Immaculate Reception

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The Immaculate Reception is the nickname given to one of the most famous and utterly bizarre plays in the history of not only American football, but all American sports. It occurred in an AFC divisional playoff game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Oakland Raiders at Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on December 23, 1972. NFL Films has chosen it as the greatest play of all time.

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How it happened

The Pittsburgh Steelers trailed the Oakland Raiders 7-6, facing fourth-and-ten on their own 40-yard line with 22 seconds remaining in the game and no time outs. Steelers quarterback and Louisiana Tech alumnus Terry Bradshaw threw the football to the Raiders' 35-yard line, toward fullback John "Frenchy" Fuqua. Raiders safety Jack Tatum reached Fuqua just as the ball did. Tatum's hit knocked Fuqua to the ground. The ball sailed backward several yards, end over end. Steelers running back Franco Harris, after initially blocking on the play, had moved forward in case Bradshaw needed another eligible receiver. He scooped up the sailing ball just before it hit the ground, apparently off the tops of his shoes, and ran the rest of the way downfield to score the touchdown that gave the Steelers a 12-7 lead with five seconds remaining in the game.

Controversy

The critical question was: Off of whom did the ball bounce in that Fuqua/Tatum collision? If it bounced off Fuqua, and then Harris was the next to touch the ball, the reception was illegal under the rules of the time, which did not allow two offensive players to touch a pass in succession; the Raiders would gain possession and a sure win. If the ball bounced off Tatum, or if it bounced off Fuqua and then Tatum, the reception was legal, as a defensive player was the last to touch the ball.

The game officials did not immediately make any signal, and there was no instant replay rule at the time. Referee Fred Swearingen telephoned the NFL's supervisor of officials, Art McNally, who was sitting in the press box, after which he signaled a touchdown. Fans immediately rushed the field, and it took fifteen minutes to clear them so that the point-after, or conversion, could be kicked to give the Steelers what turned out to be their final margin of victory, 13-7.

The play is still disputed by those involved, particularly by surviving personnel from the Raiders and the team's fans, who insist that the Raiders should have won. The surviving videotape and photographs of the play are not conclusive. Tatum has said the ball did not bounce off him.[1] Fuqua has been coy, supposedly saying he knows exactly what happened that day but will never tell. [2] Raiders coach John Madden, currently a sportscaster with NBC television, has said he will never get over it, indicating that he's bothered more by the delay between the end of the play and the final signal of touchdown, than by which player the ball truly hit. [3]

The linebacker who was covering Harris, Phil Villapiano, has also claimed he was clipped (illegally blocked from behind) before he could make a tackle, which would have nullified the play entirely had an official seen the clip.Template:Citeneeded In a later interview with NFL Films, Villapiano claims, "I look back at Franco, he's 'jogging' down the field. Half speed, he missed his block. Had I been as lazy as Franco, that ball would've come to me at waist high".Template:Citeneeded Raider executive Al LoCasale also claimed on the same program that Swearingen's phone call had nothing to do with the call. According to LoCasale, Swearingen was told that the officials could not be guaranteed safety if they changed the call, so he ruled in favor of the Steelers. [4]

Aftermath of the play

The week after this playoff victory, the Steelers lost the AFC championship game to the Miami Dolphins, who would then win Super Bowl VII in their landmark undefeated season. The Steelers, however, would reverse four decades of futility and go on to become a dominant force in the NFL for the subsequent decade, winning four Super Bowls with such stars as Bradshaw, Harris, and Lynn Swann.

The Immaculate Reception spawned a heated rivalry between the Steelers and Raiders, a rivalry that was at its peak during the 1970's, when both teams were among the best in the league and both were known for their hard-hitting, physical play.

The phrase "Immaculate Reception" is a play on words of the Immaculate Conception, implying that the play was divine or miraculous in nature. It was first used on air by Myron Cope, the Steelers announcer who was reporting on the Steelers' victory. A woman named Sharon Levosky called Cope the night of the game and suggested the name (which was coined by her friend, Michael Ord). Cope used the term on television and the phrase stuck.

Resolution?

An article on the physics of the Immaculate Reception appeared in the science section of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on October 18, 2004. The article describes the work of John Fetkovich, an emeritus professor of physics at Carnegie Mellon University. Fetkovitch's analysis of the NFL Films tape of the play led him to the conclusion, based the trajectory of the bounced ball and conservation of momentum, that the ball must have bounced off of Tatum, who was running upfield at the time, rather than Fuqua, who was running across and down the field.

An addendum to the article stated that NBC's video of the play, broadcast during the telecast of the 1998 AFC Championship game, clearly showed that the ball had hit Tatum.

See also

References

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