The fifth-oldest franchise in the NFL,
the Steelers were founded on July 8,
1933 by Arthur
Joseph Rooney. Originally named the Pittsburgh Pirates, they were a member of
the Eastern Division of the 10-team NFL. The other four current NFL teams in
existence at that time were the Chicago (Arizona) Cardinals, Green
Bay Packers, Chicago Bears and New York Giants.
One of the great pioneers of the
sports world, Art Rooney passed away on August 25,
1988 following
a stroke at the age of 87. "The Chief," as he was affectionately known, is
enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame and is remembered as one of
Pittsburgh's great people.
Born on January 27,
1901, in
Coultersville, Pa., Art Rooney was the oldest of Daniel
and Margaret Rooney's nine children. He grew up in Old Allegheny, now known as
Pittsburgh's North Side, and until his death he
lived on the North Side just a short distance from Three Rivers
Stadium.
Rooney attended St. Peter's Parochial
School and DuquesneUniversityPrep
School. He studied collegiately at Indiana
(Pa.) Normal, which is now Indiana University of
Pennsylvania, as well as at Georgetown and Duquesne.
An exceptional all-around athlete,
Rooney held middleweight and welterweight titles from the AAU Boxing
Championships and was named to the U.S. Olympic Boxing Team in 1920, although he
did not participate in the Olympic Games. He played minor league baseball from
1920-25 before a promising career was cut short by an arm injury. Rooney
continued playing football for several semi-pro teams in the
Pittsburgh area. He was married on
June 11, 1931 to Kathleen McNulty, and the couple
had five sons — Daniel, Art Jr., Tim, John and Pat.In 1964, Rooney was inducted into the
Pro Football Hall of Fame for his contributions to the growth of the NFL and the
Pittsburgh Steelers.
By the mid-1960s, Steelers founder Art
Rooney had begun to turn over much of the operation of the Steelers to his
oldest son, Dan. After having worked in every area of the organization since
1955, Daniel M. Rooney was named president of the Steelers in 1975.In 2000, Dan Rooney was inducted into
the Pro Football Hall of Fame. He joined his his father Art to form only the
second father-son tandem to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. New York Giants
owner Wellington Mara and his father Tim were the first.
Now in his 50thyear with the organization, he is one of
the most active NFL owners and one of Pittsburgh's most involved executives in civic
affairs. Among his community activities, Dan Rooney is a board member for The
United Way of America, The American Ireland Fund, The
American Diabetes Association, PresbyterianUniversityHospital, The Pittsburgh History and Landmarks
Foundation and DuquesneUniversity.
Dan Rooney has been a member of
several NFL committees over the past 30-plus years. He has served on the board
of directors for the NFL Trust Fund, NFL Films and the Scheduling Committee. He
was appointed chairman of the Expansion Committee in 1973, which considered new
franchise locations and directed the addition of
Seattle and
TampaBay as expansion teams in 1976.
In 1976, Rooney was also named
chairman of the Negotiating Committee, and in 1982 he contributed to the
negotiations for the Collective Bargaining Agreement for the NFL and the
Players' Association. He again played a key role in the labor agreement reached
between NFL owners and players in 1993. Rooney was also largely responsible for
developing the realignment plan and scheduling format that the NFL adopted prior
to the 2002 season.In October
2002, he was named chairman of the NFL's Diversity in the Workplace Committee.
Rooney is also a member of the eight-person Management Council Executive
Committee, the Hall of Fame Committee, and the NFL Properties Executive
Committee. In February 1999, he was named the recipient of the Philadelphia
Maxwell Football Club's Francis J. "Reds" Bagnell Award for outstanding
contributions to the game of football.
Daniel M. Rooney was born on
Pittsburgh's North Side on July 20, 1932. He is a 1950 graduate of
NorthCatholicHigh
School, where he played quarterback on the
varsity football team. He went on to graduate from
DuquesneUniversity in 1955 with a bachelor of arts
degree in accounting. Rooney and his wife Patricia live on the North Side. The
Rooneys have nine children.
In 2002, Dan Rooney officially turned
over the title of Steelers' team president to his oldest son, Art Rooney II, who
had previously served as the team's vice presdent and general counsel. Art II
also previously served as Chairman of the Board of Klett Rooney Lieber &
Schorling, Attorneys at Law. A 1978 graduate of the
University of Pittsburgh where he majored in political
science, Art II received his law degree from Duquesne University School of Law
in 1982.He and his wife Greta have
four children.
1930s: After founding the Pirates in 1933,
Art Rooney watched his club struggle through its first seven seasons with just
22 wins and five different head coaches. While home games were played at Forbes
Field, Rooney often took his team to such cities as
Johnstown, Latrobe,
Youngstown, New
Orleans, and
Louisville in the 1930s due to competition with
baseball and college football.
In 1938 Rooney signed Colorado
All-America Byron "Whizzer" White to a $15,800 contract, making White the first
"big money" player in the NFL. White led the league in rushing that year and
became one of the NFL's most illustrious alumni. He served 31 years as a Justice
of the United States Supreme Court before retiring in
1993.
1940s: In 1940 Rooney changed the team name
to the Pittsburgh Steelers, representing the heritage of
Pittsburgh. The first winning record in the
organization's history came in 1942 when head coach Walt Kiesling led the
Steelers to a 7-4 finish with the league-leading rushing of rookie Bill Dudley.
But the next year Dudley joined the Armed Forces along with
many other NFL players as the nation went to war. With rosters depleted, Rooney
merged the Steelers with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1943 (Phil-Pitt "Steagles")
and with the Chicago Cardinals (Card-Pitt) in 1944.
Rooney hired legendary Pitt coach Jock
Sutherland in 1946, and Dudley returned from the war to earn NFL MVP
honors, leading the league in rushing, interceptions, and punt returns. Today,
Dudley is a member of the Pro Football Hall
of Fame.
Sutherland led the 1947 Steelers to an
8-4 record and a share of the Eastern division title, but they lost their
first-ever postseason game, 21-0, to Philadelphia. Sutherland died suddenly the
following spring while on a scouting trip.
1950s: Succeeding Sutherland, John
Michelosen was head coach for the 1948-51 seasons, compiling a 20-26-2 record.
In 1952 Joe Bach returned for his second stint with the Steelers, having coached
the team previously in 1935-36. The Steelers became the last team to abandon the
single wing for the T-formation in 1952.
Bach resigned for health reasons
following the 1954 season and was replaced by assistant coach Walt Kiesling, who
had been the Steelers' head coach twice previously. Kiesling's three stints
covered the 1939-40, 1941-44, and 1954-56 campaigns.
1960s: Buddy Parker was named head coach in
1957 and over the next eight years he led the Steelers to five non-losing
seasons. Hall of Fame quarterback Bobby Layne quarterbacked the team through
three of those campaigns, leading the Steelers to a 9-5 mark and a playoff game
vs. Detroit in 1962, which the Steelers lost
17-10. Parker completed his tenure with a 51-48-6 record and ranks third among
all-time Steelers coaches for career wins.
On October 25,
1964, the
Steelers made team history when they retired jersey No. 70 in honor of former
defensive tackle Ernie Stautner. Stautner, who was inducted into the Pro
Football Hall of Fame in 1969, remains the only Steelers player to have his
jersey retired.
Brief head coaching stints by Mike
Nixon in 1965 and Bill Austin from 1966-68 preceded the hiring of the
37-year-old Chuck Noll on January 27,
1969. Noll
began to rebuild the Steelers through the draft, starting with the defense when
he selected defensive tackle Joe Greene with his first choice in 1969. Today
Greene is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
1970s: A 1-13 record in 1969 gave the
Steelers the first overall choice in the 1970 draft, with which Noll addressed
the offense by selecting quarterback Terry Bradshaw, another Hall of Famer,
after the Steelers won the first selection by winning a coin toss with the
Chicago Bears. Cornerback Mel Blount was added in the third round that year,
followed by linebacker Jack Ham in 1971 and running back Franco Harris in 1972.
In all, Noll drafted nine players who are now enshrined in the Hall of Fame
including three in his first 20 picks and four of his first
38.
Two significant changes took place in
1970. The Steelers moved from the NFL Century Division to the AFC Central with
the merger of the American Football League and the NFL. The Steelers also moved
into a new home as Three Rivers Stadium opened. Previously, the Steelers had
played home games at Forbes Field from 1933-57 and at both Forbes Field and Pitt
Stadium from 1958-63. From 1964-69 the Steelers played at Pitt Stadium until
Three Rivers opened in 1970.
Gradual improvement in the early 1970s
resulted in the team's first division title in 1972 with an 11-3 record. In the
first playoff game at Three Rivers the Steelers defeated the Oakland Raiders
13-7 with Franco Harris' "Immaculate Reception" in the final minute. Despite a
21-17 loss the following week to the undefeated Miami Dolphins, the Steelers had
reached a new plateau.
It took 40 years for the Steelers to
finally win their first division title, but over the next decade they achieved a
level of success unprecedented in professional football.
In 1973 the Steelers won a wild card
playoff berth with a 10-4 record. Oakland avenged their loss from the previous
year, however, with a 33-14 defeat of the Steelers in the
playoffs.
The Steelers won their first of six
consecutive AFC Central titles in 1974 and marched past
Buffalo (32-14) and
Oakland (24-13) en route to their first Super
Bowl appearance in Super Bowl IX. The fierce Pittsburgh defense led the way to a 16-6 victory
vs. the Minnesota Vikings, and Art Rooney was presented the Vince Lombardi
Trophy for the first time.
In 1975 the Steelers won 11 straight
games to finish 12-2 and claim their second consecutive division crown. After
defeating Baltimore (28-10) and
Oakland (16-10) in the playoffs the Steelers
became the third team in NFL history, joining Green
Bay and Miami, to win back-to-back Super Bowls with
a 21-17 win versus the Dallas Cowboys in Super Bowl X.
The 1976 Steelers struggled to a 1-4
start before reeling off nine straight victories including five shutouts to win
the division with a 10-4 mark. They defeated Baltimore 40-14 in the playoffs, but lost to
Oakland, 24-7, after both starting running
backs, Franco Harris and Rocky Bleier, were injured. The following year the
Steelers dropped a 34-21 decision to Denver in the first round of the playoffs
after posting a 9-5 regular-season record.
In 1978 the Steelers made history
after a league-best 14-2 regular season and playoff wins versus
Denver (33-10) and
Houston (34-5). Their 35-31 Super Bowl XIII
win versus Dallas made the Steelers the first team to
win three Super Bowls.
Yet another standard was set the
following year when the 1979 Steelers defeated the Los Angeles Rams, 31-19, in
Super Bowl XIV to make them the first team in history to win four Super Bowls
and the only team to win back-to-back Super Bowls twice. The Super Bowl victory
followed a 12-4 regular season and playoff wins versus
Miami (34-14) and Houston (27-13). With six
consecutive AFC Central crowns, eight straight years of playoff appearances and
four Super Bowl championships, the Steelers were tagged the "Team of the Decade"
for the 1970s.
1980s: As the 1980s opened the Steelers
stumbled, failing to make the playoffs in 1980 and 1981 with records of 9-7 and
8-8.
In 1982 the Steelers celebrated the
team's 50th anniversary by qualifying for the playoffs with a 6-3 finish in a
strike-interrupted season. During the season an anniversary banquet was held to
commemorate the team's first 50 seasons and to honor the Steelers' all-time team
as selected by fan voting. Thousands of fans were attracted to
Pittsburgh for a week of activities and exhibits
before the anniversary season was ended by San
Diego's 31-28 win in the playoffs. This
would be the last playoff game at Three Rivers until the 1992 season, a span of
10 years.
The 1983 Steelers won their eighth
division title with a 10-6 record, but fell in the postseason, 38-10, to the Los
Angeles Raiders. The following year the Steelers won their ninth division crown
and the team advanced to the AFC Championship game with a 24-17 playoff win at
Denver. A 45-28 loss to
Miami in the AFC Championship game
prevented the Steelers from a fifth Super Bowl appearance.
The Steelers' streak of 13 consecutive
non-losing seasons came to an end in 1985 with a 7-9 finish, followed by 6-10 in
1986. Playoff hopes remained alive in 1987 until the Steelers lost their last
two games to finish 8-7 during the strike-shortened
season.
In 1988 the team suffered through its
worst campaign in 19 years with a 5-11 record. The next season got off to a
similar start with losses of 51-0 and 41-10 in the first two games as the
offense failed to score in the first month of the season. But the young team
fought back to finish 9-7 and earn a wild card playoff berth on the season's
final weekend. An exciting 26-23 overtime playoff win in
Houston was followed by a heartbreaking 24-23
divisional playoff loss at Denver in which the Steelers led until the
final minutes.
1990s: A 9-7 finish in 1990 left the
Steelers in a three-way tie for the AFC Central lead, but they were eliminated
from playoff contention by a 2-4 division record. The 1991 team finished second
in the division despite a 7-9 record, winning the last two games under Noll at
home against the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns.
On December
26, 1991 Noll
announced his retirement from football after 39 consecutive seasons, the last 23
as the Steelers' head coach which made him one of only four men to coach the
same team for 23 consecutive years. He left as the fifth-winningest coach in NFL
history with an overall record of 209-156-1, and as the only coach to win four
Super Bowls. Noll was rewarded in 1993 with his election to the Hall of Fame in
his first year of eligibility.
A new era began in 1992 with the
retirement of Noll and the arrival of 34-year-old Bill Cowher, the National
Football League's youngest head coach at the time he assumed control. In the
first season of the new era, the Steelers won the AFC Central division crown for
the first time since 1984 with an 11-5 record. While the team enjoyed new-found
success, Cowher was recognized by the Associated Press as the NFL's Coach of the
Year and six Steelers played in the Pro Bowl, the most in more than a
decade.
Under Cowher the Steelers became the
first AFC team since the 1970 merger to claim its 10thdivision title. Their 11-5 record equaled
the best in the conference and gave the Steelers home field advantage throughout
the playoffs. However, in the first postseason game at Three Rivers in exactly
10 years the Steelers were defeated by eventual AFC champion
Buffalo, 24-3.
In 1993, the Steelers earned a wild
card playoff berth, marking their first consecutive playoff appearances since
the 1983-84 seasons. A 9-7 record was good for second place in the division, but
the season ended in a 27-24 overtime loss at Kansas
City in the AFC Wild Card
game.
The 1994 Steelers won seven of their
final eight regular-season games for their strongest finish since 1978. They
captured their second division title in three years with the AFC's best record
of 12-4. After a 29-9 victory over the Cleveland Browns in the first round of
the playoffs, Pittsburgh hosted their first AFC Championship
game since 1979. The game went down to the wire and the Steelers lost to the San
Diego Chargers, 17-13.
At 38, Bill Cowher became the youngest
head coach to lead his team to a Super Bowl. Along the way, Cowher's team
captured their third AFC Central division title in four years, made their fourth
straight playoff appearance, and won the Steelers' first AFC title since 1979.
After a first-round bye, they defeated the Buffalo Bills (40-21) and the
Indianapolis Colts (20-16), before losing to the Dallas Cowboys, 27-17, in Super
Bowl XXX in Tempe, Arizona.
In 1996, injuries forced Cowher to use
40 different starters during the course of the season. But the Steelers'
"never-say-die" attitude led to a 10-6 finish and their fifth consecutive trip
to the playoffs. Cowher earned his 50th regular-season win Nov. 3, 1996 in his 73rd game to become the eighth
fastest to reach 50 wins. He ended the season with 57 career victories ranking
him as the second winningest coach in team history, behind his predecessor
Noll.
The Steelers captured their fourth
consecutive AFC Central title in 1997, while posting an 11-5 record. They were
one play away from earning their sixth Super Bowl appearance and lost to
Denver, 24-21, in the AFC Championship
game.
In 1998, the Steelers finished a
disappointing 7-9, losing their last five regular-season games and missing the
playoffs for the first time under Bill Cowher. It marked the first time that
Cowher had been associated with a team with a losing record during his 14-year
coaching career.
The Steelers suffered their second
consecutive losing season under Cowher in 1999, when their record fell to 6-10,
including a six-game losing streak. The Steelers fourth-place finish in the AFC
Central was the team's worst finish under Bill Cowher.
2000s: The Steelers began a new century with
a renewed commitment. After starting the 2000 season with a 0-3 record, the
Steelers rebounded to finish the year at 9-7, and barely missed their seventh
postseason appearance under Cowher.
However, 2000 may be remembered most
for being the final season for the Steelers at Three Rivers Stadium. The
Steelers were 4-4 during their final season at Three Rivers Stadium, including
victories in four of their final six home games. The Steelers won their final
game at Three Rivers, 24-3, against the Washington Redskins on Dec.
16.
The Steelers finished 31 seasons at
Three Rivers Stadium (1970-2000) with a 182-73 home record, including the
postseason. The Steelers recorded their largest regular-season home attendance
figures (440,428) since 1998 in the final season, including a season-high 58,183
fans during the final game in stadium history.
The Steelers began a new era in team
history in 2001 with the opening of their new stadium, Heinz Field.The Steelers posted an AFC-best 13-3
regular-season record, including a 7-1 mark at home, and advanced to the AFC
Championship Game.
The inaugural game at Heinz Field was
originally scheduled to be a nationally televised Sunday Night game on Sept.
16.However, the September 11
terrorist attacks on America forced the NFL to postpone all games
that weekend — which were eventually rescheduled for the end of the season. As a
result, the Steelers opened Heinz Field on Sunday, Oct. 7 with a 16-7 win
against the Cincinnati Bengals.
The Steelers defeated the defending
Super Bowl Champion Baltimore Ravens, 27-10, in the AFC Divisional Playoffs, in
the first-ever postseason game played at Heinz Field. However, they suffered a
disappointing, 24-17, loss at home in the AFC Championship game to the eventual
Super Bowl-champion New England Patriots.
The Steelers entered the 2002 season
with high hopes and Super Bowl aspirations. After a 0-2 start, the Steelers
rallied to make the playoffs for the second consecutive season and the eighth
time under Cowher.However, the
team's Super Bowl hopes ended when they lost, 34-31, in overtime to the
Tennessee Titans on the road.
The Steelers began the 2003 season
with a 34-15 victory against AFC North rival Baltimore Ravens.However, the team never regained that
magic and finished the season with a 6-10 record and out of the playoffs for the
first time in three years.
The Steelers set a team record in 2004
by becoming the first AFC team to win 15 games (15-1) in the regular season.
They ultimately advanced to the AFC Championship Game where they lost to the New
England Patriots, 41-27. Nine Steelers were selected to play in the AFC-NFC Pro
Bowl, the teams most since the 1979 season.
Pittsburgh found itself sitting at
7-5 after 12 games in 2005, but it rallied to win
its final four regular season games to earn the AFC's sixth seed in the
playoffs. The Steelers then won an unprecedented three straight road playoff
games to gain a berth in Super Bowl XL in Detroit versus the Seattle
Seahawks.
The Steelers captured their fifth
Super Bowl title with a 21-10 victory over the Seahawks as wide receiver Hines
Ward was named MVP, finishing with five receptions for 123 yards. Ward also
hauled in a game-clinching 43-yard pass from Antwaan Randle El on a gadget play
midway through the fourth quarter.