Green Bay Packer, Detroit Lion, or US President?
![gerry Gerald Ford, Jr. out on the football field at the University of Michigan, 1933 [GRF-WHPO-H0035(03)]](http://blogs.archives.gov/prologue/wp-content/uploads/gerry.gif)
Gerald Ford, Jr. out on the football field at the University of Michigan, 1933 [GRF-WHPO-H0035(03)
But in 1935, playing football wasn’t the glitzy well-funded enterprise it is today. That’s the year the Green Bay Packers went looking for a center, and found future President Gerald Ford. They offered President Ford $110 bucks a game. Over the course of a season—14 games—that means Ford would’ve squirreled away $1,540, about $24,000 bucks in 2011 dollars, if he had accepted the draft deal.
Ford declined this offer, and another offer from the Detroit Lions to play professional football, and instead made his way over into Yale to study law, then to the Navy to serve his country, then to the House of Representatives, and finally to the White House where, thankfully, the salary was a bit better.
You can learn more at the Gerald Ford Presidential Library’s Facebook page.
Posted by Rob Crotty on February 2, 2011, under - Presidents, Myth or History.
Tags: $110 bucks, Detroit Lion, football, Gerald Ford Presidential Library, Navy, Packers, President Ford, Steelers, Superbowl, White House, Yale
Comments: 1


Comment from Robert Cherny
Time February 2, 2011 at 7:02 pm
Not only was the pay better, but there were fewer dangers from concussions.
[Reply]