Though rated highly by nearly every professional scout at the time, Mandarich's performance failed to meet expectations. ESPN has rated Mandarich as the third "biggest sports flop" in the last 25 years. [1]
[edit] A new golden era
Ultimately, the Packers' poor performance throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s led to a shakeup in which new General Manager Ron Wolf was hired to take over full control of the team's football operations during the 1991 season. In 1992, Wolf hired San Francisco 49ers offensive coordinator Mike Holmgren to be the Packers' new head coach. Holmgren had won two Super Bowls with the 49ers, had learned under legendary coach Bill Walsh, and coached two Hall of Fame quarterbacks in Joe Montana and Steve Young. Soon after hiring Holmgren, Wolf acquired quarterback Brett Favre from the Atlanta Falcons for a first-round pick. The move was criticized by many fans. Favre was only a second-round pick in the previous draft and a third-string quarterback in Atlanta with a reputation of partying. Despite the skepticism, Favre got the Packers' their first win of the 1992 season, stepping in for injured quarterback Don Majkowski and leading the Packers to a comeback win over the Cincinnati Bengals. Favre started the following week against the Pittsburgh Steelers (a win), and has not missed a start since. He has started more than 248 consecutive games (including playoffs), which is a NFL record for a quarterback. Though acquiring Favre was once controversial, he has since become one of the greatest quarterbacks in NFL history.
The Packers had a 9-7 record in 1992, and began to turn heads around the league when they signed perhaps the most prized free agent in NFL history in Reggie White on the defense. White believed that Wolf, Holmgren, and Favre had the team heading in the right direction with a "total commitment to winning." With White on board the Packers made it to the second round of the playoffs during both the 1993 and 1994 seasons. In 1995, the Packers won the NFC Central Division championship for the first time since 1972. After a home playoff win against Atlanta, the Packers defeated the defending Super Bowl champion San Francisco 49ers on the road to advance to the NFC Championship Game, where they lost to the Dallas Cowboys.
In 1996 the Packers' turnaround was complete. The team posted a league-best 13-3 record in the regular season, dominating the competion and securing home field advantage throughout the playoffs. After relatively easy wins against the 49ers and Carolina Panthers in the playoffs, the Packers advanced to the Super Bowl for the first time in 29 years. In Super Bowl XXXI Green Bay defeated the New England Patriots to win their 12th world championship. The following year the Packers won their second consecutive NFC championship, returning to the Super Bowl as heavy favorites. The Packers ended up losing to the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XXXII. The Broncos' win is widely regarded as one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history.
During the period between 1995-1997 Brett Favre won three consecutive Most Valuable Player Awards. No player in NFL history besides Favre has ever won three (or more) MVP awards.
In 1998 the Packers went 11-5 and were eliminated in the first-round of the playoffs by the San Francisco 49ers, the team Green Bay had beaten in the playoffs the previous three seasons. This game turned out to be the end of an era, as Mike Holmgren would leave the team days later to become Vice President, General Manager and Head Coach of the Seattle Seahawks. Much of Holmgren's coaching staff went with him. Reggie White also retired after the season (but later played one season for the Carolina Panthers in 2000), and the team struggled for an identity after the departure of so many of the individuals who were responsible for their Super Bowl run. In 2001, Ron Wolf also retired. Packers' President Bob Harlan credited Wolf, Holmgren, Favre, and White for ultimately changing the fortunes of the organization and turning the Green Bay Packers into a model NFL franchise.
Beginning with the 1992 season, the Packers had 13 non-losing seasons in a row (their worst record being 8-8 in 1999), two Super Bowl appearances, and one Super Bowl win (Super Bowl XXXI). The Packers 13 consecutive non-losing seasons was an active NFL record until the team finally suffered a losing campaign in 2005.
[edit] Recent events
- For detailed information on the 2005 season, see 2005 Green Bay Packers season.
- For detailed information on the 2006 season, see 2006 Green Bay Packers season.
[edit] Fan base
The Packers' fan base is famously dedicated: regardless of the team's performance, every Packer game at Lambeau Field has been sold out since 1960. The Packers have one of the longest waiting lists for season tickets in professional sports with about 71,500 people as of early 2006[5]. The current wait time for season tickets is approximately 35 years. For this reason, it is not unusual for fans to designate a recipient of their season tickets in their wills or place newborn infants on the waiting list after receiving birth certificates.
An informal name for Packer fans is "cheeseheads". The term is often used to refer to people from the state of Wisconsin in general (because of its cheese production), but is also used to refer to Green Bay Packer fans in particular. Many Packer fans, embracing this nickname, wear foam triangle hats made to look like cheese.
During training camp in the summer months, young Packer fans can take their bikes and have their favorite player ride their bike to the practice field from the locker room. This is an old Packer tradition dating back to the days of Vince Lombardi to build a better relationship with the players and their fans.
Each year the team holds an intra-squad scrimmage, called Family Night, at Lambeau Field. During 2004 and 2005 over 60,000 fans attended, selling out the stadium bowl. [6]
One unique feature of the Green Bay Packers loyalty to their fans is the "Lambeau Leap", first performed by former Green Bay Packers safety LeRoy Butler on December 26, 1993 whereby a Packer scoring a touchdown proceeds to leap up into the endzone stands and allow themselves to be touched and patted on the back by the Lambeau "faithful".
[edit] Nickname, logo, and uniforms
Curly Lambeau, the team's founder, solicited funds for uniforms from his employer, the Indian Packing Company. He was given $500 for uniforms and equipment, on condition that the team be named for its sponsor (a similar event would occur the following year with the Decatur Staleys, who later became the Chicago Bears). An early newspaper article referred to the new Green Bay team as "the Indians" but by the time they played their first game they had adopted the name "Packers."
In the early days, the Packers also were referred to as the "Bays" and the "Blues" (and even occasionally as "the Big Bay Blues"). These never were official nicknames, although Lambeau did consider replacing "Packers" with "Blues" in the 1920s.
In 1920, the Indian Packing Company was purchased by the Acme Packing Company. Acme continued its support of Lambeau's team, and in its first season in the NFL the team wore jerseys with the words "ACME PACKERS" emblazoned on the chest.
Lambeau, who attended the University of Notre Dame, chose the team's colors of navy blue and gold from the college. Again, like the Irish, in the 1930s, 1940's and early 1950's the Packers sometimes used green and gold before returning to the traditional blue and gold.
In 1959, new head coach Vince Lombardi changed the colors to the current hunter green and gold (navy blue was kept as a secondary color, seen primarily on sideline caps, but it was not actually used and quietly was dropped from the team colors list on all official materials shortly thereafter). This color scheme yields the common Packers nickname, "The Green and Gold". In 1994, the NFL's 75th anniversary, the team participated in the league-wide use of "throwback" jerseys, and for the first time since the 1950s, a Packers team wearing blue took the field. The team has not done so since and has not worn throwback uniforms at home, although it has worn them for two Thanksgiving Day games against the Detroit Lions. In 2001, the Packers sported throwback uniforms worn in the 1930s, while in 2003 they wore throwback uniforms from the 1960s (which were only slightly different from the current uniforms).[2][3]
While several NFL teams choose to wear white jerseys at home early in the season, the Packers have only chosen to do so on only two occasions, which were the opening two games of the 1989 season. Although alternate gold jerseys with green numbers are sold on a retail basis, the team has no plans to introduce such a jersey to be used in actual games.
The oval "G" logo was created in 1961 by Packers equipment manager Dad Braisher. The team actually used a number of different logos prior to 1961, but the "G" is the only logo that has ever appeared on the helmet.[4] Although other organizations, notably the University of Georgia and Grambling State University, utilize a similar logo, the Packers were the first to employ it and hold the trademark for it. [5] However, the University of Georgia does hold some rights to the logo and was not required to remove the "G" logo as Grambling State University was because Vince Dooley slightly redesigned the "G" logo in 1964. Green Bay's current, redesigned "G" logo is modeled after the University of Georgia's redesign of the original "G" logo.[citation needed]
[edit] Trivia
- The Packers conduct summer training camp at St. Norbert College.
- A Packer helmet appears in the background of the basement set of That 70's Show. Also, in one episode the characters actually attend a Packer game.
- As the writers of Mystery Science Theatre 3000 were largely from the midwest, they included references to the Packers whenever possible. For example, whenever a large, riotous crowd is depicted on screen, Mike/Joel and the bots might scream "PACKERS WIN!". Another example would be for them to say "PAHHHHHKERRRRRSSS!" when a character mouths a scream but there is no sound.
- The Packers and the Chicago Bears have played each other more times than any other two teams in the NFL, and thus are often mistakenly credited as having the oldest rivalry in the league. The crosstown rival Decatur Staleys/Chicago Staleys/Chicago Bears and Racine Normals/Racine/Chicago/St. Louis/Arizona Cardinals, the two last existing charter members of the NFL, played each other twice in 1920, a year before the Packers entered the league. However, the Packers and the Bears have played each other many more times than any other 2 NFL teams and thus, while not the oldest rivalry in the league, it is the most storied.
[edit] Team records and season records
[edit] Players of note
Main article: Green Bay Packers players
[edit] Current players
(As of 11/04/2006) | ||||||
Quarterbacks
Running Backs
Wide Receivers
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Tight Ends
Offensive Line
Linebackers
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Defensive Backs
Defensive Line
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Special Teams
Practice Squad
(* Denotes rookies and first year players) |
[edit] Pro Football Hall of Famers
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[edit] Retired numbers
- 3 Tony Canadeo, HB, 1941-52
- 14 Don Hutson, WR, 1935-45
- 15 Bart Starr, QB, 1956-71
- 66 Ray Nitschke, LB, 1958-72
- 92 Reggie White, DE, 1993-98
[edit] Head coaches
Name | From | To | Record | Titles | ||
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W | L | T | ||||
Earl (Curly) Lambeau | 1921 | 1949 | 212 | 106 | 21 | 6 |
Gene Ronzani | 1950 | November 27, 1953 | 14 | 31 | 1 | |
Hugh Devore* | November 27, 1953 | 1953 | 0 | 2 | 0 | |
Ray (Scooter) McLean* | ||||||
Lisle Blackbourn | 1954 | 1957 | 17 | 31 | 0 | |
Ray (Scooter) McLean | January 6, 1958 | 1958 | 17 | 31 | 0 | |
Vince Lombardi | 1959 | 1967 | 98 | 30 | 4 | 5 |
Phil Bengtson | 1968 | 1970 | 20 | 21 | 1 | |
Dan Devine | 1971 | 1974 | 25 | 28 | 4 | |
Bart Starr | 1975 | 1983 | 53 | 77 | 3 | |
Forrest Gregg | 1984 | 1987 | 25 | 37 | 1 | |
Lindy Infante | 1988 | 1991 | 24 | 40 | 0 | |
Mike Holmgren | 1992 | 1998 | 73 | 36 | 0 | 1 |
Ray Rhodes | January 11, 1999 | January 3, 2000 | 8 | 8 | 0 | |
Mike Sherman | 2000 | January 2, 2006 | 56 | 39 | 0 | |
Mike McCarthy | January 12, 2006 | Present | 4 | 5 | 0 |
* = Interim Head Coaches
[edit] Current coaching staff
Head Coach Offensive coaches
Special Teams coaches
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Defensive coaches
Conditioning coaches
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[edit] Board of Directors
- For more details on this topic, see Green Bay Packers Board of Directors.
Green Bay Packers, Inc., is governed by a seven-member Executive Committee, elected from a board of directors. The committee directs corporate management, approves major capital expenditures, establishes broad policy and monitors management's performance in conducting the business and affairs of the corporation.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Green Bay Packers official web site
- The Green Bay Press-Gazette
- Packer Plus (The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)
- The Green Bay Packers Uniform Database
Green Bay Packers |
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The Club | History | Players | Seasons | Statistics | Lambeau Field Board of Directors | Hall of Fame |
Club Head Coaches |
Lambeau | Ronzani | Devore | McLean | Blackbourn | McLean | Lombardi Bengtson | Devine | Starr | Gregg | Infante | Holmgren | Rhodes | Sherman McCarthy |
League Championships (12) |
1929, 1930, 1931, 1936, 1939, 1944, 1961, 1962, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1996 |