Glenn
Presnell is 94 now, living in the southern Ohio town of Ironton,
not far from the Kentucky-West Virginia border. He intends to join
millions of others today in a Thanksgiving ritual, watching the
Lions play on television. Glenn Presnell and the Lions came up short
against Chicago in the 1934 Thanksgiving game, but the team feasted
on a bear dinner at the Webster Hall Hotel following the 19-16 defeat.
Presnell has a different perspective, though. He played in the Lions'
first Thanksgiving game 65 years ago -- Nov. 29, 1934.
As
they will today, the Lions played the Chicago Bears. Football historians
recall it as one of the most exciting Thanksgiving games. The Bears
won, 19-16, on a touchdown by Bronko Nagurski, one of the game's
most famous players.
Presnell
played in a backfield with Dutch Clark, Ernie Caddel and Ace Gutowsky.
He also kicked and played safety. He remembers that owner George
Richards wanted the Lions to eat bear for their Thanksgiving Day
dinner. Literally. "Prior to the game, Mr. Richards got a bear from
northern Michigan, and we were told that we were going to have a
bear dinner after the game," Presnell said. "During the football
season, the team lived at the Webster Hall Hotel on Cass Avenue
next to Wayne University. We had a big room in the basement we called
the 'Lions Den' where we loafed and played cards.
"The
hotel staff had prepared the bear, and sure enough we ate it. After
losing, it sure didn't taste very good." Presnell doesn't remember
many details from that first game. When reminded he kicked a field
goal, he recalled it, but he had forgotten about a key interception
he had thrown. With a slight chuckle, Presnell said, "I suppose
that was something I wouldn't like to remember." A crowd of 26,000
saw the game at the University of Detroit stadium in the Lions'
first season after moving from Portsmouth, Ohio.
The
Western Conference title was at stake. The defending champion Bears,
led by Nagurski and Red Grange, who sat out because of an injury,
were 11-0. The Lions were 10-1 after winning their first 10 games,
the first seven by shutout. Richards, who had purchased the Portsmouth
Spartans in March before moving the team to Detroit, convinced George
Halas, owner-coach of the Bears, to play Thanksgiving morning. As
owner of WJR, Richards used his influence with NBC radio, and the
game was broadcast coast to coast on 94 stations. Graham McNamee
was the play-by-play announcer.
The
next day, Free Press sports writer Tod Rockwell wrote: "It was a
masterful exhibition of offensive football. Two of the greatest
lines in the game waged a fierce struggle to make way for a dozen
and more versatile backs who could plunge, pass, run, and placekick,
block, and tackle." At halftime, the Lions led, 16-7, thanks to
two touchdowns by Gutowsky and a 34-yard field goal by Presnell.
Earlier in the year, Presnell kicked a 54-yard field goal -- an
NFL record for 19 years -- in a 3-0 victory over the Green Bay Packers.
Late
in the fourth quarter of the Thanksgiving game, the Bears were trailing,
16-13, when they intercepted a Presnell pass and ran it back to
the Lions 4. Nagurski hurled himself twice at the line, only to
be rejected. Rockwell wrote: "He carried the ball at the line the
third time, but as he reached it, jumped into the air and with both
hands lobbed the ball to (Bill) Hewitt, standing unguarded in the
Lion zone for the winning score." In the final minutes, the Lions
marched the ball from their 20 to the Bears 15. They could have
kicked a field goal to tie the score, but they went for the touchdown
instead and failed to get it. Presnell played for the Lions that
season after leading the NFL in scoring with Portsmouth in 1933.
He has another legacy beyond the Thanksgiving game.
"I
held out for $4,000, which was a lot of money back then," he recalled.
"When we met with Mr. Richards, my wife and I also helped select
the Lions' colors. "He had asked us to look at the different jerseys
in the next room. There were all different colors -- orange and
black, red and white, you name it. We saw that Honolulu blue and
silver and said we liked it best. So Richards chose that."
Coach Glenn Presnell
(Nebraska ’28)
3-7-0 (.300)
Presnell
took over the program for one season after serving as an assistant
under Jones. He coached only one season before leaving for the war.
He played for Coach Bearg at Nebraska from 1925-27, and was the
first of three former NU players to serve as head coach.
Important
Notes...
Glenn Presnell
was the NFC Season Scoring Leader in 1933, with 6-TD, 6-FG, 10-PAT
= PTS 64
Glenn Presnell
held the NFL Record for the Longest Field Goal of 54 Yards which was
scored against the Green Bay Packers in 1932, winning the game 3-0.
This record stood for over 19 years.