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Alvis Forrest Gregg (October 18, 1933 – April 12, 2019) was an American professional football player and coach. A Pro Football Hall of Fame offensive tackle for 16 seasons in the National Football League (NFL), he was a part of six NFL championships, five of them with the Green Bay Packers before closing out his tenure with the Dallas Cowboys with a win in Super Bowl VI.
The 1959 Green Bay Packers season was their 39th season in the National Football League and 41st overall. The team finished with a 7–5 record in the 1959 season under first-year coach Vince Lombardi to earn a third-place finish in the Western Conference. It was the Packers' first winning season in a dozen years, the last was a 6–5–1 mark ...
Forrest Gregg, one of the standouts of the great Green Bay Packers dynasty of the 1960s, died at age 85 according to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Don Hutson was one of only two Packers players (the other being Forrest Gregg) selected for the 50th, 75th and 100th Anniversary Teams. The Green Bay Packers are a professional American football team based in Green Bay, Wisconsin.
The Green Bay Packers are a professional American football team based in Green Bay, ... Forrest Gregg, and Jerry Kramer. The defense included ... 1959, a 9–6 ...
The 1962 AP All-Pro Team included 14 Packers, the most that the team has ever had selected. [15] [7] Forrest Gregg, the Hall of Fame tackle, holds the Packers' team record for most AP All-Pro selections with eight total, while Gregg is tied with his Hall of Fame teammate Jim Ringo, a center, for the most AP All-Pro first-team selections with seven.
GREEN BAY PACKERS. 1967, Super Bowl I: Green Bay Packers 35, Kansas City Chiefs 10. 1968, Super Bowl II: Green Bay Packers 33, Oakland Raiders 14. 1969: missed playoffs. MIAMI DOLPHINS.
Lambeau, as the Packers first coach, led the team for almost 30 years until he resigned in 1949 after a falling-out with the executive leadership of the Packers. [5] During his time as head coach, Lambeau secured six NFL championships ( 1929 , 1930 , 1931 , 1936 , 1939 , and 1944 ) and won almost two-thirds of his games. [ 6 ]