Buster Ramsey
Garrard Sliger "'Buster" Ramsey' was an American professional football player for the College of William and Mary and Chicago Cardinals. He was defensive coordinator for three Detroit Lions championship teams in the National Football League in the 1950s before he became the first head coach of the Buffalo Bills in the new American Football League.
Playing career
After a stint in the United States Navy during World War II, Ramsey played for the Chicago Cardinals from 1946 to 1951. During his time there, Ramsey was a member of the 1947 NFL World Championship team.Coaching career
In 1951, Ramsey served as a player-coach for the Cardinals before becoming the Detroit Lions’ defensive coordinator in 1952. During his tenure with the Lions, Ramsey developed the 4-3 defense, a staple of modern football. In addition, he was among the first coaches to blitz linebackers in a package called Red Dog. With Ramsey as defensive coordinator the Lions won three World Championships in the 1950s. He developed a number of Lions greats including future Hall of Famers Jack Christiansen, Yale Lary and Joe Schmidt among others.In 1960, Ralph C. Wilson Jr. purchased the Buffalo Bills franchise in the fledging American Football League. Wilson did so with visions of another 1950s Detroit Lions dynasty -- his new team even adopted their silver-and-blue color scheme. Given his Lions pedigree, Ramsey was considered to be the ideal candidate for the head coach position as one of the first significant hires in the organization.
The Bills struggled to score points in their first two seasons, which often negated their stellar play at the other side of the ball. Ramsey was fired after the 1961 AFL season, but not before he laid the foundation for a defense that would become the foundation for 1964 and 1965 league championship teams. He would go on to serve as the defensive coordinator for the Pittsburgh Steelers from 1962 to 1964.