As a a still photographer and fan of NFL since ‘68, I got goosebumps watching this. Their talent was something to marvel at. This is nothing short of masterful art.
Extraordinarily talented guys. And in my opinion, they were huge contributors to the NFL becoming the dominant sport it became. No other sport has the visual mythology of the NFL. That's Ernie, Steve, Ed, and so many others.
Yeah, the old cameras have way more character, I think. I imagine NFL Films could no longer justify the cost and workflow of film, but those old Arriflexes delivered such a wonderful storytelling look. The Arris Amiras are clean but lack soul.
I watched live on TV and was in Three Rivers for the 20th Anniversary and this randomly showed up on my RUclips page. THANK YOU for a great little film!
Did we just gloss over the fact that the guy filming (hank) just said hes 73, he can still drive, walk and looks like in great physical health. I hope to be that mobile at his age. Man doesnt even look his age.
Not so much with the telephoto lens, it’s too big, but these guys haul their own gear and run up and down the field all game long. They have to be in top shape.
RIP Franco, I started as Steelers fan with my first fav player kordell, but I didn’t really take the game serious until Big Bens rookie year. But being Steelers fan is like getting PHD in football you have to learn the history watch all the NFL films stuff on the steel curtain. It’s awesome!
Franco Harris was a really nice guy.Down to earth and always had time for his fans. This was the Steelers of that era. They were decent as hell to their fans and always good for the community.
No mention of the fact that this isn't the stadium where the Immaculate Reception took place! The Immaculate Reception happened in Three Rivers Stadium, which was imploded in 2001 with millions of dollars in outstanding debt still owed.
Dude id love to see more clips from these cameras (preferably the Steelers) and or just for of these kind of vids! Ps come back to pittsburgh with that camera in 2024/2025 season we are going to the bowl! I’m calling it
its crazy that NFL Films have been using ARRI cameras from way back until now, Arriflexes to the AMIRA and the images are stunning. imagine if they use the Alexas and shoot at 4k
I miss John Madden's nonsense, it represented a more innocent time. I'm so happy I could live through a time he commentated on games and made them fun.
The controversy over this play was not about a trap. It was about who touched the pass from Bradshaw. Back in the 70s a Offensive player could not catch a ball off another offensive player. The ball needed to be touched by a Defensive player 1st before Franco could catch it. Absolutely nothing about a trap, and all about a potential illegal touch. They ruled in Pittsburgh s favor. Game over, history was made.
Actually, there is some controversy regarding whether or not it was a trap. It’s covered in most shorts and documentaries about the play. However, what you’re talking about is generally considered the bigger question about the play.
To be clear, that doesn't mean that the first player (beyond the line of scrimmage) to touch the pass had to be a defender, if an offensive player who made the reception was not the first to touch the pass. The old NFL rule (in effect till 1978), provided that if an offensive player touched a pass beyond the line of scrimmage, then he was the only player eligible to receive the pass - EXCEPT that if a defender touched it before a second offensive player touched the ball, then ALL offensive players became eligible to receive the pass, and remained eligible throughout that play. And it didn't matter what the sequence was: a defender could touch the ball, then one offensive player could touch it, and a second offensive player could then make a legal reception; OR, it could go, first offensive touch, then defender touch, and then legal reception by second offensive player. (And if a defender and one offensive player touched the ball •simultaneously•, a legal reception could likewise be made by a second offensive player.) So you often see people arguing about whether Tatum touched the ball first, and then Fuqua, before Harris caught it, or whether Fuqua touched it first, and then Tatum. But if both of them touched the ball, the order in which they contacted it is irrelevant. The only question relevant to the old so-called "double-touch" rule is, did Tatum touch the ball at •all•? If Tatum did touch it, then that absolutely settles it: Harris was eligible to make a legal reception of the pass. Only if Fuqua ALONE touched the ball, and Tatum never contacted it at all, was Harris's reception illegal under the old rule.
Wrong. If it was clear that Harris had trapped the ball and the refs weren't too chicken to call it, the pass would have been an incomplete pass and the Raiders would have won. So Harris' reception (trap or not) is huge.
@@ColumbiaB you answered your own question and destroyed your whole point..this game was in 74-75?? Trust me I know bc I was following football back then n just like you said..b4 1978.. only the 1 offensive player could catch the ball that HE TIPPED...The only way another offensive player could touch the ball was AFTER a Defensive player touched it. Please prove that BOTH touched it simultaneously!! There's never been proof of the simulation.. Again my point is that CONTROVERSIAL PART OF THIS WAS NOT TRAPPING THE BALL, THAT WAS CLEAR AS DAY.. IT'S THE SO CALLED SIMULATION.
Cool story. I shoot (digital) video now but used to shoot film stills, including sports, back in the day. Legacy equipment is something special. I held on to my Hasselblad gear as long as I could until it was nothing much more than taking up space in the closet.
@@davidwormell6609 yeah, I think that even John Madden finally agreed it was a catch after seeing the NBC footage for the first time like 30 years later.
We fans of the Pittsburgh Steeler are so passionate about the game the players coaches and owners we take it to heart. The Rooney family said we own the Steelers but the Steelers belong to the fans.
this video should be titled "how NFL films blew filming the Immaculate Reception". There's no view of the ball, Franco and the turf so there's no way to know if it was a legal catch. Franco refused to say if he caught it clean which pretty much says it touched the ground or that he trapped the ball and it was a no catch. Thus the Raiders won the game 7-6 on Ken Stablers Immaculate 30 yard TD run through the Steelers porous "Rusty Curtain" defense. lol.
both were recorded on film - can someone explain the very obvious difference in quality? the modern footage against the raiders looks great, a little too great! was it cleaned? digitally enhanced in post? am I alone in thinking....where is the grit?
I was the director on this short (not the cinematographer so take this with a grain of salt) but imo two big differences: film stocks are better now, and the stadium lights provide much much more light (it's hard to shoot low light on old cameras because of the aperture so the bright LEDs at new stadiums lead to a super different look.)
After repeatedly viewing the play over and over again from the endzone camera (it takes about 10-15 minutes of continuous viewing in order to train your eye) I can clearly see beyond any reasonable doubt exactly what happened. As the ball approached, Tatum was reaching his hands out going for the interception while at the same moment Fuqua was reaching his arms out going for the reception. I don’t believe either player saw each other as they were both playing the ball. Just a split second second before they collided you can clearly see that the ball deflected off Fuqua’s reached out left and then ricocheted off of Tatum’s helmet into the hands of Franco. Instead of a TD it should have been an illegal touching penalty on the Steelers. The team that benefited the most from this play were Miami Dolphins who didn’t have to face the Raiders in the AFC championship game where their perfect season very likely could have ended.
@Randy Hanson If the ball touched Tatum which is true, then it is a legal catch by Franco Harris. You could have multiple players touching the ball if it hit a defender.
@@giantsr1eva I was under the impression that the rule in 72 was that once the ball hit an offensive player first then only a defender could intercept the ball. In 73 or 74 the rule was modified to the interpretation that you just explained. It was only a couple years later that they done away with the rule altogether
@@randyhanson4973 - No, the rule was never modified, until it was eliminated in 1978. And giantsr1eva states that old "double-touch" rule correctly. If a defender touched a pass before more than one offensive player had touched it, then •all• offensive players became eligible to receive it, and remained eligible throughout that play. Which is to say, all these sequences led to a •legal• reception under the old rule: • Defender touch, to offensive player catch; • Defender touch, to first offensive player touch, to second offensive player catch; and • First offensive player touch, to defender touch, to second offensive player catch. What you described - the pass first hits Fuqua's hand, then bounces off Tatum's helmet, and finally is caught by Harris - would absolutely have been a legal reception under the old rule. And, to be clear, if (for argument's sake), the ball first hit Tatum, then touched Fuqua as it bounced back toward Harris, then Harris's reception •still• was legal under the old rule. Only if Fuqua ALONE touched the ball, and Tatum never contacted it at all, was Harris's reception illegal under the pre-1978 rule.
If number 20 had not celebrated after the deflection by Tatum, he would have been able to tackle or push Franco out of bounds forcing a long FG attempt in bad weather conditions and the Raiders would have won. But he celebrated with time still on the clock, a split second that changed the course of Steeler history. Didn’t Yogi Berra say “it ain’t over till it’s over”, why celebrate? The play wasn’t dead, the officials hadn’t even signaled the play was over. Also it looks like Franco got both hands under the ball on the catch, the top of his hands may have been on the turf but the ball never touched the ground. If the ball did hit the ground, at that momentum, he would not have been able to catch, yet alone stabilize the ball all in one stride, no way. The speed at which he was moving and the ball converging at him infers he caught it with hands above ground.
As a a still photographer and fan of NFL since ‘68, I got goosebumps watching this. Their talent was something to marvel at. This is nothing short of masterful art.
Slava Ukraini
@@DavidParrella 👍
Extraordinarily talented guys. And in my opinion, they were huge contributors to the NFL becoming the dominant sport it became. No other sport has the visual mythology of the NFL. That's Ernie, Steve, Ed, and so many others.
beautiful vid. as so often, the real MVP is clearly NFL Films.
6:15 The actual film recording looks spectacular, better than the modern digital recording.
Some things are timeless.
I was blessed to meet the legend out of all places in Colorado at the rusty bucket. RIP
The shots from that camera on the Immaculate Reception’s 50th anniversary looked great! Wonderful piece of equipment, and a job well done from Hank!
Yeah, the old cameras have way more character, I think. I imagine NFL Films could no longer justify the cost and workflow of film, but those old Arriflexes delivered such a wonderful storytelling look. The Arris Amiras are clean but lack soul.
One of the most crazy Game winners of all time!!
I watched live on TV and was in Three Rivers for the 20th Anniversary and this randomly showed up on my RUclips page. THANK YOU for a great little film!
Did we just gloss over the fact that the guy filming (hank) just said hes 73, he can still drive, walk and looks like in great physical health. I hope to be that mobile at his age. Man doesnt even look his age.
That’s what happens when u do what u love for a living
Being able to walk and drive at 73 is not too out-of-the-ordinary 😂 But he does look good for his age.
@@heyheyhey33351 ive seen people at 60 can barely walk, on a wheelchair, look like theyre about to die the next day
He rolled through the stop sign though.
Not so much with the telephoto lens, it’s too big, but these guys haul their own gear and run up and down the field all game long. They have to be in top shape.
He got some great shots in that last game too
RIP Franco, I started as Steelers fan with my first fav player kordell, but I didn’t really take the game serious until Big Bens rookie year. But being Steelers fan is like getting PHD in football you have to learn the history watch all the NFL films stuff on the steel curtain. It’s awesome!
Man I miss the look of film. Those shots in Pittsburgh for the 50th anniversary looks awesome.
Franco Harris was a really nice guy.Down to earth and always had time for his fans. This was the Steelers of that era. They were decent as hell to their fans and always good for the community.
When I think of perfection, I think of NFL Films
I love NFL Films.
Absolutely beautiful video
No mention of the fact that this isn't the stadium where the Immaculate Reception took place!
The Immaculate Reception happened in Three Rivers Stadium, which was imploded in 2001 with millions of dollars in outstanding debt still owed.
Franco Harris and Ernie Ernst, may their memories always bring a blessing.
I'm glad to see the background heroes get their praises. Thank you Mr. Hank and rih Mr. Ernie and legendary Franco💐🙏🏿
Dude id love to see more clips from these cameras (preferably the Steelers) and or just for of these kind of vids! Ps come back to pittsburgh with that camera in 2024/2025 season we are going to the bowl! I’m calling it
My father was there. Miss him so much.
This is awesome, I always enjoy learning about NFL history. Thank you NFL films I hope you make similar videos in the future.
This camera gives the Alexas a run for their money. Spectacular footage
its crazy that NFL Films have been using ARRI cameras from way back until now, Arriflexes to the AMIRA and the images are stunning. imagine if they use the Alexas and shoot at 4k
John Madden, the best. The camera work, superb.
Need more stuff like this
shoutout pops.
I miss John Madden's nonsense, it represented a more innocent time. I'm so happy I could live through a time he commentated on games and made them fun.
Im crying 😢
The controversy over this play was not about a trap.
It was about who touched the pass from Bradshaw. Back in the 70s a Offensive player could not catch a ball off another offensive player. The ball needed to be touched by a Defensive player 1st before Franco could catch it.
Absolutely nothing about a trap, and all about a potential illegal touch.
They ruled in Pittsburgh s favor.
Game over, history was made.
Actually, there is some controversy regarding whether or not it was a trap. It’s covered in most shorts and documentaries about the play. However, what you’re talking about is generally considered the bigger question about the play.
To be clear, that doesn't mean that the first player (beyond the line of scrimmage) to touch the pass had to be a defender, if an offensive player who made the reception was not the first to touch the pass.
The old NFL rule (in effect till 1978), provided that if an offensive player touched a pass beyond the line of scrimmage, then he was the only player eligible to receive the pass - EXCEPT that if a defender touched it before a second offensive player touched the ball, then ALL offensive players became eligible to receive the pass, and remained eligible throughout that play. And it didn't matter what the sequence was: a defender could touch the ball, then one offensive player could touch it, and a second offensive player could then make a legal reception; OR, it could go, first offensive touch, then defender touch, and then legal reception by second offensive player. (And if a defender and one offensive player touched the ball •simultaneously•, a legal reception could likewise be made by a second offensive player.)
So you often see people arguing about whether Tatum touched the ball first, and then Fuqua, before Harris caught it, or whether Fuqua touched it first, and then Tatum. But if both of them touched the ball, the order in which they contacted it is irrelevant. The only question relevant to the old so-called "double-touch" rule is, did Tatum touch the ball at •all•? If Tatum did touch it, then that absolutely settles it: Harris was eligible to make a legal reception of the pass.
Only if Fuqua ALONE touched the ball, and Tatum never contacted it at all, was Harris's reception illegal under the old rule.
Wrong.
If it was clear that Harris had trapped the ball and the refs weren't too chicken to call it, the pass would have been an incomplete pass and the Raiders would have won.
So Harris' reception (trap or not) is huge.
@@ColumbiaB you answered your own question and destroyed your whole point..this game was in 74-75??
Trust me I know bc I was following football back then n just like you said..b4 1978.. only the 1 offensive player could catch the ball that HE TIPPED...The only way another offensive player could touch the ball was AFTER a Defensive player touched it.
Please prove that BOTH touched it simultaneously!! There's never been proof of the simulation..
Again my point is that CONTROVERSIAL PART OF THIS WAS NOT TRAPPING THE BALL, THAT WAS CLEAR AS DAY.. IT'S THE SO CALLED SIMULATION.
they should film more games like this, awesome to see
That guy is 73?!
Bro looks like he's 43, like how in the hell.
Remember, without the SABOL Family, NONE OF THIS WOULD HAVE BEEN AS GOOD, OR EVEN HAPPENED.
Was that a compact disk in that camera?
GREAT !!!!
JUST WENT THROUGH A BOX OF TISSUE
THANKS A LOT 😢😁😁
Cool story. I shoot (digital) video now but used to shoot film stills, including sports, back in the day. Legacy equipment is something special. I held on to my Hasselblad gear as long as I could until it was nothing much more than taking up space in the closet.
This guy doesn’t seem 73 tbh, dude seems like he’s 50
Agreed
It was not a trap. There’s video from the original nbc telecast that shows that it was clearly a catch.
Agreed. From a Raider fan.
@@davidwormell6609 yeah, I think that even John Madden finally agreed it was a catch after seeing the NBC footage for the first time like 30 years later.
Because the NFL Films don't have subtitles in Portuguese and Spanish? People who speak other languages deserved access to this content.
We fans of the Pittsburgh Steeler are so passionate about the game the players coaches and owners we take it to heart. The Rooney family said we own the Steelers but the Steelers belong to the fans.
Only question why no film of turf and ball on that play you never see it always cut off ..
this video should be titled "how NFL films blew filming the Immaculate Reception". There's no view of the ball, Franco and the turf so there's no way to know if it was a legal catch. Franco refused to say if he caught it clean which pretty much says it touched the ground or that he trapped the ball and it was a no catch. Thus the Raiders won the game 7-6 on Ken Stablers Immaculate 30 yard TD run through the Steelers porous "Rusty Curtain" defense. lol.
both were recorded on film - can someone explain the very obvious difference in quality? the modern footage against the raiders looks great, a little too great! was it cleaned? digitally enhanced in post? am I alone in thinking....where is the grit?
I was the director on this short (not the cinematographer so take this with a grain of salt) but imo two big differences: film stocks are better now, and the stadium lights provide much much more light (it's hard to shoot low light on old cameras because of the aperture so the bright LEDs at new stadiums lead to a super different look.)
thank you! for responding@@arjunfischer4972
Rest in peace Franco Harris 🙏
A catch.
Immaculate Deception, thank you.
After repeatedly viewing the play over and over again from the endzone camera (it takes about 10-15 minutes of continuous viewing in order to train your eye) I can clearly see beyond any reasonable doubt exactly what happened. As the ball approached, Tatum was reaching his hands out going for the interception while at the same moment Fuqua was reaching his arms out going for the reception. I don’t believe either player saw each other as they were both playing the ball. Just a split second second before they collided you can clearly see that the ball deflected off Fuqua’s reached out left and then ricocheted off of Tatum’s helmet into the hands of Franco. Instead of a TD it should have been an illegal touching penalty on the Steelers. The team that benefited the most from this play were Miami Dolphins who didn’t have to face the Raiders in the AFC championship game where their perfect season very likely could have ended.
@Randy Hanson
If the ball touched Tatum which is true, then it is a legal catch by Franco Harris. You could have multiple players touching the ball if it hit a defender.
@@giantsr1eva I was under the impression that the rule in 72 was that once the ball hit an offensive player first then only a defender could intercept the ball. In 73 or 74 the rule was modified to the interpretation that you just explained. It was only a couple years later that they done away with the rule altogether
@@randyhanson4973 - No, the rule was never modified, until it was eliminated in 1978. And giantsr1eva states that old "double-touch" rule correctly. If a defender touched a pass before more than one offensive player had touched it, then •all• offensive players became eligible to receive it, and remained eligible throughout that play. Which is to say, all these sequences led to a •legal• reception under the old rule:
• Defender touch, to offensive player catch;
• Defender touch, to first offensive player touch, to second offensive player catch; and
• First offensive player touch, to defender touch, to second offensive player catch.
What you described - the pass first hits Fuqua's hand, then bounces off Tatum's helmet, and finally is caught by Harris - would absolutely have been a legal reception under the old rule.
And, to be clear, if (for argument's sake), the ball first hit Tatum, then touched Fuqua as it bounced back toward Harris, then Harris's reception •still• was legal under the old rule.
Only if Fuqua ALONE touched the ball, and Tatum never contacted it at all, was Harris's reception illegal under the pre-1978 rule.
Wow
If number 20 had not celebrated after the deflection by Tatum, he would have been able to tackle or push Franco out of bounds forcing a long FG attempt in bad weather conditions and the Raiders would have won. But he celebrated with time still on the clock, a split second that changed the course of Steeler history. Didn’t Yogi Berra say “it ain’t over till it’s over”, why celebrate? The play wasn’t dead, the officials hadn’t even signaled the play was over. Also it looks like Franco got both hands under the ball on the catch, the top of his hands may have been on the turf but the ball never touched the ground. If the ball did hit the ground, at that momentum, he would not have been able to catch, yet alone stabilize the ball all in one stride, no way. The speed at which he was moving and the ball converging at him infers he caught it with hands above ground.
Raiders
Eagles gonna win the super bowl
nah y’all getting shmoked by mahomes 🤣🤣🤣
@@connorestes9814 nah it jalen hurts this time no patrick balony
RJ~
You heard it from me first. Remember my prediction- and reflect after the Super Bowl, that I was right- - -
*Miami Dolphins*
🥂
The Army is there in a special wing of the Hall of Fame 24 hours a day so you can sleep at night
When is the NFL going to capture its problem with GAME RIGGING?
NFL isn't game rigging. It's incompetent officiating. The league needs to make them full time.
Hate to be that guy…but he kinda botched that shot 🤣🤣
1st
It's more like how it wasn't captured.
eh
It was just a fluke of a "catch". They didn't even get to, led alone win it that year. So it didn't matter. 😂
lmaooo found the salty raiders fan with zero brain cells