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Word: lombardis (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...every time I trapped that guy, he jabbed me right in the teeth with his elbow." At game's end a surgeon took 30 stitches inside Lombardi's mouth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Vinnie, Vidi, Vici | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

...Lombardi worked days as an insurance investigator, studied nights at Fordham Law ("because my Dad wanted it"), played weekend football for a minor-league pro team that called itself the Brooklyn Eagles. In 1939, he took his first coaching job - as an assistant football coach at tiny (600 students) St. Cecilia High School in Englewood, NJ. His HALFBACK HORNUNG...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Vinnie, Vidi, Vici | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

duties also included teaching physics, chemistry, algebra and Latin, and his salary was $1,700 a year. Three years later. Lombardi was head football, basketball and baseball coach; his 1945 basketball team won the New Jersey parochial school championship, and his football teams won 36 games in a row. On the strength of that record. Lombardi bounced back to Fordham in 1947-hoping some day to be named head football coach. But he stayed only two years. Fordham football was already on the skids; in 1954 the school gave up the game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Vinnie, Vidi, Vici | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

...university without football," says Lombardi in disgust, "is in danger of deteriorating into a medieval study hall." Lombardi's next stop-Army-was in no such peril. Head Coach Earl ("Red") Blaik was college football's reigning genius, and besides Lombardi. his staff included such whiz kids as Murray War-math and Paul Dietzel. For five years Lombardi ran the cadets' fast-striking offense-and by West Point standards, most of them were lean years. Army's great All-Americas, Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard, graduated in 1947, and 37 players were expelled when a cribbing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Vinnie, Vidi, Vici | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

Neither were the New York Giants exactly wild about Lombardi when he arrived in 1954 to put some offensive muscle on a team that scored only 179 points and lost nine games the season before. "Vinnie didn't understand our game when he came here," says Halfback Frank Gifford. "He wasn't too bright about it. At first, we players were showing him how it went. By the end of the year, though, he was showing us." In Lombardi's first season the Giants scored 293 points, won seven of twelve games; two years later, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Vinnie, Vidi, Vici | 12/21/1962 | See Source »

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