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Cal Hubbard fell in love with the small city of Green Bay when he played a road game there with the New York Giants and the story was that he demanded to be traded there and threatened retirement if it didn’t happen.  It did happen, and Hubbard was a major reason that Green Bay won the NFL Championship in 1929, 1930 and 1931.  Hubbard was also a three-time First Team All-Pro as a Packer and went into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in the first ever class in 1963.  He also was part of Green Bay's inaugural Hall of Fame class in 1970.

36. Max McGee

Max McGee is best known for being one of the stars of Super Bowl I catching seven passes for 138 Yards and 2 Touchdowns...an outstanding feat considering he was allegedly hungover at the time!
Considered to be one of the first truly great Guards of the game, Mike Michalske would earn the honor of being the first Offensive Guard to make the Pro Football Hall of Fame.  Michalske would make an immediate impact for the Packers after his three-year stint with the football version of the New York Yankees and he would win three NFL Championships and three First Team All-Pros in those first three years.

Michalske was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as part of their second class in 1964 and was chosen as part of the inaugural Packers Hall of Fame class in 1970.
The 2010 NFL Offensive Lineman of the Year, Josh Sitton played the first eight years of his 11-year career with the Green Bay Packers.

A Fourth Round Pick from Central Florida, Sitton was named the starting Right Guard in his second season (2009) until he switched to Left Guard in 2013.  Sitton went to three Pro Bowls with Green Bay, one at Left and two at Right, and he was part of Green Bay's Super Bowl XLV Championship Team.  Sitton was surprisingly released before the 2016 season, and he signed with the division rival, Chicago, where he went to two more Pro Bowls.