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John Brockington, a seemingly indestructible fullback when he took the NFL by storm in his first three seasons with the Packers, died Friday, March 31, in San Diego. Brockington was 74.

Selected by the Packers with the ninth choice of the 1971 NFL Draft, Brockington rushed for 1,105 yards as a rookie, averaging 5.1 per carry, and was named the NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year.

In 1972, Brockington teamed with halfback MacArthur Lane to form a bruising backfield tandem that offensively carried the Packers to their only NFC Central Division championship between 1967, Vince Lombardi's last season as coach, and 1995, Mike Holmgren's fourth season as coach. Brockington and Lane combined for 1,848 rushing yards with Brockington gaining 1,027 of them. A year later, Brockington rushed for 1,144 yards, giving him the distinction of being the first back in NFL history to rush for more than 1,000 yards in his first three seasons.

"John Brockington was the toughest, hardest hitting running back that I knew," Bill Lueck, the Packers' starting left guard from 1969 to 1974, said in 2019. "We used to joke, 'Nobody wants to be the first guy to make contact with John Brockington.'

"He was a beast. Nobody wanted to tackle him. He'd run over the first guy. That was his game. But he was elusive also. That's what made him such a dangerous running back. He may run over you the first play, and the next play you're all tensed up and ready for this major collision, and he'd put a move on you. You never knew what was coming: A move or run over you."

The trademarks of Brockington's game those first three seasons were: Take the ball, hit the hole like a bulldozer in a drag race and annihilate would-be tacklers. He did it with a rare combination of power and speed mixed with a little wiggle.

In 1972, when the Packers won the division title, Lane and Brockington also were the Packers' two leading receivers with 26 and 19 catches, respectively. Carroll Dale led the wide receivers with 16 receptions.

Those stats alone tell you that there was nothing fancy about the offense. Brockington weighed 225 pounds; Lane weighed 220. And they were deployed like two battering rams play after play, series after series.

Pound, pound, pound. That's what they did.

"John ran with a high knee action and just punished people," Scott Hunter, the second-year quarterback who would hand the ball off and then have a bird's-eye view of the carnage, said in a 2007 interview. "And Mac was so powerful. He ran a little more straight-up than John, and he wouldn't punish people as much, but he was just hard to get a hold of and then it was hard to hold onto him when you got a hold of him because he was so strong."

Even practicing against the pair was no fun.

"I'm telling you for a couple years, I would have rather played anybody else than scrimmage with our own team," middle linebacker Jim Carter said in 2010. "With (guard Gale) Gillingham and those two guys coming right after, they were a bitch. Talk about hitting you. Mac and Brock would really pop you."

Mysteriously, after three seasons, Brockington's stats tailed off considerably. He rushed for 883 yards in 1974 and then for no more than 434 yards in the two years he played under coach Bart Starr. One game into the 1977 season, the Packers waived Brockington.

Red Cochran, Packers backfield coach under Lombardi and then under Dan Devine from 1971-74, thought Brockington was as good as Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback Jim Taylor, if not better, and believed the coaching change was the reason for Brockington's decline.

"Brockington was just faster (than Taylor)," Cochran said in a 2002 interview. "He'd turn a six-yard gain into a 30-yard touchdown. He could do everything Taylor could do and with more speed. I think Brockington took a bum rap when Bart took over. People started talking about Brockington dancing. I think what happened, the guy (Starr) brought in (Paul Roach as offensive coordinator) turned that (fullback) slant from a quick-hitting power play into a kind of read-the-block. I think they took (Brockington's) instincts away. When they made Brockington read that block instead of reading it full tilt, when he stopped and looked, (the hole) was gone."

Brockington was inducted into the Packers Hall of Fame in 1984. His 5,024 rushing yards also still rank fourth all-time in team's record book.

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RIP  John was an amazingly great human

We met John and Diane at a fundraiser in San Diego

If you don't know the story of Brockington and his wife, read on.

https://donatelife.net/stories...living-kidney-donor/

"A long-time Green Bay Packers fan, Diane was a college professor residing in San Diego when she first met John, a retired Packers star running back, at a local deli. The two immediately hit it off, and had been good friends for eight years when Diane learned that John was in kidney failure and needed a transplant.
She volunteered to be his living donor, but was told she was too small. At 5ā€™ 2ā€, surely no kidney of hers would do the job for 6ā€™ 1ā€ John. Tests, however, revealed otherwise: Diane actually had huge kidneys, and she was able to successfully donate a kidney to John (the smaller kidney at that). Following Johnā€™s return to health, yet another happy surprise was in store: two years after their living donation experience, Diane and John got married"



My oldest memory of being "Packers conscious" is at four years old on my dad's 42nd birthday and associating it with Brockington's jersey. Grew up hearing the stories of post golden days tandem of Brockington and Lane. One of many past players that make the green and gold mystique so special. His story of the past two decades is as inspiring as anything he did on the field. RIP to a great one.

Brockington was my all time favorite Packer player from my childhood.  I just sent the following email to Scott Hunter, Willie Buchanon, Rich McGeorge, Jim Carter and Ken Ellis:

"Scott, Willie, Rich, Jim, Ken:  Iā€™m so saddened by the news of Johnā€™s passing.  My condolences to all of you in losing another teammate and friend.  I feel blessed to have talked with him multiple times, to have had the opportunity to tell him the huge impact he had on my life.  Only 74.  Very upsetting.  The attached images are forever emblazoned in my memory.  My best to all of you, always."

Attachments

Images (6)
  • MacArthur Lane & John Brockington
  • Packers at Vikings - December 10, 1972
  • Packers Return to Glory cover
  • John Brockington & Scott Hunter at Lambeau 2014
  • Schumer Packer Basement
  • Steve Schumer Jan 2015
Audio (1)

   Like everybody I was soo happy when GB swooped around Chicago to draft him and he was one of my all time favorite players, He was a great soul crushing back,  a Jim Taylor like back with speed.  I was overseas and forced to listen on the radio but I still remember the Minnesota game when he rushed for a ton of yards and carried the team on his back only to lose a fumble and the game 0-3.

RIP JB another Great One gone!

@Pack88 posted:

   Like everybody I was soo happy when GB swooped around Chicago to draft him and he was one of my all time favorite players, He was a great soul crushing back,  a Jim Taylor like back with speed.  I was overseas and forced to listen on the radio but I still remember the Minnesota game when he rushed for a ton of yards and carried the team on his back only to lose a fumble and the game 0-3.

RIP JB another Great One gone!

Great memory Pack88.  Just to be clear, it was Donny Anderson that fumbled.  Brockington had an incredible game, running for 149 yards.  Look at the stats from that game -- where we outgained the Vikings 301 yards to 87 -- and realize we still lost 3-0.  One of the most unbelievable losses I've ever seen.

Video (3 min):  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnvpjtEDH0A

Stats:  https://pro-football-history.c...vikings-score-0-to-3

ammo, I had heard the same.  But found the following from this great article by Cliff Christl on John Brockington from 2017:  https://www.packers.com/news/j...was-a-beast-18736339 

On those who theorize that his collision with Cincinnati's Ken Dyer, who was left almost completely paralyzed, took a psychological toll on him: "I've heard that story, but you realize that was the third game my rookie year and I think the first quarter. I had a big game that day and had a hell of a year in '71."

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