For STEELERS Fans
Franco Harris makes the Immaculate Reception two days before Christmas, on
December 23, 1972. In a controversial play, perhaps the most talked about play in football, known as the
“Immaculate Reception,” rookie running back Franco Harris of the
Pittsburgh Steelers grabed a deflected pass from quarterback Terry
Bradshaw to score a touchdown, winning the game for the Steelers 13-7
over the Oakland Raiders.
The historic play took place during the semifinal playoff game of the American Football Conference (AFC), in Pittsburgh.
Ken Stabler of the Raiders scored a touchdown with 73 seconds left in
the game, putting Oakland up 7-6. Things looked dark for the Steelers, a
struggling franchise that had finished 31 of the previous 39 seasons
with a losing record.
Bradshaw’s pass, launched from the
Steelers’ 40-yard-line, was intended for halfback Frenchy Fuqua. When
the Raiders safety Jack Tatum collided with Fuqua at Oakland’s
35-yard-line, the ball bounced backwards in a huge arc for a total of
seven yards, where Harris scooped it up before it hit the ground and ran
42 yards into the end zone.
Though one official, Adrian Burk,
immediately ruled the play a touchdown, there were no other signals.
Tatum swore he didn’t touch the ball and that it had bounced off Fuqua
and ricocheted towards Harris; this would have made Harris’ play
illegal, according to a rule at the time stating no two receivers can
touch the ball consecutively on the same play.
From a dugout on
the sidelines, referee Fred Swearingen got on the phone with Art
McNally, the NFL’s supervisor of officials. McNally had access to the
instant replay on television from his seat in the press box, and
confirmed Swearingen’s ruling that Tatum had touched the football,
making Harris’ play a touchdown.
In his post-game comments, Raiders coach John Madden indicated that he believed Tatum had made contact with the ball.
The following week, also in Pittsburgh, the Steelers lost the AFC
championship game to the undefeated Miami Dolphins, who went on to win
Super Bowl VII. The Immaculate Reception marked the end of Pittsburgh’s
years of futility, however, as the Steelers became a dominant force in
the NFL over the next decade, winning four Super Bowls by 1980.
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