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History of the Chicago Bears:
It all started on September 20, 1920, in the showroom of Ralph
Hay's Hupmobile auto agency in Canton, OH. On that day,
representatives of fourteen professional football teams sat on the
running boards of cars to form what is now the National Football
League. George Halas, an outstanding End that played his college
ball at the University of Illinois, represented his team, the
Decatur Staleys. The team had been formed the preceding year by
the A.E. Staley company of Decatur, IL, as a way to keep his
employees happy.
Halas' team played the 1920 season as the Decatur Staleys. In
1921, Staley decided he could no longer afford to subsidize the
team, so he suggested that Halas move the team to Chicago, where
it might survive, and gave him $5,000 to keep the Staley name for
one year. Thus, for 1921, the team became the Chicago Staleys and
played their games at Cubs Park. The following year, Halas
surmised that since the team was playing in the stadium of the
Chicago Cubs, his team ought to be named the Chicago Bears. The
Navy and Orange color scheme still worn by the Bears today was
derived from Halas' alma mater, Illinois.
Halas spent an enormous amount of time personally scouting
players, as well as playing for his team. Often times, he declared
that he "just had to have" certain players he saw play in college.
First, Halas signed Harold "Red" Grange, an outstanding running
back from the U of I, to an unheard of salary of $100,000. In
1925-26, Grange and the Bears went on a "Barnstorming" tour,
during which they played 19 games with only a week of rest.
Historians have concluded that this tour is what "made" pro
football. Later, Halas would acquire other players such as Bronco
Nagurski and Sid Luckman, who took Chicago to titles in '32, '33,
'40, '41 & '46. During the 1940's, the Bears Fight Song was
written, and the team revolutionized football with the
T-Formation.
The 1950's Bears featured many brawling players such as Ed "The
Claw" Sprinkle, Bill George, George Connor, and Harlon Hill, but
won no championships. Finally in 1963, the Bears won their first
NFL Championship since 1946 over the New York Giants at Wrigley
Field. That '63 team DEFEATED THE GREEN BAY PACKERS TWICE,
featuring a brusing defense along with a steady offense.
Unfortunately after '63, it was a long downhill slide, as the
Bears didn't make the playoffs again until 1977.
One could only expect that the decade of the 1970's would be
dismal after witnessing its first event. After finishing 1969 with
a 1-13 record, the Bears flipped a coin with the Pittsburgh
Steelers to determine who would get the first pick in the 1970
draft. Pittsburgh won, and drafted Hall-of-Fame Quarterback Terry
Bradshaw. The Bears sent their pick to Green Bay for a bunch of
washed-up veterans, and the decade was history. Worse, Chicago
running back Brian Piccolo succumbed to cancer at the age of 26 in
June of that year, which would lead to the movie Brian's Song,
forever cementing Piccolo and the Bears in millions of minds
across the globe.
The Bears made the playoffs and exited after one game in 1977
and 1979, but didn't make a serious run until 1984 under former
player/Head Coach Mike Ditka. In 1985, the Bears took the world by
storm as they won their first championship since '63, cutting a
music video along the way. Despite having the pure talent to win
many more championships, the team never went back to the Super
Bowl, and by 1992, the core of Super Bowl Bears had run their NFL
course. Mike Ditka was fired, and Dave Wannstedt hired by Team
President Michael McCaskey. Wannstedt took the team back to the
playoffs in 1994, but went 24-40 in his next four years, and was
dismissed in 1998.
Dick Jauron became the 12th Head Coach in Bears history on
January 24, 1999. After two forgettable seasons, Jauron shepharded
the Bears to a magical 13-3 record and home playoff game in 2001.
We now await to see if Jauron returns, or is a political
catastrophe. Thus the future mimics Chicago Bears history.....
Article courtesy of
bearshistory.com.
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