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What happened on this date, November 10, in 1928? Clue, it involved college football.
 

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Thanks, one more week of fav's covering would of been the end of me in the contest so I hope I can turn it around.
 

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"Win one for the Gipper".

<HR align=left width=700>The story is resurrected every football season. The retelling of Knute Rockne's
last conversation with the greatest player he'd ever coached; George Gipp.




Gipp contracted strep throat in Notre Dame's last game of the 1920 season against
Northwestern. The infection worsened during the following weeks, and Gipp was
confined to hospital bed at the St. Joseph's Hospital in South Bend. He was visited
by Rockne in the hospital on the evening of December 13, 1920 - just hours before
he died at the age of 25. But not before extracting a promise from his coach of
some distant and unknown Notre Dame team.


It was to be eight years before Rockne asked a beleaguered Notre Dame team to
make good of the Gipper's deathbed request. And this is how it happened:


Knute Rockne was desperate. His 1928 team, decimated by injuries, already had
lost two of it's first six games. Three powerful teams - Army, Carnegie Tech and
Southern California loomed on the schedule before the season (the worst in
Rockne's illustrious coaching career) would mercifully draw to a close. Rockne
knew that if his Ramblers could upend Army - winner of six straight games - in
Yankee Stadium, a losing record could be averted. His critics were claiming he's
lost his touch; the magic was gone.


But Rockne knew better. The week of the game he quietly told his neighbours
that Notre Dame would beat Army. Rockne had a plan. His team might not be
able to win on talent, but Notre Dame would win on emotion and spirit. Rockne
would deliver what would later become the most famous pep-talk in sports history.
After pre-game warm-ups, Rockne huddled his players in the locker room. They
laid down on Warld War I blankets that covered the cold, clammy floor. Rockne
waited until the room was silent.


He lowered his head before speaking. He began slowly - telling the team about
George Gipp, a Notre Dame player who had died during his senior season eight
years ago. Although none of the players had known Gipp personally, each and
every one of them had heard of his exploits. They knew Gipp had been the
greatest player of his time. Rockne who had been at Gipp's bedside, repeated
the young athlete's last wish.


Gipp's last words was when he said to Rockne: "I've got to go, Rock. It's allright.
I'm not afraid. Some time, Rock, when the team is up against it, when things
are wrong and the breaks are beating the boys, tell them to go in there with all
they've got and win just one for the Gipper. I don't know where I'll be then,
Rock, but I'll know about it, and I'll be happy."


Rockne continued: "The day before he died George Gipp asked me to wait until
the situation seemed hopeless - then ask a Notre Dame team to go out and beat
Army for him. This is the day, and you are the team". "There was no one in the
room that wasn't crying", recalled line coach Ed Healey. "There was a moment
of silence, and then all of a sudden those players ran out of the dressing room
and almost tore the hinges off the door. They were all ready to kill someone".


Army didn't have a chance. After falling behind 6-0 in the third period, Notre
Dame scored two touchdowns and held off a last-chance rally by the Cadets
for a 12-6 win. Jack Chevigny tied the score at 6-6 with a one-yard plunge.
As he picked himself up in the end zone, he jumped up and shouted :
"That's one for the Gipper".


The emotional Chevigny was helping Notre Dame drive towards it's final and
winning score in the last quarter when he was injured. Rockne was forced to
take him out and replace Chevigny with Bill Drew. Reerve Johnny O'Brien,
a willowy hurdler for the track team, took Johnny Colrick's place at left end.
The Irish were 32 yard away from the goal line. Left halfback Butch Niemiec
took the ball, looked downfield to O'Brien and flung a wobbly pass over an
Army defender. O'Brien hauled the ball in on the 10-yard line, squeezed past
two tacklers and dove into the end zone for the winning touchdown. O'Brien
never played a down of football again, but "One-Play O'Brien" was a legimate
hero to Irish fans.
As O'Brien scored, the Notre Dame bench erupted in woops and hollars.
The injured Chevigny cried on the sidelines : "That's one for the Gipper too".
Even Rockne showed his satisfiction with the play. "You could see a great,
big smile on his face", said quarterback Frank Carideo. "He was happy when
[size=+1]things created during the week, were used to perfection in the ballgame". [/size]
 

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