THE B TEAM
Replacement players remember the 1987 season by Adam Czech
W
hen Kevin Fitzgerald signed with the Green Bay Packers, he had no idea what a seven route was. He’d never caught a pass or played a snap of offense in his life, actually. But during his first practice as a tight end for one of the most storied franchises in the NFL, Fitzgerald wasn’t going to let those minor details slow him down. Fitzgerald signed with the Packers as a replacement players when NFL players went on strike following the second week of the 1987 season. He joined 44 other replacement Packers on a sunny fall day in late September for the new team’s first practice. It was a roster of new faces, all trying to make the most of a unique opportunity to fulfill their NFL dreams. The 6’3”, 235-pound Fitzgerald was a standout defensive end at Wisconsin-Eau Claire. But when he didn’t make an NFL roster, he returned to Eau Claire with teammate and friend Lee Weigel as an assistant coach. When NFL players went on strike, Fitzgerald and Weigel saw an opportunity. They called Packers personnel director Tom Braatz and asked for a tryout. Braatz said the roster was full, but thanked them for the call. The duo persisted, convincing Braatz to let them drive to Green Bay at their own expense for a tryout. The pair of NFL hopefuls climbed into Weigel’s Caprice Classic and set off for Lambeau Field. They stayed overnight at Weigel’s family farm in Marshfield, WI along the way. Once Fitzgerald and Weigel reached Lambeau, the tryout didn’t consist of much. Nobody timed them in the 40-yard dash or counted how often they bench pressed 225 pounds. The duo mostly caught passes thrown by a member of the Packers personnel staff. “The guy couldn’t throw at all,” Fitzgerald said. “I was making one-handed catches, twisting catches,
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