Bobby Layne and Alex Karras: Unlikely Drinking Buddies In '58 Lions Camp
Another football training camp has begun. Another opportunity for nostalgia.
Harry Gilmer, the beleaguered coach of the Lions between George Wilson and Joe Schmidt in the mid-1960s, stared out at the confounding young running back on the practice field.
The running back was easy to spot, for he was the only one not wearing a helmet on his bemusing head.
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โCoach,โ Gilmer calmly said to one of his assistants, โtell that boy to put a helmet on his head.โ
The young running back, Joe Don Looney, might have played some football sans helmet, at some point in his life.
Itโs another day at Cranbrook, the high brow school whose campus the Lions used for training until the early-1970s. Again, Looney is the focus.
Joe Don didnโt want to practice that day. Gilmer sent team captain Schmidt up to Looneyโs dorm room to talk to him.
Schmidt found Looney on his bed, strumming a guitar.
โJoe,โ Schmidt began, sitting across from Looney. โThe team needs you on the field. Iโve played in this league for 12 years and Iโve never missed a practice.โ
Looney, according to Schmidtโs re-telling, looked up from his guitar.
โWell then, Joe, Iโd say youโre due for a day off! Stay with me.โ
Itโs the mid-1990s, and the Lions are training at the Silverdome, on a field outside of the big plastic bubble.
Iโm one of the interlopers, with a TV camera man in tow, hoping for some good sound bites after practice.
Iโm daydreaming, shifting my weight from one foot to the other, when I hear some raised voices and some โWhoasโ and โLook outs.โ
I turn just in time to see a golf cart zooming toward me.
Behind the wheel is a moon-faced man chomping on a cigar.
โHey fellas!โ Wayne Fontes says brightly as he stops to give us his post-practice report.
Alex Karras played 12 marvelous seasons for the Lions, as one of the best defensive linemen to ever grace their roster. And, dare I say, one of the best to not be enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
But he almost didnโt make the team as a rookie, to hear Alex tell it.
The late, great Bobby Layne, for whatever reason, took a shining to Karras when the latter arrived as a rookie in 1958.
Just a bumpkin from Iowa, Karras once described himself.
And now he was a rookie in the NFL, playing for the defending world champions.
Layne took Karras under his wing, which in the world of Bobby Layne took on an entirely different meaning than from what you and I take that to mean.
Karras re-told the experience in the early-'70s to the late Detroit Free Press sports writer George Puscas, who Karras grew close to while playing for the Lions.
Seems Layne turned Karras into his personal drinking buddy during that 1958 camp.
โI was drunk all the time,โ Karras told Puscas. โI have no idea how I made the team because I was hungover at every practice.โ
Karras wasnโt a drinker, per se, and definitely not one to partake of hard liquor. But Layne loved his Cutty Sark, which meant Alex had to love it, too.
Layne, according to Karras, only required one, two hours of sleep per night. The two of them would stumble into the dorms at Cranbrook after a long night of partying at a bar in Pontiac, and while Karras struggled to squeeze a little sleep into his body, Layne would head into the shower and sing his favorite song, โIda Red,โ fresh as a daisy.
Karras said that he heard that Layneโs lack of sleep was due to fear of sleeping, because when Bobby was a kid he lost his parents in a car accident and spent an entire night stuck in the overturned car with their dead bodies.
I can see that theory.
But on the practice field, while Karras battled hangovers, Layne was spry, imparting his knowledge of quarterbacking to his receivers and even the coaches.
โTell that boy to take that route one more step before turning right,โ Layne would say in his Texas twang. And, Karras said, when the receiver did it, he found the ball perfectly delivered by Layne.
โThe coaches listened, because they knew that nobody knew quarterbacking better than Bobby Layne,โ Karras said.
The routine was daily: practice would end for the day, and Layne, after dinner, would come looking for โTippy,โ which was short for Karrasโs nickname, โTippy Toes,โ so garnered for the way Karras would make his moves toward the quarterback on the tips of his toes.
โHey,Tippy! Time to go out!โ
Karras said that one day, he hid under his bed, hoping that Layne wouldnโt find him. But he relented and made himself visible.
The odd couple combo of veteran QB and rookie defensive tackle would head into Pontiac, where Layne would throw down Cutty Sarks and listen to the live band perform.
Karras said the band would want to take a break, and Layne would implore them to keep playing.
โBut weโre tired, Mr. Layne,โ one of the band members said.
Layne would dismiss that and throw money into one of the horns. The band would keep playing.
One night, on the way back to Cranbrook, Karras said Layne was singing โIda Redโ and sticking his head out the window, which Bobby had done before.
But this time was different. The car was traveling at breakneck speed, faster than normal. To Karrasโs horror, he saw that Layne had placed a brick on the gas pedal and was halfway out of the vehicle, singing at the top of his lungs.
โThe car was moving so fast it was shaking,โ Karras related. โI was begging him to slow down, to stop the car.โ
Layne didnโt have a great camp on the field, but the quarterback blew that off.
โJust wait till the regular season starts,โ Layne told Karras at the bar one night. โThatโs when ole Bobby will shine. Yes sir!โ
The regular season indeed began, with Karras on the roster, to his surprise.
The Lions opened with a loss in Baltimore, and followed that with a tie in Green Bay, when Layne, who also placekicked, scuffed the infield dirt with a potential game-winning field goal.
After that game, Layne was suddenly and mysteriously traded to Pittsburgh.
The following season, the Lions played the Steelers.
โLayne was scrambling and was headed for the sidelines,โ Karras said. โI lined him up and really let him have it. I mean, I creamed him. It was almost an illegal hit because he was mostly out of bounds. Iโm not sure why I did it.โ
According to Karras, Layne looked at him and smiled.
โHe liked that. He said, โHow ya doinโ, Tippy?โโ

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