I watched a lot of it the other night. Even for that era the Packers seemed to be one of the Whitest teams in the league.
Vince Lombardi was a social conservative; in his last years he began speaking out against the moral degeneration taking place in the country. Who knows how his life would have gone if he hadn't died at the age of 57 from cancer. Would he have been a leading spokesman on behalf of the Silent Majority as it was called at the time, or would he have capitulated to the homosexual, feminist, deviant Cultural Marxist swine that took over the popular culture beginning in the late 1960s, as everyone else eventually did?
Yes, the Packers were "Whiter" than most teams. Even by 1966, Lombardi payed big money for two white running backs (Anderson and Grabowski) to replace Hornung and Taylor.
Vince Lombardi was a Roman Catholic and I can't tell you how happy Catholics were to see JFK run for and win the Presidency in 1960. Lombardi endorsed JFK during the Wisconsin primary and was told by the new president to call him if he needed anything.
During the 1961 Berlin crisis, Paul Hornung was called up by his reserve unit. He was able to play most of the season (he was 1961 NFL MVP), but was on military duty at the time of the NFL Title game. Lombardi called President Kennedy and asked if Hornung could be excused from duty to play. JFK issued orders allowing Hornung to play for the Packers. He had a big day and was MVP of the 1961 NFL Championship game, winning a new car.
You have to remember that many people who were for JFK and even RFK were somewhat socially conservative. Lombardi was one of these.
In 1968, Richard Nixon even considered Vince Lombardi as his running mate until his aides told him Lombardi was a Kennedy Democrat.
I once saw Lombardi's main biographer, David Maraniss, interviewed by Robert Novak on Paul Weyrich's network. Maraniss said that Lombardi was growing more conservative in the last year of his life, even being friendly with Nixon.
I recall a newspaper article about a Lombardi speech in the spring of 1970. He sounded like Spiro Agnew.
Maraniss felt that if he had lived, Lombardi might have been supporting Ronald Reagan in 1980.
Quite a few Democrats who supported JFK in 1960, made that move in 1980.