Sid
Gillman Writings
about Sid Gillman List of honorees
Louis Rose Society
Jewishsightseeing home
My Coach, Sid Gillman
San Diego Jewish Press-Heritage, January 10,
2003
Legendary professional football coach Sid Gillman died Jan. 3
at age 91. Ron Mix, a fellow Pro Football Hall of Famer and fellow Jew, offers a
tribute.
By Ron Mix
Sid Gillman was my coach. There is no greater compliment one can give a person,
because a coach is a teacher, a teacher of not only athletic skills
but of fundamental character traits that serve as a foundation for a society
with values.
Winston Churchill said that it was on the playing fields of Eaton that the
battles of war are won. He recognized that it is on the athletic field we
learn loyalty, discipline, the value of hard work, acceptance of responsibility,
respect for oneself and others, and the mark of a mature
person: the deferment of immediate gratification for long-term goals.
I first learned of Sid Gillman when I needed him most. In 1955, he was named the
Head Coach of the Los Angeles Rams, the team of my boyhood. At the time, I was a
junior at Hawthorne High School and a not very successful substitute on the
varsity football team.
I had been born in Boyle Heights, at the time an East Los Angeles Russian-Jewish
ghetto. "Ghetto" was a fair description of the place for it
was peopled by primarily Jewish immigrants who were trying to figure out how to
make a living in this strange land that did not particularly want them.
My father had traveled to America by himself at age 13, sent by his family to be
the first to leave the oppression in Russia, where Jews could neither
be landowners nor obtain an education. After arriving in Ellis Island, he went
to Georgia to work on a farm. There he dropped the family name of
Rabinowitz and adopted the last name of his employer, Mix, as his own.
The truth is that he never did figure out how to make a living in America and
when he met my mother in Boyle Heights, herself a first generation
Russian Jew, he was a tailor in a rundown storefront shop. That shop became our
home, with a blanket hung on string separating the public business from
the home of the Mix family.
He could not make a living as a tailor, so he was a constant gambler, and a poor
one at that. My mother divorced him when I was four years old and my
brother, Alan, was five years old. The three of us moved in with my grandmother,
uncle, aunt and cousin, in a one-bedroom apartment in Boyle
Heights. When another of my uncles returned from fighting as an American soldier
during World War II, he bought a home in Hawthorne, Calif., under
the GI Bill, and the whole of us moved in with him. So, I went from living in
Boyle Heights where, because of its immigrant population, I believed
everyone in America was Jewish, to living in Hawthorne, where I came to
understand that very few persons in America were Jewish and no one in
Hawthorne, other than our family, was Jewish.
So, at the time I learned about Sid Gillman, I was short of a father figure and
short on identity. Then, I read that a Jew had been named the Head Coach
of the team I had loved for years, the team of BobWaterfield, Tom Fears, Elroy
"Crazy Legs" Hirsch, and Tank Younger. And I learned that this Sid
Gillman guy had been an All-American end at Ohio State and played in the first
College All-Star Game.
What a revelation it was for me: Jews were not all ghetto dwellers and gamblers
who left their families they were also All-American football
players and leaders of the Los Angeles Rams. My world had begun an expansion
that continues to this day.
Later, after I had also become an All-American football player and was playing
professional football for the San Diego Chargers and Oakland
Raiders, I, of course, appreciated that my career has had a beneficial impact
upon Jewish youth. I recall a particular instance when I was playing
for the Oakland Raiders and our training camp was in Santa Rosa, Calif., at a
large motel. I had heard that a movie company had rented a portion of the
motel to film some scenes for a movie called Slither. The movie starred
James Caan and Sally Kellerman.
During a break between two-a-day practices, I went to watch the movie being
made. I was easily recognizable as a Raider player, because I was wearing a
Raider T-shirt and shorts and was all muscles and no neck. As I watched the
filming, a young man from the film company introduced himself as Jimmy
Caan's stunt double and asked my name. He told me that James Caan was a great
sports fan and he knew Jimmy would love to meet me if I could wait
until Jimmy finished that scene.
When the scene was over, the stunt double called Jimmy Caan over and introduced
us. I was very surprised at Caanıs reaction. You have to
understand that, at that time, Jimmy Caan was the hottest actor in the world,
having just appeared as Sonny in The Godfather. When the stunt double
told Jimmy my name, Jimmy said: "Ron Mix! Wow, this is so great. I cannot
tell you how much you have meant to me. When I was playing freshman football at
Michigan State and my teammates would joke around and ask me to name another
Jewish football player, I could always name you!"
Well, when I was a kid, Sid Gillman was my Ron Mix. He was my coach during my 10
years as a member of the Chargers. He personified the adage "tough but
fair." Sid demanded that players perform to their potential and never
stopped challenging them to reach their potential. As much as he demanded from
you, he gave more of himself. His work habits were legendary.
His contribution to the development of the game is matchless. It is no small
moment that he is identified as "the father of offensive football."
Our
Charger teams of the '60s were lightning in a bottle because of Sid's brilliant
designs and his use of multiple receivers. To a man, the modern
coaches who are credited as being the geniuses of the West Coast Offense (Bill
Walsh, Joe Gibbs, Dick Vermeil) correct the person handing out the
accolade and state that they learned from Sid Gillman.
Sid knew that imagination alone does not carry the day in football; the players
must also be tough and disciplined. Sid may have had his equals in
being a tough disciplinarian, but no one was superior. Everything that happened
on that practice field was a learning experience.
I remember my first practice as a professional player for the Chargers. Sid had
his assistant coaches scattered all over the field working with their
individual positions. Sid, however, had brought the offensive and defensive
linemen together and, as the first order of the day, he was going to find
out what he had. So, he ordered a full-speed run-blocking drill whereby an
offensive player would line up against a defensive player and try to block
him. Sid simply called out two players and told them to line up and go at it
"on two."
What you must understand is that is difficult for an offensive lineman to block
a defensive lineman when the offensive lineman has the advantage of
knowing the count that the ball will be snapped upon and when the defensive
lineman is faced with the uncertainty of not knowing if the play will be a
run or pass play. But when the defensive player knows both the count and the
type of play, it is very very difficult.
However, one of the great things about sports is that at certain times
everything comes together perfectly and an athlete is able to do something
as well as it has ever been done.
I was lined up against Bob Reifsnyder, a former two-time All-American tackle for
Navy. Unfortunately for Bob, one of those magic moments was about to take place.
I uncoiled just right and at just the right level from the ground, my head and
shoulders and arms carrying maximum force from my legs
and hips. Bob, on the other hand, had raised up too high and I exploded into
him. It indeed sounded like an explosion as my helmet and pads struck his.
Bob, literally, was lifted into the air and propelled onto to his back.
When Sid saw that, he blew his whistle over and over and yelled to all of his
assistants to bring their players to our area: "Everybody up. Get up
here. I want you to see how football is played. Mix just killed Reifsnyder.
He lifted him up and knocked him on his back. Reifsnyder looked like a fat
frog. Get up here. Iım going to have Mix do it again."
While Sid was devastating Reifsnyder, I glanced over at Reifsnyder and his face
was red (it seemed as though steam was coming out of his ears) and he
was using his cleats to dig holds into the ground and he had planted his feet in
the holds and crouched down in a four-point stance, his chin just
inches off the grass. Mix do it again? Not to this Navy man. There was no way I
would be able to get under him.
I lined up. Sid gave the count and there was a big collision but not much
happened this time. Disappointed, Sid said to the team and the coaches:
"Well, you should have seen it the first time." To me, Sid said:
"Dammit, Mix, if you want to play professional football, you have to be
consistent."
Playing for Sid was never boring. No one was safe from his comments. Yet, we
basked in his reflected glory as he led us to success after success.
And, football did become a bigger canvas than just wins and losses. When a
social responsibility had to be met, Sid met it head on. In the early
Sixties, when the Civil Rights movement was in its infancy and some professional
football teams appeared to have a quota on the number of Black
players allowed, and when one professional team, the Washington Redskins, had no
Black players, Sid had open competition. Sid only wanted to know if
an athlete could play.
Using playing ability as the sole litmus test, Sid brought in such great Black
players as Ernie Ladd, Earl Faison, Paul Lowe, Speedy Duncan, Kenny
Graham, Dick Westmoreland and Frank Buncom. Because that is what Jews do. We
have a social conscience and are fearless in assisting others.
While other professional teams were playing the numbers game with Black
athletes, or excluding them altogether, Sid initiated social integration on
the team: he assigned training camp roommates by position (e.g., offensive
tackles room with offensive tackles) so that there would be a natural reason
for Blacks and Whites rooming together. The pretext was so players of the same
position could study their plays and share knowledge. The real reason
was social integration.
Coach, life flew by in a wink. It was only yesterday that you were playing on
the green field of Ohio State, that you were playing jazz piano and
meeting your future wife, Esther, that you and Esther raised four children in a
home filled with love and excitement while forging a career culminating
with your induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. But you treated life's
time as precious and you went through it as a noble warrior.