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Immaculate Reception

The Immaculate Reception is one of the most famous plays in the history of American football. It occurred in the AFC divisional playoff game of the National Football League (NFL), between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Oakland Raiders at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on December 23, 1972.

1972 AFC Divisional playoff
1234 Total
OAK 0007 7
PIT 00310 13
DateDecember 23, 1972
StadiumThree Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
RefereeFred Swearingen
Attendance50,327
Hall of Famers
Raiders: George Blanda, Willie Brown, Fred Biletnikoff, Bob Brown, Al Davis (owner/gm), Jim Otto, John Madden (coach), Art Shell, Ken Stabler, Gene Upshaw
Steelers: Mel Blount, Terry Bradshaw, Joe Greene, Jack Ham, Franco Harris, Chuck Noll (coach), Bill Nunn (scout), Art Rooney (owner/founder), Dan Rooney (owner/administrator)
TV in the United States
NetworkNBC
AnnouncersCurt Gowdy and Al DeRogatis

With the Steelers trailing 7-6, on fourth down with 22 seconds left in the game, Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw threw a pass targeting John Fuqua. The ball bounced off the helmet of Raiders safety Jack Tatum. Steelers fullback Franco Harris caught it just before it hit the ground and ran for a game-winning touchdown. The play has been a source of some controversy and speculation ever since, with some contending that the ball touched only Fuqua (and did not in any way touch Tatum) or that it hit the ground before Harris caught it, either of which would have resulted in an incomplete pass by the rules at the time. Kevin Cook's The Last Headbangers cites the play as the beginning of a bitter rivalry between Pittsburgh and Oakland that fueled a historically brutal Raiders team during the NFL's most controversially physical era.[1]

NFL Films has chosen the Immaculate Reception as the greatest play of all time, as well as the most controversial.[2][3] The play was also selected as the Greatest Play in NFL History in the NFL Network's 100 series. The play was a turning point for the Steelers, who reversed four decades of futility with their first playoff win ever and went on to win four Super Bowls by the end of the 1970s.

The play's name is a pun derived from the Immaculate Conception, a dogma in the Catholic Church. The phrase was first used on air by Myron Cope, a Pittsburgh sportscaster who was reporting on the Steelers' victory. A Pittsburgh woman, Sharon Levosky, called Cope before his 11:00 p.m. sports broadcast that night of December 23 and suggested the name, which was coined by her friend Michael Ord. Cope used the term on television and the phrase stuck.[4] The phrase was apparently meant to imply that the play was miraculous in nature (see Hail Mary pass for a similar term).

Background edit

Playoff history edit

The Oakland Raiders had been to the postseason four previous times. In 1967 they won the AFL Championship before losing Super Bowl II against the Green Bay Packers. The following three seasons they made it back to the AFL/AFC Championship Game, but lost to the eventual Super Bowl champions in all three instances (New York Jets in 1968, Kansas City Chiefs in 1969, Baltimore Colts in 1970). The "Immaculate Reception" game thus marked their return to the postseason after missing out on a playoff berth the year before.[5]

The Pittsburgh Steelers, on the other hand, had appeared in the postseason only once, losing against the Philadelphia Eagles, 21–0, in an NFL divisional playoff game on December 21, 1947. The Steelers' fortunes began to change, however, in 1969, when they hired head coach Chuck Noll, who won four Super Bowls in six years with the team between the 1974 and 1979 seasons. That streak began two years after the "Immaculate Reception" game.[6]

1972 season edit

The 1972 season marked the third year after the AFL-NFL merger, which had the Steelers move to the newly formed American Football Conference despite not having been a member of the American Football League. Thus, this was the third year in which a playoff meeting between the Raiders and the Steelers could take place outside a Super Bowl.

Having missed the playoffs the year before, the two teams met in the opening game of the season (on September 17), which Pittsburgh won, 34–28. In that game, the Steelers took leads of 17–0 and 27–7 on a blocked-punt return touchdown and two rushing touchdowns by Terry Bradshaw. Oakland fought back with three touchdowns in the fourth quarter, including a 70-yard touchdown pass from Daryle Lamonica to Mike Siani, but Pittsburgh prevailed.[7]

Both teams won their respective divisions. Pittsburgh's 11–3 record put them one game over the Cleveland Browns, who earned the AFC's wild-card spot, and Oakland's mark of 10–3–1 ousted the Kansas City Chiefs by 2½ games. Until 1975 the home teams in the playoffs were two of the three division champions decided based on a yearly divisional rotation. The Miami Dolphins hosted the wild-card team in the first round of the playoffs, which set up the matchup between Pittsburgh and Oakland.[8]

Game synopsis edit

The teams played to a scoreless tie at the half, with Oakland's longest gain coming on an 11-yard completion from Daryle Lamonica to Fred Biletnikoff. Pittsburgh, meanwhile, came fairly close to a scoring chance, but passed up on a field-goal attempt from the Oakland 31-yard line. Instead, John Fuqua was stopped by Jack Tatum on a fourth-and-2 run to turn possession over to the Raiders.[9] (It was another collision by these two players that led to the "Immaculate Reception" late in the fourth quarter.) On its first possession of the second half, however, Pittsburgh opted for a field goal, with Roy Gerela's successful 18-yard attempt accounting for the first score of the game.[10]

Later in the third quarter, Lamonica was intercepted for the second time in the game –  both times by a Steelers linebacker (Andy Russell in the first quarter, Jack Ham in the third).[10] Lamonica's latest turnover prompted Raiders head coach John Madden to put Kenny Stabler into the game at quarterback.[9]

After an interception thrown by Terry Bradshaw in Oakland territory  –  the Steelers' only turnover of the game  –  Stabler turned the ball back over to Pittsburgh, when he fumbled the ball inside the Oakland 25-yard line. This led to another field goal by Gerela to extend the Steelers' lead to 6–0.[9]

Stabler, however, successfully led Oakland down the field, when he capped a fourth-quarter drive with a 30-yard touchdown run. The ensuing extra point by George Blanda gave Oakland a 7–6 lead with 1:17 left, setting up the dramatic ending to the game.[10]

Events of the play edit

 
Diagram of the Immaculate Reception

Trailing the Oakland Raiders 7–6, the Pittsburgh Steelers faced fourth-and-10 on their own 40-yard line with 22 seconds remaining in the game and no time-outs. Head coach Chuck Noll called a pass play, 66 Circle Option, intended for receiver Barry Pearson,[11] a rookie who was playing in his first NFL game.

Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw (1 in diagram) dropped back and, under great pressure from Raiders linemen Tony Cline and Horace Jones, scrambled to his right and threw the ball from his 29-yard line to the Raiders' 34-yard line, toward halfback John "Frenchy" Fuqua. Raiders safety Jack Tatum collided with Fuqua just as the ball arrived (2). Tatum's hit knocked Fuqua to the ground and sent the ball sailing backward several yards, end over end.

Steelers fullback Franco Harris, after initially blocking on the play, had run downfield in case Bradshaw needed another eligible receiver. After Bradshaw threw the pass towards Fuqua, Harris recounted the advice of his college football coach Joe Paterno, who always told his players "Go to the ball."[12] Harris, in the vicinity of the deflected pass, scooped up the sailing ball at the Oakland 44-yard line, just before it hit the ground (3). Harris ran past Raiders linebacker Gerald Irons, while linebacker Phil Villapiano, who had been covering Harris, was blocked by Steelers tight end John McMakin (4). Harris used a stiff arm to ward off Raiders defensive back Jimmy Warren (5), and went in for a touchdown. The touchdown gave the Steelers a 13–7 lead when Roy Gerela added the ensuing extra point.

1972 AFC Divisional Round: Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers—Game Summary
Period 1 2 34Total
Raiders 0 0 077
Steelers 0 0 31013

at Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

  • Date: December 23
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 42 °F (6 °C), Clear
  • Game attendance: 50,327
  • Referee: Fred Swearingen
  • TV announcers (NBC): Curt Gowdy and Al DeRogatis
  • Boxscore at pro-football-reference.com
Game information

Referee call edit

 
Statue of Harris making the "Immaculate Reception" at Pittsburgh International Airport

After the play, a critical question remained: who did the football touch in the Fuqua/Tatum collision? If it bounced off Fuqua without ever touching Tatum, then Harris' reception was illegal. If the ball bounced off only Tatum or if it bounced off both Fuqua and Tatum (in any order) then the reception was legal. The rule stated in the pertinent part that if an offensive player touches a pass first, he is the only offensive player eligible to catch the pass. "However, if a [defensive] player touches [the] pass first, or simultaneously with or subsequent to its having been touched by only one [offensive] player then all [offensive] players become and remain eligible" to catch the pass.[13][14] (This rule was rescinded in 1978.) If the reception was illegal, the Raiders would have gained possession (by a turnover on downs), clinching the victory.

One official, back judge Adrian Burk, signaled that the play was a touchdown but the other game officials did not immediately make any signal.[11] When the officials huddled, Burk and another official, umpire Pat Harder, thought the play was a touchdown because Tatum and Fuqua had both touched the ball, while three others said that they were not in a position to rule.[15][16] Referee Fred Swearingen approached Steelers sideline official Jim Boston and asked to be taken to a telephone. Boston took Swearingen to a baseball dugout in the stadium. There was a video monitor in the dugout but it was not used by Swearingen.[15] (Terry Bradshaw's assertion that a special television was rigged up on the sideline so that Swearingen could watch the replay[17]: 16  is not supported by other accounts.) From the dugout telephone, Boston put in a call to the press box to reach the NFL's supervisor of officials, Art McNally. Before the call, McNally had "an opinion from the get-go" that the ball had hit Tatum's chest, which he confirmed by looking "at one shot on instant replay".[14] In the press box the telephone was answered either by Dan Rooney, son of Steelers owner Art Rooney, or by Steelers public relations director Joe Gordon (reports vary) and McNally was put on the line.[15][18][19] According to McNally, Swearingen "never asked me about the rule and never asked what I saw. All he said was, 'Two of my men say that opposing players touched the ball.' And I said, 'Everything's fine then, go ahead.'"[15][20] After Swearingen hung up the phone Boston asked, "What do we got?" "We got a touchdown,"[15][21] answered Swearingen, who then went back onto the field to signal the ruling to the crowd. Franco Harris crossed the goal line at approximately 3:29 PM EST. Fans immediately rushed the field and it took 15 minutes to clear them so the extra point could be kicked to give the Steelers what turned out to be their final margin of victory, 13–7.

Although this has been described as the first known use of television replay to confirm a call[22][23] (there was no instant replay review then), at the time the NFL denied that the decision was made in the press box or using a television replay.[24] An Oakland Tribune article two days after the game reported that Steelers publicist Joe Gordon told reporters in the press box that the decision had been made using the replay.[25] Gordon has dismissed this as "a total fabrication".[19] NFL officials Jim Kensil and Val Pinchbeck, who were in the press box with McNally, also deny that replay was used in making the decision on the play.[25][26]

In various NFL Films productions about the play years later, various Raiders have theorized that the real purpose of Swearingen's phone conversation was to see if there were enough police on hand to ensure the players' safety if the play was ruled incomplete. The theory claims there were too few police so the play was called for the Steelers out of fear. In one of the films, McNally laughs at the suggestion.[27]

The play is still disputed by those involved, particularly by living personnel from the Raiders and their fans, who insist the Raiders should have won. Tatum said that the ball did not bounce off him, both immediately after the game[23] as well as later;[11] however, in his memoirs, Tatum equivocated, stating that he could not honestly say whether or not the ball hit him.[28] Raiders linebacker Phil Villapiano, who was covering Harris at the time, maintains that the ball hit Fuqua.[29] Fuqua has been coy, supposedly saying he knows exactly what happened that day but will never tell.[30] Villapiano has also stated that he was illegally blocked by Steelers tight end John McMakin as he was pursuing Harris following the reception and he would have tackled Harris without it.[11][29] Raiders coach Madden echoed this complaint.[25]

According to Raiders defensive back George Atkinson, the play is known by the Raiders and their fans as the "Immaculate Deception" because "the public was deceived, the officials were deceived and we got deceived".[31]

John Madden, coach of the 1972 Raiders, maintained (until his death) that he would never get over the play, and has indicated that he was bothered more by the delay between end of the play and the final signal of touchdown than by which player the ball actually hit. After the game, he said that from his view the football had indeed touched Tatum.[23] A few days later, however, Madden indicated that the Raiders game films showed that the ball hit Fuqua's shoulder pads,[25] Jack Tatum conceded that "even after we viewed the game films with stop action, nobody could tell who the ball hit on that moment of impact."[28] Years later Madden wrote, "No matter how many times I watch the films of the 'immaculate reception' play, I never know for sure what happened."[32]

In 1998, during halftime of the AFC Championship Game, NBC showed a replay from its original broadcast. The replay presented a different angle than the NFL Films clip that is most often shown. According to a writer for the New York Daily News, "NBC's replay showed the ball clearly hit one and only one man[:] Oakland DB Jack Tatum."[33] Curt Gowdy, doing the live TV play-by-play, called it as having been deflected by Tatum, and reiterated that during the video replay.[34]

Pittsburgh sportscaster Myron Cope, in a 1997 article[19] and in his 2002 book Quintuple Yoi!,[35] related that two days after the game he reviewed film taken by local Pittsburgh TV station WTAE-TV (channel 4) and that the film showed "[n]o question about it – Bradshaw's pass struck Tatum squarely on his right shoulder." Cope stated that Channel 4's film would be next to impossible to find again, because of inadequate filing procedures at WTAE.

In 2004, John Fetkovich, an emeritus professor of physics at Carnegie Mellon University, analyzed the NFL Films clip of the play. He concluded, based on the trajectory of the bounced ball and conservation of momentum, that the ball must have bounced off Tatum, who was running upfield at the time, rather than Fuqua, who was running across and down the field.[36] Fetkovich also performed experiments by throwing a football against a brick wall at a velocity greater than 60 feet per second (18 meters per second), twice the speed Fetkovich calculated that Bradshaw's pass was traveling when it reached Tatum and Fuqua. Fetkovitch achieved a maximum rebound of 10 feet (3.0 meters) when the ball hit point first and 15 feet (4.6 m) when the ball hit belly first, both less than the 24 feet (7.3 m) that the ball rebounded during the play. Timothy Gay, a physics professor and a longtime Raiders fan,[37] cited Fetkovich's work with approval in his book The Physics of Football and concluded that "the referees made the right call in the Immaculate Reception."[38]

Terry Bradshaw himself had made points similar to those of Fetkovich 15 years earlier, stating that he did not think that he had thrown the ball hard enough for it to bounce that far back off Fuqua and that since Fuqua was running across the field, the ball would have veered to the right if it had hit him. Bradshaw opined that the ball must have bounced off the upfield-moving Tatum – if that had happened then "Tatum's momentum carries the ball backward."[17]: 14–15 

Aftermath edit

The week after this playoff victory, the Steelers lost the AFC championship game, 21–17, to the Miami Dolphins,[39] who went on to win Super Bowl VII in their landmark undefeated season. Had the Raiders advanced to the AFC championship game instead, they would have entered that contest with an all-time record (including playoffs) of 6–1–1 against the Dolphins.[40]

Despite the loss to the Dolphins, the Steelers started to reverse four decades of futility and went on to become a dominant force in the NFL for the rest of the 1970s, winning four Super Bowls in six years with such stars as Bradshaw, Harris, John Stallworth, and Lynn Swann along with the Steel Curtain defense led by Jack Ham, Jack Lambert, "Mean Joe" Greene, Mel Blount, and Dwight White.

The year 1972 was one year before the team's 40th year in the league, during which they had finished above .500 only nine times, and until then had never won a playoff game. In fact, before this game, the only playoff game the team had ever played was a loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in 1947 after the two teams finished tied for the Eastern Division championship. The Immaculate Reception was actually the first touchdown the Steelers ever scored in the postseason (they were shut out against the Eagles in the 1947 playoff game). They had long been regarded as one of the league's doormats (as the 1944 Card-Pitt merger was 0–10 and was ridiculed as the "Carpitts," a play on the word "carpet"). Between 1950 and 1970, the Steelers finished as high as second place once, doing so in 1962, which garnered them an exhibition game called the "Playoff Bowl". As recently as 1969, the team had posted a 1–13 record, thus securing the first draft choice in the subsequent NFL draft, in which the Steelers chose Terry Bradshaw that seeded their remarkable turnaround. Since the AFL–NFL merger, the Steelers have the NFL's best record (surpassing Miami in 2007 because of the Dolphins' recent struggles), have had a league-low three head coaches, and have had only nine losing seasons, none worse than 5–11. Only twice since the Immaculate Reception has the team had losing seasons two years in a row and none three years in a row.

The Immaculate Reception spawned a heated rivalry between the Steelers and Raiders, a rivalry that was at its peak during the 1970s, when both teams were among the best in the league and both were known for their hard-hitting, physical play. The teams met in the playoffs in each of the next four seasons, starting with the Raiders' 33–14 victory in the 1973 divisional playoffs. Pittsburgh used the AFC championship game victories over Oakland (24–13 at Oakland in 1974 and 16–10 at Pittsburgh in 1975) as a springboard to victories in Super Bowl IX and Super Bowl X, before the Raiders notched a 24–7 victory at home in 1976 on their way to winning Super Bowl XI. To date, the two last met in the playoffs in 1983 when the eventual Super Bowl champion Raiders, playing in Los Angeles at the time, crushed the Steelers, 38–10. The rivalry has somewhat died off in the years since, mainly due to the Raiders' on-field struggles since appearing in Super Bowl XXXVII.

The play itself started another rivalry between the Raiders and the rest of the league, as Raider fans have long thought that the league has wanted to shortchange the team and specifically owner Al Davis. In 2007, NFL Network ranked the "Raiders versus the World" as the biggest feud in NFL history.[41]

More positively, the play ironically led to the lifelong friendship between Harris and Villapiano due to their shared Italian American heritage despite their difference of opinions on the events of the play. A year after the play, Harris had discovered that both his mother and Villapiano's father, both Italian immigrants, hailed from the same area of the Italian Peninsula after Villapiano's father helped Harris' mother (who still wasn't fluent in English at the time) speak for her son at a banquet in their native New Jersey. This led to the two becoming friendlier away from the football field with Harris becoming an "honorary Raider" while Villapiano has accepted the events of the play over time.[42]

For the 1978 NFL season, the NFL passed two rule changes that would have affected the Immaculate Reception had it happened today. The first one, regarding the forward pass touching an offensive player but being caught by another without touching a defender, was repealed. There are no longer any restrictions on any deflections of passes, and a future play that mirrored the Immaculate Reception would simply be an extraordinary but legal reception. Second, the NFL also passed tougher pass interference rules (ironically as a result of the Steelers' own Mel Blount, among others), which if in effect in 1972 would have penalized the Raiders regardless of the result of the play due to Tatum's hit on Fuqua; as the goal post would be at the goal line until 1974 when they were moved back to the end line, such a penalty would have placed the Steelers in relatively short field goal range for Gerela to try a game-winning field goal from 42 yards out. Whether a future Franco Harris would have been ruled as catching such a deflected football before it struck the turf is a different matter, thanks to myriad cameras and use of instant replay that is part of the present-day NFL.

As 1972 was the last year that the NFL forbade any local telecasts of home games, the game itself was not shown live on Pittsburgh NBC affiliate WIIC-TV (now WPXI), nor was it shown on nearby NBC affiliates WJAC-TV in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, WFMJ-TV in Youngstown, Ohio; WBOY-TV in Clarksburg, West Virginia; and then-NBC affiliate WTRF-TV in Wheeling, West Virginia, all of which are secondary markets to the Steelers. WICU-TV in Erie, Pennsylvania, and then-NBC O&O WKYC-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, were the closest stations to air the game (although WIIC-TV showed the game on tape delay the following day). Starting the next year, any home games that sold out 72 hours before kick-off could be televised locally. As the Steelers began their home sell-out streak in 1972, blackouts have never been needed in the Pittsburgh area.

Game ball edit

The actual ball ended up in the hands of fan Jim Baker, who attended the game with his young nephew, Bobby. Baker managed to scoop up the ball during the ensuing melee after the extra point kick, grabbed his nephew, and ran off the field. He had offered to give the ball back to the Steelers in return for lifetime season tickets but was rebuffed. He has since declined any offer to sell it, including the highest offer of $150,000 from heavy equipment provider Ray Anthony International. Baker has instead kept this coveted piece of NFL memorabilia in a guarded bank vault in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania, occasionally bringing it out for public appearances involving the Steelers including one with Franco Harris in 1997 to commemorate the play's 25th anniversary.[43][44]

Legacy edit

The Steelers organization still consider the Immaculate Reception the greatest moment in team history. The Immaculate Reception was documented by NFL Network's A Football Life in 2012.[45]

On December 23, 2012, on the 40th anniversary of the play just hours before the Steelers hosted the Cincinnati Bengals, the Steelers unveiled a monument at the exact spot where Harris made the reception at a parking lot just outside Heinz Field, where Three Rivers Stadium formerly stood. This is the third such monument that commemorates the play in the city (the others are located at the Pittsburgh International Airport and the Heinz History Center).[46]

In the 2013–14 NFL playoffs, Seattle Seahawks' Richard Sherman deflected a pass by San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick, that was intended for Michael Crabtree, which was caught by teammate Malcolm Smith to seal the Seahawks' 23–17 victory in the NFC Championship Game.[47][48][49][50] The play was later dubbed "the Immaculate Deflection" (as an homage to the Immaculate Reception), and would later be voted by Seahawks fans to be the most significant play in franchise history.[51]

For Super Bowl XLIX, Wix.com ran an ad featuring retired football players using its tools to build websites for their new businesses, including Harris who creates a fictional wedding planning website called "Immaculate Receptions" named after the famous play.[52]

"The 100-Year Game", a short film created by the league for Super Bowl LIII, featured many current and former football stars. In it, Terry Bradshaw is seen throwing a football across the room towards such contemporary star receivers as Larry Fitzgerald and Odell Beckham Jr. — only to see the ball tipped, and snatched by Harris just before it hits the floor.

A 2019 poll of media members by the NFL named the Immaculate Reception as the greatest NFL play in its history.[53]

On December 24, 2022, while hosting the present-day Las Vegas Raiders to mark the 50th anniversary of the Immaculate Reception, Harris became only the third player in Steelers history to have his jersey retired.[54] Harris had died four days earlier on December 20, and was originally scheduled to appear during the ceremony.[55]

Quotes edit

Last chance for the Steelers. Bradshaw, trying to get away. And his pass is...broken up by Tatum. Picked off! Franco Harris has it! And he's over! Franco Harris grabbed the ball, a deflection! Five seconds to go! He grabbed it with five seconds to go and scored!

— Curt Gowdy, calling the play on NBC television

You talk about Christmas miracles. Here's the miracle of all miracles. Watch this one now. Bradshaw is lucky to even get rid of the ball! He shoots it out. Jack Tatum deflects it right into the hands of Harris. And he sets off. And the big 230-pound rookie slipped away from Warren and scored.

— Gowdy, describing an instant replay of the play on NBC

Hang onto your hats, here come the Steelers out of the huddle. Twenty-two seconds remaining. It's down to one big play, fourth down and 10 yards to go. Terry Bradshaw at the controls. And Bradshaw... back and looking again. Bradshaw, running out of the pocket, looking for somebody to throw to, fires it downfield, and there's a collision! [volume increases] And it's caught out of the air! The ball is pulled in by Franco Harris! Harris is going for a touchdown for Pittsburgh! Harris is going...5 seconds left on the clock. Franco Harris pulled in the football, I don't even know where he came from!

— Jack Fleming, on the Steelers radio broadcast

We wanted to hit Barry Pearson with the post. The pass protection broke down so all of the timing was off. Bradshaw rolls out to his right and I thought he was going to get tackled, but he ducked and he came up and he fired the ball. Now, from the angle I'm coming from, the outside in, Jack Tatum's coming from an angle straight ahead. What I was going to do, if nothing else, is beat him to the point. We got there about the same time. Now, if the ball hit me, it bounced a hell of a ways. If the ball hit him, he wasn't aiming at it, he was going at my head. I can tell you this: I did not take my eyes off the ball, as you can tell from the way that my body was. What happens from that point on was truly Immaculate.

— Frenchy Fuqua on the play.[56]

The play that changed a city.

Officials edit

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Cook, Kevin (2012-08-13). "Rowdy and Rough". ESPN. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
  2. ^ NFL Top 10 – Controversial Calls
  3. ^ "Franco Harris' Immaculate Reception Named NFL Network's Top Play in NFL History". Bleacher Report. September 20, 2019. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  4. ^ Finder, Chuck (November 11, 2012). "Couple who coined name for Immaculate Reception never sought credit". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  5. ^ Las Vegas Raiders Playoff History, Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  6. ^ Pittsburgh Steelers Playoff History, Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  7. ^ Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers - September 17th, 1972, Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  8. ^ 1972 NFL Standings & Team Stats, Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  9. ^ a b c NFL Game of the Week, 1972 Divisional Playoffs
  10. ^ a b c Divisional Round - Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers - December 23rd, 1972, Pro Football Reference. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  11. ^ a b c d . Sporting News. 2000. Archived from the original on 2006-02-17.
  12. ^ "Steelers greats recall The Immaculate Reception as it turns 50". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. 18 December 2022.
  13. ^ "Rule 7, Section 5, Article 2, Item 1". Official Rules for Professional Football. The National Football League. 1971. pp. 44–45.
  14. ^ a b Gola, Hank (December 21, 1997). "Steel of the Century! Twenty-Five Years Later, 'Immaculate' Still Inimitable". New York Daily News. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d e Collier, Gene (1998). (PDF). The Coffin Corner. profootballresearchers.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-07. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  16. ^ "Did Tatum Deflect the Pass?". Eugene Register-Guard. December 24, 1972. p. 3B.
  17. ^ a b Bradshaw, Terry (1989). Looking Deep. Chicago: Contemporary Books. ISBN 0-8092-4266-4.
  18. ^ Rooney, Dan (2007). My 75 Years With the Pittsburgh Steelers and the NFL. New York: Da Capo Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-306-81569-0.
  19. ^ a b c Cope, Myron (December 21, 1997). "Backtalk: An Immaculate Explanation of the Truth". The New York Times. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  20. ^ Miller, Ira (November 29, 2000). "Cold Reception: Raiders-Steelers rivalry is still Immaculate after all these years". sfgate.com. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  21. ^ Robinson, Alan (December 28, 1997). "An Immaculate Recollection – Incredible Touchdown Still Amazes Franco Harris 25 Years Later". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  22. ^ Merron, Jeff. "Great moments, great TV". ESPN.com. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  23. ^ a b c Wallace, William N. (December 23, 1972). "This Day In Sports: The 'Immaculate Reception'". The New York Times. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  24. ^ "TV or Not TV?". The New York Times. December 24, 1972.
  25. ^ a b c d LaMarre, Tom (December 25, 1972). "Madden: Raiders Were Robbed". Oakland Tribune. (Reprinted in One for the Thumb: The New Steelers Reader, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8229-5945-3, pp. 171–172)
  26. ^ Smith, Red (December 24, 1972). "How Fort Duquesne Repelled Raiders". The New York Times. (Reprinted in One for the Thumb: The New Steelers Reader, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2006, ISBN 0-8229-5945-3, pp. 169–171)
  27. ^ "The Conspiracies Behind the Immaculate Reception | A Football Life". YouTube.
  28. ^ a b Tatum, Jack (1979). They Call Me Assassin. New York: Everest House. p. 145. ISBN 0-89696-060-9.
  29. ^ a b . TheSuper70s.com. Archived from the original on 2007-11-01. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  30. ^ "Two words say it all: 'Immaculate Reception'". ESPN.com. ESPN/Starwave Partners. January 8, 1999. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  31. ^ "The Immaculate Reception". A Football Life. Season 2. Episode 13. December 19, 2012. NFL Network.
  32. ^ Madden, John (1984). Hey Wait a Minute, I Wrote a Book. New York: Villard Books. p. 238. ISBN 0-394-53109-4.
  33. ^ Raissman, Bob (January 13, 1998). "With NFL, Networks Can't Win for Losing". New York Daily News. p. 57.
  34. ^ NBC broadcast of 1972 AFC Divisional Playoff
  35. ^ Cope, Myron (2002). Quintuple Yoi!. Sports Publishing. p. 179. ISBN 1-58261-548-9.
  36. ^ "The physics of the matter say the Immaculate Reception ball hit Tatum". Post-gazette.com. 2004-10-18. Retrieved 2019-01-17.
  37. ^ Spice, Byron (October 4, 2004). "Pigskin physics and the Immaculate Reception". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  38. ^ Gay, Timothy (2005). The Physics of Football. New York: HarperCollins. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-06-082634-5.
  39. ^ "1972 NFL Standings, Team & Offensive Statistics". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  40. ^ "All Matchups, Raiders vs. Dolphins". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved January 13, 2019.
  41. ^ "Biggest Feuds". NFL.com.
  42. ^ Borden, Sam (December 23, 2022). "Harris, Villapiano and the Immaculate Reception of 1972". ESPN.
  43. ^ Gamble, Kim (December 12, 2012). "How one man nabbed the most coveted piece of NFL memorabilia from the clutches of history". Grantland.
  44. ^ Karlovits, Bob (April 30, 2016). "'Sports Detectives' investigates Immaculate Reception ball". Trib Total Media.
  45. ^ . Tennessee Titans. 2012-10-12. Archived from the original on 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
  46. ^ "Immaculate Reception honored". ESPN. Associated Press. December 22, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  47. ^ "Seahawks CB Richard Sherman fined $7,875 for NFC title game taunting". CBS Sports. January 14, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  48. ^ Chris Greenberg (January 20, 2014). "Richard Sherman's Rant May Have 'Scared Erin Andrews,' Definitely Bothered Some On Twitter (VIDEOS)". HuffPost. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  49. ^ "Richard Sherman stunned by reaction to his victory rant". CNN. November 14, 2011. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  50. ^ "Richard Sherman fined $7,875 for on-field celebration". NFL. January 24, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2022.
  51. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-01-21. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
  52. ^ "5 Beautiful Wix Websites That (Almost) Broke the Internet". 29 January 2015.
  53. ^ Haring, Bruce (September 21, 2019). "'The Immaculate Reception' Is Voted Greatest Play In NFL History". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 21, 2019.
  54. ^ "Steelers retire Franco Harris' No. 32 during emotional halftime ceremony days after Hall of Famer's death". NFL.com. December 24, 2022.
  55. ^ Sandomir, Richard; Victor, Daniel (December 21, 2022). "Franco Harris, Steeler Who Caught 'Immaculate Reception,' Dies at 72". The New York Times. Retrieved December 21, 2022.
  56. ^ Bouchette, Ed (2012-09-16). "Frenchy Fuqua: The man who collided with history". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2022-05-14.
  57. ^ McCollough, J. Brady (September 9, 2012). "Steelers Immaculate Reception: The play that changed a city". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved May 14, 2022.

Sources

  • Steelers Fever – Immaculate Reception (Last accessed December 23, 2014)
  • "Two words say it all: 'Immaculate Reception'" ESPN.com (Last accessed March 12, 2009)

External links edit

  • Broadcast video of the incident
  • Game film angle

immaculate, reception, most, famous, plays, history, american, football, occurred, divisional, playoff, game, national, football, league, between, pittsburgh, steelers, oakland, raiders, three, rivers, stadium, pittsburgh, pennsylvania, december, 1972, 1972, d. The Immaculate Reception is one of the most famous plays in the history of American football It occurred in the AFC divisional playoff game of the National Football League NFL between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Oakland Raiders at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania on December 23 1972 1972 AFC Divisional playoffOakland Raiders 10 3 1 Pittsburgh Steelers 11 3 0 7 13Head coach John Madden Head coach Chuck Noll1234 TotalOAK 0007 7PIT 00310 13DateDecember 23 1972StadiumThree Rivers Stadium Pittsburgh PennsylvaniaRefereeFred SwearingenAttendance50 327Hall of FamersRaiders George Blanda Willie Brown Fred Biletnikoff Bob Brown Al Davis owner gm Jim Otto John Madden coach Art Shell Ken Stabler Gene UpshawSteelers Mel Blount Terry Bradshaw Joe Greene Jack Ham Franco Harris Chuck Noll coach Bill Nunn scout Art Rooney owner founder Dan Rooney owner administrator TV in the United StatesNetworkNBCAnnouncersCurt Gowdy and Al DeRogatisWith the Steelers trailing 7 6 on fourth down with 22 seconds left in the game Pittsburgh quarterback Terry Bradshaw threw a pass targeting John Fuqua The ball bounced off the helmet of Raiders safety Jack Tatum Steelers fullback Franco Harris caught it just before it hit the ground and ran for a game winning touchdown The play has been a source of some controversy and speculation ever since with some contending that the ball touched only Fuqua and did not in any way touch Tatum or that it hit the ground before Harris caught it either of which would have resulted in an incomplete pass by the rules at the time Kevin Cook s The Last Headbangers cites the play as the beginning of a bitter rivalry between Pittsburgh and Oakland that fueled a historically brutal Raiders team during the NFL s most controversially physical era 1 NFL Films has chosen the Immaculate Reception as the greatest play of all time as well as the most controversial 2 3 The play was also selected as the Greatest Play in NFL History in the NFL Network s 100 series The play was a turning point for the Steelers who reversed four decades of futility with their first playoff win ever and went on to win four Super Bowls by the end of the 1970s The play s name is a pun derived from the Immaculate Conception a dogma in the Catholic Church The phrase was first used on air by Myron Cope a Pittsburgh sportscaster who was reporting on the Steelers victory A Pittsburgh woman Sharon Levosky called Cope before his 11 00 p m sports broadcast that night of December 23 and suggested the name which was coined by her friend Michael Ord Cope used the term on television and the phrase stuck 4 The phrase was apparently meant to imply that the play was miraculous in nature see Hail Mary pass for a similar term Contents 1 Background 1 1 Playoff history 1 2 1972 season 2 Game synopsis 3 Events of the play 4 Referee call 5 Aftermath 5 1 Game ball 5 2 Legacy 6 Quotes 7 Officials 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksBackground editPlayoff history edit The Oakland Raiders had been to the postseason four previous times In 1967 they won the AFL Championship before losing Super Bowl II against the Green Bay Packers The following three seasons they made it back to the AFL AFC Championship Game but lost to the eventual Super Bowl champions in all three instances New York Jets in 1968 Kansas City Chiefs in 1969 Baltimore Colts in 1970 The Immaculate Reception game thus marked their return to the postseason after missing out on a playoff berth the year before 5 The Pittsburgh Steelers on the other hand had appeared in the postseason only once losing against the Philadelphia Eagles 21 0 in an NFL divisional playoff game on December 21 1947 The Steelers fortunes began to change however in 1969 when they hired head coach Chuck Noll who won four Super Bowls in six years with the team between the 1974 and 1979 seasons That streak began two years after the Immaculate Reception game 6 1972 season edit The 1972 season marked the third year after the AFL NFL merger which had the Steelers move to the newly formed American Football Conference despite not having been a member of the American Football League Thus this was the third year in which a playoff meeting between the Raiders and the Steelers could take place outside a Super Bowl Having missed the playoffs the year before the two teams met in the opening game of the season on September 17 which Pittsburgh won 34 28 In that game the Steelers took leads of 17 0 and 27 7 on a blocked punt return touchdown and two rushing touchdowns by Terry Bradshaw Oakland fought back with three touchdowns in the fourth quarter including a 70 yard touchdown pass from Daryle Lamonica to Mike Siani but Pittsburgh prevailed 7 Both teams won their respective divisions Pittsburgh s 11 3 record put them one game over the Cleveland Browns who earned the AFC s wild card spot and Oakland s mark of 10 3 1 ousted the Kansas City Chiefs by 2 games Until 1975 the home teams in the playoffs were two of the three division champions decided based on a yearly divisional rotation The Miami Dolphins hosted the wild card team in the first round of the playoffs which set up the matchup between Pittsburgh and Oakland 8 Game synopsis editThe teams played to a scoreless tie at the half with Oakland s longest gain coming on an 11 yard completion from Daryle Lamonica to Fred Biletnikoff Pittsburgh meanwhile came fairly close to a scoring chance but passed up on a field goal attempt from the Oakland 31 yard line Instead John Fuqua was stopped by Jack Tatum on a fourth and 2 run to turn possession over to the Raiders 9 It was another collision by these two players that led to the Immaculate Reception late in the fourth quarter On its first possession of the second half however Pittsburgh opted for a field goal with Roy Gerela s successful 18 yard attempt accounting for the first score of the game 10 Later in the third quarter Lamonica was intercepted for the second time in the game both times by a Steelers linebacker Andy Russell in the first quarter Jack Ham in the third 10 Lamonica s latest turnover prompted Raiders head coach John Madden to put Kenny Stabler into the game at quarterback 9 After an interception thrown by Terry Bradshaw in Oakland territory the Steelers only turnover of the game Stabler turned the ball back over to Pittsburgh when he fumbled the ball inside the Oakland 25 yard line This led to another field goal by Gerela to extend the Steelers lead to 6 0 9 Stabler however successfully led Oakland down the field when he capped a fourth quarter drive with a 30 yard touchdown run The ensuing extra point by George Blanda gave Oakland a 7 6 lead with 1 17 left setting up the dramatic ending to the game 10 Events of the play edit nbsp Diagram of the Immaculate ReceptionTrailing the Oakland Raiders 7 6 the Pittsburgh Steelers faced fourth and 10 on their own 40 yard line with 22 seconds remaining in the game and no time outs Head coach Chuck Noll called a pass play 66 Circle Option intended for receiver Barry Pearson 11 a rookie who was playing in his first NFL game Steelers quarterback Terry Bradshaw 1 in diagram dropped back and under great pressure from Raiders linemen Tony Cline and Horace Jones scrambled to his right and threw the ball from his 29 yard line to the Raiders 34 yard line toward halfback John Frenchy Fuqua Raiders safety Jack Tatum collided with Fuqua just as the ball arrived 2 Tatum s hit knocked Fuqua to the ground and sent the ball sailing backward several yards end over end Steelers fullback Franco Harris after initially blocking on the play had run downfield in case Bradshaw needed another eligible receiver After Bradshaw threw the pass towards Fuqua Harris recounted the advice of his college football coach Joe Paterno who always told his players Go to the ball 12 Harris in the vicinity of the deflected pass scooped up the sailing ball at the Oakland 44 yard line just before it hit the ground 3 Harris ran past Raiders linebacker Gerald Irons while linebacker Phil Villapiano who had been covering Harris was blocked by Steelers tight end John McMakin 4 Harris used a stiff arm to ward off Raiders defensive back Jimmy Warren 5 and went in for a touchdown The touchdown gave the Steelers a 13 7 lead when Roy Gerela added the ensuing extra point 1972 AFC Divisional Round Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers Game Summary Period 1 2 34TotalRaiders 0 0 077Steelers 0 0 31013at Three Rivers Stadium Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Date December 23Game time 1 00 p m ESTGame weather 42 F 6 C ClearGame attendance 50 327Referee Fred SwearingenTV announcers NBC Curt Gowdy and Al DeRogatisBoxscore at pro football reference com Game informationThird quarterPIT Roy Gerela 18 yard FGFourth quarterPIT Gerela 29 yard FG OAK Stabler 30 yard run George Blanda kick PIT Harris 60 yard pass from Bradshaw Gerela kick Top passersOAK Ken Stabler 6 12 57 YDS PIT Terry Bradshaw 11 25 175 YDS TD INTTop rushersOAK Charlie Smith 14 CAR 57 YDS PIT Franco Harris 18 CAR 64 YDSTop receiversOAK Raymond Chester 3 REC 40 YDS PIT Franco Harris 5 REC 96 YDS TDReferee call edit nbsp Statue of Harris making the Immaculate Reception at Pittsburgh International AirportAfter the play a critical question remained who did the football touch in the Fuqua Tatum collision If it bounced off Fuqua without ever touching Tatum then Harris reception was illegal If the ball bounced off only Tatum or if it bounced off both Fuqua and Tatum in any order then the reception was legal The rule stated in the pertinent part that if an offensive player touches a pass first he is the only offensive player eligible to catch the pass However if a defensive player touches the pass first or simultaneously with or subsequent to its having been touched by only one offensive player then all offensive players become and remain eligible to catch the pass 13 14 This rule was rescinded in 1978 If the reception was illegal the Raiders would have gained possession by a turnover on downs clinching the victory One official back judge Adrian Burk signaled that the play was a touchdown but the other game officials did not immediately make any signal 11 When the officials huddled Burk and another official umpire Pat Harder thought the play was a touchdown because Tatum and Fuqua had both touched the ball while three others said that they were not in a position to rule 15 16 Referee Fred Swearingen approached Steelers sideline official Jim Boston and asked to be taken to a telephone Boston took Swearingen to a baseball dugout in the stadium There was a video monitor in the dugout but it was not used by Swearingen 15 Terry Bradshaw s assertion that a special television was rigged up on the sideline so that Swearingen could watch the replay 17 16 is not supported by other accounts From the dugout telephone Boston put in a call to the press box to reach the NFL s supervisor of officials Art McNally Before the call McNally had an opinion from the get go that the ball had hit Tatum s chest which he confirmed by looking at one shot on instant replay 14 In the press box the telephone was answered either by Dan Rooney son of Steelers owner Art Rooney or by Steelers public relations director Joe Gordon reports vary and McNally was put on the line 15 18 19 According to McNally Swearingen never asked me about the rule and never asked what I saw All he said was Two of my men say that opposing players touched the ball And I said Everything s fine then go ahead 15 20 After Swearingen hung up the phone Boston asked What do we got We got a touchdown 15 21 answered Swearingen who then went back onto the field to signal the ruling to the crowd Franco Harris crossed the goal line at approximately 3 29 PM EST Fans immediately rushed the field and it took 15 minutes to clear them so the extra point could be kicked to give the Steelers what turned out to be their final margin of victory 13 7 Although this has been described as the first known use of television replay to confirm a call 22 23 there was no instant replay review then at the time the NFL denied that the decision was made in the press box or using a television replay 24 An Oakland Tribune article two days after the game reported that Steelers publicist Joe Gordon told reporters in the press box that the decision had been made using the replay 25 Gordon has dismissed this as a total fabrication 19 NFL officials Jim Kensil and Val Pinchbeck who were in the press box with McNally also deny that replay was used in making the decision on the play 25 26 In various NFL Films productions about the play years later various Raiders have theorized that the real purpose of Swearingen s phone conversation was to see if there were enough police on hand to ensure the players safety if the play was ruled incomplete The theory claims there were too few police so the play was called for the Steelers out of fear In one of the films McNally laughs at the suggestion 27 The play is still disputed by those involved particularly by living personnel from the Raiders and their fans who insist the Raiders should have won Tatum said that the ball did not bounce off him both immediately after the game 23 as well as later 11 however in his memoirs Tatum equivocated stating that he could not honestly say whether or not the ball hit him 28 Raiders linebacker Phil Villapiano who was covering Harris at the time maintains that the ball hit Fuqua 29 Fuqua has been coy supposedly saying he knows exactly what happened that day but will never tell 30 Villapiano has also stated that he was illegally blocked by Steelers tight end John McMakin as he was pursuing Harris following the reception and he would have tackled Harris without it 11 29 Raiders coach Madden echoed this complaint 25 According to Raiders defensive back George Atkinson the play is known by the Raiders and their fans as the Immaculate Deception because the public was deceived the officials were deceived and we got deceived 31 John Madden coach of the 1972 Raiders maintained until his death that he would never get over the play and has indicated that he was bothered more by the delay between end of the play and the final signal of touchdown than by which player the ball actually hit After the game he said that from his view the football had indeed touched Tatum 23 A few days later however Madden indicated that the Raiders game films showed that the ball hit Fuqua s shoulder pads 25 Jack Tatum conceded that even after we viewed the game films with stop action nobody could tell who the ball hit on that moment of impact 28 Years later Madden wrote No matter how many times I watch the films of the immaculate reception play I never know for sure what happened 32 In 1998 during halftime of the AFC Championship Game NBC showed a replay from its original broadcast The replay presented a different angle than the NFL Films clip that is most often shown According to a writer for the New York Daily News NBC s replay showed the ball clearly hit one and only one man Oakland DB Jack Tatum 33 Curt Gowdy doing the live TV play by play called it as having been deflected by Tatum and reiterated that during the video replay 34 Pittsburgh sportscaster Myron Cope in a 1997 article 19 and in his 2002 book Quintuple Yoi 35 related that two days after the game he reviewed film taken by local Pittsburgh TV station WTAE TV channel 4 and that the film showed n o question about it Bradshaw s pass struck Tatum squarely on his right shoulder Cope stated that Channel 4 s film would be next to impossible to find again because of inadequate filing procedures at WTAE In 2004 John Fetkovich an emeritus professor of physics at Carnegie Mellon University analyzed the NFL Films clip of the play He concluded based on the trajectory of the bounced ball and conservation of momentum that the ball must have bounced off Tatum who was running upfield at the time rather than Fuqua who was running across and down the field 36 Fetkovich also performed experiments by throwing a football against a brick wall at a velocity greater than 60 feet per second 18 meters per second twice the speed Fetkovich calculated that Bradshaw s pass was traveling when it reached Tatum and Fuqua Fetkovitch achieved a maximum rebound of 10 feet 3 0 meters when the ball hit point first and 15 feet 4 6 m when the ball hit belly first both less than the 24 feet 7 3 m that the ball rebounded during the play Timothy Gay a physics professor and a longtime Raiders fan 37 cited Fetkovich s work with approval in his book The Physics of Football and concluded that the referees made the right call in the Immaculate Reception 38 Terry Bradshaw himself had made points similar to those of Fetkovich 15 years earlier stating that he did not think that he had thrown the ball hard enough for it to bounce that far back off Fuqua and that since Fuqua was running across the field the ball would have veered to the right if it had hit him Bradshaw opined that the ball must have bounced off the upfield moving Tatum if that had happened then Tatum s momentum carries the ball backward 17 14 15 Aftermath editThe week after this playoff victory the Steelers lost the AFC championship game 21 17 to the Miami Dolphins 39 who went on to win Super Bowl VII in their landmark undefeated season Had the Raiders advanced to the AFC championship game instead they would have entered that contest with an all time record including playoffs of 6 1 1 against the Dolphins 40 Despite the loss to the Dolphins the Steelers started to reverse four decades of futility and went on to become a dominant force in the NFL for the rest of the 1970s winning four Super Bowls in six years with such stars as Bradshaw Harris John Stallworth and Lynn Swann along with the Steel Curtain defense led by Jack Ham Jack Lambert Mean Joe Greene Mel Blount and Dwight White The year 1972 was one year before the team s 40th year in the league during which they had finished above 500 only nine times and until then had never won a playoff game In fact before this game the only playoff game the team had ever played was a loss to the Philadelphia Eagles in 1947 after the two teams finished tied for the Eastern Division championship The Immaculate Reception was actually the first touchdown the Steelers ever scored in the postseason they were shut out against the Eagles in the 1947 playoff game They had long been regarded as one of the league s doormats as the 1944 Card Pitt merger was 0 10 and was ridiculed as the Carpitts a play on the word carpet Between 1950 and 1970 the Steelers finished as high as second place once doing so in 1962 which garnered them an exhibition game called the Playoff Bowl As recently as 1969 the team had posted a 1 13 record thus securing the first draft choice in the subsequent NFL draft in which the Steelers chose Terry Bradshaw that seeded their remarkable turnaround Since the AFL NFL merger the Steelers have the NFL s best record surpassing Miami in 2007 because of the Dolphins recent struggles have had a league low three head coaches and have had only nine losing seasons none worse than 5 11 Only twice since the Immaculate Reception has the team had losing seasons two years in a row and none three years in a row The Immaculate Reception spawned a heated rivalry between the Steelers and Raiders a rivalry that was at its peak during the 1970s when both teams were among the best in the league and both were known for their hard hitting physical play The teams met in the playoffs in each of the next four seasons starting with the Raiders 33 14 victory in the 1973 divisional playoffs Pittsburgh used the AFC championship game victories over Oakland 24 13 at Oakland in 1974 and 16 10 at Pittsburgh in 1975 as a springboard to victories in Super Bowl IX and Super Bowl X before the Raiders notched a 24 7 victory at home in 1976 on their way to winning Super Bowl XI To date the two last met in the playoffs in 1983 when the eventual Super Bowl champion Raiders playing in Los Angeles at the time crushed the Steelers 38 10 The rivalry has somewhat died off in the years since mainly due to the Raiders on field struggles since appearing in Super Bowl XXXVII The play itself started another rivalry between the Raiders and the rest of the league as Raider fans have long thought that the league has wanted to shortchange the team and specifically owner Al Davis In 2007 NFL Network ranked the Raiders versus the World as the biggest feud in NFL history 41 More positively the play ironically led to the lifelong friendship between Harris and Villapiano due to their shared Italian American heritage despite their difference of opinions on the events of the play A year after the play Harris had discovered that both his mother and Villapiano s father both Italian immigrants hailed from the same area of the Italian Peninsula after Villapiano s father helped Harris mother who still wasn t fluent in English at the time speak for her son at a banquet in their native New Jersey This led to the two becoming friendlier away from the football field with Harris becoming an honorary Raider while Villapiano has accepted the events of the play over time 42 For the 1978 NFL season the NFL passed two rule changes that would have affected the Immaculate Reception had it happened today The first one regarding the forward pass touching an offensive player but being caught by another without touching a defender was repealed There are no longer any restrictions on any deflections of passes and a future play that mirrored the Immaculate Reception would simply be an extraordinary but legal reception Second the NFL also passed tougher pass interference rules ironically as a result of the Steelers own Mel Blount among others which if in effect in 1972 would have penalized the Raiders regardless of the result of the play due to Tatum s hit on Fuqua as the goal post would be at the goal line until 1974 when they were moved back to the end line such a penalty would have placed the Steelers in relatively short field goal range for Gerela to try a game winning field goal from 42 yards out Whether a future Franco Harris would have been ruled as catching such a deflected football before it struck the turf is a different matter thanks to myriad cameras and use of instant replay that is part of the present day NFL As 1972 was the last year that the NFL forbade any local telecasts of home games the game itself was not shown live on Pittsburgh NBC affiliate WIIC TV now WPXI nor was it shown on nearby NBC affiliates WJAC TV in Johnstown Pennsylvania WFMJ TV in Youngstown Ohio WBOY TV in Clarksburg West Virginia and then NBC affiliate WTRF TV in Wheeling West Virginia all of which are secondary markets to the Steelers WICU TV in Erie Pennsylvania and then NBC O amp O WKYC TV in Cleveland Ohio were the closest stations to air the game although WIIC TV showed the game on tape delay the following day Starting the next year any home games that sold out 72 hours before kick off could be televised locally As the Steelers began their home sell out streak in 1972 blackouts have never been needed in the Pittsburgh area Game ball edit The actual ball ended up in the hands of fan Jim Baker who attended the game with his young nephew Bobby Baker managed to scoop up the ball during the ensuing melee after the extra point kick grabbed his nephew and ran off the field He had offered to give the ball back to the Steelers in return for lifetime season tickets but was rebuffed He has since declined any offer to sell it including the highest offer of 150 000 from heavy equipment provider Ray Anthony International Baker has instead kept this coveted piece of NFL memorabilia in a guarded bank vault in West Mifflin Pennsylvania occasionally bringing it out for public appearances involving the Steelers including one with Franco Harris in 1997 to commemorate the play s 25th anniversary 43 44 Legacy edit The Steelers organization still consider the Immaculate Reception the greatest moment in team history The Immaculate Reception was documented by NFL Network s A Football Life in 2012 45 On December 23 2012 on the 40th anniversary of the play just hours before the Steelers hosted the Cincinnati Bengals the Steelers unveiled a monument at the exact spot where Harris made the reception at a parking lot just outside Heinz Field where Three Rivers Stadium formerly stood This is the third such monument that commemorates the play in the city the others are located at the Pittsburgh International Airport and the Heinz History Center 46 In the 2013 14 NFL playoffs Seattle Seahawks Richard Sherman deflected a pass by San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick that was intended for Michael Crabtree which was caught by teammate Malcolm Smith to seal the Seahawks 23 17 victory in the NFC Championship Game 47 48 49 50 The play was later dubbed the Immaculate Deflection as an homage to the Immaculate Reception and would later be voted by Seahawks fans to be the most significant play in franchise history 51 For Super Bowl XLIX Wix com ran an ad featuring retired football players using its tools to build websites for their new businesses including Harris who creates a fictional wedding planning website called Immaculate Receptions named after the famous play 52 The 100 Year Game a short film created by the league for Super Bowl LIII featured many current and former football stars In it Terry Bradshaw is seen throwing a football across the room towards such contemporary star receivers as Larry Fitzgerald and Odell Beckham Jr only to see the ball tipped and snatched by Harris just before it hits the floor A 2019 poll of media members by the NFL named the Immaculate Reception as the greatest NFL play in its history 53 On December 24 2022 while hosting the present day Las Vegas Raiders to mark the 50th anniversary of the Immaculate Reception Harris became only the third player in Steelers history to have his jersey retired 54 Harris had died four days earlier on December 20 and was originally scheduled to appear during the ceremony 55 Quotes editThis section contains too many quotations for an encyclopedic entry Please help improve the article by presenting facts as a neutrally worded summary with appropriate citations Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or for entire works to Wikisource December 2016 Last chance for the Steelers Bradshaw trying to get away And his pass is broken up by Tatum Picked off Franco Harris has it And he s over Franco Harris grabbed the ball a deflection Five seconds to go He grabbed it with five seconds to go and scored Curt Gowdy calling the play on NBC television You talk about Christmas miracles Here s the miracle of all miracles Watch this one now Bradshaw is lucky to even get rid of the ball He shoots it out Jack Tatum deflects it right into the hands of Harris And he sets off And the big 230 pound rookie slipped away from Warren and scored Gowdy describing an instant replay of the play on NBC Hang onto your hats here come the Steelers out of the huddle Twenty two seconds remaining It s down to one big play fourth down and 10 yards to go Terry Bradshaw at the controls And Bradshaw back and looking again Bradshaw running out of the pocket looking for somebody to throw to fires it downfield and there s a collision volume increases And it s caught out of the air The ball is pulled in by Franco Harris Harris is going for a touchdown for Pittsburgh Harris is going 5 seconds left on the clock Franco Harris pulled in the football I don t even know where he came from Jack Fleming on the Steelers radio broadcast We wanted to hit Barry Pearson with the post The pass protection broke down so all of the timing was off Bradshaw rolls out to his right and I thought he was going to get tackled but he ducked and he came up and he fired the ball Now from the angle I m coming from the outside in Jack Tatum s coming from an angle straight ahead What I was going to do if nothing else is beat him to the point We got there about the same time Now if the ball hit me it bounced a hell of a ways If the ball hit him he wasn t aiming at it he was going at my head I can tell you this I did not take my eyes off the ball as you can tell from the way that my body was What happens from that point on was truly Immaculate Frenchy Fuqua on the play 56 The play that changed a city Pittsburgh Post Gazette 57 Officials editReferee 21 Fred Swearingen Umpire 88 Pat Harder Head Linesman 10 Al Sabato Line Judge 16 Royal Cathcart Back Judge 63 Adrian Burk Field Judge 55 Charley MusserSee also edit nbsp American football portal1972 73 NFL playoffs Pittsburgh sports lore Raiders Steelers rivalryReferences editNotes Cook Kevin 2012 08 13 Rowdy and Rough ESPN Retrieved 2022 05 14 NFL Top 10 Controversial Calls Franco Harris Immaculate Reception Named NFL Network s Top Play in NFL History Bleacher Report September 20 2019 Retrieved May 14 2022 Finder Chuck November 11 2012 Couple who coined name for Immaculate Reception never sought credit Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved May 14 2022 Las Vegas Raiders Playoff History Pro Football Reference Retrieved February 17 2021 Pittsburgh Steelers Playoff History Pro Football Reference Retrieved February 17 2021 Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers September 17th 1972 Pro Football Reference Retrieved February 17 2021 1972 NFL Standings amp Team Stats Pro Football Reference Retrieved February 17 2021 a b c NFL Game of the Week 1972 Divisional Playoffs a b c Divisional Round Oakland Raiders at Pittsburgh Steelers December 23rd 1972 Pro Football Reference Retrieved February 17 2021 a b c d The house that the Immaculate Reception built Sporting News 2000 Archived from the original on 2006 02 17 Steelers greats recall The Immaculate Reception as it turns 50 Pittsburgh Tribune Review 18 December 2022 Rule 7 Section 5 Article 2 Item 1 Official Rules for Professional Football The National Football League 1971 pp 44 45 a b Gola Hank December 21 1997 Steel of the Century Twenty Five Years Later Immaculate Still Inimitable New York Daily News Retrieved December 28 2017 a b c d e Collier Gene 1998 The Immaculate Reception Franco Catches Eternal Fame PDF The Coffin Corner profootballresearchers org Archived from the original PDF on 2012 08 07 Retrieved 2009 08 05 Did Tatum Deflect the Pass Eugene Register Guard December 24 1972 p 3B a b Bradshaw Terry 1989 Looking Deep Chicago Contemporary Books ISBN 0 8092 4266 4 Rooney Dan 2007 My 75 Years With the Pittsburgh Steelers and the NFL New York Da Capo Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 306 81569 0 a b c Cope Myron December 21 1997 Backtalk An Immaculate Explanation of the Truth The New York Times Retrieved December 28 2017 Miller Ira November 29 2000 Cold Reception Raiders Steelers rivalry is still Immaculate after all these years sfgate com Retrieved December 28 2017 Robinson Alan December 28 1997 An Immaculate Recollection Incredible Touchdown Still Amazes Franco Harris 25 Years Later Los Angeles Times Associated Press Retrieved December 28 2017 Merron Jeff Great moments great TV ESPN com Retrieved December 28 2017 a b c Wallace William N December 23 1972 This Day In Sports The Immaculate Reception The New York Times Retrieved December 28 2017 TV or Not TV The New York Times December 24 1972 a b c d LaMarre Tom December 25 1972 Madden Raiders Were Robbed Oakland Tribune Reprinted in One for the Thumb The New Steelers Reader University of Pittsburgh Press 2006 ISBN 0 8229 5945 3 pp 171 172 Smith Red December 24 1972 How Fort Duquesne Repelled Raiders The New York Times Reprinted in One for the Thumb The New Steelers Reader University of Pittsburgh Press 2006 ISBN 0 8229 5945 3 pp 169 171 The Conspiracies Behind the Immaculate Reception A Football Life YouTube a b Tatum Jack 1979 They Call Me Assassin New York Everest House p 145 ISBN 0 89696 060 9 a b Memories from Pro Football s Greatest Era TheSuper70s com Archived from the original on 2007 11 01 Retrieved December 28 2017 Two words say it all Immaculate Reception ESPN com ESPN Starwave Partners January 8 1999 Retrieved December 28 2017 The Immaculate Reception A Football Life Season 2 Episode 13 December 19 2012 NFL Network Madden John 1984 Hey Wait a Minute I Wrote a Book New York Villard Books p 238 ISBN 0 394 53109 4 Raissman Bob January 13 1998 With NFL Networks Can t Win for Losing New York Daily News p 57 NBC broadcast of 1972 AFC Divisional Playoff Cope Myron 2002 Quintuple Yoi Sports Publishing p 179 ISBN 1 58261 548 9 The physics of the matter say the Immaculate Reception ball hit Tatum Post gazette com 2004 10 18 Retrieved 2019 01 17 Spice Byron October 4 2004 Pigskin physics and the Immaculate Reception Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved December 28 2017 Gay Timothy 2005 The Physics of Football New York HarperCollins p 17 ISBN 978 0 06 082634 5 1972 NFL Standings Team amp Offensive Statistics Pro Football Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved December 28 2017 All Matchups Raiders vs Dolphins Pro Football Reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved January 13 2019 Biggest Feuds NFL com Borden Sam December 23 2022 Harris Villapiano and the Immaculate Reception of 1972 ESPN Gamble Kim December 12 2012 How one man nabbed the most coveted piece of NFL memorabilia from the clutches of history Grantland Karlovits Bob April 30 2016 Sports Detectives investigates Immaculate Reception ball Trib Total Media NFL Network s A Football Life Explores Life Legacy of Steve McNair Oct 17 Tennessee Titans 2012 10 12 Archived from the original on 2012 10 18 Retrieved 2022 05 14 Immaculate Reception honored ESPN Associated Press December 22 2012 Retrieved December 28 2017 Seahawks CB Richard Sherman fined 7 875 for NFC title game taunting CBS Sports January 14 2014 Retrieved May 14 2022 Chris Greenberg January 20 2014 Richard Sherman s Rant May Have Scared Erin Andrews Definitely Bothered Some On Twitter VIDEOS HuffPost Retrieved May 14 2022 Richard Sherman stunned by reaction to his victory rant CNN November 14 2011 Retrieved January 24 2014 Richard Sherman fined 7 875 for on field celebration NFL January 24 2014 Retrieved May 14 2022 Richard Sherman gives new meaning to cover corner Archived from the original on 2018 01 21 Retrieved 2022 05 14 5 Beautiful Wix Websites That Almost Broke the Internet 29 January 2015 Haring Bruce September 21 2019 The Immaculate Reception Is Voted Greatest Play In NFL History Deadline Hollywood Retrieved September 21 2019 Steelers retire Franco Harris No 32 during emotional halftime ceremony days after Hall of Famer s death NFL com December 24 2022 Sandomir Richard Victor Daniel December 21 2022 Franco Harris Steeler Who Caught Immaculate Reception Dies at 72 The New York Times Retrieved December 21 2022 Bouchette Ed 2012 09 16 Frenchy Fuqua The man who collided with history Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 2022 05 14 McCollough J Brady September 9 2012 Steelers Immaculate Reception The play that changed a city Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved May 14 2022 Sources Steelers Fever Immaculate Reception Last accessed December 23 2014 Two words say it all Immaculate Reception ESPN com Last accessed March 12 2009 External links editBroadcast video of the incident Game film angle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Immaculate Reception amp oldid 1160049392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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