By BOB
LABRIOLA
Steelers.com
The verbal
exchange had taken place on the January 1969 day when the Pittsburgh Steelers
presented Chuck Noll as their new head coach. Most in the city greeted the
announcement with an appropriate degree of skepticism for a team with eight
winning seasons in 36 years in the league. Noll, fresh from Super Bowl III where
he was an assistant coach on the Baltimore Colts staff that had been upset by
the New York Jets, was asked why he thought he was the guy who could win in
Pittsburgh.
"Losing has
nothing to do with geography."
Noll had spent three calendar years
assembling the pieces that would prove his point, and the 1972 season was the
beginning of the payoff. It would start with a split of the first four games,
but the losses were by a combined nine points and had been played in
Cincinnati and in
Dallas. Clearly,
these weren't the Same Old Steelers.
They proved it by going on a
five-game winning streak, and if that generated them some national attention, a
26-24 loss in Cleveland seemed to
restore the natural order. But again, these definitely were not the Same Old
Steelers, and they proved it the following Sunday with a decisive, 23-10 win
over a Minnesota Vikings team that had been 35-7 plus a Super Bowl appearance in
its three previous seasons.
Dave Anderson of The New York Times
wrote this from the Three Rivers Stadium press box that day: "The weather never
seems to change much here this time of year. It's usually cloudy and gloomy …
Art Rooney never seems to change much, either … But his Pittsburgh Steelers have
changed. They used to find a way to lose. But today, they found a way to win a
big game from the Minnesota Vikings, and if they find a way to a win over the
Cleveland Browns here next Sunday, they may go on to win the first division
title in the 40-year history of the franchise. In other National Football
League cities, a
division title is a stepping-stone to the playoffs. Here, it's a
milestone."
By the way, the Steelers did beat
the Browns the Sunday after they handled the Vikings, and drumbeat of that 30-0
TKO reverberated all over the NFL. By the time they had clinched the AFC Central
Division with a 24-2 win over San Diego in the regular season finale to finish
11-3, Raiders coach John Madden was
telling everyone who would listen that it was time to take the Steelers
seriously.
The first playoff game of the Noll
era was scheduled for Dec. 23, 1972, and it would be a rematch of the opener,
also won by the Steelers and also played at Three
Rivers Stadium. There was no doubt that the game would be a sellout, but the NFL
still had its blackout rule, which meant the game would not be televised within
a 75-mile radius of the city.
That meant
places like Erie, Pa., and Meadville, Pa., and Zanesville, Ohio, suddenly became
destinations of choice for Steelers fans. Motels in those towns were jammed with
Steelers fans; buses were chartered to go to Erie to watch the game and people
there were selling seats in their homes to Steelers fans who wanted to watch the
game.
The game itself
was the competitive opposite of the meeting between the teams during the first
weekend of the regular season. That meeting, won by the Steelers, 34-28, offered
a back-and-forth series of big plays.
For Pittsburgh in the opener,
linebacker Henry Davis blocked a punt, recovered the ball and ran 5 yards for
the game's first touchdown; Terry Bradshaw scored on quarterback sneaks of 20
and 2 yards; and then he threw a 57-yard touchdown pass to Ron Shanklin in the
fourth quarter.
For the
Raiders, Ken Stabler started at quarterback, but after throwing three
interceptions was replaced first by George Blanda and then by Daryle Lamonica,
who threw touchdown passes of 24 and 70 yards to Mike Siani in the fourth
quarter.
But the playoff
game was a defensive battle. After a scoreless first half, the Steelers carved
out a 6-0 lead on a pair of Roy Gerela field goals, while the Raiders were
trying to carve out some first downs. While Lamonica rescued Stabler during the
regular season, the roles were reversed in this playoff game. The Steelers
sacked Lamonica four times and intercepted him twice before Madden went to
Stabler.
Later in his career, Stabler would
become known for his accuracy as a passer, but in this game it was his legs that
changed the entire complexion of the afternoon. Getting outside rookie defensive
end Craig Hanneman, Stabler raced 30 yards on a broken play for the touchdown
that allowed the Raiders to take a 7-6 lead with 1:13
to
play.
What happened
three plays after the ensuing kickoff – on fourth-and-10 from the Steelers
40-yard line – has been anointed the greatest touchdown in league history by NFL
Films, but to generations of Steelers fans it came to be a historical marker, as
in, "Where were you during the Immaculate Reception?"
The primary receiver on the play
called by Terry Bradshaw for this fourth-and-10 was Barry Pearson, but it soon
became clear there was nothing about this that was going to go according
to
plan. Feeling pressure, Bradshaw ducked away from the rush
and shrugged off an arm tackle as he found some open space on the Three Rivers
Stadium carpet, caught sight of a black jersey and stepped into the
throw.
Wrote author Roy Blount Jr.,
"Frenchy
Fuqua and Oakland defender Jack Tatum, famous for nearly
breaking folks' backs with his tackles, went up together, and the ball hit them,
bounced off, and disappeared … maybe some franchises are born to
lose."
Franco Harris'
assignment on the play had been to stay in and block, but as the play broke down
and Harris saw Bradshaw cock his arm he began to hustle downfield. That was his
instinct, the instinct of a champion.
The collision
of Tatum and Fuqua sent the ball flying back toward the line of scrimmage, back
toward the hustling Harris.
More from
Blount Jr.: "The ball reappeared on the screen, borne by Harris, who had caught
it, off camera, at his shoe tops on the rebound. Something surely would happen
to frustrate the Steelers again."
This time, nothing happened except
Harris crossing the goal line with the most improbable game-winning touchdown in
the history of the sport. And Steelers fans, who had been described by one
writer as "western civilization's experts at living with a loser," reveled in
the cosmic payback. After this, Christmas could be canceled because
no
present under any tree was going to top this.
Coyly, Fuqua refused to divulge to
reporters after the game what he knew, and as the recipient of a thunderous hit
by Tatum who could be certain he actually knew anything pertinent anyway. None
of the other players on the field were unbiased witnesses, and if any definitive
film of the play ever existed it never was among the footage widely used to
chronicle this game.
As the sun set
on Pittsburgh that day, there was much that was unknown about the touchdown that
carries this mundane deScription in the record books to this day: Harris 60 pass
from Bradshaw (Gerela kick).
What was known
that night was this: the Pittsburgh Steelers had won a playoff game and as a
result were going to host the undefeated Miami Dolphins for a spot in Super Bowl
VII.