|
Wikipedia entry:
Immaculate Reception
More on the Immaculate Reception:
Raiders vs. Steelers
December 23, 1972
Pittsburgh 13, Oakland 7
From 1933 through 1971, the Pittsburgh Steelers (actually the Pirates for their first
seven seasons) were as downtrodden a franchise as you could imagine. In those 39 seasons they appeared in
exactly one postseason game—a 21-0 loss to the hated cross-state Eagles in 1947.
It took a miracle to spin the Steelers into an upward trajectory. It took the
"Immaculate Reception," the impossible ending to a 1972 AFC Divisional Playoff Game that NFL.com
fans have honored as number two on the list of the NFL's Most Memorable Games.
"What surprises me is that young people, who weren't even born then, want to talk
about it," says John (Frenchy) Fuqua, the pivot man in this surreal event. "They describe it to
me, and it's like they were there and I wasn't."
Fuqua was indeed there, surrounded by up-and-coming stars. Terry Bradshaw was in his
third season with the Steelers, though he had yet to find his comfort zone as an NFL quarterback. Franco
Harris was an exciting rookie out of Penn State. (Mean) Joe Greene, Jack Ham, and Mel Blount all were part
of Pittsburgh's defense. On the other side of the field, the Oakland Raiders were stocked with future Pro
Bowl Football Hall of Fame enshrinees: wide receiver Fred Biletnikoff, cornerback Willie Brown, center Jim
Otto, guard Gene Upshaw, and tackle Art Shell.
Unfortunately for the Raiders, their once-sensational quarterback, Daryle Lamonica, was
flu-ridden and ineffective on this cold December day in Pittsburgh. So the Raiders trotted out a
replacement—the young Ken Stabler, who wouldn't relinquish the job for most of the decade.
Those who remember Stabler as a brittle-kneed, if deadly accurate, quarterback may be
surprised when reminded of the second biggest play of the game. It was a 30-yard run by the sprightly
quarterback, a swiftly plunged dagger that gave the Raiders a 7-6 lead with just 1:13 remaining.
By the time 22 seconds showed on the clock, the Steelers had advanced only to their
40-yard line. The dreams that club owner Art Rooney and the working-class loyalists of Pittsburgh had
carried around for 40 years were withering before their eyes.
In the huddle, Bradshaw called "66 Option." He dropped back to pass and
immediately felt heat from Oakland's Horace Jones and Tony Cline. Raiders safety Jack Tatum set his cross
hairs on Fuqua, who had run a hook about 15 yards downfield, as Bradshaw drifted to his right.
"He should've been able to hit Preston Pearson, who was wide open [on a post
route]," Fuqua remembers. "But I looked directly in those blue eyes, and I knew he was going to
throw to me. I could see Tatum was heading toward the middle of the field, and that the location of the
pass would bring me on a collision course with him. I'm thinking that I just want to get my body between
him and the ball. Now Bradshaw has released the ball, and here's Tatum. I hear his footsteps, then I hear
his breath, then his heartbeat."
Tatum and the pass met Fuqua at approximately the same time, and the force of the hit
sent the ball ricocheting across the field. Tatum and some of the other Raiders began to celebrate.
Bradshaw threw his helmet to the ground in despair. Art Rooney never saw any of it; he was riding the
elevator down to locker-room level, preparing to give his team a consolation pep talk. He had to rewrite
the speech.
Harris, who had drifted out of the backfield, rescued the ball just before it hit the
ground and, never breaking stride, dashed 60 yards for the most creative touchdown this side of Adelphia
Coliseum.
The Raiders were livid. The rules of the time stated that two offensive players could
not touch a pass in succession, and they were sure Fuqua had batted it to Harris. John Madden, the
thunderous Oakland coach, chased an official, yelling, "no good, no good."
As it turned out, the officiating crew had no idea exactly what had transpired. Referee
Fred Swearingen ducked into a stadium dugout and phoned upstairs to Art McNally, the NFL supervisor of
officials. As far as anybody could tell, Tatum and Fuqua had touched the ball simultaneously. Swearingen
ran back onto the field and signaled the touchdown.
Delirious fans poured onto the field, but were quickly shooed away. Five seconds
remained on the clock. Moments later they, too, were gone.
The Pittsburgh Steelers were winners, finally. A week later they would become the 16th
victim in the Dolphins' perfect 17-0 season, but they had taken the first step toward four Super Bowl
trophies. Pittsburgh and Oakland would meet in each of the next four postseason tournaments, forging a
sometimes vicious rivalry.
So what really occurred at Three Rivers Stadium? Instant replay wouldn't have helped the
officials much in this case. The replay has been rewound a hundred times, and most viewers still aren't
sure. Fuqua claims he's the only one who truly knows, and he's willing to divulge the secret—for the
low, low price of $100,000.
"On the twenty-fifth anniversary of the game, they flew me in," says the
mischievous Fuqua, who now works in circulation for Detroit Newspapers. "We were filming, and I went
into the bathroom. I'm splashing my face, and here comes Bradshaw. He says, 'Frenchy, tell me what
happened.' I said, 'Well, I want to keep it Immaculate, but I guess I can tell a teammate.'
"That's when I noticed the little microphone on his lapel. He was bugged. Can you
believe it? A teammate!"
One would think Fuqua—and anybody else who witnessed the events of Dec. 23,
1972—could believe just about anything.
By Phil Barber, NFL Publishing — NFL.com
|