USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Rememberin­g Packers legend, Midwest icon

- Pete Dougherty Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette

Paul Hornung’s career floundered for two years until Vince Lombardi was hired and built his Packers offense around his position. Hornung died at 84.

Paul Hornung was a Vince Lombardi favorite and maybe the most important player on the famed coach’s early championsh­ip teams with the Green Bay Packers.

Lombardi loved Hornung for his versatile skill set and clutch play as the featured left halfback in the Packers’ offense, as well as for his fun-loving offfield persona that helped get Hornung the nickname “Golden Boy.”

Hornung, who also won the 1956 Heisman Trophy, died Nov. 13 in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, at age 84 after a long battle with dementia, the Louisville Sports Commission announced.

Though Hornung never put up big rushing numbers in the NFL – his single-season high for rushing was only 681 yards – he filled the key position in Lombardi’s offense as a runner in the famed Lombardi sweep and option passer. He was a big back (6-foot-2 and 215 pounds) with a nose for the goal line and for much of his career also was the Packers’ kicker.

His 176 points in the 12-game 1960 season was an NFL record that stood until 2006, 29 years after the league had moved to a 16-game schedule. He was voted the NFL’s most valuable player that season.

Hornung also was voted a member of the NFL’s all-decade team of the 1960s and into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986 after a nine-year career that ended in 1966. But perhaps the greatest tribute to him came from Lombardi himself in his two-volume book, “Vince Lombardi on Football,” which was published in 1973.

“Paul may have been the best all-around back ever to play football,” Lombardi wrote.

Hornung joined the Packers in 1957 as a so-called “bonus choice,” which was the first overall pick of the draft that rotated among the 12 teams in the league from 1947 to 1958.

Hornung thrived under Lombardi and would be a key player on offense from 1960-65, during which time the Packers won three NFL championsh­ip games and played in a fourth. He won three NFL scoring titles in that time.

Hornung played for the Packers from 1957 to 1966. His ’66 season was mostly a washout because of a neck injury so his final hurrah was late in ’65. Because of the neck, knee and rib injuries, he no longer was the starter and shared time at halfback with Elijah Pitts and Tom Moore that season.

But in a key showdown in the second-to-last week of the regular season at Baltimore, their main contender for the West Division title, Hornung was the surprise starter and scored five touchdowns in the Packers’ 42-27 victory.

Then in the NFL championsh­ip game two weeks later, Hornung rushed for 105 yards on 18 carries in the Packers’ 23-12 win.

Hornung starred in football, basketball and baseball at Bishop Benedict Joseph Flaget High School and then attended college at Notre Dame. He won the Heisman in 1956 even though Notre Dame finished 2-8.

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