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Green Bay Packers: Who wore #85 best?

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Max McGeen wore #85 for the Packers back in the 1960s; Greg Jennings also spent a number of years wearing the number. Raymond T. Rivard photograph
Max McGeen wore #85 for the Packers back in the 1960s; Greg Jennings also spent a number of years wearing the number. Raymond T. Rivard photograph /

Max McGee … a Lombardi soldier

Today we focus on Max McGee, who was one of those really steady players who was at Green Bay when Vince Lombardi arrived in 1959.

He would go on to star with the team through the early- and mid-1960s. However, it wasn’t until his final game – the first AFL vs. NFL Championship (otherwise known as Super Bowl I) that he came into national prominence.

More from Green Bay Packers All Time Lists

His juggling catches and last-minute insertion into the lineup are things of lore in Green Bay but were very real at the time.

Had Bart Starr not had an MVP-caliber performance in that first Super Bowl, McGee could have easily won the Award. We need to remember that.

McGee caught 345 passes for 6,346 yards (18.4-yard average per catch), and 50 touchdowns over his 12-year career – all in Green Bay.

Here is how John Maxymuk describes McGee:

"“Cool in the clutch was Max McGee. The bigger the game, the more tense the situation, the better he played. He had a remarkable ability to relax in any environment and to enjoy himself both on and off the field. He grew up in Texas and enrolled at Tulane University in New Orleans, where he not only led the team in rushing for three years while also lettering in baseball and basketball, but also took full advantage of the extracurricular advantages offered by the Big Esy. And he earned a useful degree in business, as well. He was the Packers fifth round draft choice in 1954 and wen on to catch nine scring passes as a rookie, in addition to holding the job as the team’s punter. After two years in the Air Foce where he served with future teammate ad roomate Zeke Bratkowski, Max returned to Green Bay in 1957. Over the next few years, he esablished himself as the struggling team’s deep threat. In Lombardi’s first year, 1959, McGee led the league with an average of 23.2 yards per catch. Finally, there was the simple fact that he could play. He might run around all night with his buddy Paul Hornung – and the stories those two could tell would make a whole other book – but he could still run on the field at game time. In the big games, he was at his best. In the 1960 title game against the Eagles, McGeen did fumble once, but he also ran a fake punt 35 yrds to covert a fourth down, which led to the Packers’ only touchdown eight plays later – a seven-yard pass to Max. In the 1966 championship game against Dallas, Starr threw the last of his four touchdown passes 28 yards to McGee, wide open on a corner route for what would be the clinching score. Two weeks later came the game for which he is remembered, Super Bowl I against Kansas City."

Here are McGee’s career statistics as provided by Pro Football Reference:

Provided by Pro Football Reference, here is the list of players over the past 50 years who have worn #85.

  From To AV
Karsten Bailey 2002 2003 0
Emery Barnes 1956 1956 0
Elmo Boyd 1978 1978 0
Corey Bradford 1998 2001 12
Phil Epps 1982 1988 26
Dick Gordon 1973 1973 0
Greg Jennings 2006 2012 55
Jim Jennings 1955 1955 0
Bobby Kimball 1979 1980 0
Ron Lewis 1992 1994 2
Max McGee 1954 1967 57
Sean McHugh 2004 2004 0
Terry Mickens 1995 1997 3
Anthony Morgan 1996 1996 0
Terrence Murphy 2005 2005 0
Ken Payne 1974 1977 13
Jeff Query 1989 1991 7
Jay Rhodemyre 1951 1951 0
John Spilis 1969 1971 6
Paul Staroba 1973 1973 0
Jake Stoneburner 2013 2013 0
Kitrick Taylor 1992 1992 1
Wesley Walls 2003 2003 2
Ab Wimberly 1952 1952 0

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