September 13: Green Bay (1-0) 10, Chicago Cardinals (0-1) 7
(GREEN BAY) - A 25-yard field goal by Ernie Smith enabled the Green Bay Packers to defeat the Chicago Cardinals for the first time in six straight games, 10 to 7. A crowd of 10,000 persons, on hand for the opener of the NFL season at Green Bay, saw Smith boot the ball squarely over the goalpost in the fourth period after Joe Laws had twisted and squirmed his way 22 yards to the Cardinals 18. Although outplaying the Cardinals throughout most of the game, Green Bay missed fire on several scoring opportunities. They trailed at the half, 7 to 0. With the ball inches from the goal line midway in the second period, Bobby Monnett fumbled a lateral pass and Bill Smith of the Cardinals scooped up the ball and raced to Green Bay's 38-yard line before he was downed by Milt Gantenbein. A pass by Charlier Sarboe, who evaded several tacklers while attempting to locate a receiver, was completed to Charlie McBride for a touchdown. The Packers evened the score in the third period. A fourth down pass from Arnie Herber to Monnett, good for 24 yards, put the ball on the Chicago three-yard line. George Sauer scored the touchdown on his second plunge through the line and Schwammel place-kicked the extra point. Later in the period the Packers missed two scoring chances. Excitement from the rough-andtumble battle between the Packers and Cardinals was blamed for the death of William Hurst, 59, Black Creek. Hurst dropped dead while watching the game. Coroner Orlen Miller said death was due to heart disease. Another sideline casualty came when Robert Denis, 21, suffered a broken back when he fell out of a tree from which he was witnessing the contest. His condition was critical.
CHI CARDS -   0  7  0  0  -  7
GREEN BAY -   0  0  7  3  - 10
2nd - CHI - Charlie McBride, 38-yard pass from Phil Sarboe (Clarence Kellogg kick)  CARDINALS 7-0
3rd - GB - Sauer run (Schwammel kick)  CHICAGO CARDINALS 7-3
4th - GB - E. Smith, 25-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 10-7
September 20: Chicago Bears (1-0) 30, Green Bay (1-1) 3
(GREEN BAY) - Displaying a powerful offense in the second half, the Chicago Bears won a brilliant game from the Green Bay Packers, trouncing them 30 to 3. A crowd of more than 14,000 persons watched the Bears take a 10 to 3 lead at the half and then come back to smash and pass their way to three more touchdowns in the second half. Chicago was given a stiff battle by Green Bay in the first half, but in the last two periods the Bears turned on the power to hand the Packers a crushing defeat. The Bears clicked when scoring opportunities loomed whereas the Packer offense stumbled and faltered in the pinches. A 26-yard field goal by Ade Schwammell matched Jack Manders' 36-yard field goal for a 3 to 3 tie. Then a forward pass, followed by a double lateral, Keith Molesworth to Bill Hewitt to Luke Johnsos to Gene Ronzani, gave Chicago a touchdown from the Green Bay 30-yard line. Early in the third period Chicago opened a drive from their own 20 which carried them to the Packer 7-yard line. A pass from Nolting to Hewitt scored a touchdown. Early in the fourth quarter, the Bears moved down the field to score a touchdown on a pass from Molesworth to Brumbaugh. The final Chicago score came midway in the fourth period when Karr circled left end from the 9-yard line on an end around play. A thrilling 62-yard touchdown play by Swede Johnson on a pass brought the crowd to its feet in the closing minutes but the play was called back because of a Packer offside.
CHI BEARS -   3  7  6 14  - 30
GREEN BAY -   0  3  0  0  -  3
1st - CHI - Jack Manders, 36-yard field goal  CHICAGO BEARS 3-0
2nd - GB - Schwammel, 26-yard field goal  TIED 3-3
2nd - CHI - Gene Ronzani, 12-yard lateral from Luke Johnsos after lateral from Bill Hewitt after pass from Keith Molesworth (Manders kick)  CHICAGO 10-3
3rd - CHI - Hewitt, 12-yard pass from Ray Nolting (Kick failed)  BEARS 16-3
4th - CHI - Carl Brumbaugh, 5-yard pass from Molesworth (Manders kick)  BEARS 23-3
4th - CHI - Bill Karr, 9-yard run (Manders kick)  CHICAGO BEARS 30-3
October 4: Green Bay (2-1) 24, Chicago Cardinals (0-3) 0
(MILWAUKEE) - Repeating an early season victory in more convincing fashion, the Green Bay Packers smothered the Chicago Cardinals under a hard-driving attack here, 24 to 0. After the first quarter it was all Green Bay, with the northern team displaying a smooth functioning running game and a timely pass offense to score in three periods. The Cardinals threatened only once, late in the final period, when a series of passes brought the ball to the Packer 5-yard line. Green Bay scored its first touchdown in the second period after a 55-yard drive down the field. A 20-yard pass from Arnie Herber to Hank Bruder started the drive. Monnett then broke through right tackle to the 11 and three plays later Swede Johnson rammed the ball home on a line plunge. A march of 66 yards later in the same period, featured by Herber's passes and runs by Clark  Hinkle and George Sauer, resulted in another touchdown. Hinkle smashed through center from the 2-yard line for the score and Ade Schwammel converted from placement for a Packer lead of 14 to 0 at the half. After Tiny Engebretsen placekicked a field goal from the 35-yard line in the third period, the Packers added the final touchdown on a 41-yard run around left end by Joe Laws. Aided by fine blocking, Laws did a brilliant bit of open field running, reversing his field twice. Hank Bruder intercepted a Chicago pass in the closing minutes of the game to halt the final  Cardinal threat.
CHI CARDS -   0  0  0  0  -  0
GREEN BAY -   0 14  3  7  - 24
2nd - GB - Johnson run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
2nd - GB - Hinkle run (Schwammel kick)  GREEN BAY 14-0
3rd - GB - Engebretsen, 35-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 17-0
4th - GB - Laws, 41-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 24-0
October 11: Green Bay (3-1) 31, Boston (2-3) 2
(GREEN BAY) - Scoring in every period, the Green Bay Packers baffled the Boston Redskins with a driving ground attack and brilliant aerial thrusts to hang up an easy 31 to 2 victory. Wasting little time, the Packers scored early in the first period on a 38-yard pass from Arnie Herber to Don Hutson, fast-stepping end. Green Bay moved into scoring position again in the second period with an attack featured by some brilliant running by Bobby Monnett. A pass, this time from Herber to Johnny Blood, who was playing his first game of the season for the Packers, was good for a score. Blood made a beautiful leaping catch of the ball. Between these first half touchdowns the accurate toe of Ernie Smith was good for three points on a field goal from the Boston 30-yard stripe. Continuing their impressive ground gaining attack in the second period, the Packers worked the ball to the Boston 22-yard line in the third period from which point a forward pass from Joe Laws to Paul Miller scored a touchdown. Green Bay scored its fourth touchdown at the start of the finalperiod when Bernard Scherer intercepted a Boston pass and ran 50 yards to a touchdown. Boston scored its two points in the third period when a pass from center on the Green Bay 5-yard line shot past Swede Johnson and landed in the end zone for an automatic safety.
BOSTON    -   0  0  2  0  -  2
GREEN BAY -  10  7  7  7  - 31
1st - GB - Hutson, 38-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
1st - GB - Smith, 30-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 10-0
2nd - GB - Blood, 38-yard pass from Monnett (Schwammel kick)  GREEN BAY 17-0
3rd - GB - P.Miller, 22-yard pass from Laws (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 24-0
3rd - BOST - Safety, Green Bay fumbled out of the end zone  GREEN BAY 24-2
4th - GB - Scherer, 50-yard interception return (Clemens kick)  GREEN BAY 31-2
October 18: Green Bay (4-1) 20, Detroit (2-1) 18
(GREEN BAY) - In one of the most sensational games this football-minded town ever has witnessed, the Green Bay Packers pounded back with an almost unbelievable finish to snatch victory from the Detroit Lions, NFL champions, by a 20 to 18 score. A crowd of 13,500 was left almost breathless as Paul (Tiny) Engebretsen booted an 18-yard field goal in the waning minutes of the game for the winning margin after Detroit had rallied to e fourth period lead and apparent victory. Engebretsen scored the first and the last points of the game. Early in the opening period he kicked a field goal from the 40-yard line to give the Packers the lead. Trailing 10 to 0 at half time, the Lions fought brilliantly to take the play from the Packers. Ernie Caddel sprinted through tackle for 28 yards and a touchdown in the third period. In the same quarter, Detroit scored a safety when Arnie Herber was downed behind his own goal when attempting to pass, to leave the Green Bay margin at 10 to 9. A withering line attack by the two powerhouses, Ace Gutowsky and Caddel, again brought the ball deep into Packer territory in the fourth period and then Clark passed to Caddel for a touchdown. Clark, however, missed the extra point. With his team trailing, 15 to 10, Johnny Blood sparked Green Bay to a downfield drive which ended with Blood snaring a 46-yard forward pass from Herber and stumbling over the goal for a touchdown.  Detroit came right back and Clark's field goal from the 28-yard line gave the Lions the lead again, 18 to 17, with only minutes to play. But the Packers had one last drive left and marched down the field to set the scene for Engebretsen's deciding field goal.
DETROIT   -   0  0  9  9  - 18
GREEN BAY -   3  7  0 10  - 20
1st - GB - Engebretsen, 40-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 3-0
2nd - GB - Gantenbein, 22-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 10-0
3rd - DET - Ernie Caddel, 28-yard run (Dutch Clark kick)  GREEN BAY 10-7
3rd - DET - Safety, Herber tackled in the end zone by Jack Johnson  G. BAY 10-9
4th - DET - Caddel, 14-yard pass from Clark (Kick failed)  DETROIT 15-10
4th - GB - Blood, 46-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 17-15
4th - DET - Clark, 28-yard field goal  DETROIT 18-17
4th - GB - Engebretsen, 18-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 20-18
October 25: Green Bay (5-1) 42, Pittsburgh (4-3) 10
(MILWAUKEE) - Bewildering the Pirates with a brilliant pass attack, the Packers smothered their eastern opponents by a score of 42 to 10. A crowd of 10,000 persons watched the Packers come back after Pittsburgh took an early lead and demoralize the Pirates with their deadly passing game. Not only did the Packers score on their own passes but they consistently intercepted Pittsburgh tosses to run for counters or good gains. Five minutes after Pittsburgh took a 3 to 0 lead through Armand Niccolai's place kick from the 30-yard line early in the0 game, Green Bay scored a touchdown. After that it was a rout as the Bays added three more in the second quarter and two in the third period. After each touchdown they converted for the extra points. Don Hutson and Paul Miller led the Green Bay scoring with two touchdowns apiece. Pittsburgh chalked up 14 first downs against 13 for Green Bay, but their gains were made mostly in midfield. A 12-yard touchdown pass from Bob
Monnett to Joe Laws started the Green Bay fireworks in the first period. Then Arnie Herber began tossing the ball to Miller and Hutson for long gains and capped the attack with a 21-yard pass to Hutson for a touchdown. Miller then intercepted a Pirate pass and returned it to the 26 and three plays later Herber shot the ball to Hutson for another touchdown. Late in the period Johnny Blood intercepted another Pittsburgh pass and raced 58 yards to score. The Packers failed to cool down after the intermission and Miller scored from the 2-yard line after runs and passes had brought the ball down the field. A few minutes later an intercepted pass by Miller led to the final Green Bay score. Miller took a short pass from Blood for the touchdown. With the score standing 42 to 3, Pittsburgh marched down the field in the final period and Bull Karcis plunged over.
PITTSBURGH -   3  0  0  7  - 10
GREEN BAY  -   7 21 14  0  - 42
1st - PITT - Armand Niccolai, 30-yard field goal  PITTSBURGH 3-0
1st - GB - Laws, 12-yard pass from Monnett (Engebretsen kick)  GREEN BAY 7-3
2nd - GB - Huston, 21-yard pass from Herber (Schwammel kick)  GREEN BAY 14-3
2nd - GB - Huston, 11-yard pass from Herber (Schwammel kick)  GREEN BAY 21-3
2nd - GB - Blood, 58-yard interception return (Hinkle kick)  GREEN BAY 28-3
3rd - GB - P.Miller, 2-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 35-3
3rd - GB - P.Miller, 7-yard pass from Blood (Blood run)  GREEN BAY 42-3
4th - PITT - Bull Karcis, 1-yard run (Karcis run)  GREEN BAY 42-10
November 1: Green Bay (6-1) 21, Chicago Bears (6-1) 10
(CHICAGO) - Thanks to the colorful and powerful Green Bay Packers, the NFL's Western Division race was a "toss up" affair. The Packers abandoned their aerial attack for straight football and defeated the Chicago Bears 21 to 10 yesterday before 31,346 fans, the largest crowd ever to see a professional game here. The defeat was the Bears' first in seven games and left them tied with the Packers in the western section race at six wins each, one defeat and no ties. Jack Manders' field goal and Bill Hewitt's touchdown, scored on a fumbled punt, put Chicago ahead early in the contest. The Packers retailiated with Don Hutson scoring on a pass from Arnie Herber after a long Packer running drive and Clark Hinkle smashing through with a fifty-nine-yard touchdown sprint. George Sauer scored the final Green Bay touchdown after Milt Gantenbein scooped the ball on a fumbled lateral and ran thirty-four yards to the Bear three-yard line.
GREEN BAY -   0 14  0  7  - 21
CHI BEARS -  10  0  0  0  - 10
1st - CHI - Jack Manders, 23-yard field goal  CHICAGO BEARS 3-0
1st - CHI - Bill Hewitt, 53-yard fumble return (Manders kick)  BEARS 10-0
2nd - GB - Hutson, 9-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  CHICAGO BEARS 10-7
2nd - GB - Hinkle, 59-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 14-10
4th - GB - Sauer, 2-yard run (Engebretsen kick)  GREEN BAY 21-10
November 8: Green Bay (7-1) 7, Boston (4-4) 3
(BOSTON) - Displaying one of their famed aerial attacks, the high-flying Green Bay Packers defeated the hard-working Boston Redskins at Fenway Park, 7 to 3. A crowd of 10,000 persons watched Green Bay keep pace with the Chicago Bears in first place in the western division of the NFL. Although Boston outrushed the Packers 11 first downs to seven and 114 yards to 18, the best the Redskins could do was register a field
goal in the first period when Riley Smith booted a placement from the 15-yard line. Green Bay came from behind in the third period on a stunning pass attack with Arnie Herber doing the throwing. A 55-yard march was climaxed with a 20-yard toss from Herber to Don Hutson, who carried the ball over the goal line. The game more or less see-sawed, with one team holding the advantage for a time and then the other. Both Green Bay and Boston muffed several scoring chances. Boston never was able to function with its running atack inside of the Packers' 20 yard marker and most of the Redskins desperate passes, particularly in the fourth period, were intercepted.
GREEN BAY -   0  0  7  0  -  7
BOSTON    -   3  0  0  0  -  3
1st - BOST - Riley Smith, 15-yard field goal  BOSTON 3-0
3rd - GB - Huston, 20-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-3
November 15: Green Bay (8-1) 38, Brooklyn (2-5-1) 7
(BROOKLYN) - Varying a smashing running attack with a dazzling aerial offensive, the powerful Green Bay Packers routed the Brooklyn Dodgers, 38 to 7, before 25,325 persons. Dominating the play throughout the game, the Packers scored a field goal in the first quarter, two touchdowns in the second period and three more in the third. The Dodgers, who were unable to advance farther than the Green Bay 33-yard line until the final period, averted a shutout by driving 60 yards to a touchdown in the closing minutes of play. A 70-yard march by the Dodgers in the same period ended when Green Bay intercepted a pass on its own nine. Paul Engebretsen began the rout with a 23-yard field goal in the first period. In the second period a blocked kick by Ernie Smith on the Brooklyn 17 was converted into a touchdown when Arnie Herber passed to Don Hutson over the goal line.
GREEN BAY -   3 14 21  0  - 38
BROOKLYN  -   0  0  0  7  -  3
1st - GB - Engebretsen, 23-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 3-0
2nd - GB - Hutson, 5-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 10-0
2nd - GB - Hutson, 12-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 17-0
3rd - GB - Hinkle, 1-yard run (Monnett kick)  GREEN BAY 24-0
3rd - GB - Laws, 5-yard pass from Monnett (Monnett kick)  GREEN BAY 31-0
3rd - GB - Becker, 14-yard pass from Monnett (Monnett kick)  GREEN BAY 38-0
4th - PITT - Bobby Wilson, 12-yard pass from Phil Sarboe (Dick Crayne kick)  GB 38-7
November 22: Green Bay (9-1) 26, New York (4-5-1) 14
(NEW YORK) - Bringing their dazzling aerial display to the Polo Grounds, the Green Bay Packers routed the New York Giants, 26 to 14, before 25,000 persons. The victory kept Green Bay in a tie with the Chicago Bears at the top of the NFL's Western Division. The Packers began with a 34-yard field goal by Ernie Smith late in the first period, but reserved the real firewoiks for the second half, scoring two touchdowns in the third period and another in the fourth. They added two more points when one of Tony Sarausky's punts was blocked by Smith and rolled into the end zone for an automatic safety. A 67-yard drive following the second half kickoff accounted for the first Packer touchdown. Clark Hinkle pounded over from the one-yard line. Later in the same period, Arnie Herber passed to Hal Schneidman who caught the ball in the clear and ran 24 yards for a touchdown. The play was good for 46 yards.  George Sauer went over from the 11 yard line for the last score after Hank Bruder had intercepted a pass. Although outplayed throughout the first half, the Giants began to click in the third quarter. The fine all-around play of Sarausky featured their rally. New York marched 80 yards to a touchdown with Sarausky carrying the ball across from the 1-yard marker for the first tally. Early in the fourth period, a 41-yard run by Kink Richards and a pass over the goal line from Sarausky to Leland Shaffer scored the second tally.
GREEN BAY -   3  0 14  9  - 26
NEW YORK  -   0  0  7  7  - 14
1st - GB - Smith, 34-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 3-0
3rd - GB - Hinkle, 1-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 10-0
3rd - GB - Schneidman, 46-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 17-0
3rd - NY - Tony Sarausky, 1-yard run (Tilly Manton kick)  GREEN BAY 17-7
4th - NY - Leland Shaffer, 17-yard pass from Sarausky (Manton kick)  G. BAY 17-14
4th - GB - Safety, Smith blocked punt out of the end zone  GREEN BAY 19-14
4th - GB - Sauer, 11-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 26-14
November 29: Green Bay (10-1) 26, Detroit (6-4) 17
(DETROIT) - The powerful Green Bay Packers held the Western Division championship by virtue of a 26 to 17 victory over the Detroit Lions, last year's champions. The Chicago Cardinals made the championship a certainty by defeating the Chicago Bears 14 to 7 at Chicago, dropping them two games behind the Packers. Twenty-two thousand chilled spectators watched Detroit and Green Bay engage in a brilliant offensive battle, featured by the work of the Packer passing combination, Arnie Herber to Don Hutson. This pair produced a touchdown in the first minute of play and the Packers, were never headed although Detroit tied the score twice. Green Bay made a second touchdown in the first period, a third in the second quarter, and then added two field goals in the final half.
GREEN BAY -  14  6  3  3  - 26
DETROIT   -   7  7  3  0  - 17
1st - GB - Hutson, 58-yard pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
1st - DET - Dutch Clark, 1-yard run (Clark kick)  TIED 7-7
1st - GB - Hinkle, 4-yard run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 14-7
2nd - DET - Bill Shepherd, 38-yard fumble return (Glenn Presnell kick)  TIED 14-14
2nd - GB - Hutson, 40-yard blocked punt return (Kick failed)  GREEN BAY 20-14
3rd - GB - Engebretsen, 23-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 23-14
3rd - DET - Clark, 25-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 23-17
4th - GB - Smith, 38-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 26-17
December 6: Green Bay (10-1-1) 0, Chi Cardinals (3-8-1) 0 (Tie)
(CHICAGO) - The powerful Green Bay Packers, champions of the Western Division closed their regular season by battling the Chicago Cardinals to a scoreless tie. Green Bay, using reserves during the greater part of the game, left the match in fine shape for next Sunday's league title clash with the Boston Redskins. A crowd of 5,000 persons saw the game, played in near-zero weather and on an ice-covered field. Outplaying Green Bay, the Cardinals drove to the Packer four-yard line once, but didn't have a scoring punch. They muffed two other scoring chances, but kept the Green Bay offensive from doing damage. Tiny Engebretsen missed a field goal attempt from the 27-yard line in the third period. Ernie Smith and Mike Mikulak were ordered from the game in the final period for trading punches. Arnie Herber and Clark Hinkle were sent into the Packer backfield in the last quarter after Joe Laws, Bobby Monnett and Swede Johnston had carried the Packer offensive load for most of the game. The other regular backs were given a rest.
GREEN BAY -   0  0  0  0  -  0
CHI CARDS -   0  0  0  0  -  0
Green Bay Packers (10-1-1) 21, Boston Redskins (7-5) 6
(New York) - Although New York was not represented in the title playoff, the game was played at the Polo Grounds because George Preston Marshall, upset with Boston support, was shifting his Redskins franchise to Washington D.C. In front of 29,545, Don Hutson caught a 48-yard touchdown pass from Arnie Herber in the first three minutes, and the Packers never trailed. Green Bay's two second-half scores were set up, respectively, by a 52-yard pass from Herber to Johnny Blood and when Lon Evans blocked a punt.
NAME             NO   POS  HGT WGT         COLLEGE YR PR  A  G HOW ACQUIRED
Wayland Becker   32     E 6- 0 183       Marquette  1  3 25 11 Free Agent - Brook (1935)
Hank Bruder    18/27    B 6- 0 197    Northwestern  6  6 28 11
Frank Butler   48/59    C 6- 3 246     Michigan St  3  3 27 11
Cal Clemens       33    B 6- 1 195             USC  1  1 27  9
T. Engebretsen 34/52    G 6- 1 238    Northwestern  3  5 26 12 Free Agent - Brook (1934)
Lon Evans         51    G 6- 2 223             TCU  4  4 24 12
Milt Gantenbein   22    E 6- 0 208       Wisconsin  6  6 26  9
Buckets Goldenberg44  G-B 5-10 212       Wisconsin  4  4 24  7
Lou Gordon        53    T 6- 5 235        Illinois  1  7 30 12 Free Agent - Cards (1935)
Arnie Herber      38    B 5-11 195           Regis  7  7 26 12
Clarke Hinkle     41   FB 5-11 202        Bucknell  5  5 27 12
Don Hutson        14    E 6- 1 180         Alabama  2  2 23 12
Swede Johnston 15/54    B 5-10 192       Marquette  4  5 26 10 Free Agent - St. L (1934)
Walt Kiesling  49/60    G 6- 3 248 St. Thomas (MN)  2 11 33  9 Free Agent - Bears (1935)
Joe Laws          29    B 5- 9 186            Iowa  3  3 25 12
Russ Letlow    46/62    G 6- 0 203   San Francisco  1  1 22 10 1936 Draft - 1st round
Harry Mattos      23    B 6- 0 201  St. Marys (CA)  1  1 25  2
*-Johnny McNally  55    B 6- 0 190      St. John's  7 12 32  8 Free Agent - Pitt (1935)
Paul Miller        3    B 5-10 175    S. Dakota St  1  1 23 12
Bob Monnett     5/12    B 5- 9 181     Michigan St  6  6 26 12
Tony Paulekas     39  C-G 5-10 207 Washington-Jeff  1  1 24 11
Al Rose           47    E 6- 3 195           Texas  5  7 29  2 Free Agent - Prov (1932)
George Sauer      25    B 6- 2 208        Nebraska  2  2 25 10
Bernie Scherer    40    E 6- 1 183        Nebraska  1  1 23 10 1936 Draft - 3rd round
Herm Schneidman    4  E-B 5-10 205            Iowa  2  2 22  7
Ade Schwammel  50/57    T 6- 2 232       Oregon St  3  3 27 12
Champ Seibold  37/58    T 6- 4 230       Wisconsin  3  3 23 12
Ernie Smith    45/61    T 6- 2 221             USC  2  2 26 12
George Svendsen   43    C 6- 4 224       Minnesota  2  2 23 11
* - Known as Johnny Blood
NO - Jersey Number POS - Position HGT - Height WGT - Weight YR - Years with Packers PR - Years of Professional Football AGE - Age at Start of Season G - Games  Played
1936 PACKERS DRAFT
RND SEL NAME               POS COLLEGE 
1     7 Russ Letlow          G San Francisco
2    16 J.W. Wheeler         T Oklahoma    
3    25 Ernie Scherer        E Nebraska    
4    34 Theron Ward          B Idaho       
5    43 Darrell Lester       C Texas Christian
6    52 Bob Reynolds         T Stanford
7    61 Wally Fromhart       B Notre Dame
8    70 Wally Cruice         B Northwestern
GREEN BAY    -   0   0   0   0  - 62
WISCONSIN    -   0   0   0   0  -  0
September 5: Green Bay 62, Wisconsin Cardinals 0
(GREEN BAY) - The Green Bay Packers defeated the Wisconsin Cardinals of Madison here Saturday night 62 to 0, with Paul Miller and Wayland Becker each acoring two touchdowns.
GREEN BAY -   7  0  7  7  - 21
BOSTON    -   0  6  0  0  -  6
1st - GB - Hutson 48 pass from Herber (E.Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
2nd - BOS - Pug Rentner 2 run (Kick failed)  GREEN BAY 7-6
3rd - GB - Gantenbein, 8-yard pass from Herber (E.Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 14-6
4th - GB - Monnett, 2-yard run (Engebretsen kick)  GREEN BAY 21-6
football clubs, dickered today for a rematch following their tie yesterday. With a victory apiece registered during the regular pro season, the deadlock failed to decide a rivalry that flared into open fisticuffs. Beattie Feathers, 177-pound Bear fullback, and 235-pound Lou Gordon, Packer tackle, were ejected from yesterday's game for fighting, and storm clouds hovered up and down the opposing fronts. A crowd of 10,000 saw the game. Trouble started when Arnie Herber, after firing the first Packer touchdown pass to Milt Gantenbein, left the field with a broken nose, charging the Bears slugged him.
GREEN BAY  -   7  10   0  10   - 20
CHI BEARS  -   0   7   7   6   - 20
1st - GB - Gantenbein pass from Herber (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
2nd - GB - Laws, 48-yard pass from Monnett (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 14-0
2nd - CHI - Joe Stydahar, 55-yard interception return (Manders kick)  GB 14-7
2nd - GB - Smith, 23-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 17-7
3rd - CHI - Johnson pass from Brumbaugh (Manders kick)  GREEN BAY 17-14
4th - CHI - Manders, 34-yard field goal  TIED 17-17
4th - GB - Smith, 18-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 20-17
4th - CHI - Manders, 25-yard field goal  TIED 20-20
January 31: Green Bay 17, Chicago Bears 14
(LOS ANGELES) - The Green Bay Packers ended their post-season professional football war with the Chicago Bears in victory yesterday, when Paul Engebretsen, bulky guard, kicked a 35-yard field goal in the last minute of play. The teams, bitter NFL, played a 20-20 tie here last Sunday. Twelve thousand fans watched Sunday's battle at Gilmore Stadium. Scoring twice in the first period on power plays and holding the Bears to one touchdown in the second, Green Bay ended the half with a 14-7 lead. The Bears tied the count after a 66-yard march down the field with Jack Manders, hallback, leading the attack and making the score. With less than two minutes to play, Manders attempted a field goal from the 42-yard line, Ernie Smith blocked the try and recovered the ball on the Bear 25. On the next play Engebretsen booted the ball through the uprights for the winning tally.
GREEN BAY  -  14   0   0   3   - 17
CHI BEARS  -   0   7   7   0   - 14
1st - GB - Sauer run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 7-0
1st - GB - Laws run (Smith kick)  GREEN BAY 14-0
2nd - CHI - Richard Masterson run (Manders kick)  GREEN BAY 14-7
3rd - CHI - Manders run (Manders kick)  TIED 14-14
4th - GB - Engegretsen, 35-yard field goal  GREEN BAY 17-14
January 1: Green Bay 21, Brooklyn 13
(DENVER) - Green Bay, champions of the NFL, scored three touchdowns in the final period for a 21-13 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers in a New Year's day exhibition game. Despite a snow-coated gridiron and temperatures well below the freezing point, more than 6,000 attended. George Sauer, Packer left half, scored all three touchdowns, one on a 23-yard run and the other two on short plunges He raced 60 yards around right end to make the last score possible. Jim Hartman scored one Brooklyn touchdown and Jeff Barrett the other, both catching accurate passes from Phil Sarboe.
GREEN BAY -   7  0  7  7  - 21
BROOKLYN  -   0  6  0  0  - 13
GB TD: George Sauer 3
January 10: Green Bay 42, Salinas 7
(SAN FRANCISCO) - The Green Bay Packers gave a convincing demonstration yesterday of why they rule the NFL with a crushing 42-7 victory over the Salinas Iceberg Packers, Pacific coast champions. Behind tremendous ground power and bullet-like passes, the national championship aggregation rolled .to six touchdowns, two in each of the first three periods. The coast team was so badly outclassed the game hardly developed into a contest. The Salinas squad nevertheless came up with the most thrilling play of the game. It was an 85-yard run of a kickoff to a touchdown, with Quarterback George Tharp taking the ball, returning it 45 yards and then lateralling to Loren Grannis, center, who raced on to score.
GREEN BAY -  14 14 14  0  - 42
SALINAS   -   0  0  0  7  -  7
Green Bay: Touchdowns - Miller, Hinkle; Gantenbein, Becker, Svendsen, Scherer Point after touchdown - Hinkle 2, Schwammel 2, Engebretsen 2 Salinas: Touchdown - Grannis Point after touchdown - Storm
January 17: Green Bay 49, Los Angeles 0
(LOS ANGELES) - Crushing the pride of local pro football, the Los Angeles Bulldogs, the Packers started preparations today to meet the Bears here next Sunday. A crowd of 12,000 at Gilmore Stadium saw the Packers push the Bulldogs all over the lot. The top heavy score was a distinct surprise, the locals having defeated three NFL clubs, tied another and lost a 7-0 decision to the Bears. The Packers scored twice in the first period, three times in the second, once in the third and twice in the last quarter. The local pro club, with a record of 205 points scored to opponents 72 in nine games this season, was unable to get past midfield until the third quarter.
GREEN BAY    -  14  14   7   14   - 49
LOS ANGELES  -   -   -   -    -   -  0
January 24: Green Bay 20, Chicago Bears 20 (T)
(LOS ANGELES) - Managers of the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears, barnstorming professional
1936 IN REVIEW: After defeating the Chicago Cardinals in the first week of the season, the Packers were embarrassed at home by the Chicago Bears 30-3. However, the loss would prove to be a turning point rather then a setback as Green Bay would not lose again before tying the Cardinals in Chicago in a meaningless game at the end of the season. The Packers already had the Western Division sewn up, and were set to play the Boston Redskins in the NFL Championship Game. The game was played in New York, as the Redskins were in the middle of relocating to Washington. Don Hutson scored on a 48-yard TD pass in the first 3 minutes, as the Packers never looked back winning their 4th Championship, and first in the modern era 21-6.
1936 PRE-SEASON RESULTS (1-0) - SEPTEMBER (1-0)
5  G-WISCONSIN CARDINALS                 W 62- 0    1-0-0    2,000
1936 RESULTS (8-4) - SEPTEMBER (1-1)
13 G-CHICAGO CARDINALS (0-0-0)           W 10- 7    1-0-0    8,900
20 G-CHICAGO BEARS (0-0-0)               L  3-30    1-1-0   14,312
OCTOBER (4-0)
4  M-CHICAGO CARDINALS (0-2-0)           W 24- 0    2-1-0   11,000
11 G-BOSTON REDSKINS (2-2-0)             W 31- 2    3-1-0    6,100
18 G-DETROIT LIONS (2-0-0)               W 20-18    4-1-0   13,500
25 M-PITTSBURGH PIRATES (4-2-0)          W 42-10    5-1-0   10,000
NOVEMBER (5-0)
1  at Chicago Bears (6-0-0)              W 21-10    6-1-0   31,346
8  at Boston Redskins (4-3-0)            W  7- 3    7-1-0   11,220
15 at Brooklyn Dodgers (2-4-1)           W 38- 7    8-1-0   25,325
22 at New York Giants (4-4-1)            W 26-14    9-1-0   20,000
29 at Detroit Lions (6-3-0)              W 26-17   10-1-0   22,000
DECEMBER (1-0)
6  at Chicago Cardinals (3-8-0)          T  0- 0   10-1-1    4,793
1936 POST-SEASON RESULTS (1-0) - NFL CHAMPIONSHIP
13 Boston Redskins at New York (7-5-0)   W 21- 6            29,545
1936 POST-SEASON EXHIBITIONS (4-0-1) - JANUARY
1  Brooklyn Dodgers at Denver            W 21-13             6,000
10 Salinas Icebergs at San Francisco     W 42- 7             2,500
17 at Los Angeles Bulldogs               W 49- 0            12,000
24 Chicago Bears at Los Angeles          T 20-20            10,000
31 Chicago Bears at Los Angeles          W 17-14            12,000
9    79 J.C. Wetsel          G Southern Methodist
BOLD - Played for the Packers
Packers at Giants Program - 22 November
1936 Championship - Packers versus Redskins
1936 Green Bay Packers