Vote for the Steelers!

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  • SteelCrazy
    Legend
    • Aug 2008
    • 5049

    Vote for the Steelers!

    [url]http://espn.go.com/nfl/feature/memorablePlays[/url]
    2019 Mock

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  • 8467thekraken
    Starter
    • Apr 2012
    • 720

    #2
    Quite an amazing play.

    First playoff win for The Steelers.
    Harris, the Rookie, not being where he was "supposed" to be and coming up huge for the team.
    All the "controversy" surrounding the play.

    Kinda like a play of destiny, 'cause from that point on, that team was a juggernaut.

    Comment

    • D Rock
      Hall of Famer
      • Dec 2008
      • 2797

      #3
      Bradshaw unloads that pass with such ease. 40 yard throw with no setup and a flick of the wrist. It would be really interesting to see what he could have done in this era.

      Comment

      • DukieBoy
        Hall of Famer
        • May 2008
        • 3488

        #4
        Absolutely the best, most impactful play in NFL history.





        Comment

        • 8467thekraken
          Starter
          • Apr 2012
          • 720

          #5
          And to think that it barely beat out "the helmet catch".

          Geez...

          Comment

          • hawaiiansteel
            Legend
            • May 2008
            • 35648

            #6
            Immaculate Reception stands alone

            July, 21, 2014
            By Scott Brown | ESPN.com

            I wrote following a fan vote for the most memorable play in Pittsburgh Steelers history that all were vying for second place behind Franco Harris’ “Immaculate Reception.”

            That turned out to be true for every other NFL team as well.

            Harris’ galloping touchdown after making a shoestring catch of a desperation pass – one that had caromed backwards -- won ESPN.com’s bracket challenge for the most memorable play in NFL history.

            The Immaculate Reception beat Dwight Clark’s touchdown catch that launched the San Francisco 49ers’ dynasty in the early 1980s, capturing 52 percent of the fan vote over a three-day period.

            Harris’ play was the last one standing despite some stiff competition, confirming how enduring it is -- and that it transcends the Steelers and even Pittsburgh.

            The play as ESPN.com NFL columnist Kevin Seifert wrote had a little bit of everything: drama, a great individual effort and intrigue.

            We may never know if Terry Bradshaw’s pass first touched Steelers running back Frenchy Fuqua, which would have made Harris’ reception an illegal one, despite Zapruderesque dissection of the play.

            The controversy over the final play -- and the Steelers' 13-7 win over the Raiders at Three Rivers Stadium -- touched off a rivalry that shaped the 1970s.

            And while the Steelers lost the following week in the AFC championship game to the Miami Dolphins no less an authority than Dan Rooney has said Harris’ catch and game-winning touchdown gave the franchise hope and belief.

            It might be difficult for a younger generation of Steelers fans to believe but Pittsburgh was badly in need of both before the Immaculate Reception. The Steelers had never won a playoff game before Harris’ miraculous catch and run.

            Since beating the Raiders in 1972, two days before Christmas, the Steelers have won 32 times in the postseason and six Super Bowls.

            [URL]http://espn.go.com/blog/pittsburgh-steelers/post/_/id/7632/immaculate-reception-stands-alone?ex_cid=espnapi_public[/URL]

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