JohnR wrote:Having recently finished Alex Hawkins' book, it was clear the admiration he had for Layne. Layne was a star when Alex was in Jr High and that's when we first begin identifying our sports heroes.
Layne's play hard and party hard lifestyle clearly resonated with The Hawk.
Speaking of his "party hard lifestyle," here's a story I heard, independently, from two people who were witnesses.
There used to be a nightclub called the Piccadilly here in New Bedford, Massachusetts. It featured a lot of jazz entertainers, including a female pianist-singer who performed there on several Saturday nights in 1959.
When she arrived to set up on one of those Saturday nights, Bobby Layne was with her. It was about 7 pm and he immediately ordered a drink. When the Pic closed at 2 am Sunday, he was passed out or asleep. Several guys got him into the entertainer's car so she could drive him to her home in Connecticut.
Layne was then with the Steelers, of course, and they were playing the Giants on Sunday afternoon. Some of the guys who had seen Layne Saturday night sought out their bookies Sunday morning so they could bet on the Giants, reasoning that Layne would be in no shape to lead his team to victory.
The Steelers won 14-9 after Layne threw a 45-yard pass in the 4th quarter...and kicked the extra point, of course.