Green Bay Packers: Who wore #88 the best?

Oct 26, 2014; New Orleans, LA, USA; A detail of a Green Bay Packers helmet before a game against the New Orleans Saints at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Derick E. Hingle-USA TODAY Sports
Oct 26, 2014; New Orleans, LA, USA; A detail of a Green Bay Packers helmet before a game against the New Orleans Saints at the Mercedes-Benz Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Derick E. Hingle-USA TODAY Sports /
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Ron Kramer: A key piece of Lombardi’s early championships

For us longtime Packers fans, we love to remember tight end Ron Kramer.

For those of us lucky enough to remember his playing days, we remember his ability to catch the ball in traffic, to block and to play the kind of football that coach Vince Lombardi demanded. We remember him looking like a wide receiver in tight end’s clothing.

At 6-3, 234 pounds, Kramer played 10 years in the NFL, seven of them in Green Bay. He played his final three years for the Lions in his home state.

Kramer was a rookie in 1957, and had a breakout season with 28 catches for 337 yards. In 1958 and 1959, he spent time in the military, but when Lombardi started utilizing him more in 1960, his statistics began to increase. Between 1961 and 1964 (his last year in Green Bay), he had 138 catches for 2,202 yards and 15 touchdowns.

Over the course of his career in Green Bay, he caught 170 balls for 2,594 yards (15.3 yards per catch), and 15 touchdowns.

Here is how Maxymuk describes Kramer:

"At the University of Michigan, Ron Kramer was known as the ‘Terror of the Big Ten.’ He caught passes, place-kicked, punted, and blocked on offense; on defense he played defensive end in a bruising style that got him thrown out of the Ohio State game as a senior for unnecessary roughness. In addition to being a two-time All-American in football, he played center on the basketball team where he was three-time team MVP, and also lettered three years in track. Drafted in the first round by the Packers in 1957, his pro career fell into three equal phases. In his first four years, he looked like a flop. As a rookie, he caught 28 passes, but then missed more than a year in the military. By the time he reported to the team in 1959, he had missed training camp and was out of shape. He did not catch a pass all year. In the following year, he won the starting tight-end job in training camp. However, Lombardi sent him back to the bench after he ran the wrong pass patern in the opener, causing a crucial pass interception in the loss to the Bears. He caught only four passes all year wile being stuck on the pine. Kramer rededicated his effort the next year and began the second phase of his pro career. From 1961064, he was the prototypical tight end, a true blend of lineman and receiver. As Kramer described it, the tight end is a “loose tackle.” The Bears’ Mike Ditka and the Colts’ John Mackey were more central to their teams’ passing offenses and caught more passes, but Kramer was a powerful force at the line of scrimmage for Green Bay. His ability to handle a defensive end by himself freed the Packer interior linemen to expand their own blocking range."

Like Ditka and Mackey, Kramer helped to establish the position for the modern game. Guys like Jermichael Finley and Tony Gonzalez can thank their predecessors for their work.

Kramer will long be remembered as one of the best in Green Bay.

Next: Who wore #89 the best?

Provided by Pro Football Reference, here is the list of players over the past 50 years who have worn #88.

From To AV
Bill Anderson 1965 1966 1
Jahine Arnold 1999 1999 0
Bert Askson 1975 1977 10
Albert Bell 1988 1988 0
Dick Capp 1967 1967 0
Ron Cassidy 1979 1984 2
Preston Dennard 1985 1985 1
Jermichael Finley 2008 2013 27
Bubba Franks 2000 2007 18
Len Garrett 1971 1973 1
George Hays 1953 1953 0
Darryl Ingram 1992 1993 0
Keith Jackson 1995 1996 5
Reggie Johnson 1997 1997 0
Ron Jones 1969 1969 0
Ron Kramer 1957 1964 31
Aubrey Matthews 1988 1989 3
Phil McConkey 1986 1986 0
Terry Mickens 1994 1994 0
Roell Preston 1997 1998 3
Gene White 1954 1954 0
Charles Wilson 1990 1991 5

Here’s a video tribute to Ron Kramer: