Tar Schwammel
Adolphe John "Tar" Schwammel was an American football tackle who played collegiately for the Oregon State Beavers. He was named an All-American in 1933. Schwammel entered the National Football League in 1934 and played for five seasons with the Green Bay Packers. He was named a first-team All-Pro in 1935 and named to the second team the next year. He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1981 and the Oregon State University Hall of Fame in 1990, both for his football prowess.
Early life and college career
Adolphe Schwammel was born on October 14, 1908, in Los Angeles, and attended Fremont High School in Oakland, California. He attended Oregon State University where he played for the school's football team. He lettered in football from 1931 through 1933.Schwammel was a starter on the 1933 Oregon State Beavers football team that played the undefeated two-time national champion USC Trojans to a 0–0 tie using just eleven "Iron Men" for the entire duration of the game. He was named a 1933 College Football All-America Team tackle. Schwammel was one of the key players in the now illegal "Pyramid Play", where the Beavers lifted 6-foot-seven-inch Clyde Devine atop the shoulders of 6-foot-two-inch Schwammel and 6-foot-two-inch teammate Harry Shields to block a placekick. The play was first successfully used in a game against the University of Oregon. A picture of the play published in the Saturday Evening Post brought the team and the play national attention, leading to the pyramid technique being banned by the NCAA's rules committee shortly thereafter. The 1933 OSC team finished with a 6–2–2 record that included a win on the road over Fordham University, during this game, he was injured in his shoulder.
Schwammel was named as the first-team All-American and All-Pacific Coast Conference tackle as a senior in the 1933 season. He was also chosen to play in the 1934 East-West Shrine Game.