In reply to: Ameche was just voted a top-10 Wisc. HS athlete of all-time. posted by G.K.Chesterton
Here are the ND-specific mentions:
As a sophomore, Ameche was promoted to the varsity on a team that finished the 1948 season with an 0-8 record, scoring one touchdown the entire year. Before the start of the next season, Chuck Jaskwhich, a Kenosha native who played quarterback at Notre Dame, was named as the new coach. The Red Devils responded with a 5-3 record, winning their final four games.
And...
After Kenosha opened the 1950 season with a 45-14 nonconference rout of Fond du Lac, in which Ameche scored two touchdowns but was slowed by injury, the Racine Journal Times wrote in its upcoming preview, “Even on one leg Ameche is better than most of the backs in the Big Eight. He’s that good.”
Other editorial examples included a comparison to a Triple Crown-winning race horse, “Alan Ameche, sensational Kenosha left half, showed the speed and stamina of a Citation going down the stretch … “
After his high school career, which also included a state title in the shot put, Ameche was the subject of an intense recruiting battle that eventually boiled down to Notre Dame and Wisconsin.
Ameche was named a first-team running back on The Milwaukee Journal Team of the Century in 1993, in which writer Cliff Christl sent out 300 ballots to coaches, players and writers. Ameche also was chosen as the All-Time Player.
Ameche died at age 55 of a heart attack in 1988 after heart surgery in Houston.
referenced in the excerpt I had posted.
Cliff Christl has been the official historian for the Green Bay Packers for years and has done a *lot* of digging into archives of various kinds, talking to local Green Bay folks, etc. You can see his work at the link below, including an article titled "Yes, Curly Lambeau fathered a second son".
though I linked a different article below...can't find Christi's
The Packers put up a statue to honor ND's John Vainisi awhile back.
It was Vainisi who drafted all the great Packer players in the 1950s that Lombardi had on his '60s Championship teams...Vainisi also (without any authorization to do so) was the first to contact NY Giants assistant Lombardi about becoming Green Bay head coach.
John Vainisi was a HS football star (tackle) at Chicago St George...he was recruited to ND by Interim Irish HC Hugh Devore in the 1945 recruiting class.
Vainisi was drafted off the ND campus & assigned overseas...where he contracted Rheumatic fever...he was discharged and returned to ND to get his degree...but his football playing days were over.
Vainisi got a job with the Packers after graduation-the linked article tells the rest......Vainisi died young (age 33)-never seeing Lombardi's great success with all of the players that he had scouted & drafted.....Vainisi's younger brother was later the GM of the Super Bowl champ Chicago Bears.