Doin’ Dunmore: Remembering the Last of the Four Horsemen

Doin Dunmore - Four HorsemenBy Steve Svetovich

Thoughts of a September football bring back memories of the late Jim Crowley who was the last surviving member of “The Four Horsemen of Notre Dame.”

Crowley died at 83 Jan. 15, 1986 at Holy Family Residence in Scranton where he lived in the latter part of his life. He spent a good part of his final years living in the Green Ridge section of Scranton. His funeral was held at Saint Clare’s Church in Green Ridge.

It was famed sportswriter Grantland Rice who penned “The Four Horsemen” name on the four members of the Notre Dame backfield in the early 1920s. The picture of the four players, including Crowley, sitting on horses is legendary and was on the wall of Terry’s Diner in Moosic for decades.

Crowley was born in Chicago 115 years ago this September 10.

He played at Notre Dame from 1922 through 1924, suited up for three games of professional football and then coached at Michigan State from 1929 to 1933 and Fordham University from 1933 to 1941. At Fordham, he coached “The Seven Blocks of Granite,” a group that included Vince Lombardi who later became a legend himself as coach of the Green Bay Packers.

This scribe had the privilege of meeting the Notre Dame legend in the early 1980s. Crowley was a patient at Mercy Hospital, Scranton, and this scribe was working in the Central Supply Unit. A co-worker, Bill Hoppel, met him first and introduced me to him.

A friendship ensued and there were other frequent visits. Eventually, Crowley agreed to do a taped interview.

220px-Jim_Crowley

Jim Crowley was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1966.

Here are some excerpts from the taped interview with the witty Crowley:

“We got the name, ‘The Four Horsemen,’ in the fall of 1924 when we defeated Army, 13-7. Grantland Rice, the Dean of sports writers at the time, gave us the name in his write up of the game. When we got back to South Bend, a very enterprising reporter, George Strickler, had four horses brought out to the campus and had us stride them. They took our picture and that picture went all over the country. Between the combination of the two, we became known as ‘The Four Horsemen.’ That was it.”

The late Grantland Rice, who lived next door to Crowley in New York when the Notre Dame legend coached at Fordham, wrote: “Outlined against the blue-gray October sky, The Four Horsemen rode again. In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction, and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are Stuhldraher, Miller, Crowley and Layden. They formed the crest of the South Bend cyclone which another Fighting Irish team was swept over the precipice at the Polo Grounds this afternoon.”

Knute Rockne’s undefeated 1924 Notre Dame team went on to win the national championship and defeated Stanford in the Rose Bowl. Rockne died in a plane crash in March of 1931.

“Rockne was a great man,” Crowley said. “He would have been a success at anything. He was a brilliant individual, great coach and dynamic character. He was a strict disciplinarian, but at the same time had a great sense of humor.”

fordhamCrowley had great memories of coaching Lombardi at Fordham.

“Lombardi was a good, steady player, not a great star. He played with the ‘Seven Blocks of Granite.’ He had to be good to play in that group. I didn’t think he would get into coaching at the time, but he did and became a great one.”

Crowley, known as Sleepy Jim, said he went from playing a few pro games into coaching to make more money. “It wasn’t lucrative to be a pro player then. You could make more money in coaching.”

Crowley compiled a 58-13-7 coaching record at Fordham. His .783 winning percentage is fourth on the all-time list. He led Fordham to a 2-0 win over Missouri in the 1942 Sugar Bowl. The game was played during a fierce electrical storm. The win made Fordham national champions.

Crowley coached Fordham in the first televised football game in 1939.

Crowley recalled being at a New York Giants football game with Milton Berle when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. “I was there with Ted Collins, who was Kate Smith’s manager. Milton came over between halves to sit with us. Milton was with his mother. He often had his mother with him. He had a transistor radio which blared out that the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. We continued watching the game. There was nothing we could do at that point.”

In March 1942, Crowley was commissioned as a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy Reserve. He served on the staff of Admiral William H. Halsey and was in charge of welfare and recreation in the South Pacific.

After his Naval duty concluded, he became commissioner of the All-American Football Conference.

rocketsHe then became head coach, general manager and executive Vice President of the Chicago Rockets.

In 1951, he entered the insurance business in Wilkes-Barre, but moved to Scranton in 1953 and remained in insurance. He also became station manager of television station WTVU.

In 1954, he did color commentary for NBC covering Canadian football.

He was chairman of the Pennsylvania Athletic Commission from 1955 through 1963.

Crowley knew plenty of celebrities in his day.

“Babe Ruth was on the same speaking circuit as me in the 1920s and early 1930s. It is true that he liked to eat a lot of hot dogs. He had a huge, gregarious personality. He was bigger than life.

“Bob Hope used to come to my New York apartment. He used to sit on a steamer trunk and drink scotch. He wanted to be seen with us, so he could become known. He wasn’t known yet and was trying to make it big.”

Tom Fox, of the Philadelphia Inquirer, at a gathering after Crowley’s funeral said, “He was a  man who shared himself, a great speaker. Jim Crowley was so down to earth, he was dead level to the ground.”

Tim Ruddy Reflects on Life After the NFL

By Patrick Schuster

*Originally published on Football Dialogue.*

(Credit: Football Dialogue)

(Credit: Patrick Schuster, Football Dialogue)

As the leaves slowly start to change in northeastern Pennsylvania, you can listen close on most Friday nights and hear the cheers from local high school football stadiums across the county as students, parents and alumni all gather to root for this year’s teams.   One former local football star is my former Dunmore High School classmate and good friend Tim Ruddy, who took what he learned from his parents, family, and teachers to the professional level in the National Football League.

Recently, I had the chance to check in on Tim and see how life has been treating him since his days with the Miami Dolphins ended in 2003.

***

Patrick Schuster: Since the NFL fans last saw you on a field, what have you been up to?

Tim Ruddy: Currently, I am the CEO of Vista International Technologies, Inc., a small renewable energy company specializing in tire recycling and gasification.

PS: What has been the biggest adjustment since your career ended?

TR: If I get mad at someone, I can’t hit them, or I will go to jailor worse, be shamed in social media.

PS: What is your fondest memory from your days in college or the NFL?

TR: Tough to pick just one. A lot of the playoff and bowl victories were special. When Notre Dame won the Cotton Bowl in 1994, it was particularly special because we thought we had a shot at the national championship. Instead, it went to Florida State, whom we had beaten head to head a few weeks earlier. I think that scenario was one of the “final straws” that made the NCAA move to the BCS [Bowl Championship Series] system.

Lou Holtz with the captains of his 11-1 Notre Dame team in 1993: Jeff Burris (9), Bryant Young (97), Aaron Taylor (75) and Tim Ruddy (61). (Credit: http://notredame.247sports.com/)

Lou Holtz with the captains of his 11-1 Notre Dame team in 1993: Jeff Burris (9), Bryant Young (97), Aaron Taylor (75) and Tim Ruddy (61). (Credit: http://notredame.247sports.com/)

PS: Have you had the chance to go back to Notre Dame to see a game?

TR: I went back for the spring game once, but not a regular season game.

PS: What are your thoughts on players like Patrick Willis, Chris Borland, Jake Locker and Jason Worlids walking away from the NFL?

TR: To each his own. Everything has risks, football included. You have to make a decision as far as risk versus reward. I believe that some players are much more susceptible to brain injury than others, just as people have different bone structure, muscle density… However, it would seem to me that the time to quit would have been when you were in high school. By the time you get to the NFL, a lot of the damage is already done. In addition, with the lack of two a day practices and the NFL coming down on vicious hits, the NFL is “safer” now than it’s been in years. I don’t think all the science is in yet, either.

PS: As a player who always excelled in the classroom as well as the football field, how were you able to balance school work with your football life during your playing days?

TR: No real secrets. It was a lot of hard work and dedication to both areas, but obviously it can be done. I give a lot of credit to my parents and siblingsand the coaches and teachers I had along the way.

PS: Take me back to your draft day. What is the one memory you have of that day, and what advice would you give any players waiting for that call this spring?

TR: I actually had an engineering project due the next day, so I was working from my dorm room. I didn’t get drafted until almost midnight on the first night, so there was considerable time to wait. As far as advice to a potential draft pick, at that point all the data is in, and the teams have made up their mind on who they like, right or wrong. It’s important to be grateful to be in that position and to enjoy the process.

PS: From the outside now, what would you say has been the biggest change in the NFL since your career ended?

TR: The league has been hollowed out considerably, with teams having a few (10-15) stars, and then trying to fill in the remaining roster spots with lesser, often subpar players, to get under the cap. This started when I was in the league but has gotten worse since I left. Because of this, protecting those “stars” has become priority number one, hence the series of rule changes making most vicious hits illegal.

PS: Knowing you as well I do, I am betting the answer is no, but have you joined the social media world?

TR: No, I don’t do social media. I don’t have the time, and I’m not all that “social” to begin with.

Tim Ruddy (61). (Credit: Amazon.com)

Tim Ruddy (61). (Credit: Amazon.com)

PS: Some former teammates have gotten into broadcasting and coaching. Do you have any thoughts of entering either of those worlds?

TR: Not really, I like coaching kids and helping them learn. As far as broadcasting, I definitely have a face for radio, so that limits my prospects in broadcasting. Although I guess that hasn’t stopped Willie McGinest. (Just kidding there.)

PS: Best advice you ever received during your playing days?

TR: Find a good fight, and get in it.

PS: You were known for your being a workout guy, especially weight lifting. Still hitting the gym and showing the younger guys how it’s done?

TR: I try, but at this point in life, the years are not my friends.

***

Tim played college at the University of Notre Dame, and his entire NFL career with the Miami Dolphins, but was not satisfied with just sitting around feeling like life was over just because his football days were done. Tim is a prime example of the countless players who have moved on after years in the league to become valued contributing members of society.

Interested in reading more interviews? Check out www.footballdialogue.net.