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Instant Replay is a book written by Green Bay Packers offensive lineman Jerry Kramer and published in 1968. The book covers the 1967 Green Bay Packers' season which ended with the team winning Super Bowl II against the Oakland Raiders. It was also notable because the Packers earned the right to represent the National Football League in the Super Bowl (before the NFL's merger with the American Football League) by winning the 1967 NFL Championship Game, more commonly known as the "Ice Bowl," against the Dallas Cowboys, with Kramer throwing a key block in the winning touchdown.

Kramer authored the book with sportswriter Dick Schaap. In Schapp's obituary in 2001, The New York Times called Instant Replay one of the "best-selling books of its era."

Sports Illustrated in 2002 named Instant Replay the 20th greatest sports book of all time.

Being published about two years before Ball Four by Jim Bouton, the two books are considered some of the first that looked inside the real life of a sports team. "I decided to just write it from the perspective of being as honest as I could be and straight forward," Kramer said in an interview years later. "Tell it like it is. If they don't like it, they don't like it."

Unlike Bouton, who wrote his notes on paper, Kramer would speak his thoughts into a tape recorded and then send the tapes on to Schaap. Kramer said Schaap came to him with the idea for a book. "Dick asked me if I wanted to write a book. I said, 'What the hell do I know about writing a book?' He says, 'Well, you talk into a tape recorder and record your observations, activities, impressions, thoughts and your life. Then you send it to me and I'll transcribe it and I'll organize it into a book.'

Schaap told Kramer they might sell between 15,000 and 20,000 books. But Kramer said they "ended up" selling about 400,000 hard cover copies.

The block on Jethro Pugh to win the Ice Bowl received a description in the book that takes longer to read than it took for the play to unfold: ""I slammed into Jethro hard. All he had time to do was raise his left arm. He didn't even get it up all the way and I charged into him. His body was a little high, the way we'd noticed in the movies, and, with [Ken] Bowman's help, I moved him inside. Willie Townes, next to Jethro, was down low, very low. He was supposed to come in low and close to the middle. He was low, but he didn't close. He might have filled the hole, but he didn't, and Bart churned into the opening and stretched and fell and landed over the goal line. It was the most beautiful sight in the world, seeing Bart lying next to me and seeing the referee in front of me, his hands over his head, signaling the touchdown. There were thirteen seconds to play."

There also is extensive focus on what it was like to play for the Packers' head coach Vince Lombardi in what proved to be Lombardi's last season with the Packers. "I loved Vince. Sure, I had hated him at times during training camp and I had hated him at times during the season, but I knew how much he had done for us, and I knew how much he cared about us. He is a beautiful man, and the proof is that no one who ever played for him ever speaks of him afterward with anything but respect and admiration and affection. His whippings, his cussings, and his driving all fade; his good qualities endure."