Green Bay Packers: Who wore #72 best?

What NFL draft prospect wouldn't mind working here? Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports
What NFL draft prospect wouldn't mind working here? Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports /
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Dick Afflis: A Packers player you should know

HERE’S WHAT MAXYMUK HAD TO SAY ABOUT DICK AFFLIS:

"Dick Afflis played guard, tackle and defensive line in his four years with Green Bay and wore a higher uniform number each year. He was a credible performer, but will never be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. However, his chances of being selected for the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame that opened in the spring of 2002 would have to be pretty good since he had a 35-year career within the scripted ring as “Dick the Bruiser.”"

"Dick wasn’t the greatest lineman the Packers ever had, but he was one of the most interesting characters. In college he moved around a lot. He left Purdue after punching one of the coaches and also attended Miami … as well as lasting only two weeks at Notre Dame and also passed through Alabama before landing in the desert at Nevada-Reno. He was drafted in the 16th round by the Packers and was most noteworthy for his strength. He was an early proponent of bodybuilding and looked odd in his football uniform with his 52-inch barrel chest and 30-inch wasp waist. Afflis was not someone to make angry. In the early 950s, many Packers fans would take the train to Chicago and back for the Bears game, and sometimes they would run into players in the dining car. Once a fan got in Afllis’s face about the game on the trip home, and Dick broke off a beer bottle on the bar and invited the fan to do something about it. The sight of an angry Dick the Bruiser holding a broken beer bottle was enough to quell the disturbance. He made an impression when he arrived in Green Bay for his first training camp in 1951, fresh from working as a bouncer in Las Vegas. He was packing two .45s in shoulder holsters and asked to check them at the Northland Hotel front desk. Another time, Hawg Hanner attempted to instigate some trouble when he told Afflis that fellow lineman Jerry Helluin considered himself stronger than Dick. Dick went and found Helluin and they engaged in a series of feats of strength, smashing beer cans with their hands and so forth, until Afflis smashed a beer can on his face, causing the blood to run down his contorted visage."

“…they engaged in a series of feats of strength, smashing beer cans with their hands and so forth, until Afflis smashed a beer can on his face, causing the blood to run down his contorted visage.”

"Afflis left the game after the 1954 season to go into professional wrestling, from which he made a lucrative living for the next 35 years. Reminiscent of his altercation with Jerry Helluin, Dick’s trademark was blood streaming down his face from a hidden patch on his head, and his billing was the “World’s Most Dangerous Wrestler.” H was obviously a difficult man to get along with and was married four times. One time in the ring he slugged the referee, earning himself a suspension. Another time he went to the Indiana restaurant of his rival Cowboy Bob Ellis and turned over tables and broke windows. He continued to cross paths with football from time to time. He and his new bride were sitting on the Packers bench for a Bears game in Wrigley Field one year. When a Packer broke off a long return, Dick’s wife got so excited that she followed the player into the end zone. A fight ensued with Wrigley ushers about this and both Dick and his wife were thrown out of the park. In his second career, he was among the wealthiest of wrestlers and also had a construction business and an Indianapolis tavern called the Harem Athletic Club. He died at the age of 62 lifting weights in his Florida home when a blood vessel in his esophagus burst, causing extensive internal bleeding. Although he died relatively young, he lived as he chose, a full and contentious life."

Afflis was certainly one of the more colorful characters to wear a Packers uniform and one that certainly shouldn’t be forgotten. He epitomized a time in the history of professional football when just about anything went.

How times have changed.

Next: Profiling J.C. Tretter

Here are the players since 1950 who have worn #72:

From To AV
Dick Afflis 1953 1953 0
Todd Auer 1987 1987 1
Brad Bedell 2004 2004 0
Warren Bone 1987 1987 0
Greg Boyd 1983 1983 1
Ben Davidson 1961 1961 2
Earl Dotson 1993 2002 45
Steve Gabbard 1991 1991 0
Mark Hall 1989 1990 1
Jerry Helluin 1954 1957 0
Dick Himes 1968 1977 35
Tom Johnson 1952 1952 0
J.D. Kimmel 1958 1958 0
Kit Lathrop 1979 1980 3
Johnny Miller 1960 1960 3
Tom Neville 1986 1988 7
Brad Oates 1981 1981 0
Harvey Salem 1992 1992 1
Theo Sherman 2011 2011  
Jason Spitz 2006 2009 23
Herbert Taylor 2011 2011 0
Steve Wright 1964 1967 13

Next: What are you thinking about Brett Favre these days?