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A lot was riding on the 1961 Iron Bowl when Alabama pulled up to Legion Field a day before kickoff.
Bear Bryantâs fourth Crimson Tide was undefeated, touting what many still consider the most dominant defense in program history. Since national titles were awarded at the end of the regular season back then, the finale with Auburn meant even more.
So, what Alabama found when it arrived in Birmingham on the eve of kickoff was troubling.
âIt was like walking around on concrete,â said Bill Battle, an end on that 1961 team.
Months of high school and college games on the turf not designed to modern standards left Legion Field a disaster. Thatâs what made Bryantâs response to the conditions so clever.
It involved a network of state troopers, commitment to the cause and a last-minute secret weapon.
Stacks of shoe boxes greeted Alabama players at breakfast the next morning.
Only these werenât football cleats.
And as far as Gary White knows, their story has never been fully told.
***
White was in his third season as head manager for Alabamaâs football team in 1961. He had arrived in the Ears Whitworth era as an assistant manager and climbed the ranks under Bryant.
After seeing the field, White remembers the conversation behind the scenes.
The guys needed soccer shoes, Bryant determined.
They had soft spikes that could navigate that mess. Assistant coach Carney Laslie was in charge of equipment and the plan to bring a football roster worth of shoes from a fairly obscure sport to the west side of Birmingham in less than 24 hours.
âSo, that night,â White recalled 57 years later, âfrom all over the state, state troopers brought them to the stadium.â
Thatâs where Chief Joe Smelley came into the equation. One of the state troopers who famously guarded Bryant on game days was in charge of the highway patrol statewide.
Itâs safe to say he had some influence.
They were coming from all corners of the state because no one store had close to enough in stock to satisfy this sudden and large demand. There was no way that effort could have been mobilized without Smelleyâs help, White said.
âWe were getting them from Mobile, from Huntsville, Dothan,â White remembered. âI mean we had them coming from everywhere that night. They were waiting for us when we arrived at the stadium.â
Puma.
Adidas.
Any soccer shoe a sporting goods store stocked in football-player sizes wound up in Birmingham.
Battle, who went on to become Alabamaâs athletics director from 2013-17, remembers seeing the new kicks for the first time.
âWe felt like kids at Christmas going to try on those shoes,â Battle said. âSome of them had lightning stripes going down the side. We thought that was the coolest thing.â
This wasnât even the first time Alabama made footwear adjustments on the fly that fall. A torrential downpour before the Mississippi State game in Bryant-Denny Stadium required the managers to unscrew all the normal cleats and replace them with longer ones.
Alabama won that one, 24-0 on homecoming day.
Those spikes wouldnât work at Legion Field in the Iron Bowl, however. So, it was up to White and the managers to make sense of this airlift and get the soccer shoes unboxed and ready for the biggest game of their lives.
âWe got everybody outfitted,â White said, âwent out and warmed up and the rest is history.â
***
Benny Nelson clearly remembers the sight of those soccer shoes in the Legion Field locker room. Nelson, who went on to be an All-American two seasons later, was then a third-string running back. He got a new pair of shoes that December day in Birmingham.
Unlike the old leather shoes, the new imports didnât need as much work to break them in.
âPut these on, go out there and see how these work,â was Nelsonâs memory of Bryantâs pregame instructions with the new gear. âAnd everybody loved them. They worked really well. It was pretty ingenious he found out a way to overcome that problem.â
As Nelson remembered it, the muddy field was rolled âlike you would a highwayâ and painted it.
âAnd it looked great,â Nelson said. âIt really did, until you walked out there on it. It was like playing on a parking lot.â
Apparently, the new shoes helped. They had grip where the old cleats did not.
âIt made a hell of a difference,â Nelson said. âI mean, you could run in those shoes. They had a soft cleat on them and they were all the difference in the world in that game âŚâ
Nelson paused.
â⌠Not that we werenât going to beat them anyway,â
Alabama cruised to a 34-0 win with Pat Trammell at quarterback, Lee Roy Jordan at center and All-American Billy Neighbors at tackle. Nelson remembers Neighbors didnât get the soccer shoes but wore âhigh top tennis shoesâ for that Auburn game.
âWe looked fast as the wind,â said White who went on to work 38 years with Alabama athletics before retiring in 1996 as an associate athletics director. âIt was unbelievable how it all worked out.â
Auburn threw four interceptions navigating the beat up field in traditional footwear. It wasnât Ralph Jordanâs best Tiger team entering with a 6-3 record, but they were on a two-game winning streak over Georgia and Florida.
The Iron Bowl, however, was never close. The Tide led 24-0 at halftime and a few days later, Bryantâs first national title at Alabama was official. A 10-3 win over Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl completed the perfect 11-0 season.
The story of the soccer shoes, however, appeared to be lost to history. Newspaper stories from the time didnât mention the move. Bryant never mentioned it on his statewide television show taped the day after the game.
Nelson recalled wearing them for a while longer in practices before Bryant snapped them up one day never to return.
Now, Alabama has a $68 million contract with Nike that runs through 2025 and fields are pristine carpets of finely manicured turf.
Battle still laughs about the time they outfoxed Auburn with everything on the line.
âI saw an Auburn guy several weeks after the game,â Battle said 57 years later, âand he said when you all ran out on the field in those soccer shoes, the game was over.â
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