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The Gipper's Greatest Comeback
Townhall.com ^ | November 25, 2020 | Terry Jeffrey

Posted on 11/25/2020 1:30:55 PM PST by Kaslin

Some newspapers in the Midwest in 1920 referred to the Notre Dame football team not as the Fighting Irish but as "the Catholics."

Notre Dame's star player, however, was not one.

George Gipp grew up in a small northern Michigan town, where he did not play high school football and his father was a Baptist pastor.

He arrived in South Bend in 1916 as a baseball prospect.

Joseph Meyer -- who later became the football coach at Xavier -- was a senior baseball player at Notre Dame when Gipp was a freshman. In 1920, he recalled how Knute Rockne discovered his ultimate star.

"One day, he wandered out on the gridiron and began kicking the ball around while the team was practicing," Meyer said of Gipp. "Someone showed him how to dropkick, and it wasn't long before he booted a field goal from the 62-yard line.

"His boot was reported to the coaches," Meyer recounted. "They snared him right away and put a uniform on him."

By his senior year, sportswriters were hailing Gipp as the greatest player in the game.

The New York Herald explained why in a story published after the 1920 Army-Notre Dame game.

"Gipp played the greatest individual game seen at West Point since the afternoon when Jim Thorpe of the Carlisle Indians defeated the Cadets single handed and single footed," the paper said.

"The Army could not stop this man," it said.

But something else almost did stop Gipp from playing his senior year.

"Gipp was recently dismissed from the university by President J.A. Burns and the faculty because of insufficient work in academic subjects," the South Bend Tribune reported on March 18, 1920.

But four days before the opening game of the 1920 season, Notre Dame reinstated Gipp.

"The ineligibility of George Gipp ... was cleared up at a meeting of the faculty athletic board held yesterday afternoon," the South Bend Tribune reported on Sept. 29. "Gipp, who returned to school last week, was granted a hearing before the board, and on a presentation of a statement of satisfactory work in his June examinations from the law department his disqualification was removed."

Six weeks later, Notre Dame was 6-0 and playing Indiana.

Toward the end of the third quarter, the Hoosiers were ahead 10 to 0 -- and for some reason unknown to the fans, Rockne had been playing Norman Barry at halfback instead of Gipp.

Then, when the Irish made it to Indiana's one-yard line on the last play of that quarter, Rockne put Gipp on the field.

"Gipp carried the ball over on the first play of the fourth quarter," the Indianapolis Star reported. Then he kicked the extra point. The score was now 10 to 7.

Indiana then fumbled on its own 33 and Notre Dame recovered.

Gipp completed a 15-yard pass, made two hard runs and led Notre Dame to another touchdown, putting the Irish ahead 13 to 10. (He missed the extra point).

So, why had Rockne pulled Gipp from the game -- and then sent him back out for the fourth quarter?

Three days later, columnist Archie Ward explained. "An unexampled display of grit that enabled Notre Dame to defeat Indiana Saturday was revealed yesterday when it became known that George Gipp, halfback, played through nearly the entire game with a fractured collar bone," wrote Ward.

"Gipp suffered the injury early in the first quarter," Ward said.

"Rockne, realizing that something was wrong with his star player, beckoned Gipp to the sidelines in the third quarter and substituted Barry," he said.

Notre Dame had two more games that season -- against Northwestern and Michigan State -- but newspapers reported Gipp was out for the season.

Yet an already-ill Gipp did play against Northwestern at Evanston the next week, when Notre Dame won 33-7.

Rockne later recalled what happened in a conversation with sports writer Grantland Rice, who reported it in his memoir, "The Tumult and the Shouting."

"In our final game against Northwestern, at Evanston, he climbed out of bed to make the trip," Rockne said. "I used him very little in that game."

"But in the last quarter the stands chanted Gipp's name so loud and long that I finally sent him in for a few plays -- on that ice-covered field with the wind off Lake Michigan cutting us all to the bone," said Rockne.

"I got him out of there quick; but after returning to school with a raging fever, Gipp went back to his sick bed," Rockne said. "He never got up. Pneumonia had him backed to his own goal line. He lived barely two weeks."

Rockne also recounted what happened in Gipp's hospital room before he had his own famous final conversation with the young man.

"Shortly before he went, Father Pat Haggerty baptized him into the church," Rockne said.

The day after the Gipper died, Father John O'Hara -- who later became the president of Notre Dame and then the Cardinal Archbishop of Philadelphia -- gave a more detailed account.

"What wrought the miracle of this beautiful death?" asked O'Hara at a student Mass. "It was the reward of Notre Dame, the Blessed Mother, for a humble service wrought in her honor in a humble way. George Gipp loved this school which is dedicated to her honor; he strove in his own way to add lustre to its tradition; and although we did not think of George as a deeply religious man, his inmost thoughts came to the surface when he faced death."

"You offered a novena of communions for him and when informed of it he said: 'Tell them to keep it up,'" said O'Hara. "On the day the novena ended he asked to become a member of your church and the following day was baptized. He lingered on, sustained only by prayer, and offered his sufferings to God.

"On the afternoon before his death," said O'Hara, "he became more his real self than he has been for two weeks; and he spoke not of the honors he had received but of his death in the arms of God."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: football; georgegipp; gipper; history; notredame; sports

1 posted on 11/25/2020 1:30:55 PM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

2 posted on 11/25/2020 1:43:11 PM PST by DFG
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To: Kaslin

Go Irish


3 posted on 11/25/2020 1:50:57 PM PST by irish guard
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To: Kaslin
George Gipp's story is told in detail in the book Rockne & Jones: Notre Dame, USC and the Greatest Rivalry of the Roaring Twenties (Kent, Ohio, Black Squirrel Books, 2017).

Rupp, the author, who posts on this board, tells the story of two colorful coaches, Notre Dame's Knute Rockne and USC's Howard Jones and how they forged the USC-Notre Dame rivalry that continues to this day. He examines the lives of the two coaches both on and off the field and sets the story against the backdrop of the political, economic and social events and trends of the 1920's and 1930's.

4 posted on 11/25/2020 2:46:15 PM PST by Fiji Hill
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To: Kaslin
he booted a field goal from the 62-yard line.

He what?

5 posted on 11/25/2020 3:17:38 PM PST by libertylover (Remember: Deep State hated Jesus too.)
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To: DFG

"Win one for The Zipper!"

"Excuse me, Doc, I've got a plane to land."

6 posted on 11/25/2020 3:21:17 PM PST by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Kaslin

Note that Knute Rockne was also not Catholic.


7 posted on 11/25/2020 3:47:16 PM PST by MrChips ("To wisdom belongs the apprehension of eternal things." - St. Augustine I don’t think we need one,)
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To: Kaslin; Liz; V K Lee

I had a Baptist professor teach the Ethics class I took at ND. He was a great prof, who spoke with conviction and implanted at least a little bit of wisdom in my thick skull.

Great story to post about George Gip. Grit, determination — that’s the stuff of a certain reluctant politician I know.


8 posted on 11/25/2020 4:19:45 PM PST by poconopundit (Hard oak fist in an Irish velvet glove: Kayleigh the Shillelagh we salute your work!)
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To: Kaslin; Salvation

I’ve heard and used the phrase “win one for the Gipper” countless times but until now I never knew the full history behind it.

Thank you, and a blessed Thanksgiving!

Mine is now enriched greatly.


9 posted on 11/26/2020 12:30:06 AM PST by lightman (I am a binary Trinitarian. Deal with it!)
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To: MrChips

He converted in 1925.


10 posted on 11/27/2020 10:09:51 AM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Did he?! I never knew that. But he is still tor some reason not buried in the Catholic cemetery on campus.


11 posted on 11/27/2020 5:05:18 PM PST by MrChips ("To wisdom belongs the apprehension of eternal things." - St. Augustine I don’t think we need one,)
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To: MrChips

He’s buried off campus. His wife, who was always Catholic, chose the resting place. His funeral was on campus. I was at his house in South Bend last year and spoke with the current homeowner.


12 posted on 11/27/2020 6:16:24 PM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SoCal Pubbie

Must be a real treat for that person to live in Rock’s house!


13 posted on 11/28/2020 2:36:54 PM PST by MrChips ("To wisdom belongs the apprehension of eternal things." - St. Augustine I don’t think we need one,)
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To: MrChips

As I recall he said people come by all the time.


14 posted on 11/28/2020 3:21:24 PM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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